Mauricio Dubón
(Redirected from Mauricio Dubon)
Mauricio Andre Dubon
- Bats Right, Throws Right
- Height 6' 0", Weight 160 lb.
- High School Capital Christian School
- Debut July 7, 2019
- Born July 19, 1994 in San Pedro Sula, Cortés Honduras
Biographical Information[edit]
Infielder Mauricio Dubón was a 26th-round selection by the Boston Red Sox in the 2013 amateur draft. The scout was Demond Smith. He played that first season with the GCL Red Sox, then in 2014 stepped forward as the regular shortstop for the Lowell Spinners of the New York-Penn League, hitting .320 in 66 games. He split 2015 between the Greenville Drive and the Salem Red Sox, playing a total of 120 games during which his batting line was .288/.349/.376 with 70 runs scored. In 2016, he continued to demonstrate strong hitting abilities, combining for a .323/.379/.461 slash line in 124 games split equally between Salem and the Portland Sea Dogs of the AA Eastern League. He hit 13 doubles and 9 triples, scored 101 runs and drove in 59.
On December 6, 2016, he was traded to the Milwaukee Brewers alongside 3B/1B Travis Shaw and fellow prospect Josh Pennington in return for P Tyler Thornburg. He split the season between the AA Biloxi Shuckers and AAA Colorado Springs SkySox, hitting .274/.330/.382 with 8 homers and 57 RBIs in 129 games. He was named to the 2017 Futures Game as part of the World team.
Dubon was born in Honduras and learned to play baseball there. It was not a popular sport in the Central American country, but it got him noticed by Christian missionaries who had come over to donate equipment for his native city's fledgling baseball and softball program, and they offered to pay a scholarship so he could attend high school in Sacramento, CA. He left his home and family to seize this opportunity of a lifetime, living with a host family from the age of 15 on, and made the most of it. In addition to perfecting his baseball skills, he learned to speak flawless English and created a bright future for himself. When he played in the 2017 Futures Game, his mother made the trip from Honduras to watch him; it was the first time she had seen him play baseball in a professional setting.
He made his major league debut during the 2019 season, appearing in two games for the Brewers, before being traded to the San Francisco Giants on July 31st in return for Drew Pomeranz and Ray Black. He appeared in 28 more games, and altogether he hit .274 with 4 homers and 9 RBIs. He was a regular during the pandemic-shortened 2020 season, playing in 54 of the Giants' 60 games as their main centerfielder. He hit .274 with 4 homers and 19 RBIs, for an OPS+ of exactly 100. In 2021, when the Giants surprised just about every one to post the best record in the majors, he batted .240 in 74 games with 5 homers and 22 RBIs. However, his OPS+ fell to 75, the result of a poor walk rate that saw his OBP tumble to .278. He was a utility player, seeing time at four positions: center field, second base, shortstop and third base. He did not appear in the postseason.
In 2022, he got off to a slow start, batting .239 in his first 21 games with San Francisco, with an OPS+ of 80. On May 14th, he was traded to the Houston Astros for minor league catcher Michael Papierski. At the time, the Astros were dealing with an injury to starting 2B José Altuve and not getting much production from their two main back-up infielders, Aledmys Diaz and Niko Goodrum. It turned out to be a great career move for him, even though he hit just .308 with 3 homers and 16 RBIs in 83 games after the trade, for an OPS+ of 57. He was a member of the Astros' first World Series-winning team since their scandal-tainted 2017 win, getting into 6 games over the course of the postseason, albeit strictly as a defensive replacement (he did not have a single plate appearance).
It was in 2023 that things started to turn around for him, as he became a key contributor on the Astros that year. He played in 132 games during the regular season, batting .278 with 10 homers, 76 runs and 46 RBIs, his OPS+ shooting up to 97. However, it was his versatility and defensive excellence that made him especially valuable as he split his time between second base and the outfield and won the Gold Glove at the utility player position. He got his first postseason hits that year, as he went a combined 8 for 25 (.320) when the Astros made it all the way to Game 7 of the ALCS before bowing to the Texas Rangers. His next two seasons, in 2024 and 2025, were very similar, albeit that his batting average fell down a notch both years, to .269 in 2024 and .241 in 2025. He played a similar number of games both years - 137 and 133 -, and his OPS+ also went down in a similar manner, to 87 and 78 respectively. He won a second Gold Glove in 2025, again at the utility player position, beating out the Toronto Blue Jays' multi-positional wizard, Ernie Clement, that year. However, postseason success eluded Houston those two years, as they were quickly eliminated at the Wild Card Series stage the first year (he went 2 for 5 in the two games), and missed the postseason altogether the second.
On November 19, 2025, he was traded to the Atlanta Braves, in return for IF Nick Allen, giving him a chance to compete for the starting shortstop job with the Braves in 2026.
Both of his father and brother are named Danilo Dubón; one of them was on the Honduran national team in 2010.
Notable Achievements[edit]
- 2-time AL Gold Glove Winner (2023 & 2025/UT)
- Won one World Series with the Houston Astros in 2022
Further Reading[edit]
- Ted Berg: "Brewers prospect wants to spread baseball in his native Honduras", "For the Win!", USA Today Sports, July 9, 2017. [1]
- Mark Bowman: "Braves acquire Gold Glover Dubón from Astros for infielder Allen", mlb.com, November 20, 2025. [2]
- Dakota Gardner: "Mauricio Dubon's mother had never seen him play professionally until the Futures Game", "Cut4", mlb.com, July 12, 2017. [3]
- Brian McTaggart: "Astros acquire versatile Dubón to bolster depth", mlb.com, May 14, 2022. [4]


We're Social...for Statheads
Every Sports Reference Social Media Account
Site Last Updated:
Question, Comment, Feedback, or Correction?
Subscribe to our Free Email Newsletter
Subscribe to Stathead Baseball: Get your first month FREE
Your All-Access Ticket to the Baseball Reference Database
Do you have a sports website? Or write about sports? We have tools and resources that can help you use sports data. Find out more.