This story was excerpted from Jason Beck’s Tigers Beat newsletter. To read the full newsletter, click here. And subscribe to get it regularly in your inbox.
Josue Briceño’s three-homer, five-RBI game for High-A West Michigan on May 29 at Dayton will go down as one of the best single-game performances of the season in the Minor Leagues.
“He should've had four that day; he hit a double off the wall,” teammate and fellow Tigers prospect Kevin McGonigle said with a smile.
“And you can't forget the steal of home,” Whitecaps manager Tony Cappuccilli pointed out, “because he'll never let me live that down. That game was incredible.”
Yes, Briceño swiped home plate on a double steal in that game.
“The most impressive was the steal of home,” he said. “I think I had maybe five stolen bases in my career.”
And yet, what impressed many teammates and coaches even more about the Tigers’ No. 4 prospect was how he came back his next game.
“The ninth-inning grand slam,” Cappuccilli said. “I mean, we were dead.”
The Whitecaps were down a run with two outs and nobody on when Archer Brookman worked out of an 0-2 count to draw a walk. Then Seth Stephenson reached on an error. Then McGonigle walked on four pitches to bring up Briceño.
“That was unbelievable,” McGonigle said. “We knew right when he had the bat in his hands, something good was going to happen. And then he did exactly what everyone thought he was going to do.”
Said Cappuccilli: “Josue went up and [hitting coach] Matt Malott was telling him to get a fastball. To his credit, he got a fastball and was able to drive it out of the yard. That was special. That was really incredible watching him.”
Briceño: “It felt great. This moment, this is the goal at this time, so it's amazing.”
Briceño finished that week 6-for-16 with five homers, 12 RBIs and eight runs scored, including the steal of home. He came back to West Michigan to open the next series and put up four more hits, including a tape-measure home run off the top of the new club area in right field at LMCU Ballpark.
The Whitecaps earned a first-half Midwest League Eastern Division title, clinching their first postseason berth since 2018, and they have a star-studded lineup that includes three MLB Pipeline Top 100 prospects. Yet what Briceño has done this season stands out from the pack as the most impressive first half in the Tigers’ system.
Briceño entered Tuesday leading the Midwest League with 14 home runs, a .615 slugging percentage and a 1.017 OPS; his 45 RBIs stood second. Add in nine doubles and a triple, and more than half of his 43 hits have gone for extra bases. And yet, he entered Tuesday with nearly as many walks (33) as strikeouts (34), a testament to the work he has put in with Malott on staying relaxed at the plate and concentrating on his strike zone.
“I think he's become more routine-based, both with his pregame routine and his postgame recovery routine, just understanding the idea of being a professional and how to prepare to play and how to take in the information that we're giving them and what he needs to use,” Cappuccilli said. “He's our power guy in the middle of the order, and he knows it, and other teams know it. And so I think the work that he's done on his swing in addition to the approach and the plan that he sets, as long as he sticks to it, he's done a great job.”
He’s doing all this while working on two defensive positions, splitting his time between catching and first base (plus designated hitter). He wants to stick as a catcher and has put in the work for it, from setups to pitch framing to his arm. He’s also working on his footwork and anticipation at first base.
“If that time comes where it's one or the other position that he ends up playing, I have no doubt he's going to just jump two feet in and really learn to play that position, whichever one it ends up being,” Cappuccilli said.
The 20-year-old Venezuelan entered the season with high expectations coming off of his batting Triple Crown in the Arizona Fall League. Somehow, he’s exceeding them.
“He's always been hitting,” McGonigle said. “I can tell you from last year, from the time I played with him last year before he got hurt, he could definitely swing it. I don't think anyone is surprised by how he's swinging. …
“All the power behind his swing, whenever he touches the ball, it's going to be hit hard. It's truly awesome to watch.”