Bruce Maxwell
Bruce Tyrone Maxwell III (born December 20, 1990) is a former professional baseball catcher who appeared in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Oakland Athletics from 2016 to 2018 and the New York Mets in 2020.[1][2] Drafted by the Athletics in the second round of the 2012 MLB Draft out of Birmingham-Southern College, Maxwell debuted in the majors on August 31, 2016, and compiled a career batting line of .240/.314/.347 with five home runs and 42 runs batted in over 127 games, primarily serving as a backup catcher.[1][2] His tenure gained national attention on September 23, 2017, when he became the first MLB player to kneel during the pregame national anthem as a protest against perceived racial injustice and police brutality, a gesture inspired by NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick; Maxwell, from a military family, stated the act was not intended to disrespect the armed forces.[3][4] The protest drew widespread backlash, including death threats, and correlated with a sharp decline in his playing time and subsequent unsigned status as a free agent after the 2018 season, after which he played in independent and Mexican leagues before a brief Mets organization stint ended without a return to the majors.[3][5][6]Maxwell's career trajectory reflects both his athletic progression from minor leagues—where he posted stronger offensive numbers, including a .273 batting average over 634 games—and the professional repercussions of his public stance, amid broader debates over anthem protests in sports.[7] While his on-field contributions were limited by injuries and depth chart competition, the kneeling incident positioned him as a singular figure in MLB's engagement with social issues, with no other active players following suit at the time despite league-wide discussions.[6][5] Post-MLB, he has commented on team relocations and player activism, maintaining a profile tied to his 2017 decision.[8]
Early Life and Background
Birth and Family Origins
Bruce Maxwell was born on December 20, 1990, in Wiesbaden, Germany, where his family resided due to his father's service in the U.S. Army.[1][2] His full name is Bruce Tyrone Maxwell III, indicating his father, Bruce Maxwell II, as a career military member stationed overseas at the time.[9] The birth occurred on a U.S. Army base, reflecting the transient nature of military family life and Maxwell's early exposure to international postings.[10] Maxwell's parents represent a biracial union, with his father being Black and his mother White, which shaped his personal identity amid a military household emphasizing structure and adaptability.[10] His father's Army career, including assignments that necessitated frequent relocations, instilled foundational values of discipline and resilience, as later reflected in Maxwell's own accounts of family dynamics. The family returned to the United States shortly after his birth, settling in Huntsville, Alabama, following his father's transfer to Redstone Arsenal, a key U.S. Army installation focused on missile and rocket development.[11] This early relocation grounded Maxwell's formative years in the American South, away from the overseas military environment, though details on siblings or extended family remain limited in public records.[11] The Huntsville posting marked the family's primary U.S. base, providing stability during Maxwell's infancy amid his father's ongoing service obligations.[11]Upbringing and Early Influences
Bruce Maxwell was born on December 20, 1990, at a U.S. Army installation in Wiesbaden, Germany, where his father, Bruce Maxwell Jr., an African American soldier, was stationed during active duty.[10][12] His mother, of European descent, completed a biracial family unit shaped by military service, which often entails relocations and structured routines.[13] The family relocated to Huntsville, Alabama, when Maxwell was approximately three years old, transitioning from overseas base life to a domestic setting with enduring military ties, as Huntsville hosts Redstone Arsenal, a major U.S. Army hub.[11][14] This environment, combining service family dynamics with Southern regional norms, exposed him to emphases on discipline, resilience, and communal patriotism—values reinforced by his father's career and the area's veteran-heavy culture, though adaptation from transient postings to rooted civilian patterns presented inherent challenges like rebuilding social networks.[15] As a mixed-race youth in Alabama during the 1990s and early 2000s, Maxwell navigated interpersonal tensions tied to racial dynamics, fostering early awareness of societal divisions independent of later public actions.[15] These formative elements contributed to personal traits such as competitiveness and self-reliance, attributable to familial expectations of accountability rather than external pursuits.[10]Amateur and College Career
