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Shea Langeliers has been on an absolute tear to begin 2026.

Shortstop is often considered baseball’s premier position—rolling out an elite shortstop is generally viewed as more critical than fielding a good second or third baseman.

However, offensively speaking, the catcher position is historically barren. In 2025, the 10th-best catcher by OPS, J.T. Realmuto, posted a mark of just .700. For reference, the league-average hitter had a .719 OPS. Clearly, offensive production behind the dish is hard to come by in today’s game.

For the Athletics, however, this isn’t an issue. That’s thanks to 28-year-old catcher Shea Langeliers, who might be the least-talked-about 30+ home run hitter in baseball. Langeliers blasted more home runs in 2025 than José Ramírez, Manny Machado, Christian Yelich, and many others.

In 2026, he hasn’t skipped a beat. During Spring Training, he smashed seven home runs in 46 at-bats—roughly 13 games’ worth of action. He finished the spring with a 1.335 OPS, building massive momentum before the season even started.

When the regular season kicked off, Langeliers immediately picked up where he left off. He mashed two key home runs against the Blue Jays on Opening Day, including a game-tying, 414-foot missile in the ninth inning. But he didn’t stop there.

The very next day, he hammered a 420-foot, go-ahead grand slam in the seventh inning after Jays’ starter Dylan Cease had cruised through the A’s lineup.

The breakout looks real, but is it actually a breakout, or just a continuation of an established trend? Let’s take a look.


Finding the Barrel Consistently

One defining trait of Langeliers’ game is his ability to consistently barrel the baseball. Since his first full season in 2023, he has never posted a Barrel Rate under 11%. Considering the 2026 league average sits at just 7.2%, Langeliers is elite in this category.

While he also stands out in Average Exit Velocity and Hard-Hit Rate, his barrel statistics are the true driver of his success. To illustrate how Barrel Rate translates to production, look at the correlation between various quality-of-contact stats and home runs using 2025 MLB data. Unsurprisingly, Barrel Rate has the strongest correlation by far:

  • Avg. EV: 0.36 correlation

  • Hard-Hit Rate: 0.39 correlation

  • Bat Speed: 0.40 correlation

  • Barrel%: 0.73 correlation

With these numbers in mind, it’s easy to see why Langeliers is so underrated. The flashier metrics like exit velocity and bat speed often overshadow the fundamentals.

Ultimately, Langeliers’ swing path is the engine that drove his 30-homer campaign in 2025. He posted a 16.4° average launch angle—well above the league average—meaning he was getting the ball in the air consistently. The math is simple: frequent fly balls + consistently solid contact = consistent barrels and plenty of home runs.


Early 2026 Data Findings

Three games is a tiny sample size, and early-season individual player data is notoriously volatile. For instance, Padres contact hitter Xander Bogaerts is currently averaging a 95.4 MPH exit velocity, compared to a mere 89.0 MPH across 2025.

However, there are some standout nuggets from Langeliers’ Opening Weekend in Toronto. His data is overwhelmingly positive from a power standpoint, easily masking some early swing-and-miss woes. Here is how his metrics have jumped early on compared to his 2025 averages:

  • Average Exit Velocity: 90.9 → 94.2 MPH (+3.3)

  • Average Launch Angle: 16.2° → 24.5° (+8.1°)

  • Barrel Rate: 11.2% → 37.5% (+26.3%)

Because Barrel Rate is a rate stat, it is highly susceptible to early-season volatility. However, another key underlying metric has increased significantly: bat speed. Langeliers improved his bat speed from 73.8 MPH to 76.5 MPH through his first three games. While external factors—like simply getting better pitches to swing hard at—could influence this, it is a trend worth monitoring. An increase in bat speed could signify a jump from the 30-homer tier to even greater heights.

In 2025, three major leaguers consistently found the sweet spot of making loud contact while keeping batted balls in the air: Aaron Judge, Kyle Schwarber, and Cal Raleigh. Those three players, along with Langeliers, are highlighted on the plot below.

At his current 2026 pace, Langeliers would plot right next to Raleigh. Over the opening series, his ability to consistently hit the ball hard and in the air reached a truly elite caliber.


2026 Outlook and Updated Projections

With such a loud start in the books, it’s hard not to project a second straight 30-homer season for the A’s backstop. Even if his early numbers regress to his baseline, his optimized swing path and barreling ability will still provide ample power.

Most projection systems peg him just under the 30-homer mark with an OPS hovering around .800. Given his Opening Weekend performance and underlying metrics, this feels like a conservative undershoot. Below are our updated projections for his 2026 campaign, compared to FanGraphs’ current model:

    • FanGraphs Projection: .258 AVG | 30 HR | .506 SLG | .824 OPS | 3.1 WAR

    • BSBLR Projection: .262 AVG | 36 HR | .563 SLG | .888 OPS | 3.9 WAR

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