
"I classified Guerrero's 2025 season as All-Star caliber, however I would also be driven to say it was on the low end of that category. He hit just .203 over his final 18 regular season games, and his final numbers for the season looked more like he was hitting for average than hitting for power. In total, Guerrero slashed .292/.381/.467 with an .848 OPS, 23 home runs, 84 RBIs, and 34 doubles in 156 games last season."
"The regular season numbers quickly became overshadowed by what he achieved during Toronto's run to the World Series. He put up a tremendous .397/.494/.795 slash line through 18 playoff games, including 8 home runs (setting a franchise record for postseason home runs), 15 RBIs, and only seven strikeouts. Watching him step up in the playoffs was genuinely special, and it added more face-of-the-franchise flavor to his career palette."
Vladimir Guerrero Jr. has produced wildly varying seasons since his 2019 debut, ranging from underwhelming years to All-Star-caliber campaigns and a near-MVP 2021. In 2025 he slashed .292/.381/.467 with an .848 OPS, 23 home runs, 84 RBIs and 34 doubles in 156 games, earning a fifth straight All-Star selection and a Gold Glove finalist nod. He struggled down the stretch, hitting .203 over his final 18 regular-season games. Guerrero excelled in the playoffs, posting a .397/.494/.795 line with eight home runs, 15 RBIs and seven strikeouts in 18 games. He has demonstrated remarkable durability, playing at least 156 games each year since 2021 without landing on the Injured List.
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