High School Baseball
Bruce Maxwell attended Sparkman High School in Harvest, Alabama, where he played baseball primarily as a first baseman.[2] He emerged as a standout prep player noted for his athleticism and power-hitting potential at the position.[16] This performance drew recruitment interest from college programs, culminating in his commitment to Division III Birmingham-Southern College.[1] Specific high school statistics, including batting averages, home runs, or defensive metrics such as caught stealing percentages, are not comprehensively documented in public records, though his physical tools—6 feet 2 inches tall and approximately 230 pounds—highlighted raw offensive capabilities suitable for collegiate competition.[17]Birmingham-Southern College Achievements
Bruce Maxwell enrolled at Birmingham-Southern College, a Division III institution in the Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference (SCAC), where he played catcher and first base from 2009 to 2012.[18] His development emphasized left-handed power hitting and plate discipline, evidenced by his career .381 batting average, high on-base percentage of .464, and ability to draw walks while maintaining contact rates suitable for scouting evaluations of professional potential.[19] In his freshman year of 2010, Maxwell hit .427 with 15 home runs, 18 doubles, and 61 RBIs in 39 games, leading the team in slugging percentage (.860), total bases (129), and multiple offensive categories, which underscored his early raw power and efficiency in generating extra-base hits relative to at-bats.[19] This performance earned him SCAC Freshman of the Year, All-SCAC honors, ABCA Second Team All-South Region, and honorable mention D3baseball.com All-American recognition, highlighting his immediate impact on a program transitioning within the conference.[19] Maxwell's senior season in 2012 marked peak dominance, batting .471 with a .619 on-base percentage and .928 slugging percentage, including 25 doubles, 15 home runs, and 59 walks, demonstrating exceptional plate discipline (walk rate exceeding 20% of plate appearances) and slugging efficiency that projected high prospect value for a Division III player.[18] These metrics contributed to his selection as unanimous Division III National Player of the Year by both D3baseball.com and the American Baseball Coaches Association (ABCA), along with SCAC Offensive Player of the Year, D3baseball.com South Region Player of the Year, and First Team All-America honors.[20][21][22] As team leader, Maxwell guided Birmingham-Southern to its first SCAC tournament championship, elevating program visibility and securing his status as a top draft prospect through consistent catching defense and offensive output that scouts valued for translation to higher levels.[23] His left-handed swing generated power via pull-side authority, with extra-base hit rates supporting causal assessments of his tools over volume stats alone.[18]Professional Draft and Minor Leagues
2012 MLB Draft Selection
The Oakland Athletics selected Bruce Maxwell, a catcher from Birmingham-Southern College, in the second round (62nd overall) of the 2012 MLB First-Year Player Draft on June 5, 2012.[1][2] This pick, acquired as compensation from the Minnesota Twins for the loss of free agent reliever Michael Wuertz, positioned Maxwell as a mid-tier prospect among catchers, valued primarily for his left-handed power potential rather than elite defensive tools.[24] Pre-draft evaluations highlighted his offensive projection, including strong hit tool and raw power derived from bat speed, though his arm strength (clocked in the low-80s mph range) and overall prospect velocity ranked him below top-tier catching peers like supplemental first-rounder Andrew Susac.[25] Maxwell's selection reflected the Athletics' draft strategy under general manager Billy Beane, emphasizing cost-controlled college players with above-average power upside in a premium position like catcher, where scarcity drives value despite his Division III background.[24] His junior-year performance—.471 batting average, .619 on-base percentage, .928 slugging percentage, with 59 walks against 11 strikeouts in 153 at-bats—underscored this fit, marking him as an outlier from non-Power 5 conferences but not a consensus top-50 prospect.[26] Maxwell signed with the Athletics for a $700,000 bonus, slightly under the recommended slot value of approximately $791,600 for the 62nd pick, signaling mutual agreement on his perceived talent level without negotiation delays.[27][28] This under-slot deal aligned with MLB's 2012 bonus pool incentives, allowing Oakland to allocate resources toward later rounds while securing a catcher projected for gap-to-gap hitting and moderate home-run projection in professional development.[29]Minor League Progression and Statistics
