Cade Smith’s first All-Star Weekend gave the Cleveland Guardians closer plenty to remember, but one part of the experience stood above the rest.
Smith, who has been among MLB’s top relievers since the start of the 2024 season, was in the middle of All-Star festivities for the first time over the weekend. He handled his lone inning in the game with ease, working a quick one-two-three frame with two strikeouts. Bryce Harper’s reaction said plenty about the stuff Smith was bringing, with Harper calling it “disgusting” as he headed back to the dugout.
For Smith, though, the highlight wasn’t the strikeouts or the spotlight.
“I thought the coolest part was just being able to talk to guys on other teams from around the league and just um, yeah, kind of just get to have a normal conversation with them and not be competing against them in that moment,” Smith explained.
That side of the weekend clearly meant something to a pitcher who brings a relentless edge every time he takes the mound, no matter the score or inning. The All-Star setting gave him a rare chance to step out of that competitive bubble and simply talk baseball - and life - with players he usually sees as opponents.
Smith also singled out the chance to share the experience with teammates Parker Messick and Travis Bazzana.
“I thought it was super cool,” Smith continued.
“I mean, we were super excited to represent Cleveland. To be invited to something like that is a huge honor, something that none of us take for granted. I think we really did our best to soak it in and just enjoy the moment, enjoy the show.”
Smith described the trip to Philly as “definitely very busy, a little bit hectic, but it was a lot of fun.”
From the red carpet to watching the home run derby on the field to hearing his name introduced, the weekend packed in plenty. But for Smith, the most memorable part was the simplest: getting a normal conversation with players from around the league while everyone was away from the pressure of competition.
And with a 2.84 ERA, a 1.11 WHIP, and a major league-leading 28 saves so far in 2026, Smith has more than earned the stage.
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Four Former Guardians Could Suddenly Put Cleveland Back In Deadline Talk
A month out from the Aug. 3 trade deadline, four familiar names could wind up back in the rumor mill for reasons that matter to Cleveland. Josh Bell, Tyler Freeman, Sam Hentges and Lane Thomas all have different paths, different contract situations and different kinds of appeal, which is exactly why they have surfaced as possible pieces in other clubs deadline calculations. For a Guardians team that knows how quickly the market can shift, the intrigue is less about nostalgia than about whether any of these former players become useful leverage for someone else.
Bells one-year deal and Freemans years of control give them very different kinds of value, while Hentges has rebuilt enough stock after arm injuries to draw attention again. Thomas is the wild card, especially with Kansas City sliding hard and every roster decision getting harder to justify as the deadline nears. None of it guarantees movement, but it does leave Cleveland watching a corner of the market where old friends could suddenly become relevant again. [Read more 🡒]
