Fernando Tatís Jr. is one of the latest stars to crash back to earth after a World Baseball Classic high.

The San Diego Padres’ slugger has just six home runs this season — one fewer than Vladimir Guerrero Jr. — after both dominated the WBC in March. WFAN’s Rickie Ricardo, the Yankees’ Spanish play-by-play voice, says their slump traces back to that tournament surge.

“These guys were big-time performers in the WBC, that got cranked up in July-August form, mentally and physically, in March,” Ricardo said on 10 July 2026. “And once it was over, it was almost like they let the air out of their balloon and they haven’t been able to recover yet.”

What happened to Fernando Tatís Jr. in 2026?

Tatís entered the year as a three-time All-Star and two-time Silver Slugger. His 2025 slash line (.282/.366/.572) looked untouchable. Yet in 2026, the power has vanished. Through 95 games, he’s slugging just .410 with a .235 ISO — both career lows.

The drop is sharpest in extra-base hits. He’s managed only 21 doubles and six homers, down from 33 and 42 last year. Pitchers are pounding the zone, and Tatís is chasing more often. His chase rate sits at 33.4%, up from 27.1% in 2025.

Why the slump matters for Fernando Tatís Jr.

The Padres need Tatís to rediscover his 2024 form. San Diego sits 47-48, third in the NL West, five games back of the Dodgers. A playoff push now depends on a second-half surge.

Tatís’ absence at the plate shows in run production. The Padres rank 12th in the NL in runs per game, down from fifth in 2025. His OPS+ has fallen from 158 to 98. The lineup lacks its usual thump.

Ricardo’s theory points to mental fatigue. The WBC pushed both Tatís and Guerrero into peak form three months early. The real season arrived, and the switch flipped. “It’s almost like they played their World Series in the month of March,” Ricardo said.

What comes next for Fernando Tatís Jr.

Tatís and the Padres return from the All-Star break with a brutal stretch: 10 games against the Braves and Phillies. The margin for error is tiny. A hot week could reignite the lineup. A cold one could bury their hopes.

Manager Mike Shildt insists Tatís remains the same hitter. “He’s got the same approach, the same swing,” Shildt said. “The results will come.” The numbers say otherwise — for now.

Guerrero faces the same reckoning in Toronto. The Blue Jays, 45-50 and last in the AL East, need both stars to flip the script. If Tatís can’t, San Diego’s season may end before October arrives.