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SF Giants: The impressive numbers behind Patrick Bailey’s show-stealing defense

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SAN FRANCISCO — All it took to end Tuesday night’s 4-3 win over the Diamondbacks was one flick of the wrist from Patrick Bailey.

In one fluid motion, Bailey received a fastball high and outside from Sean Manaea, shifted his body toward first base and flung a dart from his knees to LaMonte Wade Jr., who slapped a tag on Geraldo Perdomo for the third out of the ninth inning. Clinching the one-run win, it was just the latest defensive highlight from the rookie catcher.

“Obviously Pat can really change the game with his defense, like we saw,” manager Gabe Kapler said afterward. “There’s very few catchers around the game who can do that.”

Literally, Bailey is doing things no other catcher can.

It took him a mere 1.39 seconds to execute that little flick of the wrist, or the fastest any catcher has gotten the ball to first base since Statcast began tracking the metric in 2015, according to MLB.com researcher Sarah Langs. Perdomo was Bailey’s 19th victim on the basepaths, more than any catcher since he was recalled and already the most by a rookie backstop since Jorge Alfaro in 2018.

“LaMonte, the pitch before, we both kind of made eye contact, like yo, this is a good time to pick off,” Bailey said. “It worked out well.”

Even Bailey had never ended a game on a pickoff move. It’s been done by a catcher only 42 times since 1903, according to Baseball-Reference, though you only have to go back to 2022 to find the last time it happened. Keibert Ruiz caught Nick Senzel sleeping to clinch a Nationals win over the Reds on June 5. Like Bailey’s that play was challenged and held up under the scrutiny of video review.

“That was obviously pretty cool,” Bailey said. “It’s weird because with replay you’re not really sure if you got him out or not, so the emotions kind of hit and you have to relax a little bit, like you don’t know if he’s safe or out. Definitely cool to finish a game like that.”

Add Perdomo and his 13 steals this season to a rap sheet that might as well be a list of baseball’s most dangerous base runners. He already has nabbed Fernando Tatis Jr. (17-for-20), Mookie Betts (7-for-9), Whit Merrifield (21-for-29), Starling Marte (24-for-28), Elly De La Cruz (17-for-21) and Jarren Duran (23-for-25).

Bailey leads all catchers with 14 Defensive Runs Saved, despite logging only 449 innings behind the plate, 29th-most in the majors. Without even accounting for his arm, he has stolen more strikes with his framing than any catcher besides Austin Hedges.

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