Franchise World Series. Therefore, it was not at all surprising when the Yankees were reported to have made their first move, signing the best catcher available in the market-Brian McCann



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After falling short of the postseason for just the second time since 1995 and the first time since 2008, the New York Yankees are expected to make some big noise in the free agent market this offseason and rebuild their roster in order to return to the play-offs and win their 28th franchise World Series. Therefore, it was not at all surprising when the Yankees were reported to have made their first move, signing the best catcher available in the market—Brian McCann.

McCann, along with A.J. Pierzynski, Jarrod Saltalamacchia and John Buck, is one of the top tier catchers that have been granted free agency this season. McCann spent each of his first nine big league seasons with the Atlanta Braves, who drafted him in the second round of the 2002 amateur draft. McCann made his Major League debut on June 10, 2005 and hit his first career homerun in his very next game. He was the personal catcher of John Smoltz in the 2005 season and finally was named everyday starter for the 2006 season when the Braves traded Johnny Estrada to the Arizona Diamondbacks. Starting from that point, Brian McCann became one of the best catchers in the entire Major League.

McCann hit .333 with 24 homeruns and 93 RBIs in his first full big league season in 2006. He led all catchers in homeruns and was among the three leaders in RBI, with Jorge Posada of the New York Yankees and Victor Martinez of the Cleveland Indians. The Braves catcher was also selected to the 2006 MLB All-Star Game.

McCann was again selected into the annual All-Star Game in each of the following five seasons (2007-2011) and was named All-Star Game Most Valuable Player in 2010 when he drove in all three runs for the National League in a 3-1 victory, which ended the American League’s unbeaten streak at 13. In 2012, McCann was denied his seventh straight All-Star selection as Buster Posey of the San Francisco Giants, Yadier Molina of the St. Louis Cardinals and Carlos Ruiz of the Philadelphia Phillies were the three catchers selected onto the NL team, but he earned it in the following year, replacing his injured teammate Freddie Freeman.



McCann has won a total of five Silver Sluggers and is known as one of the best catchers at the plate. He hit at least 20 homeruns in each of the last six seasons. However, his performance behind the plate is not to good to be mentioned. McCann led National League catchers in stolen bases allowed in three seasons: 2008 (93), 2010 (84) and 2011 (104, also led MLB). He also led major league catchers in errors in 2009, with 12, and had the lowest fielding percentage among them (.988).

Anyway, the Yankees do not really care whether McCann can field or not. All they want to know is that McCann can hit at the plate and will boost their line-up. With the short right field porch at Yankee Stadium, McCann, as a left-handed batter, will certainly benefit from this advantage and will most likely upgrade his numbers in the following years. Even though not yet official, Brian McCann is looking forward to be the Yankee backstop for the next five seasons, reported to have agreed to a five-year, $85 million contract, which includes a vesting option for 2016 that can push the total value over $100 million.

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