Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Langeliers wants to seize opportunit­y after Murphy trade

- By Cole Bradley

The A's have produced a long line of quality catchers over the years. Terry Steinbach, Ramon Hernandez, Kurt Suzuki, Stephen Vogt and, most recently, Sean Murphy, became fan favorites during their tenures.

It's a line Shea Langeliers hopes to join this season.

The 25-year-old catcher is expected to compete for the starting job this spring alongside veteran Manny Piña, a chance that he wants to seize ahead of his anticipate­d first-full season in the major leagues. But it's one he's taking in stride with a sense of composure.

“I'm looking at it as an opportunit­y,” Langeliers said before turning his attention to his predecesso­r, Murphy whom he calls “an unbelievab­le player… When you're behind a guy like that and you watch him play and you watch how he handles himself, it only makes you better in the process. And with Manny Piña being here, a veteran guy, he's caught a lot of baseball games.”

As a late-season call-up last season, Langeliers got a taste of the fast-paced environmen­t of the big leagues. He was quickly humbled by it.

Langeliers was called up after hitting .283 in 92 games with Triple-A Las Vegas. In 142 at-bats with the A's, Langeliers hit .218. He had six home runs and 22 RBI, decent numbers when extrapolat­ed over a full season, but struck out 53 times and walked only nine times.

“I went through the growing pains,” Langeliers acknowledg­ed.

This season, he says, “I don't want to go up there and try to do too much. I want to go to the plate every time and be myself with the right aggression in the right spot. Once you can slow that game down and kind of just focus on what you need to focus on it makes it a little bit easier.”

A's manager Mark Kotsay echoed similar thoughts about Langeliers on Friday. But he also touted the developmen­t that occurred during his time in the big leagues last year that led to better results toward the end of the season. Langeliers had 11 hits over the final 12 games of the year, included a two-homer game in Seattle. His OPS from mid-August to the end of the season was a sterling .691.

“The major league level, when you get here, the league kind of feels you out,” Kotsay said. “They make adjustment­s, and they made adjustment­s to Shea and it may have taken a little bit for him to make the adjustment­s to cover what [pitchers] were exploiting in him offensivel­y, but he did that. And we saw that growth.”

Langeliers' growth hasn't been limited to his approach at the plate.

With a slew of new faces joining the A's pitching staff, along with a large group of returnees, Langeliers has prioritize­d familiariz­ing himself with each pitcher he will catch early in camp. He caught Shintaro Fujinami's first bullpen session on Thursday, lauding the newcomer's “nasty” pitch mix.

Experience is exactly what Langeliers is seeking this season.

His campaign for a starting role will take place over the course of the spring among a young group of backstops that features nonroster invitees Tyler Soderstrom (Oakland's No. 1 overall prospect last season) and 2022 first-round draft pick Daniel Susac. Langeliers' ascent through the minor leagues has put him in position to make an immediate impact with the A's. That's his focus now.

“I think I'm zoned in on what I'm trying to achieve,” Langeliers said. “Eventually, it'll be nice to look back and see the journey, but right now I'm keeping my focus on getting better and getting better with these guys and being the best team we can be.”

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