Red Sox’ Mickey Gasper never gave up on his MLB dream

Red Sox’ Mickey Gasper never gave up on his MLB dream

Boston Red Sox

“It still feels surreal to me,” said his mother, Livia Tumin-Gasper. “I can’t believe it.”

Mickey Gasper is hitting .333 for the Red Sox this season. Phil Long/AP Photo

By Trevor Hass

May 31, 2026 | 5:21 PM

6 minutes to read

As he evaluated talent at a Showcase League tryout in the early 2010s, coach Nick Jaskolka marveled at the poise and pop of a promising young player named Mickey Gasper.

Jaskolka glanced at his notes, curious to learn more, and was stunned to learn that Gasper was 14 years old. After dominating from the left side of the plate, Gasper told Jaskolka he could hit from the right side, too, and quickly proved it. 

He then caught pitchers several years older and articulated his analysis with a level of maturity and sophistication beyond his years. Attending a tryout at that age was uncommon, and making such a splash among a loaded field was unheard of. 

When a line drive smoked Gasper as he strolled by, he shrugged it off like it was nothing. 

“Everybody’s just like, ‘Who is this kid?’” Jaskolka recalled. “Everybody wanted him on their team. Immediately, he was on everyone’s radar.”

Gasper’s talent has been undeniable since his youth days, but his circuitous journey has taken more time to reach its peak than many others with his level of talent and versatility. He was minimally recruited out of Merrimack, N.H., then spent six years in the Minors before making his Major League debut with the Red Sox in August 2024.

He went hitless in 18 at-bats that year, hit .158 last year with the Twins, and started the 2026 season with the Triple-A Worcester Red Sox. But this month, Gasper, 30, has hit his stride and provided a major boost for an offense that desperately needs it. 

While Gasper primarily catches, he can also play first base, outfield, and just about anywhere else as needed. The 5-foot-9-inch Gasper, who has upped his average to .333, usually hits from the left side, but is also capable of hitting righty. 

Red Sox interim manager Chad Tracy, who worked with Gasper in Worcester, has placed his faith in the journeyman and given him a platform to flourish.

“Really good swing decisions,” Tracy said. “Knows the zone, swings at strikes, and hits them on the barrel. That’s what he does.”

Mickey Gasper learned the art of switch hitting with coach Bob Caswell. – Courtesy The Gasper Family

That’s what he’s done for as long as anyone who knows him has watched him play. Gasper’s parents, Livia Tumin-Gasper and Louis Gasper, say their son had a baseball in his hand at two months old.

Tumin-Gasper brought her baby boy in his stroller to watch Louis compete in men’s league games, then he went home and watched the Yankees with his father as well. Gasper quickly made hitting off a tee look easy and loved playing for his father in local youth leagues in the years to follow.

At age 8, Gasper started switch hitting and fine-tuning his mechanics with the late, great Bob Caswell, a former coach at Southern New Hampshire University. Gasper captured four consecutive Cal Ripken championships and began to dream big starting in sixth grade.

“He looked at us very seriously and said that he was going to go to a Division 1 school and play baseball,” Tumin-Gasper said. “He did.”

But first, Gasper engineered a legendary career for Merrimack High, with Jaskolka leading the way his junior and senior seasons.

Jaskolka said he knew right away that Gasper had a future career in baseball. As a first-year head coach, he often found himself turning to Gasper to brainstorm as “another coach” on the field.

“He was as complete a high school baseball player as I’ve ever been around,” Jaskolka said. “The tools were obvious, but the makeup separated him. Mickey wasn’t just talented. He knew how to play the game. The baseball IQ was so high it blew my mind, where I was learning from him.”

Mickey Gasper is pictured with two childhood friends at Fenway Park. – Courtesy The Gasper Family

Jaskolka remembers a playoff game his senior year where he considered giving Gasper a take sign on a 3-0 count with his team down 1, but decided against it. Gasper could have easily swung at a pitch out of the zone, yet he elected to take the walk because the team needed a baserunner to ignite a rally.

