C | Bats/Throws: S/R | 5' 9" 170 lbs | Age: 20
MLB Pipeline Rank
PA AB R H HR SB AVG OBP SLG OPS
2025 102 78 15 21 6 1 .269 .431 .551 .982
Career Minors 647 536 88 138 16 13 .257 .374 .433 .807
AVG HR SB OPS
2025 .269 6 1 .982
Career Minors .257 16 13 .807

Standard Minor League Batting Statistics

SeasonTmLGLGPAABRH2B3BHRRBIBBSOSBCSHBPAVGOBPSLGOPS
2023 2 Teams Minors 46 170 141 23 39 11 3 1 14 24 30 3 2 3 .277 .388 .418 .806
2023 DSL Tigers 2 DSL ROK 10 43 33 7 8 2 0 1 4 9 6 2 1 1 .242 .419 .394 .813
2023 DSL Tigers 1 DSL ROK 36 127 108 16 31 9 3 0 10 15 24 1 1 2 .287 .378 .426 .804
2023 2 Teams ROK 46 170 141 23 39 11 3 1 14 24 30 3 2 3 .277 .388 .418 .806
2024 FCL Tigers FCL ROK 43 183 149 23 36 9 1 3 22 28 44 5 2 3 .242 .366 .376 .742
2025 2 Teams Minors 71 294 246 42 63 12 3 12 50 46 66 5 1 0 .256 .371 .476 .847
2025 FCL Tigers FCL ROK 48 192 168 27 42 10 2 6 32 23 42 4 1 0 .250 .339 .440 .779
2025 Fort Myers Mighty Mussels FSL A 23 102 78 15 21 2 1 6 18 23 24 1 0 0 .269 .431 .551 .982

Scouting Report

international

Scouting grades: Hit: 50 | Power: 50 | Run: 50 | Arm: 50 | Field: 55 | Overall: 50

The switch-hitting Jimenez is a prospect to watch. It’s hard to keep your eyes off him.

He shows lots of hitting ability and some power, especially from the right side of the plate. He makes hard contact to all fields and possesses noticeable opposite field power. The teenage catcher projects to an average runner.

Behind the plate, he shows a high baseball IQ and an understanding of how to call a game. His blocking, framing and receiving skills continue to improve, and he has outstanding footwork. He projects to have an average arm, but he makes up for it in overall athleticism. His makeup has been described as off the charts.

Jimenez trains with Carlos Mota. The Tigers have shown interest in him.


2025

Scouting grades: Hit: 40 | Power: 45 | Run: 40 | Arm: 50 | Field: 50 | Overall: 40

The Tigers signed the switch-hitting Jimenez out of Venezuela for a $1.25 million bonus as the headliner of their 2023 international class. He made steady if quiet progress since then as a catcher, culminating in his stateside debut last summer in the Florida Complex League. He had a hot start in the FCL before fading down the stretch, then was putting up moderately improved numbers in a return engagement back at the complex when he was sent to the Twins in the Chris Paddack trade.

Jimenez isn’t a big body behind the plate at 5-foot-9 and 170 pounds, and his presence at the plate fits accordingly. He has a good eye for the strike zone, though he can be prone to passiveness as a hitter at times, and makes contact with a quick swing and short levers. Using a slightly open stance, there is some solid raw bat speed and strength for him to tap into in the future. Though he’s had more at-bats hitting left-handed, he’s been more effective in limited at-bats from the right side off southpaws. Defensively, he commands the game and handles pitchers well, and he answered the challenge of the running game in the FCL well by throwing out 33 percent of potential base stealers in his two summers combined.

While the Tigers were dealing from an area of depth behind the plate, the Twins have had some difficulty developing backstops in recent years. Jimenez doesn’t offer a huge ceiling, but he does give Minnesota someone with a fairly decent floor as a potential big league backup, even though he’s still far away from reaching that role.


2024

Scouting grades: Hit: 45 | Power: 45 | Run: 45 | Arm: 45 | Field: 50 | Overall: 40

The Tigers didn’t have a big-name signing in the 2023 international market, but they delved into a deep crop of Venezuelan catchers and signed the switch-hitting Jimenez -- the No. 32 prospect on the international market according to MLB Pipeline -- for a $1.25 million bonus. The reviews from his early work in the Dominican Summer League suggested a sound investment, from a good eye at the plate to a good arm behind it. 

Jimenez is an athletic presence behind the plate and a respectable hitter at the plate, with a smooth, compact swing, good zone judgment and promising extra-base power. He was a bit passive at the plate early last season but settled into a good all-fields approach, though his ground-ball rate was a bit high. He’s a mobile catcher who can smother balls in the dirt. He has a quick release on throws to second.

The Tigers are thin on catching prospects below Dillon Dingler in their system, despite some teases over the last few years, so there’s an opportunity for Jimenez if he can continue to mature. He’s a long-term play, but his first taste of Minor League ball in the States should give a better idea of how far he has to go.


2023

Scouting grades: Hit: 50 | Power: 50 | Run: 50 | Arm: 50 | Field: 55 | Overall: 40

Venezuela has a strong reputation for producing Major League catchers, including Victor Martinez, Salvador Perez and most recently Francisco Alvarez. All five backstops ranked among MLB Pipeline’s Top 50 international prospects in the 2023 class hailed from that country, including No. 32 Jimenez. The 5-foot-10 catcher was Detroit’s most notable Jan. 15 addition this year, signing for $1.25 million. He has begun his career with a pair of Tigers affiliates in the Dominican Summer League.

The switch-hitter may be on the smaller side for a backup, but what he lacks in size, he makes up for in athleticism. That translates solidly to the box, where he has done a solid early job of putting bat on ball with a compact swing from both sides. His early power is playing better from the left side, but that could even out with more reps against southpaws in the pros.

An average runner, Jimenez draws his best reviews for his work behind the plate. He exhibits impressive footwork that helps him move and keeps balls in front of him, and he receives the ball well at an early age. His overall arm strength is just average, but he makes up for it with his ability to jump out of the crouch quickly on steal attempts. There might not be a plus tool here just yet for the 17-year-old, but it’s a well-balanced foundation on which to build his budding career.


Transactions

Team Date Transaction
07/29/2025 C Enrique Jimenez assigned to Fort Myers Mighty Mussels from FCL Twins.
07/29/2025 Fort Myers Mighty Mussels activated C Enrique Jimenez.
07/29/2025 Fort Myers Mighty Mussels activated C Enrique Jimenez.
07/28/2025 Minnesota Twins traded RHP Chris Paddack and RHP Randy Dobnak to Detroit Tigers for C Enrique Jimenez.
07/28/2025 C Enrique Jimenez assigned to FCL Twins.
07/28/2025 C Enrique Jimenez roster status changed by FCL Twins.
03/11/2025 C Enrique Jimenez assigned to Detroit Tigers.
03/06/2025 activated C Enrique Jimenez.
05/03/2024 C Enrique Jimenez assigned to FCL Tigers from DSL Tigers 1.
05/03/2024 FCL Tigers activated C Enrique Jimenez.
03/08/2024 C Enrique Jimenez assigned to Detroit Tigers.
06/23/2023 C Enrique Jimenez assigned to DSL Tigers 1 from DSL Tigers 2.
06/04/2023 C Enrique Jimenez assigned to DSL Tigers 2 from DSL Tigers 1.
01/31/2023 C Enrique Jimenez assigned to DSL Tigers 1.
01/15/2023 Detroit Tigers signed free agent C Enrique Jimenez to a minor league contract.