Brandon Patrick McCarthy (born July 7, 1983) is an American former professional baseball pitcher and front office executive.[1][2]
Drafted by the Chicago White Sox in the 17th round of the 2002 Major League Baseball draft out of Lamar Community College, McCarthy made his MLB debut with the White Sox in 2005 and went on to play for seven teams over a 13-year career spanning 2005 to 2018, including stints with the Texas Rangers, Oakland Athletics, Arizona Diamondbacks, New York Yankees, Los Angeles Dodgers, and Atlanta Braves.[1][2][3]
In 240 games (primarily as a starting pitcher), he recorded a career 69–75 win–loss record, 908 strikeouts, and a 4.05 earned run average over 1,313 innings pitched.[2][4]
A highlight came in 2014 with the Yankees, where he pitched a complete-game shutout against the Houston Astros, allowing just four hits.[1]
McCarthy's career was marked by resilience following a traumatic 2012 incident with the Athletics, when he was struck in the head by a line drive from Los Angeles Angels batter Erick Aybar, resulting in a skull fracture, brain contusion, and emergency surgery to remove a hematoma and place two plates in his skull; he returned to pitch the next season.[3]
After retiring, McCarthy transitioned to baseball operations roles and later became sporting director for USL Championship club Phoenix Rising FC, leveraging his experience from MLB front offices.[5][6]
Early life and education
Childhood and family
Brandon McCarthy was born on July 7, 1983, in Glendale, California.[2] His father, Pat McCarthy, supported his early interests by taking him to Los Angeles Dodgers games at Dodger Stadium during the family's time in Southern California.[7] There, the young McCarthy became a devoted fan of pitcher Orel Hershiser, memorizing and reciting his statistics, which sparked his fascination with baseball analytics and pitching mechanics.[7]The family lived in the suburban Los Angeles area, including Pasadena, for McCarthy's first decade, during which he began experimenting with throwing a flat four-seam fastball, prioritizing control over velocity.[7] Neither parent had a professional athletic background, but Pat McCarthy's involvement in attending games provided direct exposure to Major League Baseball without formal coaching.[7] In 1994, following multiple home break-ins, the family relocated to Colorado Springs, Colorado, marking the end of McCarthy's primary Southern California upbringing.[7]
High school baseball and MLB draft
Brandon McCarthy attended Cheyenne Mountain High School in Colorado Springs, Colorado, where he played baseball as a pitcher before graduating in 2001.[3][2] After high school, McCarthy enrolled at Lamar Community College in Lamar, Colorado, opting for junior college over immediate professional or Division I opportunities.[8]At Lamar, McCarthy emerged as a standout right-handed pitcher, posting elite strikeout totals that averaged 14.0 per nine innings, leading all national junior college hurlers in 2002.[9] This performance drew professional scouting interest and culminated in his selection by the Chicago White Sox in the 17th round (510th overall) of the 2002 MLB June Amateur Draft.[2] McCarthy signed with the White Sox on June 7, 2002, beginning his professional career as a mid-round prospect valued for his size (6-foot-8) and strikeout potential rather than velocity or polish.[10][3]
Minor league career
Progression through White Sox affiliates
Following his selection by the Chicago White Sox in the 17th round (510th overall) of the 2002 MLB Draft, McCarthy was assigned to the Rookie-level Arizona League White Sox, where he made 14 starts, posting a 4–4 record with a 2.76 ERA over 78.1 innings, striking out 79 batters while walking just 15, demonstrating early command and strikeout ability.[11][12]In 2003, McCarthy advanced within the rookie ranks to the Pioneer League's Great Falls White Sox, recording a 9–4 mark with a 3.65 ERA in 15 starts across 101 innings, again issuing only 15 walks against 125 strikeouts, which highlighted his control and effectiveness against professional hitters for the first time.[11][13]McCarthy's most rapid progression occurred in 2004, beginning at High-A Kannapolis Intimidators before promotions to Advanced-A Winston-Salem Warthogs and Double-A Birmingham Barons; across the three levels, he went 17–6 with a 3.14 ERA in 27 starts over 172 innings, amassing a minor-league-leading 202 strikeouts to just 30 walks, including three complete games and one shutout, signaling his readiness for higher competition.[11][14]By 2005, McCarthy reached Triple-A with the International League's Charlotte Knights, where in 19 starts he compiled a 7–7 record and 3.92 ERA over 119.1 innings, with 130 strikeouts and 32 walks, maintaining solid peripherals despite a slight uptick in ERA amid tougher opposition.[11][12]