In Jaskolka’s 20 years coaching high school baseball, Gasper is the only catcher he’s exclusively let call the game. Catching became his specialty, but Jaskolka said he would have been a plus defender anywhere on the field and the best shortstop in the state. He used to try to plead with him to pitch a few innings before Jaskolka reminded him he was too valuable behind the plate.

While everyone knew Gasper was the best player in the area, he understood he wasn’t a finished product and never carried himself with a sense of entitlement.

“There’s just no ego,” Jaskolka said. “He was really polished already. When I suggested a mechanic switch, he’d be like, ‘Yeah, yeah, yeah. Of course. I’ll try that.’ He attacked development like he had something to prove.”

Mickey Gasper celebrates with his sister, Veronica, after getting called up to the Majors in 2024. – Courtesy The Gasper Family

Gasper briefly garnered interest from Boston College, but nothing materialized, and he ended up starring at Bryant University. He credited Bryant head coach Steve Owens for helping him develop professional habits. 

“I had a big chip on my shoulder,” Gasper told Boston.com. “I wanted to prove that I belonged at that level.”

He hit .392 as a sophomore, was the Northeast Conference Player of the Year as a junior, then spent the summer with the Brewster Whitecaps in the Cape Cod Baseball League in 2017. Gasper wrapped up his college career in 2018 with a Division 1 program-best .469 career on-base percentage. 

When the MLB Amateur Draft came around, Gasper heard from his agent that the St. Louis Cardinals were interested in taking him in the 12th round. They went elsewhere instead, and Gasper waited until the 27th round (817th overall) before the Yankees called. 

He then meandered around the Minors, suiting up for nine teams in six years — down to Florida, up to New Jersey, over to Pennsylvania, among other stops, on his own personal baseball carousel. Gasper played sparingly initially, then earned more time before an injury set him back going into 2020.

“I just had to really battle my way through those next couple years in Double-A,” Gasper said. “Something just clicked when I got to the Red Sox organization. They helped me reach the ultimate dream of getting a chance in the Major Leagues.” 

At the plate: #RedSox Mickey Gasper when leading off an inning this season: .615 AVG/.643 OBP/.692 SLG with 1 double, a walk and 2 strikeouts.

— Red Sox Nation Stats (@RSNStats) May 31, 2026

Gasper joined the Worcester Red Sox in 2024 and hit .367, then finally made the MLB debut he had envisioned for decades. Eighteen at-bats over 13 games followed and that elusive first hit still never came. It was back to Triple-A in St. Paul, Minnesota, back to the Twins, back to Worcester, then eventually back to Boston.

“It’s a special feeling,” Gasper said. “It’s truly a blessing, and I’m very thankful every day to wear the Red Sox uniform.”

His parents said there was never a day where Gasper came to them and told them he was giving up on his dream. Whenever people asked them about a plan B, they proudly told him that he didn’t have one. 

Tumin-Gasper said her son has a drive and commitment to the game that she wishes she had in life. She’s amazed by the resilience he’s shown as he’s navigated the emotional and physical ups and downs. 

“That’s a big dream for any kid,” Louis Gasper said. “He just kept working at it. He hit just about every chance he could get. God, I didn’t really think he would do it until he did it.”

When Gasper struggled to grow a mustache as a kid, after watching his father and grandfather proudly don facial hair, he maintained faith that his day would come. As he traversed from team to team in the Minors, he never lost sight of his passion and purpose and continued to trust his work.

Now, with a full mustache and a nourished soul, Gasper is living out that childhood dream. His parents are still in awe, but they know their son has always been wired differently. If anyone could endure that many twists and turns and come out unscathed, it was him.

“It still feels surreal to me,” Tumin-Gasper said. “I can’t believe it. I say it to my husband all the time. ‘That’s your name on the back of his jersey. That’s our kid.’”

Trevor Hass is a sports producer for Boston.com, where he writes and edits stories about Boston’s professional teams, among other tasks.

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