PHILADELPHIA - Juan Soto walked into All-Star Week with the kind of résumé that should have made him impossible to miss.
He’s 27. He already has a World Series ring.
He’s coming off back-to-back third-place finishes in MVP voting, one in each league. And he’s the highest-paid player in baseball, thanks to a record 15-year, $765 million contract.
Still, at Citizens Bank Park, Soto never quite owned the stage.
Shohei Ohtani stayed away to rest an aching knee. Aaron Judge remained in New York for tests on his fractured rib cage. That opened the door for Soto to be the obvious headliner, but the spotlight kept drifting elsewhere - to the Phillies’ Kyle Schwarber and Bryce Harper, to the Dodgers’ Andy Pages and Teoscar Hernandez, to Atlanta’s Ronald Acuna Jr., and even to rookie Japanese slugger Munetaka Murakami and Jordan Walker, who stole Monday night’s Home Run Derby with a last-swing walk-off blast into the seats.
Soto did get there eventually, but even that took some work. In Phase 1 of the NL outfield voting, he finished fifth with 1,538,562 votes, behind Pages, Brandon Marsh, Acuna and Hernandez. He made the cut, then earned the starting leftfield spot after Phase 2 narrowed the field.
That was still an upgrade from last season, his first in Flushing, when Soto missed the NL roster entirely despite putting up All-Star-caliber numbers by the break after a slow start. For a hitter with his kind of profile, that omission felt absurd then, and it still does now.
“It feels great for me,” Soto said. “I feel like every team I’ve been a part of, I’ve been giving my 100%. I’ve been giving everything that I have, and to be recognized with an All-Star Game, I think it’s really cool for myself.”
By Monday, Soto was handling the All-Star media grind like a veteran who has seen all of this before. He spent 45 straight minutes taking questions in English and Spanish, with reporters stacked two deep around his booth.
A lot of the conversation circled back to the same place: the Mets. That’s been the story around Soto for a while now, and he’s familiar enough with the script to answer without much strain. It’s a much easier assignment than the ones he faced in earlier All-Star appearances.
Two years ago, when he was an All-Star with the Yankees, the chatter was all about where he would land next and how massive the eventual contract would be. In 2022, his final season with the Nationals, he sat under the blazing Los Angeles sun with agent Scott Boras beside him and fielded questions about the trade everyone knew was coming. Two weeks later, he was a Padre.
“I feel like every question was about trading me,” Soto recalled with a smile. “And now? It’s a different mindset.”
The chaos of his early 20s should be behind him now. But Soto has spent the last few seasons as the most coveted player in the sport, and the Mets are his fourth team in five seasons. Their failures have pushed him out of the center of the baseball conversation, even as his own production keeps him in the MVP picture.
At the break, Soto ranked second in the NL with a .967 OPS and was tied for sixth in homers with 21. He also looked like he was only getting hotter as the first half wound down.
That’s why the comparison to Alex Rodriguez keeps coming up. In 2003, Rodriguez won MVP for a Rangers team that finished 71-91, 20 games under .500 and 25 games out of first place, before being traded to the Yankees the next winter. Soto’s situation has a similar feel: elite numbers, enormous contract, and a team nowhere near the level it needs to be.
There’s no shortcut for him now. No exit plan. Just the Mets’ obligation to stop being a mess and give him a stage worthy of his talent.
Until that happens, Soto has to carry the image work himself. Ohtani and Judge are still the names most people reach for when they talk about the face of baseball, but Soto belongs in that conversation too.
“I think he’s Top 5, if not higher,” Cody Bellinger said. “I just think, no matter what, his plate discipline, his power, contact quality.
I mean, he’s a Hall of Famer. He’s only 27 years old, which is insane.
He’s still so young.”
That’s the player the Mets paid for. Right now, though, the price tag looks even steeper because the team around him is so far from respectability.
On the Yankees, Soto was Robin to Judge’s Batman, and that setup seemed to suit him. In the Bronx, the pinstripes would have guaranteed a bigger profile. In Queens, he’s the main attraction at a much smaller stage.
Soto said Monday that Robinson Cano was one of his childhood idols, another Yankees star who left the Bronx for Seattle on a 10-year, $240 million deal. Cano was productive with the Mariners, but his star power faded once he was out of the spotlight.
Soto’s challenge is different, but the warning is there. Greatness is easy to spot when the team around it is holding up its end. Right now, that’s the part missing.
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