When the weather cools in Detroit, the margins of a game get loud. Tigers catcher Dillon Dingler lived in those margins all year: quietly turning tough pitches into strikes, running games with a veteran’s calm, and stabbing would-be chaos into routine outs. If the casual fan missed how often the Tigers leaned on their young backstop to steady innings (and steal a few), opposing dugouts didn’t. Dingler’s presence changed how lineups attacked Detroit’s staff, which is the truest compliment you can pay a catcher.
That’s why this Gold Glove nod lands with more weight than a line on a résumé. It’s validation for a first full season that blended technique with toughness, and it’s a spotlight on a profile that still flies under most radars. The numbers caught up to the eye test, and the eye test matched the output: this is a winning catcher’s toolkit.
Dillon Dingler’s Gold Glove nod puts MLB on notice about Detroit’s backstop
Start with the production. Dingler, 27, debuted late in 2024 and wrested the starting job from Jake Rogers this season on merit — offense and defense both clearing the bar. Across 126 games, he posted a .752 OPS (108 OPS+) in 469 plate appearances. The Tigers asked for starter volume; he answered with starter results.
Then zoom into the craft. By the publicly available metrics, Dingler finished at +6 Defensive Runs Saved and a robust +12 in Fielding Run Value, indicators that his framing, throwing, and blocking weren’t just competent, they were additive. You don’t need fireworks when your glove keeps the inning on script.
Congratulations to Dillon Dingler on being named a #RawlingsGoldGloveAwards finalist! 👏 pic.twitter.com/XNiCtU0K82
— Detroit Tigers (@tigers) October 15, 2025
And this isn’t a one-off for the organization. Detroit has now placed a catcher among the league’s final three in back-to-back seasons (Jake Rogers was a finalist in 2024), which speaks to a pipeline and a standard. This year, Dingler stands alongside Alejandro Kirk (Blue Jays) and Carlos Narváez (Red Sox) in the American League finalist group — a pair of strong defenders who underscore just how crowded the top tier has become. That Dingler belongs in that company already, after seizing the job and then holding up in the postseason.
If “underrated” means the public hasn’t quite matched the value the clubhouse feels, this nomination pushes the conversation where it belongs. Dingler’s bat was solid, his defense was a difference-maker, and his October composure was real.
Whether the hardware arrives or not, the label fits: he’s one of the most underrated catchers in the majors right now — because the best parts of his game are the ones that win in silence. Detroit can build around that. Opponents have to game-plan for it. And if 2025 was just the introduction, the sequel is where the rest of the league learns his name the hard way.
