Roman Anthony Bio
Roman Joseph Anthony (born May 13, 2004) is an American professional baseball outfielder for the Boston Red Sox of Major League Baseball (MLB). He made his MLB debut in 2025 after being widely recognized as baseball’s top prospect. A former second-round pick, Anthony rose quickly through Boston’s minor-league system and signed a long-term contract extension as a rookie.
Early Life and Background
Roman Joseph Anthony was born on May 13, 2004, and grew up in Parkland, Florida. He attended Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, the same Parkland-based school that gained national attention in 2018, and played baseball for the Eagles. As an amateur, he developed into one of the most highly regarded prep hitters in the country.
After his sophomore year, Anthony committed to play college baseball at the University of Mississippi (Ole Miss), though he would never suit up for the Rebels. Following his junior season, he went on to become one of the top prospects in the 2022 MLB draft class, eventually forgoing his college commitment to begin his professional career.
As a high-school player, Anthony posted strong offensive numbers over multiple seasons. He was named the Broward County 7-A Player of the Year by the Sun Sentinel after hitting .363 with five home runs, six doubles, and 22 runs batted in (RBIs), plus 26 stolen bases and 32 runs scored. He repeated as Broward 7-A Player of the Year as a senior while batting .520 with 52 hits, 14 doubles, 10 home runs, 40 RBIs, and 36 runs scored. That same year he was named the Gatorade Florida Player of the Year and Florida Mr. Baseball, and he helped his team win the National High School Invitational.
Path to Baseball
Anthony entered the 2022 MLB draft as a consensus top-prospect bat with power, on-base ability, and above-average speed. The Boston Red Sox selected him with the 79th overall pick and signed him to an over-slot deal worth $2.5 million. That bonus signaled Boston’s confidence in his long-term ceiling and helped convince him to forgo his commitment to Ole Miss.
After signing, Anthony began his professional career with the Rookie-level Florida Complex League Red Sox before a late-August promotion to the Salem Red Sox of the Single-A Carolina League. The path from there to the major leagues took less than three seasons, a rapid rise that tracked with his production at every level.
Roman Anthony Career
Early Career (2022–2023)
Anthony’s first full professional season came in 2023, when he returned to Salem to start the year. In 42 games with the Salem Red Sox, he batted .228 with one home run and 18 RBIs before a promotion to the High-A Greenville Drive. With Greenville, he hit .294 with 12 home runs, 38 RBIs, and 41 runs scored in 54 games, earning another promotion, this time to the Double-A Portland Sea Dogs.
He finished the 2023 season batting a combined .272 with 14 home runs, 64 RBIs, and 78 runs scored across his three levels. The Red Sox recognized his breakout year by naming him the organization’s minor league hitter of the year for 2023, a strong signal that his ceiling was on track.
Minor-League Breakthrough (2024)
Anthony began 2024 in Double-A Portland, ranked as the Red Sox’ number two minor-league prospect by Baseball America. He spent the bulk of the year there before an August promotion to the Triple-A Worcester Red Sox, a move made alongside fellow prospects Marcelo Mayer and Kyle Teel. At the time of his call-up, he had posted a .269/.367/.489 slash line with Portland.
In September 2024, Baseball America named Anthony the top prospect in all of baseball, replacing Junior Caminero after Caminero had exhausted his prospect status with time in the majors. The ranking cemented Anthony as the face of Boston’s farm system and one of the most-anticipated call-ups in the sport.
Boston Red Sox Era (2025–Present)
Boston invited Anthony to 2025 spring training, then sent him to Triple-A Worcester to begin the season. He slashed .288/.423/.491 with 10 home runs and 29 RBIs in the minors before his promotion, capped by a 497-foot grand slam against the Rochester Red Wings on June 7, the longest home run in professional baseball to that point in 2025.
Anthony made his major-league debut on June 9, 2025, against the Tampa Bay Rays, recording an RBI groundout in four hitless at-bats. At 21 years and 27 days old, he became the youngest Red Sox player to debut since Rafael Devers. The next day, June 10, he collected his first MLB hit, a two-RBI double in the first inning off Ryan Pepiot, and his uniform number was changed from 48 to 19. He hit his first major-league home run on June 16 against the Seattle Mariners, and his first career walk-off hit came on August 1 against the Houston Astros.
On August 6, 2025, Anthony signed an eight-year contract extension with Boston worth $130 million, including escalators that could push the total value above $230 million, with a club option that keeps him under team control through 2034. After a strong summer, he was named American League Rookie of the Month for August, hitting .304 with six home runs, 13 RBIs, four doubles, 15 walks, 21 runs scored, two stolen bases, a .520 slugging percentage, and a .390 on-base percentage across 26 games. A left oblique strain landed him on the 10-day injured list on September 3, ending his regular season.
Driving Style and Strengths
Anthony is a left-handed-hitting outfielder whose game is built around a patient, on-base-heavy approach combined with plus raw power. He drew more walks than strikeouts during his climb through the minors, a rare combination that helped him post on-base percentages near .400 in 2025. Defensively, he has the arm and range to profile as a corner outfielder, with the athleticism to handle a move to a more demanding spot if needed.
Notable Events and Milestones
His 497-foot grand slam in Worcester was the longest home run in professional baseball during the 2025 season to that point, an early signature moment of his year. He was later named to MLB’s 2025 All-Rookie team as an outfielder and finished third in AL Rookie of the Year voting, narrowly missing the bonuses tied to a top-two finish in his contract extension.
Roman Anthony Career Wins
Anthony’s win totals are still being established at the major-league level, since his rookie campaign was cut short by injury. His career highlights so far center on prospect accolades, a long-term contract, and individual recognition rather than accumulated victories in any single series.
Major League Highlights
Anthony’s most notable major-league achievements from 2025 include his first MLB hit, first home run, and first walk-off, all coming within his first two months in the big leagues. He was named American League Rookie of the Month for August and to MLB’s All-Rookie team for 2025 as an outfielder.
Other Wins & Performances
At the high-school level, Anthony helped Marjory Stoneman Douglas win the National High School Invitational and earned Florida Mr. Baseball honors. In the minors, he was the Red Sox’ minor league hitter of the year for 2023, his first full professional season.
Roman Anthony Family
Family Background and Racing Lineage
Public biographical sources for Roman Joseph Anthony do not detail his parents or any family connection to professional sports. He grew up in Parkland, Florida, where he attended Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.
Personal Life
Anthony is a young, single professional athlete focused on his rookie season with the Boston Red Sox. There is no public confirmation of a spouse, partner, or children as of the 2025 season.
2025 Season Performance
Anthony’s 2025 season split cleanly into two chapters: a dominant Triple-A run at Worcester and a lightning-fast major-league debut with Boston. In the minors, he slashed .288/.423/.491 with 10 home runs and 29 RBIs, a 497-foot grand slam, and enough plate discipline to keep his name at the top of prospect rankings. When Boston finally called, he arrived as one of the most hyped rookies in recent memory.
At the major-league level, Anthony showed both the patience and the power Boston had hoped for, drawing walks, working counts, and delivering his first home run, first walk-off, and an August Rookie of the Month award. A left oblique strain in early September ended his regular season, denying him a chance to build a full counting stat line but not before he signed an eight-year, $130 million extension with escalators that could push the deal above $230 million. The new contract runs through 2034 and includes a club option.
He finished the year third in AL Rookie of the Year voting and was named to MLB’s All-Rookie team, a fitting cap to a debut that set the foundation for what Boston hopes is a long, productive career. With his extension in place, the focus now turns to a healthy offseason and a full 2026 campaign, when Anthony is expected to take on a full-time role in the Red Sox outfield.

