The San Diego Padres drafted catcher Blake Hunt as their Competitive Balance pick after the second round of the 2017 draft and signed him for $1.6 million. He had progressed to High-A Fort Wayne when he was traded to the Tampa Bay Rays as part of the Blake Snell deal in 2020. He was with the Rays organization until he was traded to Seattle in November of 2023. In May of 2024, the Mariners traded him to the Baltimore Orioles.

Hunt was called up by the Orioles in July for one day but was not used. He stayed on the taxi squad for a month but was never promoted again. He was designated for assignment in January of 2025 then traded back to Seattle and optioned back to Triple-A Tacoma. For the 2025 season, Hunt hit .272/.368/.452 with eight home runs and 35 RBI with 15 doubles and two triples. During the season he was again designated for assignment, cleared waivers and stayed with Tacoma.

Hunt opted for free agency at the end of the 2025 season and was re-signed by the Padres to a minor league contract on Dec. 16. On March 2, in the Padres major league camp, Hunt suffered an oblique injury and was shut down. He started the season on the injured list and wasn’t sent out for a rehab assignment until May; he played in seven games with the ACL Padres for his rehab.

On June 3, Hunt made his Triple-A debut with the El Paso Chihuahuas and has played in eight games as the primary catcher for El Paso. In 26 at-bats, he had a 269/.375/.462 line with two home runs.

Spring expectations

At the start of spring camp, manager Craig Stammen stated that Hunt was the catcher they were looking toward as their number three catcher, available in El Paso as needed. His early spring injury pushed Rodolfo Durán into that position and the fractured toe to Luis Campusano gave that 11-year minor league veteran a chance to prove his worth. He has since contributed significantly to the Padres.

As a prospect with Seattle in 2024, Hunt was reported to have plus-power as well as a sub-two-second pop time behind the plate. At 6-foot-4 and 215 pounds, he will easily be the biggest of all Padres catchers.

Blake Hunt gets his chance

Hunt, 27, is going to make his MLB debut after front-line catcher Freddy Fermin was placed on the seven-day concussion IL after being hit in the head with a bounced warm-up pitch from Yuki Matsui. Fermin has taken several direct hits to his facemask so far this season while catching. He had one previous concussion scare earlier this year but was only given a couple of games off.

The latest hit for Fermin required his removal from the game and further assessment indicated an IL stint was needed. Durán replaced Fermin on Saturday after his injury, and he started Sunday against the Baltimore Orioles in the final game of the series. Durán will start the first game of the series against the St. Louis Cardinals, but Hunt will most likely make his debut on Tuesday when Michael King has his next start.

With the debut of Blake Hunt, the Padres will have played host to the third member of their minor leagues making their MLB debut. Outfielder Jase Bowen, Rodolfo Durán and Hunt have all had minor league success without having an opportunity to play in the majors until injuries to Padres regulars have given them a big opportunity.

Hunt joins them and outfielder Samad Taylor as well as utility man Nick Solak in debuting with the Padres after the release of Nick Castellanos and injuries to multiple Padres regulars.

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