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The Two-Catcher Offense Is Quietly Becoming the Best Roster Hack in Baseball, and Fantasy Managers Are Misreading It

It's become more trendy for teams to trot out a two-catcher system. But many fantasy managers may not understand the implications.

Since the new ABS Challenge System is currently taking center stage, managers are misreading this trend as a pitch framing-related shift. In fact, four teams implementing the two-catcher ideology have unlocked roster redistribution that produces fantasy gains.

Let's take a closer look at the two-catcher tandem and how it is turning backups into undervalued fantasy assets.

Why the "ABS Killed Framing" Theory Doesn't Explain the Two-Catcher Trend

 Samuel Basallo's emergence strengthens roster flexibility while preserving catching depth and offensive production. © Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images
Samuel Basallo's emergence strengthens roster flexibility while preserving catching depth and offensive production. © Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images arena

The ABS System has indeed shrunk the strike zone and put a growing spotlight on pitch framing. This has created a theory: Teams are playing offense-first catchers as designated hitters because they don't frame well.

But that hypothesis doesn't hold water.

Enter the Baltimore Orioles, who have been playing Adley Rutschman and backup Samuel Basallo in a catcher-DH swap. Rutschman easily debunks the "ABS killed framing" argument, since he is one of the MLB's best pitch framers according to Statcast. Both Rutschman and Basallo have been hot at the plate, and the two-catcher system keeps both bats in the lineup.

The Real Mechanics: Injury Insurance, Rest Cycles, and the DH Roster Hack

 Ivan Herrera exemplifies how tandem catching arrangements balance health preservation and lineup continuity. Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images
Ivan Herrera exemplifies how tandem catching arrangements balance health preservation and lineup continuity. Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images

Here's the basic roster math: Rostering two catching-capable bats lets a team fill the DH slot with a player who'd otherwise sit. This also gives the primary catcher scheduled rest days from being in the squat without losing his bat for a day.

In Baltimore's case, Rutschman had five catcher starts followed by two starts as the designated hitter. This kept his bat in the lineup while also giving him a couple of rest days from behind the dish. It also kept Basallo's hot bat in the lineup at DH (and occasionally first base) for those five games Rutschman caught.

And it's not just the Orioles who have used catcher depth to generate a highly-useful tandem. The St. Louis Cardinals have kept Ivan Herrera's hot bat in the lineup and minimized his injury risk at catcher by playing him in a 60-40 split with Pedro Pages. Yainer Diaz typically catches three or four times a week for the Houston Astros, while veteran backup Christian Vazquez catches specific pitches and stays in the lineup at DH. Up in Seattle, backup catcher Mitch Garver fills in as DH when he isn't filling in behind the plate for big bat Cal Raleigh.

The Fantasy Verdict: Plate Appearances Are Being Redistributed, Not Reduced

 Samuel Basallo gains additional opportunities through multi-position usage beyond traditional backup responsibilities.
Samuel Basallo gains additional opportunities through multi-position usage beyond traditional backup responsibilities.

The tandem also unlocks backups in two-catcher leagues, since rostering a backup who can credibly start multiple times a week gives a real roster edge. In Basallo's case, getting slotted in at DH or first base gets him way more starts and meaningful at-bats than a traditional backup catcher would.

This is a signal to fantasy managers in two-catcher leagues that it's time to hit the waiver wire. Backups with dual position eligibility will get more at-bats and can produce more frequently throughout the week.

For what it's worth, Basallo is hitting .257/.320/.464 with nine home runs and 27 RBI through 57 games this season and is on less than 50% of fantasy rosters.

The Core Takeaway on the Two-Catcher Trend

The two-catcher trend isn't a knee-jerk response to the new ABS Challenge System, nor is it reducing at-bats for starting catchers. Instead, it's a roster construction and injury-management strategy, creating more opportunities for starters and backups alike.

Managers should take a good look at the teams with a regular two-catcher system in 2026. This method is redistributing value rather than eliminating it, and smart owners can use this new rotation to unlock more fantasy potential.

Questions and Answers

What is a two-catcher system in fantasy baseball?

A two-catcher system is when a team rotates two catchers between the catcher and designated hitter positions instead of using one clear starter and a bench backup. The Orioles, Cardinals, Astros, and Mariners have all used variations of this approach to keep both bats in the lineup while managing workload and rest.

Did ABS make pitch framing less important?

The evidence presented here suggests otherwise. Adley Rutschman remains one of baseball's top pitch framers, and the use of two-catcher systems appears to be driven more by roster construction and workload management than by changes in framing value.

Is Adley Rutschman losing fantasy value because of the Basallo rotation?

No. When Rutschman shifts from catcher to designated hitter, he remains in the lineup and continues accumulating plate appearances rather than receiving a full day off.

Which MLB teams are using a two-catcher rotation in 2026?

The Baltimore Orioles, St. Louis Cardinals, Houston Astros, and Seattle Mariners are all cited as teams using versions of a two-catcher system.

Should I roster a backup catcher in a two-catcher fantasy league?

Backup catchers who are part of these tandem systems can provide more starts and plate appearances than traditional backups. Players such as Samuel Basallo may offer added value because they can remain in the lineup at designated hitter or other positions.

Copyright 2026 The Arena Group, Inc. All Rights Reserved

This story was originally published June 12, 2026 at 1:55 PM.

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