BOSTON â Other than Pete Crow-Armstrong patrolling the vast outfield grass on the North Side of Chicago for the Chicago Cubs, you would be hard-pressed to find a center fielder in Major League Baseball capable of matching what Ceddanne Rafaela does nightly for the Boston Red Sox.
Rafaela, one of Bostonâs two reigning Gold Glove outfielders, did not simply win the award in 2025 â he dominated the defensive conversation. Tied for third among all MLB players with 21 Outs Above Average and ranking second among outfielders behind Crow-Armstrong, Rafaela established himself not as a rising defender, but as the defensive standard in the American League. His jumps were cleaner. His routes were sharper. His closing speed erased mistakes before they became highlights.
In an era increasingly defined by metrics, Rafaela passed every test. He was the only outfielder in 2025 to exceed +20 in Outs Above Average, Defensive Runs Saved, and Fielding Run Value simultaneously. That trifecta is not a fluke. It is a declaration.
But dynasties, even defensive ones, invite challengers. And this spring, a potential threat is quietly emerging from the Midwest. The Cleveland Guardians are experimenting with shifting Steven Kwan â the American Leagueâs four-time reigning Gold Glove winner in left field â into center field for the 2026 campaign.
On the surface, it sounds logical. Kwan has been one of baseballâs most polished defenders, piling up accolades with almost mechanical consistency. Even in 2025, when he posted a modest +5 Outs Above Average, he still claimed the Gold Glove thanks to a sparkling +12 Fielding Run Value and a remarkable +22 Defensive Runs Saved. That DRS total barely eclipsed Rafaelaâs +20, underscoring just how elite Kwan truly is with the glove.
Yet context matters. Left field is not center field. The geometry of the position changes everything. Center demands more range, more communication, more instinct. It is the nerve center of the outfield, the position that swallows line drives into the gap and prevents triples from igniting rallies. Kwan has been brilliant in his corner. But brilliance in left does not automatically translate to dominance in center.

Rafaela, meanwhile, has already proven he can shoulder that burden full-time. His instincts in center are not theoretical. They are documented, repeated, measurable. He does not merely chase balls down; he anticipates them. And he does it under the bright lights of Fenway Park, where angles can betray even seasoned veterans.
There is also a subplot that could strengthen Rafaelaâs grip on the award in 2026. Last season, Bostonâs roster needs forced him into an unusual experiment: 165 innings at second base. The move, while showcasing his versatility, siphoned defensive value from center field and likely suppressed his cumulative metrics. Enter the offseason acquisition of Caleb Durbin, expected to stabilize the infield and allow Rafaela to return exclusively to his natural home in center.
If that happens, the league may witness something even more emphatic. A fully focused Rafaela, unburdened by positional juggling, could push his already gaudy numbers into rarefied territory.
Of course, Clevelandâs motivations with Kwan may extend beyond hardware. Strong left field defense is valuable, but center fielders carry a different premium â particularly in trade discussions. The Guardians have done little to silence speculation surrounding Kwanâs long-term future. If he proves capable of handling center on a full-time basis, his value skyrockets. A Gold Glove-caliber defender at the most demanding outfield position becomes a tantalizing trade chip, especially for National League contenders seeking range in expansive ballparks.
But that is the gamble. If the experiment falters, Kwan risks stepping out of the Gold Glove conversation altogether. And even if he thrives, he must outperform a player who already owns the lane.

The competition narrative is compelling, but the numbers remain stubborn. Rafaela is not simply âvery good.â He is historically efficient by modern defensive standards. Outs Above Average, Defensive Runs Saved, Fielding Run Value â each metric independently validates his supremacy. Together, they form an argument few can counter.
Could Kwan close the gap? Perhaps. He has the instincts, the discipline, the rĂŠsumĂŠ. Yet the leap from elite corner defender to elite center fielder is steep. Crow-Armstrong may have a claim in the National League, but in the American League, Rafaela sits atop the defensive hierarchy â and he has shown no signs of relinquishing that throne.
The 2026 Gold Glove race in center field is suddenly more intriguing. Clevelandâs positional experiment has injected suspense into what once seemed inevitable. But until someone proves capable of matching Rafaelaâs range, consistency, and measurable impact, the award remains his to lose.
And if Bostonâs defensive anchor stays planted in center all season, fully unleashed, the word ârepeatâ may undersell what is coming. It might be the beginning of something closer to a dynasty.