On the same day the Dodgers decided to bite the bullet with top prospect Dalton Rushing, they did the same with veteran catcher Austin Barnes.
Sources: The Los Angeles Dodgers plan to designate catcher Austin Barnes for assignment.
— Robert Murray (@ByRobertMurray) May 14, 2025
The longest-tenured position player on the team is being designated for assignment, according to multiple reports Wednesday. Barnes was hitting .214 as the backup to starting catcher Will Smith.
Dodgers will designate Austin Barnes for assignment, league sources said. Was the Dodgers' longest-tenured position player. https://t.co/yE1XRfcGk0
— Fabian Ardaya (@FabianArdaya) May 14, 2025
Barnes, 35, was acquired by the Dodgers at the 2014 trade deadline in the seven-player blockbuster trade that also brought Kiké Hernández to Los Angeles and sent Miguel Rojas to the Miami Marlins.
From 2015-16, Barnes shuffled back and forth between the minors and Triple-A. Since 2017, however, he had been the Dodgers' entrenched backup catcher — first to Yasmani Grandal and Russell Martin, then to Will Smith.
Barnes had made three trips to the injured list, and endured a brief demotion to the minors in 2019. Otherwise, his presence was a constant — practically a given over the last eight seasons.
Barnes made his bones as a hard-nosed catcher, willing to get dirty, frame pitches with the best of his peers, and ably call a game for one of the league's best pitching staffs. Although never a slugger, Barnes' ability to draw walks and put the ball in play endeared him to the organization as a viable backup.
In 11 major league seasons, all with the Dodgers, Barnes slashed .223/.322/.338. He never drew more than 262 plate appearances in a single season.
In his best season at the plate, 2017, Barnes hit .289 with a .402 on-base percentage. His 138 OPS+ that year, combined with an October slump by Grandal, made him the primary backstop in the National League Championship Series and World Series.
Barnes appeared in 44 postseason games with the Dodgers, collecting rings in 2020 and 2024. He caught the final out of the 2020 World Series, and appeared in five games against the Tampa Bay Rays as the Dodgers broke their 32-year championship drought.
A native of Riverside, Barnes was originally drafted by the Marlins in the ninth round of the 2011 MLB Draft out of Arizona State.
That the Dodgers waited as long as they did to cut Barnes speaks to his value in the organization — and their apparent faith in Rushing to earn more at-bats than they could give Barnes as Smith's backup.
Although Barnes will be difficult to replace as a game-caller and pitch-framer, Rushing's left-handed bat ought to represent a meangingful upgrade. He could also help give Smith more opportunities to rest.
Last year, Smith saw his OPS drop to .626 after the All-Star break, down from .838 in the season's first half. Smith's hitting in the first half (.889) and second half (.701) followed a similar pattern in 2023.
The wisdom in Wednesday's move might be measured as much by Smith's performance as Rushing's.
More to come on this story from Dodgers on SI.
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