Breaking: Dodgers Trade Stunted Catching Prospect Diego Cartaya to Twins for Hard-Throwing DSL Arm

On Thursday the Dodgers and Twins agreed to a small trade involving former Top 100 Prospect, Diego Cartaya, a 23-year-old Venezuelan catcher who has struggled to develop as he’s been exposed to upper-level pitching.

The Dodgers designated him for assignment earlier this week. In exchange, the Dodgers received hulking 20-year-old DSL righty, Jose Vasquez, a hard-throwing prospect who has spent the last two seasons in the DSL.

Cartaya was a big bonus amateur player ($2.5 million) whose career had a very promising first four seasons. He slashed .254/.389/.503 in 2022, at mostly High-A, when he was still just 20 years old.

He was striking out at an elevated rate (26.7%) at the time, but he was also getting to impressive power and playing a premium position.

His big frame and plus raw arm strength were the foundation of a likely defensive fit at catcher, and at the time it felt fine that Cartaya (who had missed all of 2020 because of the COVID shutdown, and most of 2021 due to injury) was a little behind as a receiver and ball-blocker.

In the two seasons since then, though, Cartaya has either plateaued or regressed in basically every facet of the game. His hands remain below average, and this shows in the way he tries to frame borderline pitches and in how he tries to pick balls in the dirt.

Cartaya is capable of hurling darts right to second base with plus pop times, but he often either takes too long to get rid of the baseball, or airmails throws into center field. He has a good arm, yet he’s allowed stolen bases at an 80% success rate in his minor league career and 84% in 2024.

At a mix of Double- and Triple-A, Cartaya hit .189/.278/.379 in 2023 — his first year on the Dodgers 40-man roster — and .221/.323/.363 in 2024. His measurable power has dipped, with his hard hit rate dropping from 41% in 2022 to 33% last year. It’s prudent to give young catchers a long runway to develop as hitters because their bodies take a beating playing defense, and they might be physically compromised for large chunks of a season, such that it impacts their overall offensive output.

But Cartaya has now had two years with the look of a fringe prospect, and so at this point it’s fair to consider him exactly that. He’s still a big-framed young guy with that big arm, and the Twins have had success at developing catchers who were once considered long shots to remain behind the plate, so Cartaya still carries some prospect value as a potential late-bloomer.

While Cartaya’s development stagnated and his options nearly ran dry, Dalton Rushing emerged as a potential everyday catcher in the Dodgers system. Hunter Feduccia (whom I have a backup catcher grade on) is a solid third option on the 40-man right now, behind starter Will Smith and backup Austin Barnes, while Rushing further develops in the minors.

There was probably still time for the Dodgers to attempt to develop Cartaya if they really wanted to, but as a contending team they’ll likely have other, more pressing needs for that 40-man roster spot, and they got an actual prospect in return.

Cartaya is now on Minnesota’s 40-man in what will be his final option year. He is very unlikely to make the Opening Day roster, barring injuries to the catchers in front of him, and he’s likely to be the Twins’ fourth catcher on the depth chart when camp breaks, behind Ryan Jeffers, Christian Vázquez, and another former Dodgers minor leaguer, Jair Camargo. Industry inventory at catcher is always low, and depth at that position is coveted on the margins of every roster. If the Twins develop Cartaya enough that he can be their backup next year when Vázquez’s contract ends, then they can feel okay about having given up an actual prospect for him.

That actual prospect is Jose Vasquez, who signed with Minnesota at the tail end of the 2022 signing period (December 13) for $120,000, and he spent both 2023 and 2024 in the DSL.

After walking more than a batter per inning in his debut season, Vasquez had a much better second campaign, working 2-to-4 innings at a time, as both a starter and reliever, and amassing 30 2/3 innings, 45 strikeouts, and a much more tenable 15 walks.

Despite his strike-throwing improvement, Vasquez is still most likely going to be a reliever.

He’s a physical, 220ish-pound 20-year-old who has had trouble harnessing his 94-97 mph fastball, which sometimes has very heavy late sink. His 84-88 mph slider is curt and cuttery at times, but it flashes bat-missing two-plane shape and above-average length.

Vasquez’s realistic ceiling is better than a generic middle reliever, but he’s maybe a half decade away from the bigs. He’ll probably begin his Dodgers career in Extended Spring Training.

Related Posts

🚨BREAKING: White Sox receive much-needed good news just before spring training opens — and it quietly changes the mood around the team. After weeks of uncertainty, this development gives Chicago a boost at exactly the right time, leaving fans wondering how big the ripple effect could be 👇👇👇

Encouraging Signs Emerge as Prelander Berroa Begins Throwing Ahead of White Sox Spring Training Even before pitchers and catchers officially report to spring training, the Chicago White…

🚨 YANKEES DROP A BOMBSHELL: New York announce 2026 Spring Training non-roster list featuring elite prospects ready to shake up the organization! Fans are buzzing as the Bronx announces a wave of exciting young talent in the mix — and some could be surprise contributors sooner than anyone expected..ll 👇👇👇

The email lands late on a quiet Thursday afternoon, that unmistakable New York Yankees logo sitting in your inbox like a familiar heartbeat of the offseason. You…

🚨BREAKING: Freddie Freeman isn’t shying away from Braves heartbreak — and he’s using it to fuel what comes next. Instead of burying the pain, the veteran star is openly embracing it, hinting that the lessons from Atlanta could shape the strongest chapter of his career yet. This mindset is turning heads across the league and changing how fans view his future 👇👇👇

Freddie Freeman Isn’t Shying Away From Braves Heartbreak — He’s Using It to Shape His Future Nearly five years have passed since Freddie Freeman made one of…

🚨BREAKING: Red Sox top prospect named breakout candidate heading into 2026 season! Baseball insiders are buzzing that this young star could explode onto the big-league stage and change the trajectory of Boston’s lineup. Could this be the next fan-favorite phenom who goes from prospect chatter to franchise centerpiece faster than anyone expected? 👇👇👇

Red Sox Top Prospect Marcelo Mayer Poised for Breakout Season as 2026 Campaign Approaches The Boston Red Sox enter the 2026 season with a sense of cautious…

🚨BREAKING: Red Sox–Cubs trade update shows Boston means business! Recent chatter isn’t just smoke — Boston has reportedly escalated talks in a way that’s forcing Chicago to respond. Could this be one of the boldest moves of the offseason, and is the Sox front office quietly reshaping the AL East before anyone notices? 👇👇👇

Red Sox–Cubs Trade Update Shows Boston Means Business If there was any doubt that the Boston Red Sox were finished reshaping their roster this offseason, the latest…

🚨BREAKING: Yankees just landed a pitcher with ace-level upside — and the early whispers are turning heads across the league. Scouts see flashes of something special, front offices are quietly taking notice, and fans are starting to wonder if this move was bigger than it first appeared. The real question is how soon this arm could change everything in the Bronx 👇👇👇

Yankees Landed a New Pitcher With Legitimate Ace Potential The New York Yankees entered the offseason knowing that starting pitching depth would be one of their most…