It may take him a while to take over the identity recognition in the general culture from that other “Jason Castro” fall-out musician from American Idol, but our guy should be able to do just fine building an early good name for himself in the big leagues as a first class catcher.
Born June 18, 1987 in Castro Valley, California, near San Francisco, the 6’3″ , 210 pound 23-year old jewel in his club’s minor league prospect crown has joined the Astros playing roster.
He’s only played the three-game San Francisco Giants series at home at this writing, but he has impressed on all levels for a rookie. His first ten at bats have produced three base hits, including his first major league homer; he bagged his first two gunner kills on attempted steals of second; he received “props” from the great Roy Oswalt for calling a near flawless game in their first work together as an Astros battery; he showed a field presence in responding to the media that simply oozes with intelligence and emotional maturity; and he paraded a physical athleticism is his ordinary movements that all add up as further evidence that we are looking at a real ballplayer out there on the field – one who can catch, throw, and hit the ball with any other of his position as one of the sweetest lefty swingers I’ve seen in a very long time.
We concede the fact that nothing quick is rarely the whole picture on the long trail of one man’s playing career – and that time holds the answers on the final judgment of Jason Castro as a major league catcher, What we can see now, however, is that he seems to have the mental and physical tools for getting there and playing well for a very long time.
The Giants series was especially enjoyable on TV due to the presence of Castro’s parents in the stands at Minute Maid Park for each of his first three games. The Stanford graduate and his Bay Area family got to enjoy breaking into the big time in a series played against the club they all had followed throughout Jason’s childhood years.
There was no doubt about the current placement of the Castro family allegiance. It’s now with the Houston Astros, of course. When Jason Castro hit his first major league home run in Game Two, both parents lept to their feet to cheer uproariously. By the time Castro rounded third, heading for home, his mom had gone through laughter, tears, smiles, and shouts – and she was now busily preparing to snap a photo of her kiddo as he touched home plate in the middle of his Astros teammate reception committee.
Only a mother knows how to give full expression to the word “love” for her own child – no matter how old that kid may be.
Props also need to extend to Astros General Manager Ed Wade and his new scouting crew on this one too. Their first major draft pick, Jason Castro, looks like a winner at this point, even if any evaluation of him this early appears as meaningful as polishing the apple that already shines. The signs are good that this one will keep on shining.
Intelligence and ability are a great results combination when they work together and not against each other – and Jason Castro has both working in the right direction from the git-go because of his emotional humility and a performance presence that belies his lack of actual big experience.
Now we just have to watch how experience serves him – and how he adjusts to the adjustments that big league pitchers, especially, will make to him over these first couple of years.
My guess is that Castro has the ability to put himself in contention for “Rookie of the Year” honors, but he may have started too late in 2010 to have much chance to do much other than use up his rookie status in a way that makes him ineligible for the honor in 2011.
That’s OK. There are plenty of other honors waiting down the road that this young man is capable of earning on his own over time.
As a Houston Astros fan, I’m just happy that Jason Castro is our heir apparent catcher of the future and that, as of the just concluded Giants series, the future is now.
Go get some more of these guys, Ed Wade!
Tags: Baseball, Houston Astros, Jason Castro

June 26, 2010 at 3:11 pm |
No disrespect to the Colt 45/Astro catchers of old, but we have never had a “COMPLETE CATCHER” in the ORGANIZATION. Good Luck Jason.
June 27, 2010 at 12:13 am |
Bill, my son and I were at Castro’s first game against the Giants and we saw his first major league hit. But what really impressed us both was the game he (presumably) called for Roy Oswalt, and the two attempted base-stealers he gunned down. His release was as quick as any I’ve seen and his throws were very strong and very accurate. He looks good swinging the bat. He couldn’t pick a better time to arrive. At this time he looks like the best catching prospect I’ve seen in Houston franchise history, and I’ve been watching them all since Hal Smith caught Bobby Shantz’s first pitch and doubled off Don Cardwell in the first inning of the first game on April 10, 1962.
Mark
June 27, 2010 at 12:16 am |
Correction with my apology: Smith’s double off Cardwell came as the first batter in the second inning.
Mark