Initial professional challenges
McCarthy encountered inconsistencies in command and pitch effectiveness during his ascent through the White Sox affiliates, as reflected in varying walk-plus-hit-per-inning ratios across seasons: 1.187 in 2002, 1.188 in 2003, a career-low 0.953 amid rapid promotions in 2004, and 1.140 in 2005 at Triple-A Charlotte.[11] These fluctuations indicated challenges in sustaining dominance against progressively better competition, particularly in refining secondary offerings like his curveball to limit hard contact.Home run vulnerability emerged as a key obstacle, with rates climbing from 0.7 per nine innings in 2002 to 1.2 in 2005, correlating with difficulties in sequencing pitches to induce weaker contact at higher levels.[11] Despite elite strikeout totals—peaking at 202 in 2004, leading all minor leaguers—his inability to consistently suppress extra-base damage highlighted the need for mechanical adjustments to secondary pitches, delaying full readiness for major-league hitters.[9]Endurance demands also tested him, as innings pitched progressed from 78.1 in 2002 to a high of 172 in 2004 before dipping to 119.1 in 2005 amid shoulder soreness that sidelined him for weeks on the disabled list.[3] This injury, requiring a midseason return in June 2005, extended his development beyond the typical timeline for prospects with his strikeout profile, as repeated deep counts from high whiff rates strained arm stamina without corresponding workload management refinements.[3]As a 17th-round selection from junior college in 2002, McCarthy's path exemplified the prolonged seasoning often required for late-round arms, where raw strikeout ability (e.g., 10.6 K/9 average through 2004) demanded iterative tweaks to command and secondary arsenals before MLB viability, unlike faster-tracked higher-drafted peers who debuted within two seasons.[11] These factors collectively postponed his major-league call-up until May 2005, underscoring causal hurdles in translating minor-league dominance to elite readiness.
Major League Baseball career
Chicago White Sox (2005–2006)
McCarthy made his major league debut on May 22, 2005, starting for the Chicago White Sox against the Chicago Cubs at U.S. Cellular Field, where he pitched 5⅓ innings, allowing two earned runs on four hits while striking out six and walking one.[2] In his rookie season, he appeared in 12 games, making 10 starts as a spot starter and occasional rotation member, posting a 3–2 win–loss record with a 4.03 ERA over 67 innings pitched, during which he recorded 48 strikeouts against 17 walks.[2][1] A standout outing occurred on September 5, 2005, when he delivered seven shutoutinnings with seven strikeouts against the Boston Red Sox, securing a White Sox win and demonstrating his potential despite limited command.[15] McCarthy remained with the team through its World Series championship that year but did not pitch in the postseason.[16]
In 2006, McCarthy transitioned to a primary relief role, appearing in 53 games with just two starts and earning 11 holds, while compiling a 4–7 record and 4.68 ERA across 84⅔ innings, with 69 strikeouts and 33 walks reflecting ongoing control challenges that contributed to inconsistent results.[2][1] His higher walk rate compared to 2005—3.5 per nine innings versus 2.3—underscored command issues in shorter outings, where he often struggled to finish strong despite occasional effectiveness in late innings.[2] This period marked an adaptation phase amid bullpen duties, with limited starting opportunities highlighting the White Sox's depth in rotation spots.[7]
Texas Rangers (2007–2010)
