Max Muncy doubted he’d be an All-Star again … now his return ‘feels a little bit more special’

Jul 14, 2026 - 22:35
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Max Muncy doubted he’d be an All-Star again … now his return ‘feels a little bit more special’

PHILADELPHIA –– There were many times early in his career that Max Muncy never thought he’d be an All-Star.

There were plenty more moments in recent years when he doubted he’d ever get back again.

Max Muncy’s return to the MLB All-Star game was made possible after hitting .259 with 17 home runs and 40 RBI’s. MLB Photos via Getty Images

That’s why, as Muncy arrived in Philadelphia this week for his third career All-Star Game, the veteran third baseman reflected on his previous trips and realized this year’s felt a little more meaningful.

“Once you hit 30, you kind of wonder,” Muncy told the California Post. “The world tries to tell you that you’re past your prime. So you start wondering about that a little bit. And then for me, just with the injuries the last couple years, it’s not something you necessarily expect to happen.”

Instead, in what has been a renaissance season for the 35-year-old slugger, Muncy was voted in as the National League’s starting third baseman, returning to the Midsummer Classic for the first time in a half-decade after previous nods in 2019 and 2021.

Muncy walked the MLB All-Star game red carpet with his family on Tuesday afternoon. MLB Photos via Getty Images

And this week, he allowed himself to soak up the experience, relishing an accomplishment that once felt out of reach.

“I always knew I’m still this kind of player,” Muncy said. “It’s just that I had to be healthy. And this year, I’ve been able to show that.”

In Muncy’s previous All-Star seasons, of course, his selections to the games were their own kind of surprises. Up until 2018, he had been a minor-league player who toiled with limited MLB opportunities. But then, in one of the most unlikely development stories of the Dodgers’ decade-and-a-half-long run of dominance, he emerged as one of the team’s most potent hitters.

Muncy was named an All-Star for the third time in his career. MLB Photos via Getty Images

Looking back now, however, Muncy’s recent return to the summit has felt almost as unlikely as that initial breakthrough ascent.

At the end of 2021, he infamously blew out his elbow on the last day of the regular season and underwent surgery, the after-effects of which dogged him over the following couple of years (he hit a combined .204, albeit with 57 total home runs, in 2022 and 2023).

And though Muncy’s production improved in 2024 and 2025 (batting .238 with an .849 OPS), repeated problems with his oblique, plus a freak knee injury last injury, limited him to just 173 total games.

At his age, another season of full health was starting to feel far from guaranteed.

This year, however, Muncy dropped weight in the offseason and got medical treatment that helped calm his oblique.

What has followed has been perhaps the most consistent all-around performance of his career, highlighted by a .259 batting average, 17 home runs, an .842 OPS and (last weekend’s three-game error streak notwithstanding) some of the best defense at third base by anyone in the league.

Being selected to this All-Star Game as a third baseman was particularly significant to Muncy, whose previous nods were at first and second base.

“Since I switched over there, [I was] being told by everybody how terrible I was at it,” he said. “And I’ve been able to prove a lot of them wrong by working hard over the years and getting better at it.”

Muncy has helped lead the Dodgers to the best record in baseball at the All-Star break. MLB Photos via Getty Images

Another reason this year feels different: Muncy’s three kids all get to be part of the experience.

“The previous two,” he joked, “they weren’t around yet.”

It does make the days longer, he noted with a laugh, recounting how he and his wife, Kellie, stayed up until 4:30 in the morning following their late arrival Sunday night, setting up beds and cribs in their hotel room.

But it has also added to the experience of each event during the week, from their first arrival at the stadium Monday to the annual red-carpet walk-in before Tuesday’s game.

“My daughter has been talking about dressing up,” Muncy said. “She’s definitely excited about it.”

They are all precious little moments in a week Muncy once thought he might never get to experience again.

“This one,” he said, “just feels a little bit more special.”

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