Maxwell signed with the Oakland Athletics as a second-round selection (65th overall) in the 2012 MLB Draft and began his professional career in the Arizona League, posting a .277 batting average with a .705 OPS across 67 games between rookie and short-season A ball, though he hit no home runs.[30] In 2013, he advanced to Low-A Beloit Snappers before a midseason promotion to High-A Stockton Ports, achieving a combined .275 average, seven home runs, and .739 OPS in 104 games, demonstrating plate discipline with a 10.5% walk rate.[30] His performance dipped in 2014 upon repeating High-A Stockton and debuting at Double-A Midland RockHounds, where he batted .243 with a .668 OPS over 104 games, including six home runs but elevated strikeouts (24% rate).[30] The 2015 season at Double-A Midland saw further stagnation, with a .243 average, just two home runs, and a career-low .629 OPS in 96 games, reflecting persistent power deficiencies despite a solid 10.3% walk rate.[30] These years highlighted a plateau in development, as Maxwell's slugging percentage hovered below .400, contrasting his college power output.[26] A resurgence occurred in 2016 at Triple-A Nashville Sounds, where Maxwell batted .321 with 10 home runs, a .393 OBP, and .932 OPS in 60 games, including a 12.4% walk rate and improved contact that signaled readiness for major league evaluation; his weighted runs created plus (wRC+) exceeded 140 in the Pacific Coast League, per advanced metrics.[30] [31] This hot start followed adjustments to regain swing mechanics lost post-college, enabling better power realization against Triple-A pitching.[32]| Year | Level(s) | Team(s) | G | AB | H | HR | RBI | BB | SO | AVG | OBP | SLG | OPS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2012 | Rk/A- | Athletics/Vermont | 67 | 249 | 69 | 0 | 26 | 31 | 38 | .277 | .356 | .349 | .705 |
| 2013 | A/A+ | Beloit/Stockton | 104 | 374 | 103 | 7 | 49 | 43 | 63 | .275 | .348 | .390 | .739 |
| 2014 | A+/AA | Stockton/Midland | 104 | 374 | 91 | 6 | 37 | 50 | 90 | .243 | .334 | .334 | .668 |
| 2015 | AA | Midland | 96 | 338 | 82 | 2 | 48 | 39 | 54 | .243 | .321 | .308 | .629 |
| 2016 | AAA | Nashville | 60 | 193 | 62 | 10 | 41 | 24 | 38 | .321 | .393 | .539 | .932 |
Major League Career with Oakland Athletics
2016 Debut Season Performance
Bruce Maxwell was called up to the Oakland Athletics from the Triple-A Nashville Sounds on July 23, 2016, following Stephen Vogt's placement on the family medical emergency list, and made his major league debut that evening as a pinch-hitter, grounding out in his only plate appearance.[33][2] He appeared in 33 games overall that season, primarily as a backup catcher, logging 92 at-bats with a .283 batting average (26 hits), one home run, and 14 RBI, outperforming the league average for catchers which hovered around .240.[2] His lone home run came on September 19 against Houston Astros pitcher Brad Peacock, a solo shot in a 7-0 Athletics win.[34][35] Defensively, Maxwell started 25 of his 29 games behind the plate, catching 215 innings with a .995 fielding percentage but allowing eight of eight stolen base attempts to succeed (0% caught stealing rate), reflecting typical rookie adjustment struggles in controlling the running game against major league speed.[2] Pitch-tracking data from the era indicated limited framing impact due to his backup role and smaller sample of called pitches received, though early evaluations noted potential in game-calling as he adapted to sequencing against Athletics pitchers like Sonny Gray and Kendall Graveman.[31] His offensive output, including eight walks against 24 strikeouts, provided solid contributions in a reserve capacity, with multi-hit games on September 9 (three hits, one double) and September 25 underscoring flashes of power potential relative to catcher norms.[35][2]2017 Season Statistics and Role