McCarthy was traded to the Texas Rangers from the Chicago White Sox on December 23, 2006, along with minor leaguer David Paisano, in exchange for pitchers John Danks, Nick Masset, and Jacob Rasner. The Rangers, seeking rotation depth, inserted the 23-year-old McCarthy into their starting lineup for the 2007 season, where he made 22 appearances (21 starts). He recorded a 5–10 win–loss record with a 4.87 earned run average (ERA) over 101⅔ innings pitched, striking out 59 batters while issuing 42 walks. Highlights included his first major league win on April 8 against the Cleveland Indians (5 innings, 7 strikeouts in a 12–8 victory) and his first complete game on May 24. However, recurring blisters on his pitching hand hampered consistency.[10][2][3]The 2008 season was curtailed by injuries, limiting McCarthy to just 5 starts and 22 innings with a 1–1 record and 4.09 ERA, as he spent significant time on the disabled list. He rebounded somewhat in 2009, logging 17 starts for a 7–4 mark, 4.62 ERA, and 97⅓ innings, with a career-best 65 strikeouts among Rangers pitchers that year. A stress fracture in his right shoulder, however, restricted him to fewer than 100 innings for the third straight full season. These figures underscored underlying potential in his strikeout ability and occasional command but highlighted persistent durability concerns, with McCarthy averaging under 75 innings per year from 2008–2009.[2][17]In 2010, McCarthy struggled early with a 1–5 record and 4.68 ERA across 13 starts and 65 innings before the Rangers traded him to the Oakland Athletics on July 31 for reliever Chris Ray. Shoulder soreness and inconsistent outings contributed to his diminished role amid the team's rotation shuffle. Despite McCarthy's limitations, the Rangers mounted a late surge to claim the American League West title—their first playoff appearance since 1999—and advanced to the World Series, though McCarthy's contributions were marginal due to his midseason departure and subpar output. Over his Rangers tenure, he compiled a 14–20 record with a 4.82 ERA in 87 appearances (56 starts), demonstrating flashes of mid-rotation capability marred by injury-prone workloads and mechanical inconsistencies in his fastball-heavy approach.[2]
Oakland Athletics (2011)
McCarthy signed a one-year, $1 million contract with the Oakland Athletics as a free agent on December 14, 2010.[10][18] He earned the fifth starter role in spring training despite a 4.50 ERA over three starts and three relief appearances in the Cactus League.[18]In 25 starts during the 2011 season, McCarthy recorded a 9–9 win-loss mark with a 3.32 ERA, surrendering 73 earned runs on 168 hits over 170.2 innings pitched.[19] He issued just 27 walks against 124 strikeouts, yielding a 4.59 strikeout-to-walk ratio that ranked second in the American League, while tying for second league-wide with five complete games.[19] His walks per nine innings total ranked third in the AL at 1.43.McCarthy refined his delivery by lowering his arm slot and emphasizing sinkers and cutters over four-seam fastballs, boosting velocity on the sinker-cutter mix by over 1 mph compared to prior years.[20][21] These adjustments enhanced ground-ball induction and command without sacrificing velocity, marking a rebound from previous inconsistency.[20][22] His performance, including a career-low 2.86 FIP, underscored the efficacy of these changes and positioned him favorably for free agency.[23]
Arizona Diamondbacks (2012–2014)
McCarthy signed with the Arizona Diamondbacks as a free agent on December 14, 2012, agreeing to a two-year, $15.5 million contract that included a $2.5 million signing bonus, $4 million salary for 2013, and $9 million for 2014.[24][2]In 2013, McCarthy logged 135 innings over 22 starts, marking a career-high workload for the right-hander and demonstrating durability following prior seasons limited by health issues.[2] He recorded a 5–11 win-loss mark with a 4.53 ERA, issuing just 21 walks for a 1.4 BB/9 rate while striking out 76 batters at 5.1 K/9; however, 13 home runs allowed (0.9 HR/9) contributed to 161 hits surrendered.[2] His FIP of 3.75 outperformed the ERA, indicating potential misfortune in batted-ball outcomes or defense, though bWAR stood at -0.2 amid the team's struggles.[2]
Statistic
2013
Games Started
22
Innings Pitched
135.0
ERA
4.53
FIP
3.75
K/9
5.1
BB/9
1.4
HR/9
0.9
bWAR
-0.2
