PHILADELPHIA -- Pete Crow-Armstrong saw the issue, said it out loud, and then went to work on it.
Early last season in Cincinnati, the Cubs center fielder talked about his approach at the plate and made clear what he wanted to clean up. His words stuck because they sounded like a player who understood exactly where the trouble was.
"I'm definitely looking forward to the day that I have a better grasp of the strike zone and don't swing at so many bad pitches."
That self-scouting has turned into real progress. With the 2026 All-Star Game now behind him and the second half about to begin, Crow-Armstrong has gone from identifying a weakness to looking like one of baseball’s best all-around players.
The numbers tell the story. His walk rate has climbed from 4.5% last season to 11.2% this year.
His chase percentage has dropped by more than six points. He’s swinging less, but when he does swing, he’s making more contact and hitting the ball harder, with his hard-hit percentage up seven points.
"Yeah, absolutely," he said when asked if he’s happy with the improvement. "You can't work on, like, walking, but I've had a lot of good conversations and good people to talk to about how to get on base better, as funny as that sounds."
Crow-Armstrong knows the results are showing up.
"Shoot, a year later, the OBP is higher than it's ever been in my career, I think, minor league and the big leagues," he said. "I'm super proud of that and I'm really proud of getting on base as much as I have."
He has every reason to be. Before this season, his best on-base percentage at any level with more than a tiny sample was .376, set in 2022 between Class A and High-A. This year, the production has been driven not just by hard contact but by a much better eye, even after he falls behind in the count.
Before this season, Crow-Armstrong had only two multi-walk games in his career. In the first 96 games of this season, he has nine, including his first two three-walk games.
He had walked four times after getting to 0-2 in the count before this year; already this season, he has done it seven times. He was clearly keeping tabs on that too.
As I was walking away, I tossed out, "keep taking those 0-2 walks."
"Helll yeah!" he loudly replied.
Crow-Armstrong pointed to his three-walk game against the Astros on May 24 as the moment things started to click. The box score barely hints at it - he went 0 for 1 - but he felt those plate appearances set the tone for what came next. At that point, he was hitting .228/.316/.370.
Since then, the transformation has been obvious. Entering the All-Star break, PCA is hitting .291/.386/.531 with a 155 OPS+. Among National League players, he ranks 13th in batting average, fifth in OBP, ninth in slugging and fifth in OPS.
That kind of production, paired with his elite defense and speed, has made him one of the most valuable players in the sport. He’s second in the majors in WAR behind the only two-way player in more than a century.
He’s also on pace for a monster stat line: 25 doubles, six triples, 36 home runs, 91 RBI, 108 runs and 41 steals. Only Julio Rodríguez and Bobby Witt Jr. have multiple 30-30 seasons before age 25, and Crow-Armstrong is positioned to join them this year.
The turnaround has also put him in line for a season that would rank among the best in Cubs history. His 5.9 WAR puts him on pace for about 9.8 over the full year.
Only three Cubs position players have ever reached 10 WAR in a season: Rogers Hornsby in 1929, Sammy Sosa in 2001 and Ernie Banks in 1959. A 9.8 finish would be almost identical to Ron Santo’s 1967 season, which would slot fourth in franchise history.
The speed and defense were never the question. Last season, Crow-Armstrong became the first Cub to go 30-30 since Sosa, and the power-speed package was already flashing.
What has changed is the discipline. That’s the piece that has lifted him from a good all-around player into someone who can credibly sit in the MVP conversation, where he opens the second half with the second-best odds in the National League at +650 behind Shohei Ohtani, per Caesars.
There is still one obvious caution flag. Crow-Armstrong has been here before, at least in part. He hit .265/.302/.544 with 25 home runs in the first half last season before fading badly down the stretch.
This time, though, the case for believing in the surge is stronger. He identified the problem, fixed it, and has the numbers to prove it. The only thing left is to keep doing it.
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Civale is expected to give the Cubs innings out of the bullpen, a useful role with Daniel Palencia and Hoby Milner both on the injured list and the deadline still ahead. His arrival also points to more roster shuffling to come, and a corresponding move will likely follow as Chicago continues to piece together its pitching staff. [Read more 🡒]