In 2017, Bruce Maxwell assumed the role of primary catcher for the Oakland Athletics following the designation for assignment of veteran Stephen Vogt on June 26, which opened up full-time duties behind the plate for Maxwell over the latter portion of the season.[36] He appeared in 76 games overall, starting 74 at catcher and handling the majority of the pitching staff's workload, including managing a rotation that featured young arms like Sean Manaea and Kendall Graveman.[2] Maxwell's defensive contributions included a perfect 1.000 fielding percentage on 574 chances, reflecting error-free play in framing pitches and blocking balls in the dirt.[2] Offensively, Maxwell posted a .237 batting average across 219 at-bats, with 52 hits including 12 doubles and 3 home runs, driving in 22 runs while drawing 31 walks for a .329 on-base percentage and .333 slugging percentage, resulting in a .663 OPS.[2] His plate discipline helped mitigate a high strikeout rate of 63 in 253 plate appearances, but power production remained limited, aligning with the Athletics' catcher group ranking near the bottom of MLB in offensive output.[37]| Statistic | Value |
|---|---|
| Games Played | 76 |
| At-Bats | 219 |
| Hits | 52 |
| Batting Average | .237 |
| On-Base Percentage | .329 |
| Slugging Percentage | .333 |
| Home Runs | 3 |
| RBIs | 22 |
| Walks | 31 |
| Strikeouts | 63 |
National Anthem Protest and Backlash
Protest Event and Stated Motivations
On September 23, 2017, Oakland Athletics catcher Bruce Maxwell became the first Major League Baseball player to kneel during the "Star-Spangled Banner," prior to a home game against the Texas Rangers at the Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum.[4][3] Maxwell knelt on his right knee, placing his right hand over his heart while facing the flag; his teammates stood alongside him, with outfielder Mark Canha placing a hand on Maxwell's shoulder.[40][41] The gesture followed the example set by NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick in 2016.[3] Maxwell stated that his action aimed to protest police brutality and racial injustice, emphasizing it was not intended to disrespect the military, flag, or country.[3][42] He cited personal experiences growing up in Huntsville, Alabama, where he witnessed daily oppression of the Black community, as motivating his decision to "do my part" in raising awareness.[43][44] Days earlier, Maxwell had vented on social media about racial divisions, reacting to President Trump's criticisms of NFL protests and responses from athletes like Stephen Curry and LeBron James, which contributed to his resolve to act.[15] He described the kneel as a means to highlight systemic issues affecting marginalized communities, without targeting symbols of national patriotism.[3][45]Immediate Reactions and Public Criticism
Maxwell received numerous death threats and online harassment immediately following his kneeling during the national anthem on September 24, 2017, including threats to blow up or burn down his house, hopes that he would die in a fire, and warnings to "watch his back."[46][47] He also faced racial slurs and threats directed at his family, such as those aimed at his father, a U.S. Army veteran.[48][49] Public opinion polls conducted amid the contemporaneous NFL anthem protests, which Maxwell explicitly referenced as inspiration, indicated widespread disapproval of kneeling as a form of expression. A September 2017 CNN poll found 49% of Americans viewed NFL players kneeling during the anthem as the wrong way to express political opinions, with only 36% approving.[50] Similarly, a Pew Research Center survey from the same period showed 50% disapproval of NFL players kneeling, versus 47% approval, reflecting a divided but slightly negative public sentiment.[51] A Morning Consult poll reported that 44% of respondents viewed the NFL less favorably due to the protests.[52] On the road, Maxwell encountered boos from portions of the crowd in Arlington, Texas, on September 29, 2017, though he described them as mild compared to online vitriol.[53][47] Veterans and military personnel voiced strong objections, associating the gesture with disrespect to the flag and those who served under it. Maxwell's own teammate, Athletics pitcher Sean Doolittle, acknowledged in a September 30, 2017, interview that while he supported Maxwell's intent, the kneeling alienated some veterans who equated it with disdain for military sacrifices, despite Maxwell's stated hand-over-heart posture facing the flag.[54] Broader reactions echoed this, with critics arguing the protest conflated personal grievances with symbols honoring service members, though Maxwell's father publicly defended him as aligned with military values of standing against injustice.[48] Support was limited and often qualified, primarily from civil rights activists and select teammates, but internal team divisions emerged. MLB issued a statement on September 24, 2017, affirming respect for players' rights to express opinions peacefully while emphasizing the league's support for military families.[55] Rays pitcher Chris Archer noted teammate opposition to similar protests, highlighting rifts over whether individual actions undermined team unity.[56] Media coverage split along ideological lines, with left-leaning outlets like ESPN framing the act as principled advocacy against racism—citing Maxwell's Alabama upbringing experiences—while conservative commentators condemned it as anthem desecration violating longstanding norms of respect during pre-game ceremonies.[3][12] Vice President Mike Pence's October 8, 2017, departure from an NFL game upon players kneeling amplified national optics of political backlash against such protests, indirectly heightening scrutiny on figures like Maxwell.[57]Long-Term Consequences and Career Impact