McCarthy's 2014 campaign with Arizona showed elevated strikeouts at 7.6 K/9 across 93 total in 109.2 innings over 18 starts, with continued command (1.6 BB/9) but vulnerability to power (15 HR, 1.2 HR/9), yielding a 3–10 record and 5.01 ERA.[2] The FIP metric again suggested underlying competence at 3.82, contrasting the surface results and resulting in -0.6 bWAR.[2] On July 6, 2014, the Diamondbacks traded him to the New York Yankees for left-hander Vidal Nuño and cash, after which Arizona covered $2.05 million of his remaining salary.[25][26]
Statistic
2014 (pre-trade)
Games Started
18
Innings Pitched
109.2
ERA
5.01
FIP
3.82
K/9
7.6
BB/9
1.6
HR/9
1.2
bWAR
-0.6
New York Yankees (2014)
On July 6, 2014, the New York Yankees acquired Brandon McCarthy from the Arizona Diamondbacks in exchange for left-handed pitcher Vidal Nuno and cash considerations.[1] In 14 starts with the Yankees, McCarthy recorded a 7–5 win–loss mark, 2.89 earned run average (ERA), and 1.151 walks plus hits per inning pitched (WHIP) across 90⅓ innings pitched, allowing 91 hits and 29 earned runs while striking out 82 batters and walking just 13.[2] This performance reflected a sharp rebound from his pre-trade 5.01 ERA over 102 innings with Arizona, highlighting his adaptation to the American League East's hitter-friendly parks and higher-pressure divisional matchups.[2]McCarthy's outings against AL East opponents underscored his effectiveness in the Bronx, where Yankee Stadium's short porch amplified home run risks. On July 22, he limited the Boston Red Sox to one earned run over seven innings in a 4–3 Yankees victory.[2] He followed with a shutout effort against the Toronto Blue Jays on August 6, scattering five hits over seven scoreless innings en route to a 4–0 win.[2] Later, on September 12, McCarthy blanked the Baltimore Orioles on four hits through seven-plus innings in a tight 2–1 loss, matching rookie Kevin Gausman in a low-scoring duel despite New York's offensive struggles.[27][2]These results, part of a broader 1.90 ERA in his final eight Yankees starts, demonstrated McCarthy's command and resilience under scrutiny, setting a strong foundation for his free agency pursuits following the Yankees' non-playoff finish.[28][2]
Los Angeles Dodgers (2015–2017)
McCarthy signed a four-year, $48 million contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers on December 16, 2014, featuring a $6 million signing bonus, $11 million salaries in 2015 and 2016, and $10 million annually in 2017 and 2018.[29][30] The deal positioned him as a mid-rotation starter expected to provide stability, with his peripherals from prior seasons—such as a career ground-ball rate exceeding 45%—aligning with Dodger Stadium's pitcher-friendly dimensions.[31]In 2015, McCarthy made three starts for 23 innings, posting a 5.87 ERA with 29 strikeouts against nine walks, though underlying metrics like a 3.86 FIP suggested potential for regression toward his norms amid limited workload.[2] His 2016 campaign spanned 10 appearances (nine starts) over 40 innings, yielding a 4.95 ERA and 1.38 WHIP, with 44 strikeouts and 26 walks; a .207 opponent batting average on balls in play indicated some misfortune, but elevated walk rates (5.85 per nine innings) highlighted control inconsistencies.[2][32] These seasons reflected moderate reliability, as McCarthy's fastball velocity held steady around 91 mph and his curveball generated whiffs at a 30% clip, contributing to the Dodgers' National League West titles despite his partial availability.[1]McCarthy's 2017 performance marked a rebound, with 19 games (16 starts) across 92.2 innings, a 6-4 record, 3.98 ERA, and 1.25 WHIP; he recorded 72 strikeouts against 27 walks, limiting opponents to a .256/.313/.354 line and just five home runs on a career-high 42% ground-ball rate.[2][33] However, a midseason dip in July saw a 6.75 ERA over 14.1 innings with 11 earned runs, correlating with reports of mechanical "yips" affecting his delivery, though he stabilized post-All-Star break.[34] Trade speculation surfaced around the July deadline, with analysts suggesting the Dodgers could leverage his early value (3.38 ERA through mid-July) for prospects, but the club retained him for rotation depth amid a 16-game win streak.[35][36]Throughout 2015–2017, McCarthy's efforts supported the Dodgers' consecutive postseason berths, including their 2017 World Series appearance; he secured a bullpen spot for the Fall Classic after providing 16 quality starts in the regular season, bolstering a rotation that posted MLB's best ERA (3.20).[33][37] His ability to induce ground balls and limit hard contact (under 30% rate) proved valuable in high-leverage scenarios, even as health constraints capped his innings to under 100 annually.[1]
