Guardians' Travis Bazzana earns All-Star nod as rookie, was 'speechless'
· Yahoo Sports
CLEVELAND -- Travis Bazzana used to try to catch All-Star Game highlights around his class schedule when he was a kid in Australia. Now, he'll be seeing one with a pretty solid vantage point — the dugout and possibly at second base at Citizens Bank Park.
Bazzana was one of three Guardians players announced as 2026 All-Stars on Fox's live Selection Show July 4, along with closer Cade Smith and starting pitcher Parker Messick.
Visit betsport24.es for more information.
Bazzana and Messick became the third and fourth Guardians rookies to be selected to an All-Star Game, along with catcher Sandy Alomar Jr. in 1990 and pitcher Herb Score in 1955. For Bazzana, he'll head to Philadelphia for the All-Star festivities despite not starting the regular season in the major leagues, an impressive feat to earn the nod in only 57 games played entering July 4.
"I was confident early on in the year that I could be a good player in the major leagues once I got my chance," Bazzana said after getting the news. "But yeah, I didn't really think about being an All-Star early on. ... I was honestly a little speechless because I didn't expect it at all."
Travis Bazzana voted an MLB All-Star
Bazzana, Smith and Messick were all voted in by the players' vote, a key part of the process, which added a layer of appreciation to an announcement he wasn't expecting to receive when Guardians manager Stephen Vogt informed the team prior to their July 4 game against the Chicago White Sox.
"Travis in particular being here for two months, his peers and his teammates are the ones that voted him in, so they're recognizing what he's doing," Vogt said. "What we've asked Travis to do is come in as a rookie and hit at the top of the order. It's not an easy thing to do and he's handling it tremendously and it's a very, very well-earned honor to be going."
In those 57 games in the majors entering July 4, Bazzana was hitting .255 with a .347 on-base percentage, seven home runs, 12 doubles, 27 RBIs and 12 stolen bases. Since being called up on April 28, his 1.4 fWAR is just behind New York Yankees infielder Jazz Chisolm Jr. (1.5) for the most among American League second basemen.
Travis Bazzana stats
With outfielder Steven Kwan struggling to get going at the plate in 2026, the Guardians needed someone to step in the leadoff spot and deliver. Bazzana effectively forced his way into the role.
"I mean, I think we had visions of Travis hitting at the top of our order before he even got here," Vogt said. "You have a prospect like that, you know what he's capable of, the different tools he possesses, but you don't know until they get up here and just the way he settled in, the quality of his at-bats, it was screaming, 'Move me up.' And we got to a point where it was time, and he's handled it amazingly."
The 2025 season did not go Bazzana's way, to say the least. Oblique injuries played a key role in denying him the call-up to the majors as several other players taken in the top-10 in his draft class were already thriving in the big leagues. Ever since he received the promotion to Cleveland, though, Bazzana has secured the everyday job at second base along with acting as the club's leadoff hitter, something that could remain the case for years if all goes well.
And now, he's an All-Star as a 23-year-old rookie.
"I feel like there's been ups and downs," Bazzana said. "I feel like I haven't been the most consistent version of myself, but to get the nod when I feel like there's a lot left in the tank was really cool, and I just didn't expect it. So I was kind of speechless."
Ryan Lewis covers the Guardians for the Akron Beacon Journal. He can be reached at [email protected].
This article originally appeared on Akron Beacon Journal: Guardians' Travis Bazzana earns All-Star nod as rookie, was 'speechless'