Following his September 23, 2017, kneeling protest during the national anthem, Maxwell faced a sharp decline in MLB interest that persisted despite his public reversal on the gesture. On February 13, 2018, Maxwell announced he would stand for the anthem going forward, stating the protest had achieved its aim of raising awareness for social issues and expressing optimism for a more inclusive society.[58] Despite this pledge and the Oakland Athletics retaining him on their 40-man roster into spring training, Maxwell appeared in only minor league games during the 2018 season after being demoted in June, and the A's released him after the year.[6] Subsequent opportunities evaporated, illustrating a causal link between the protest's backlash and diminished employability in a league prioritizing apolitical stability to appeal to diverse fanbases. In 2019, while playing in Triple-A for the A's affiliate Nashville Sounds, Maxwell was scouted by 14 MLB teams, yet none extended a major league contract, leading him to sign with the Mexican League's Monclova Acereros.[6] This pattern of interest without commitment aligned with broader MLB aversion to players associated with high-profile controversies, as teams weighed the risk of renewed public scrutiny against routine roster needs for catchers with Maxwell's defensive pedigree from his 2012 draft status. His agent's outreach to franchises, including the Pittsburgh Pirates amid their catcher shortage, yielded no deals, underscoring how the protest's lingering stigma hampered marketability even after Maxwell's explicit disavowal.[6] Empirically, Maxwell's career stalled without a sustained MLB return, diverging from trajectories of comparable catchers from the 2012 draft class who navigated minor controversies or injuries to secure longer tenures. For instance, while peers like Bryan Anderson or Zach Nieto parlayed similar minor league paths into extended big-league or steady affiliate roles, Maxwell's post-2017 path led to independent ball and coaching by 2020, declining an A's overture to prioritize Mexican League stability.[6] This self-inflicted trajectory, initiated by injecting politics into gameplay amid widespread fan and sponsor backlash, prioritized ideological expression over professional longevity in an industry where controversy correlates with contractual exclusion, regardless of on-field skills.[14]Post-A's Professional Stints
2018 Season and Release
In 2018, Maxwell's major league playing time with the Oakland Athletics was severely limited to 18 games, during which he recorded a .182 batting average, one home run, and six runs batted in across 55 at-bats, reflecting diminished offensive output compared to prior seasons.[2][1] His on-base plus slugging stood at .516, underscoring broader struggles with plate discipline and power production that constrained his utility as a backup catcher.[2] Defensively, Maxwell started 16 games at catcher, committing one error for a .995 fielding percentage, but advanced metrics highlighted inefficiencies, including a career-low contribution in run prevention relative to league averages for catchers in limited samples.[9] The Athletics' depth chart, bolstered by veterans like Jonathan Lucroy and Josh Phegley alongside emerging prospect Sean Murphy, prioritized roster spots for players offering higher value in framing, blocking, and game-calling per Baseball Prospectus evaluations of positional replacements.[59] On September 1, 2018, the Athletics designated Maxwell for assignment to clear a 40-man roster spot, followed by an outright assignment to Triple-A Nashville Sounds, effectively concluding his tenure with the organization amid evaluations of salary arbitration eligibility and minor league options exhaustion.[60] This move aligned with the team's economic constraints and performance-based roster decisions, as Maxwell's projected arbitration salary exceeded his marginal contributions in a cost-controlled system.[61] Maxwell later expressed a shift in personal focus toward professional refinement without external distractions, aiming to rebuild his standing through dedicated skill development.New York Mets and San Francisco Giants Attempts