Atlanta Braves (2018)
McCarthy joined the Atlanta Braves for the 2018 season as a veteran addition to provide rotation depth following his tenure with the Los Angeles Dodgers.[38] He made 15 starts, logging 78.2 innings pitched with a 6-3 record, 4.92 ERA, and 65 strikeouts.[2] His role was limited by ongoing physical challenges associated with age (35 at the time) and a right knee tendinitis injury that sidelined him starting in late June, after which he managed the condition by adjusting his arm slot and knee mechanics to continue pitching.[39]On August 14, 2018, McCarthy announced his intention to retire at the season's end, stating that he had evaluated continuing his career but opted against surgery on his knee—a procedure he would have pursued a month and a half earlier if planning to pitch into his age-36 year.[39] Instead, he aimed to test bullpen viability with Triple-A Gwinnett in the offseason preceding his full retirement, effectively concluding his MLB playing days without returning to the majors post-announcement.[39][40]McCarthy's retirement capped a 13-year MLB career marked by persistent injuries, finishing with 69 wins, 75 losses, and a 4.20 ERA across 1,285.1 innings in 206 starts and 28 relief appearances for seven teams.[2][4]
Injuries and recovery
Key injuries and medical events
On September 5, 2012, McCarthy sustained a skull fracture, epidural hemorrhage, and brain contusion after being struck in the head by a line drive hit by Erick Aybar during a game against the Los Angeles Angels.[41][42] He underwent emergency surgery the following day to relieve pressure on his brain, a procedure deemed life-saving by medical staff given the severity of the epidural bleed.[43] McCarthy walked off the field under his own power but was hospitalized, with doctors noting the injury's potential lethality due to the rapid onset of intracranial pressure.[44]McCarthy was released from the hospital on September 11, 2012, after monitoring confirmed no further complications, allowing him to begin gradual rehabilitation focused on neurological recovery and strength rebuilding.[45] His fastball velocity, which averaged around 91-93 mph prior to the injury, showed variability upon return but stabilized without permanent deficit, as evidenced by consistent mid-90s peaks in subsequent outings.[46] In June 2013, while recovering from unrelated shoulder soreness, he experienced a seizure attributed directly to residual effects from the 2012 trauma, requiring brief medical intervention but no long-term impairment.[47]On April 27, 2015, McCarthy suffered a torn ulnar collateral ligament (UCL) in his right elbow, necessitating Tommy John surgery performed the following day at the Kerlan-Jobe Orthopaedic Clinic.[48][49] The procedure addressed complete ligament rupture confirmed via MRI, with recovery projected at 12-18 months; he resumed pitching in July 2016 after phased rehab emphasizing elbow stability and pitch command.[50] Earlier arm issues included recurrent shoulder soreness in 2005-2006 and 2011, linked to overuse rather than structural damage, which interrupted training but resolved with rest and conditioning adjustments.[3]These events contributed to a career marked by frequent disruptions, with McCarthy averaging 91.8 innings pitched per season over 14 MLB years (2005-2018), totaling 1,285.2 innings—substantially below the 150-180 innings typical for durable starting pitchers, as recurrent trauma and surgical recoveries enforced extended absences and workload limitations. Later incidents, such as a partial left shoulderdislocation in April 2018 from a non-game activity and right knee tendinitis in 2017, further exemplified patterns of soft-tissue vulnerabilities but were less severe than the primary cranial and elbow traumas.[51][52]
Impact on performance and career trajectory
