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Red Sox’ Brooks Brannon named South Atlantic League Player of the Week
ALEX HICKS JR./STAFF / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Red Sox catching prospect Brooks Brannon has been named the South Atlantic League Player of the Week for the week of May 26-June 1, Minor League Baseball announced on Monday.

Brannon appeared in five of High-A Greenville’s six games against the Jersey Shore BlueClaws at Fluor Field this past week. The right-handed hitting 21-year-old went 11-for-21 (.524) with three doubles, one triple, two home runs, eight RBIs, nine runs scored, and three strikeouts. He recorded three hits on Wednesday, had two hits on Thursday and Friday, homered twice on Saturday, and doubled in Sunday’s series finale.

On the heels of that impressive week-long showing, Brannon is now riding a nine-game hitting streak. Through 40 games for Greenville this season, he is batting .273/.317/.442 with seven doubles, two triples, five home runs, 25 RBIs, 25 runs scored, three stolen bases, nine walks, and 46 strikeouts over 164 plate appearances. That includes a .295/.341/.481 slash line against right-handed pitching and a .160/.192/.240 slash line against left-handed pitching.

Among 80 qualified hitters in the South Atlantic League to this point in the year, Brannon ranks eighth in line-drive rate (28.3 percent), 14th in batting average, 16th in slugging percentage, 20th in isolated power (.169), 29th in OPS (.759), 30th in speed score (6.7), 34th in wOBA (.343), and 37th in wRC+ (109), per FanGraphs.

Defensively, Brannon has seen the majority of his playing time with Greenville this season come behind the plate. Splitting those responsibilities with Hudson White and Juan Montero, the 5-foot-11, 210-pound backstop has thrown out 13 of 59 possible base stealers and has allowed two passed balls in 24 starts at catcher. He has also made five starts at first base (where he has committed two errors in 41 chances) and 11 starts at DH.

Brannon was originally selected by the Red Sox in the ninth round (279th overall) of the 2022 draft out of Randleman High School (Randleman, N.C.). He received a well-over-slot $712,500 signing bonus to forgo his commitment to the University of North Carolina, but has been hindered by various injuries since entering the professional ranks. In 2023, he was limited to just 17 games due to a low back strain. Last year, he missed the first seven weeks of the season while recovering from arthroscopic surgery on his left knee.

Brannon ended the 2024 campaign with Low-A Salem and then earned All-Star honors in the Arizona Fall League. Finally healthy, he has seemingly carried over that momentum into 2025 and is showing flashes of his potential on both sides of the ball. Equipped with plus-plus raw power, he has posted an average exit velocity of 92.2 mph and a max exit velocity of 119.8 mph so far this season, according to Baseball America’s Jesus Cano.

Brannon, who just turned 21 last month, is not currently regarded among Boston’s top 30 prospects by publications such as Baseball America or MLB Pipeline. SoxProspects.com, on the other hand, has him ranked 47th on its top 60 list.

Assuming he remains with the Red Sox through the trade deadline this summer, it would not be terribly surprising if Brannon were to receive a promotion to Double-A Portland before the end of the season. He could speed up that timeline if he continues to produce the way he has been as of late.

This article first appeared on Blogging the Red Sox and was syndicated with permission.

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