In July 2020, the New York Mets signed Maxwell to a minor league contract, assigning him to their alternate training site amid the COVID-19 shortened season, though he received no major league call-up due to the team's established catching tandem of René Rivera and Chance Sisco alongside depth options like Ali Sánchez.[1][63] Maxwell re-engaged with the Mets organization into 2021, appearing in 18 minor league games split between Double-A Binghamton and Triple-A Syracuse, where he posted a .211 batting average, .319 on-base percentage, .351 slugging percentage, two home runs, and 12 RBI—figures that reflected diminished power and contact rates compared to his prior peaks, limiting his viability in a catcher market featuring reliable veterans like J.T. Realmuto and Will Smith.[64][7] On June 5, 2021, the Mets traded Maxwell to the San Francisco Giants for cash considerations, positioning him for a potential Bay Area return with access to Triple-A Sacramento, but his tenure ended abruptly after he underwent Tommy John surgery on his elbow in July 2021, sidelining him for the remainder of the season and foreclosing any major league opportunity amid the Giants' reliance on Buster Posey and Joey Bart at the position.[1][65][66] The injury, unusual for catchers but linked to repetitive throwing strain, underscored broader challenges in Maxwell's physical resurgence, as the Giants' system prioritized healthier depth candidates in a league where catcher production remained abundant from incumbents and prospects alike.[67][64] These brief affiliations highlighted failed bids for MLB reinstatement, with neither team elevating him amid competitive positional rosters and his inconsistent minor league output.[7]Mexican League and Independent Ball Careers
In March 2019, Maxwell signed with the Acereros de Monclova of the Mexican League (LMB), a Triple-A equivalent circuit.[68] During his debut season, he appeared in 109 games, batting .325 with 138 hits, 27 doubles, 24 home runs, and 112 RBI, posting a .966 OPS that underscored a strong adaptation to the league's conditions.[1] [69] This performance helped Monclova secure the league's championship in the Serie del Rey playoffs.[70] He continued with Monclova into 2022, maintaining a role as a primary catcher amid the circuit's demanding schedule and travel.[71] Maxwell's LMB tenure shifted in 2023, beginning with a trade to the Piratas de Campeche on March 16, where he played 18 games before another midseason move.[1] On June 14, he was traded to the Rieleros de Aguascalientes, logging 12 games prior to his release on June 20.[7] These stints reflected diminished output compared to his 2019 peak, with limited plate appearances signaling challenges in sustaining earlier production levels amid age and roster competition. Overall LMB averages hovered in the .250-.280 range across seasons, highlighting persistence in a lower-tier professional environment with salaries typically far below MLB scales—often $10,000 to $20,000 monthly versus multimillion-dollar major-league contracts.[68] [72] During this period, Maxwell represented Germany in the 2023 World Baseball Classic qualifiers as a utility catcher, appearing on the roster but unable to advance the team beyond preliminary rounds against competitors like the Czech Republic and South Africa.[73] [74] No independent league appearances followed his MLB exit, with efforts confined to LMB grinding.[30]Legal and Personal Challenges
2017 Aggravated Assault Arrest
On October 28, 2017, Bruce Maxwell was arrested at his Scottsdale, Arizona, residence following a report from a female Postmates delivery driver who alleged that he pointed a handgun at her head after she arrived to deliver a pizza order around 9 p.m.[75][76] The driver stated in a 911 call and police interview that Maxwell opened the door armed, demanded to know her purpose aggressively, and aimed the weapon at her forehead, causing her to comply by handing over the food bag and fleeing the scene in fear.[75][77] Maxwell maintained to investigators that he had acted in self-defense, mistaking the unannounced visitor for a potential intruder at his gated home, and admitted to unholstering his legally owned handgun from a nightstand but denied ever pointing or displaying it toward her; he claimed the driver had approached without prior notice despite his instructions to call upon arrival.[75][77] Police reports documented inconsistencies in Maxwell's account during questioning, including initial admissions followed by denials, and noted he exhibited signs of alcohol intoxication such as slurred speech, bloodshot eyes, and an odor of intoxicants, with an open bottle of Hennessy observed nearby.