Andy Pages is making a serious case for his first All-Star selection. The Los Angeles Dodgers center fielder has been on fire this season, posting a stellar .333/.375/.571 slash line with nine home runs and 35 RBIs through the first 40 games. That batting average ranks fifth in all of Major League Baseball, while his RBIs and 49 hits are both tied for third. If he keeps this pace, he's on track for 140 RBIs and nearly 200 hits by season's end—numbers that scream All-Star.
But it's not just about the bat. Pages has been elite with the glove too, ranking in the top 10% of all defensive categories according to Baseball Reference. His bWAR sits at 2.8, which leads the majors. That's the kind of all-around production that turns heads when All-Star rosters are being finalized.
This surge didn't happen by accident. After a tough 2025 postseason—where he went just 1-for-16 in the World Series despite making a spectacular catch in Game 7—Pages made a deliberate choice. He skipped the World Baseball Classic to focus entirely on improving his game. The results are clear: his plate discipline has improved, with his walk rate climbing from the sixth percentile in 2025 to the 20th percentile this year. More importantly, his hard-hit percentage has skyrocketed to the 94th percentile, and his average exit velocity has jumped from 88.6 mph to 91 mph.
The question now is whether Pages can sustain this level of play through the summer. If he does, he won't just be an All-Star—he'll be a cornerstone of the Dodgers' postseason push. And for a player who learned the hard way that regular-season success doesn't guarantee October glory, that motivation might be exactly what keeps him going.