McCarthy's performance following the September 5, 2012, skull fracture and subsequent emergency surgery to address an epidural hemorrhage and brain contusion showed initial resilience but long-term durability challenges. In 2013 with the Arizona Diamondbacks, he made 22 starts but posted a 5-11 record with a 4.53 ERA over 135 innings, a decline from his pre-injury 3.24 ERA in 19 starts that year, which he later attributed to lingering effects of the brain injury including fatigue and recovery issues.[3][2] A seizure episode in June 2013 further highlighted ongoing neurological recovery demands, though he continued pitching without immediate cessation.[53]The 2014 season marked a rebound, with 32 starts across the Diamondbacks and Yankees yielding a 10-15 record, 4.05 ERA, and career-high 200 innings, suggesting adaptation to post-injury mechanics and improved command.[2] However, recurrent arm and shoulder issues—building on prior stress fractures from 2007–2010—interrupted sustained excellence; a torn elbowligament in April 2015 necessitated Tommy John surgery, limiting him to four starts (3-0, 5.87 ERA, 23 innings) before season-ending absence.[3][54]Subsequent years reflected compounded injury tolls, with only nine starts in 2016 (2-3, 4.95 ERA, 40 innings) due to recovery setbacks, 16 in 2017 amid knee tendinitis and shoulder dislocation, and 15 in 2018 before right knee tendinitis prompted retirement announcement on August 15, 2018, at age 35.[2][40] Overall, injuries curtailed his career from a 2011 peak (9-9, 3.32 ERA, 171 innings) to fragmented rotations and trades across five teams post-2012, yielding a lifetime 69-75 record and 4.20 ERA in 255 games, underscoring how physical setbacks eroded workload capacity and team stability despite mechanical adjustments for injury mitigation.[2][3]
Post-playing professional career
Texas Rangers front office role
Following his retirement from Major League Baseball after the 2018 season, Brandon McCarthy joined the Texas Rangers front office on December 11, 2018, as a special assistant to general manager Jon Daniels.[55][56] In this role, McCarthy focused on talent evaluation and decision-making processes, drawing on his 14-year pitching career that included over 1,200 innings pitched across multiple organizations.[56]McCarthy's responsibilities encompassed all aspects of pitching development at both major and minor league levels, aiding the organization's shift toward an analytical approach under new manager Chris Woodward.[55][56] His prior exposure to advanced analytics during stints with the Los Angeles Dodgers, New York Yankees, and Oakland Athletics informed contributions to pitching strategy and player assessment, though specific decision-making outputs remain undocumented publicly.[56]McCarthy held the position for three seasons, from 2019 through 2021, supporting internal front office operations without quantified metrics on organizational impact available in public records.[3]
Phoenix Rising FC involvement and controversies
Following his departure from the Texas Rangers front office, McCarthy assumed the role of sporting director for Phoenix Rising FC in January 2023, while maintaining his minority ownership stake acquired in August 2016.[57][58] In this capacity, he oversaw player acquisitions, squad building, and strategic decisions that contributed to the club's first USL Championship title in 2023, secured via a 3–2 penalty shootout victory after a 1–1 draw in the final against Orange County SC on November 11, 2023.[59] McCarthy emphasized data-driven approaches to scouting and recruitment, drawing from his baseballanalytics background, which helped stabilize the roster amid prior coaching transitions.[60]McCarthy's tenure faced scrutiny from a September 30, 2020, USL Championship match against San Diego Loyal SC, where Phoenix Rising forward Junior Flemmings was accused by Loyal midfielder Collin Martin of directing a Jamaican homophobic slur at him during first-half stoppage time. Martin, openly gay, reported the incident to referee Joe Dickerson, who did not hear it; no audio or video evidence captured the alleged slur, and no other players or officials witnessed it directly.[61] San Diego Loyal players walked off in protest, forfeiting the match 1–0, a decision upheld by the league despite Phoenix Rising's objections.