[77][75] Officers also reported Maxwell making statements critical of police, including references to body cameras and skepticism toward law enforcement motives.[75] Maxwell was booked into Maricopa County Jail on charges of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, a felony, and misdemeanor disorderly conduct; he posted a $10,000 bond and was released the following day, October 29, with conditions prohibiting firearm possession and contact with the victim.[76][78] The incident occurred approximately one month after Maxwell's public national anthem protest during the 2017 MLB season, amid his ongoing offseason training in Arizona, though no direct causal link was established in initial police findings.[76][79] A grand jury reviewed the case and issued an indictment on the charges on November 8, 2017.[80]Resolution and Aftermath
In April 2018, Maxwell reached a plea agreement with Arizona prosecutors, pleading guilty to disorderly conduct—a misdemeanor—while the aggravated assault charge was dropped after the state agreed he did not point the gun at the delivery driver as initially alleged in the police report.[81][42] On July 2, 2018, he was sentenced in Maricopa County Superior Court to two years of supervised probation and 300 hours of community service, with no jail time imposed and the weapons-related element dismissed upon successful completion of probation.[82][14] In a 2019 interview, Maxwell acknowledged answering his door with a handgun in hand during the incident, attributing it to a heightened state of alertness from death threats received after his anthem protest, and stated he immediately apologized to the delivery driver, put the weapon away, and emphasized that threatening a woman was "the last thing I'd ever want to do."[14] He described being in a "dark place" amid intense social media backlash from the kneeling, which his agent later noted overshadowed the protest itself in teams' evaluations, with clubs questioning the arrest more than the activism and contributing to prolonged free agency challenges.[14] The legal proceedings, unfolding amid existing scrutiny from the protest, amplified negative publicity and correlated with diminished MLB interest, as the combination of events fueled perceptions of volatility despite the absence of a felony conviction.[14][81]Coaching Transition
Role with Toros de Tijuana
In early 2024, Bruce Maxwell transitioned into professional coaching with the Toros de Tijuana, a team in the Mexican League (Liga Mexicana de Béisbol), serving as catching coach and assistant hitting coach from March to May.[71] This marked his initial foray into a dedicated coaching position within organized professional baseball, following years of playing in the same league.[83] The Mexican League operates as a Triple-A equivalent circuit, emphasizing player development and competition among regional franchises, with Toros de Tijuana representing the Baja California border region and competing in the North Zone. Maxwell's responsibilities centered on catcher development, including technique training for glove-to-hand transfers, footwork alignment, and consistent arm mechanics, as well as supporting hitting instruction to enhance offensive strategies.[71] As battery coach, he focused on coordinating pitcher-catcher interactions, emphasizing game-calling and defensive positioning to bolster team performance in high-stakes league play. His tenure, though brief, aligned with the Toros' efforts to integrate experienced former MLB personnel for tactical depth amid the league's roster of international and domestic talent.[8] The role concluded in May 2024, after which Maxwell pursued other opportunities in baseball instruction.[84]Current Status as of 2025
As of October 2025, Bruce Maxwell serves as a coach on the technical staff of Bravas de León in the Liga Mexicana de Softbol Femenil, a role he assumed on November 12, 2024, to aid the team's pursuit of its first postseason appearance in the January-February 2025 season.[85] This position follows his brief stint as catching coach and assistant hitting coach for Toros de Tijuana in the Mexican League during April-May 2024, marking his transition to full-time coaching after ceasing professional playing in 2024.[71] On July 25, 2025, Maxwell, identified as a German baseball player, accepted a four-year period of ineligibility from the International Testing Agency under World Baseball Softball Confederation anti-doping rules after testing positive for the prohibited substance amphetamine, as confirmed by a WADA-accredited laboratory.[86] The sanction, agreed upon via consequences without appeal, bars him from competing in eligible events through approximately 2029 but does not preclude coaching roles. At age 34 (turning 35 on December 20, 2025), this development aligns with common career pivots for catchers, who often shift to instructional capacities amid physical demands and performance declines post-prime. No involvement with Major League Baseball organizations has been reported since his last minor-league attempt in 2019.Awards, Honors, and Statistical Legacy
