Breaking news: Vladimir Guerrero Jr. is very good at baseball. That statement may sound obvious, almost redundant, but what’s unfolding in Toronto suggests something far more significant than simple excellence. After bursting onto the scene in 2019 as the most hyped prospect of his generation and recently delivering one of the most electrifying postseasons in modern history during the Blue Jays’ World Series run, Guerrero stands at the edge of something bigger. The question is no longer whether he is elite. The question is whether 2026 becomes the year he takes over the sport entirely.
Everyone in Toronto understands the hierarchy. Guerrero is the guy. He is the $500-million face of the franchise, the centerpiece of the organization’s identity, especially now that Bo Bichette has taken his talents to New York. The spotlight belongs solely to Vlad Jr., and with that spotlight comes weight. Last season, at times, that weight appeared visible.

Statistically, Guerrero was good in 2025. Very good, even. He posted a respectable .848 OPS with 23 home runs and 84 RBIs. For most players, those numbers represent a strong campaign. For Guerrero, they felt underwhelming. Those counting stats were his lowest totals since his rookie year, when he played only 123 games. The dominance fans expected after his massive extension didn’t consistently materialize during the regular season.
The contrast with 2024 was impossible to ignore. That year, Guerrero slashed .323/.396/.544, launched 75 extra-base hits, and finished top-six in MVP voting despite playing for a last-place Blue Jays team. He carried the offense on his back and reasserted himself as one of the most feared hitters in baseball. In 2025, however, the rhythm felt off. The swings were close, but not fully connected. The damage was there, but not relentless.
Dig deeper into the numbers, and the picture becomes more nuanced. When Guerrero struggles, it’s often because he pulls too many ground balls to the left side, turning hard contact into routine outs. In 2024, he hit ground balls 47.7% of the time. In 2025, that number actually improved slightly to 47.1%. His pulled ground ball rate also dropped from 21.6% to 20.8%. On paper, that suggests progress, not regression. So what changed?

The culprit may have been something subtler: pop-ups. Guerrero’s pop-up rate jumped from 4.2% in 2024 to 6% in 2025. That might seem minor, but history tells a story. In his MVP runner-up season in 2021, his pop-up rate was just 4.8%. In 2022 and 2023—two comparatively underwhelming seasons—it rose above 6%. Pop-ups are often a sign of near-misses, of mechanics slightly out of sync. A fraction too early. A fraction too under the ball. The difference between a 420-foot homer and a routine infield fly can be microscopic.
For much of the 2025 regular season, Guerrero looked like a hitter searching for perfect timing. Around mid-August, he appeared to be locking back in, driving the ball with authority to all fields. Then came the hamstring injury, disrupting his rhythm once again. He returned, but something still looked off—until October.
Everything changed in the postseason.
Guerrero erupted for a historic eight home runs, delivering thunderous swings that echoed across Canada. His grand slam and emphatic bat flip in Game 2 of the ALDS instantly became part of Toronto baseball folklore. More importantly, he looked fully synchronized—mechanically and mentally. The balance was back. The violence in his swing was controlled. The confidence radiated.
That confidence may be the most important development of all.

Mechanics in baseball are inseparable from mindset. When Guerrero stepped into the batter’s box during the postseason, he no longer looked like a player trying to justify a $500-million contract. He looked like a superstar embracing it. The doubts vanished. The narrative shifted. There is no longer a debate about whether he deserved that deal. October answered it.
And that psychological breakthrough could define 2026.
For the first time in his career, Guerrero enters a season without lingering questions about postseason performance or contract pressure. He has proven himself on the biggest stage imaginable. He has felt the roar of a city celebrating his October heroics. He has tasted validation. That changes a player.
Historically, Guerrero has not strung together two fully dominant seasons back-to-back. Ironically, that inconsistency might be the best news for the league’s MVP voters. If patterns hold, 2026 is positioned to be the explosion year. The mechanical tweaks are minor. The power remains elite. The contact ability is intact. The only missing ingredient during stretches last season was unwavering belief.
Now he has it.

Toronto’s lineup will revolve around him more than ever. The American League remains stacked with stars, but few possess Guerrero’s combination of bat speed, plate coverage, and postseason credibility. If he reduces the pop-ups, maintains his improved ground ball profile, and carries over that October swagger into April, the numbers could skyrocket.
This is what a monster season looks like before it happens. A superstar who has already conquered the stage. A franchise fully behind him. A city that believes. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. has never had more reason to trust himself. And if history is any guide, baseball might be on the verge of witnessing his most complete season yet.