Newcomer Mark Contreras hits Red Sox’ first home run of 2024

A newcomer hit the first home run of the spring for the Red Sox in their spring training opener against Northeastern at JetBlue Park on Friday afternoon.

Mark Contreras, who is in camp as a non-roster invitee, belted a go-ahead three-run homer in the third inning of the Sox’ 7-2 victory over the Huskies.

After grounding out to end to the bottom of the first, Contreras — Boston’s three-hole hitter and starting center fielder — stepped back up to the plate with two outs and runners on the corners in the latter half of the third. The left-handed hitter drilled a first-pitch strike from Northeastern reliever Joseph Hauser into the visitor’s bullpen in right field to score both David Hamilton and Nick Yorke.

By crossing home plate himself, Contreras gave the Red Sox their first lead of the day at 4-1. The 29-year-old remained in the game through the fourth inning before being replaced in center field by Allan Castro.

Friday represented a strong first impression for Contreras, who was brought in on a minor-league contract in November after spending the first six years of his professional career in the Twins organization.

“He’s a good player,” Red Sox manager Alex Cora said of Contreras when speaking with reporters (including the Boston Herald’s Mac Cerullo). “We recognized him early in the offseason. Good athlete, good baserunner, we just have to make sure he swings at the right ones.”

Contreras, who hails from California, was originally selected by the Twins in the ninth round of the 2017 amateur draft out of UC Riverside. The Moreno Valley native signed with Minnesota for a mere $10,000 that June, but established himself in the pro ranks by taking home a Rawlings MiLB Gold Glove Award in 2019 and earning MiLB.com organizational All-Star honors in 2021.

After getting off to a solid start at Triple-A St. Paul in 2022, Contreras was called up by the Twins for the first time that May. He debuted against the Astros and appeared in a total of 28 games, going 7-for-58 (.121) with one double, three home runs, six RBIs, nine runs scored, one stolen base, one walk, and 21 strikeouts.

Contreras lost his spot on Minnesota’s 40-man roster that December after fellow outfielder Joey Gallo was signed to a one-year deal. He wound up clearing waivers and spending the first four-plus months of the 2023 campaign with St. Paul, where he batted .274/.352/.418 to go along with 17 doubles, one triple, 10 home runs, 54 RBIs, 52 runs scored, 23 stolen bases, 36 walks, and 99 strikeouts over 90 games (381 plate appearances), before being released by the Twins last August.

Since he has prior major- and minor-league experience at all three outfield positions, Contreras figures to provide the Red Sox with much-needed versatile depth at Triple-A Worcester to begin the 2024 season. The 6-foot, 195-pound speedster also has minor-league options remaining, which could play in his favor if the need arises for outfield help later in the year.

(Picture of Mark Contreras: Maddie Malhotra/Boston Red Sox/Getty Images)

Red Sox sign former Twins outfielder Mark Contreras to minor-league deal

The Red Sox have signed free agent outfielder Mark Contreras to a minor-league contract, according to Baseball America’s transactions tracker. It is unclear if the deal comes with an invite to major-league spring training.

Contreras, who turns 29 in January, spent the better part of the last seven seasons in the Twins organization after originally being selected by the club in the ninth round of the 2017 amateur draft out of UC Riverside. The Moreno Valley, Calif. native broke in at the big-league level last May and appeared in 28 games for Minnesota, going 7-for-58 (.121) with one double, three home runs, six RBIs, nine runs scored, one stolen base, one walk, and 21 strikeouts.

In December, Contreras lost his spot on the Twins’ 40-man roster when fellow outfielder Joey Gallo was signed to a one-year deal. He then cleared waivers and remained in the organization through the winter, ultimately breaking camp this past spring with Minnesota’s Triple-A affiliate in St. Paul. With the Saints this season, the left-handed hitter batted .274/.352/.418 to go along with 17 doubles, one triple, 10 home runs, 54 RBIs, 52 runs scored, 23 stolen bases, 36 walks, and 99 strikeouts over 90 games (381 plate appearances) before being released in early August.

For his career at the Triple-A level dating back to 2021, Contreras is a lifetime .252/.334/.442 hitter with 64 doubles, four triples, 43 homers, 176 runs driven in, 178 runs scored, 58 stolen bases, 107 walks, and 341 strikeouts in 287 total games (1,198 plate appearances). On the other side of the ball, the 6-foot, 195-pounder has past experience at all three outfield spots in both the major- and minor-leagues. He recorded three of his four outfield assists from center while with St. Paul this year.

To that end, Contreras figures to provide the Red Sox with versatile, experienced outfield depth at Triple-A Worcester next season. As things stand now, he slots in behind the likes of Wilyer Abreu, Jarren Duran, Ceddanne Rafaela, Rob Refsnyder, Alex Verdugo, and Masataka Yoshida, all of whom are on Boston’s 40-man roster.

(Picture of Mark Contreras: David Berding/Getty Images)