College and Minor League Accolades
During his junior season in 2012 at Birmingham-Southern College, a NCAA Division III program, Bruce Maxwell batted .471 with a .619 on-base percentage and .928 slugging percentage, accumulating 72 hits, 56 runs, 25 doubles, 15 home runs, and 48 RBIs over 42 games.[20] [18] These performances earned him the D3baseball.com Division III Player of the Year award, along with first-team All-America honors from the same publication, and the American Baseball Coaches Association/Rawlings National Player of the Year distinction, making him only the second catcher to win the latter (following Gerard Haran in 2006).[21] [1] [18] He also received unanimous Southern Athletic Association Player of the Year recognition that year, leading the conference in batting average while helping the Panthers reach the NCAA Tournament for the first time in program history.[87] [23] Over his college career spanning 124 starts, Maxwell hit .430 with 38 home runs and 166 RBIs, setting program benchmarks for power production at the Division III level.[88] In 2011, as a sophomore, he led the team with a .427 average, 15 home runs, 61 RBIs, and an .860 slugging percentage across 39 games, earning co-Male Athlete of the Year honors at the institution.[19] Selected by the Oakland Athletics in the second round (62nd overall) of the 2012 MLB Draft out of Birmingham-Southern, Maxwell's minor league accolades included Midwest League Mid-Season All-Star honors in 2013 with the Beloit Snappers and California League Mid-Season All-Star selection in 2014 with the Stockton Ports, where he ranked second in the league by throwing out 39.6% of basestealing attempts.[7] [89] [18] He was named to the MiLB.com Organization All-Star team for the Athletics in 2016 and earned Pacific Coast League Player of the Week on July 17 that year with the Nashville Sounds after batting .563 with three home runs and seven RBIs over six games.[1] Prospect evaluators ranked him as high as the Athletics' No. 10 overall prospect by Baseball America following the 2014 season, reflecting his defensive prowess behind the plate and emerging offensive potential as a catcher.[1] [90]MLB Career Statistics and Evaluations
Bruce Maxwell's Major League Baseball career spanned 127 games across three seasons (2016–2018) exclusively with the Oakland Athletics, where he primarily served as a backup catcher. His cumulative batting statistics included a .240 batting average, .315 on-base percentage, .345 slugging percentage, 5 home runs, and 42 runs batted in over 366 at-bats, reflecting modest offensive production typical of a part-time role but lacking sustained impact.[2] Defensively, he appeared in 119 games behind the plate, committing 6 errors while successfully throwing out 24 of 86 attempted base stealers (27.9% caught stealing rate), which exceeded contemporaneous league averages for catchers around 25–27%.[2] Advanced metrics underscore his marginal overall value, with a career Wins Above Replacement (WAR) of 0.4 per Baseball-Reference calculations, indicating replacement-level performance amid inconsistent playing time.[2] Offensively, Maxwell exhibited power potential in isolated on-base-plus-slugging (ISO) flashes, particularly in 2016 (.119 ISO), but struggled with contact, evidenced by strikeout rates exceeding 25% in limited samples and a career weighted runs created plus (wRC+) hovering near 80–90 relative to league-average catchers.[2] Pitch-framing evaluations from Statcast data were constrained by his small sample (under 1,000 innings caught), yielding no standout run-value contributions; minor-league scouting reports had praised his framing mechanics as "terrific," yet MLB translation proved average at best.[31] Catcher-specific context, such as staff ERA+ when receiving (not publicly isolated but inferred from team pitching metrics), aligned with league norms, offering neither penalty nor premium to Oakland's rotation.[2]| Season | Team | G | AB | AVG/OBP/SLG | HR | RBI | WAR | CS% |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 | OAK | 62 | 199 | .283/.337/.402 | 1 | 14 | 0.5 | 0.0 |
| 2017 | OAK | 25 | 84 | .198/.276/.397 | 2 | 12 | 0.0 | 27.9 |
| 2018 | OAK | 40 | 83 | .169/.207/.265 | 2 | 16 | -0.1 | 36.8 |
| Career | 127 | 366 | .240/.315/.345 | 5 | 42 | 0.4 | 27.9[2] |