| After being selected by the Chicago White Sox in the amateur draft in 1996, Paul was a back-up catcher from 1999 until he was granted his outright release in 2003. He was signed by the Chicago Cubs, but was again released in October of the same year. The Anaheim Angels signed him in 2004. He was traded in late 2005 to the Devil Rays for minor league third baseman Travis Schlichting.
According to commentator Tim McCarver, Paul is writing a book about pitch selection. Paul, who lost a friend in the September 11, 2001 attacks, also had a brief brush with fame as a proponent of playing games scheduled on September 11, 2002.
Paul is most famous for his involvement in a controversial play in Game 2 of the 2005 ALCS versus the Chicago White Sox. In the bottom of the ninth, with the score tied at 1, Paul was catching Angels reliever Kelvim Escobar. There were two outs and nobody on base. After Chicago's A. J. Pierzynski swung and missed a third strike in the dirt, Paul, believing he had caught the ball, began walking back to the dugout along with the rest of his team. However, home plate umpire Doug Eddings ruled that the ball had not been caught and Pierzynski ran to first, where he was called safe. Pinch runner Pablo Ozuna stole second and later scored on Joe Crede's game winning double, tying the ALCS at 1 game apiece. The White Sox went on to take the next 3 games and go on to the World Series
Paul spent much of the 2006 season as the personal catcher for Devil Rays pitcher Seth McClung. After McClung was sent to the minor leagues to be converted to closing and Devil Rays starting catcher Toby Hall was traded to the Los Angeles Dodgers, Dioneer Navarro came to Tampa Bay as the Devil Rays' main catcher. With rookie catcher Shawn Riggans seeing playing time at the end of the 2006 season, Paul's position on the 2007 Devil Rays is unclear. |