2026 IBC Padres Prospect News & Notes
Posted: Mon Jan 05, 2026 8:52 am
At 5-foot-10, 195 pounds, Marco Dinges isn’t going to wow anyone physically.
The way he swings the bat? That’s a different story.
“His bat speed is off the charts,” Brewers assistant director of player development Brenton Del Chiaro said. “It’s one of the best—if not the best—in our organization.
“And what that does is it allows him to drive the ball out of the ballpark to all fields.”
The Brewers drafted Dinges in the fourth round in 2024 out of Florida State. The 22-year-old is a righthanded-hitting catcher who appeared in 47 games at the position in 2025, while serving as DH in another 30.
Dinges batted .300/.416/.514 with 13 home runs for Low-A Carolina and High-A Wisconsin. He was one of seven minor league catchers to top a .900 OPS while batting at least 300 times.
hitting an even .300 with 13 home runs, 62 runs batted in while compiling an OPS of .930 in 77 combined games between Class A Carolina and Class High A Wisconsin.
A badly strained hamstring led to him missing a large chunk of time and never being fully right late in the season. That’s a big reason why his stint in the Arizona Fall League was abandoned after two games.
Opposing pitchers learned fast that Dinges does damage at the plate.
Del Chiaro said that Dinges’ bat speed has topped out at 85 mph in training and sits around 75 in games. Those are major league-caliber readings.
Dinges has been letting it rip at the plate for a long time.
“I’ve always swung pretty violently,” he said. “I was pretty undersized when I went to junior college and I’ve always had the same swing—I just didn’t have the strength. Then once the strength got added, the results started showing.
“I never really struck out that much, so I was like, ‘Why not?’ That’s how I felt about it.”
Defensively, Dinges possesses a strong arm and is athletic for a catcher but needs to continue to log game reps with game-calling and pitch-framing as focal points.
https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories ... s-results/
The way he swings the bat? That’s a different story.
“His bat speed is off the charts,” Brewers assistant director of player development Brenton Del Chiaro said. “It’s one of the best—if not the best—in our organization.
“And what that does is it allows him to drive the ball out of the ballpark to all fields.”
The Brewers drafted Dinges in the fourth round in 2024 out of Florida State. The 22-year-old is a righthanded-hitting catcher who appeared in 47 games at the position in 2025, while serving as DH in another 30.
Dinges batted .300/.416/.514 with 13 home runs for Low-A Carolina and High-A Wisconsin. He was one of seven minor league catchers to top a .900 OPS while batting at least 300 times.
hitting an even .300 with 13 home runs, 62 runs batted in while compiling an OPS of .930 in 77 combined games between Class A Carolina and Class High A Wisconsin.
A badly strained hamstring led to him missing a large chunk of time and never being fully right late in the season. That’s a big reason why his stint in the Arizona Fall League was abandoned after two games.
Opposing pitchers learned fast that Dinges does damage at the plate.
Del Chiaro said that Dinges’ bat speed has topped out at 85 mph in training and sits around 75 in games. Those are major league-caliber readings.
Dinges has been letting it rip at the plate for a long time.
“I’ve always swung pretty violently,” he said. “I was pretty undersized when I went to junior college and I’ve always had the same swing—I just didn’t have the strength. Then once the strength got added, the results started showing.
“I never really struck out that much, so I was like, ‘Why not?’ That’s how I felt about it.”
Defensively, Dinges possesses a strong arm and is athletic for a catcher but needs to continue to log game reps with game-calling and pitch-framing as focal points.
https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories ... s-results/