Corbin Carroll Holds Eighth in Mlb Standings NL All-Star Vote
Corbin Carroll sat eighth among National League outfield vote-getters in Monday’s first 2026 All-Star fan voting update, a spot that trails several bigger names in mlb standings despite his production. He entered the ballot update with a.277/.367/.535 line, 12 home runs and a.902 OPS.
Carroll’s numbers
Carroll’s case starts with the bat and keeps growing from there. He led baseball with eight triples, had stolen nine bases and posted 3.1 FanGraphs WAR, the 10th-highest total in baseball and the third-highest among all outfielders. That is the stat line sitting behind the eighth-place vote total.
Only James Wood had a higher OPS than Carroll among the seven outfielders ahead of him in the vote update. Wood sat at.967 OPS, while Andy Pages led the position voting with an.802 OPS. Ronald Acuña Jr. was second with a.794 OPS and seven home runs, even though he was on the injured list with a hamstring strain.
Diamondbacks voting picture
The first update also gave Arizona a wider reading on where its players stood. Ketel Marte was in the second-base race with a.743 OPS, while Ozzie Albies led that group with an OPS around 30 points higher. Bryson Stott was second at.230/.288/.391 with plus-1 Fielding Run Value, compared with Marte’s plus-3, and Dodgers infielder Hyesong Kim had a.651 OPS and one home run while drawing the fourth-most votes among the second basemen mentioned.
Arizona did not place every regular near the top of the board. Nolan Arenado was hitting.239/.318/.396 with eight home runs and a.714 OPS, which put him as the third-best qualified third baseman in the National League pool behind Max Muncy, who led the group with a.903 OPS. Geraldo Perdomo did not crack the top 10 at shortstop, and Pavin Smith missed the top 10 in the DH race.
The update fits the same pattern across the ballot: production does not always line up with the early fan count. Carroll’s numbers compare well with players ahead of him, but the first update still left him eighth, which means Arizona’s path to All-Star recognition will have to come through the next round of voting and continued pressure from his own stat line.