[62]Flemmings issued an unequivocal denial, stating he used no slur and attributing the accusation to on-field disputes over a yellow card, a position supported by the Jamaica Football Federation.[63] As co-owner, McCarthy publicly backed Flemmings, citing the absence of corroborating evidence, the referee's non-detection, and inconsistencies in the timeline reported by San Diego players; he suggested in direct messages and statements that the claim might involve fabrication or coordinated pressure, given the lack of independent verification.[64][65] The USL investigation, relying primarily on Martin's testimony and team interviews, found insufficient direct proof but suspended Flemmings for six games and fined him, deeming the allegation credible on balance while upholding the forfeit; critics, including McCarthy, noted the decision prioritized the accuser's account over the evidentiary gaps.[61][66]In subsequent years, McCarthy expanded Phoenix Rising's operations, launching a national scouting department in March 2025 to enhance player identification and development, amid efforts to rebound from a disappointing 2024 season that missed playoffs after the 2023 triumph.[67] He focused on targeted acquisitions, such as midfield reinforcements and youth integrations, positioning the club for renewed title contention in the USL Championship's Western Conference.[68][69]
Personal life
Family and residences
McCarthy was born on July 7, 1983, in Glendale, California, and spent his early life in Southern California.[3] He married Amanda McCarthy in 2010; the couple has one daughter, Cassidy, born in early 2016.[70]His residences have followed career relocations, beginning with California roots during his time with West Coast teams like the Los Angeles Dodgers. Property records show ownership of a townhome at 2935 Magnolia Hill Court in Dallas, Texas, acquired amid his transition to a front office role with the Texas Rangers. Subsequent professional involvement with Phoenix Rising FC in Arizona indicates a relocation to that state, though specific property details remain private.[71]
Public statements and media presence
McCarthy maintains an active presence on X (formerly Twitter) under the handle @BMcCarthy32, where he frequently comments on baseball analytics, player development, and sports psychology, drawing from his pitching career and front-office experience.[72] His posts often emphasize data-driven evaluation over anecdotal narratives, such as in discussions of performance optimization and injury recovery, informed by his own history of overcoming a 2012 skull fracture from a line drive.[7] For instance, in July 2025, he observed that while injuries can cause lasting personal distress, elite athletes rapidly activate a mental "switch" to refocus on competition, countering perceptions of prolonged psychological fragility in professional sports.[73]In transitioning to soccer with Phoenix Rising FC, McCarthy has publicly advocated for rigorous, fundamentals-based scouting that prioritizes empirical assessment amid the sport's inherent unpredictability, contrasting it with baseball's more quantifiable metrics. In an April 2025 interview, he stated, "One thing I love about soccer is that you can't truly 'solve' it the way you somewhat can in baseball. There's just too many variables," highlighting the need for adaptable evaluation frameworks over rigid traditional methods.[60] He elaborated on this in promoting the club's expanded 2025 scoutingprogram, describing it as a meritocratic entry point into professional sports that extends beyond conventional networks: "This program is more than just scouting—it's a pathway into professional sports where opportunities like this are rare."[74]McCarthy has critiqued prevailing media dynamics in sports coverage, arguing they incentivize sensationalism over substantive analysis. In a September 2025 X post, he remarked on the industry's reliance on "rage and hyperbole" for engagement, pledging to counter it with balanced perspectives: "Rest assured—we will create more of this," referring to measured discourse amid emotional narratives.[75] His commentary, often grounded in firsthand career data like velocity trends and recovery protocols, positions him as a bridge between player insights and executive strategy, as explored in a 2019 Freakonomicspodcast where he dissected decision-making under pressure.[76]