Married to Kelsey…has four children: daughter Poppy and sons Wilder, Rhodes and Fitz...In addition to being a top baseball prospect at Palo Alto (Palo Alto, Calif.) High School, was also a top performer on the football team at wide receiver...Was teammates with current Raiders wide receiver, Davante Adams…Pederson led the team with 30 catches, 650 yards receiving and nine9 touchdowns compared to Adams' 25 receptions, 484 yards and seven touchdowns...Also competed on the gridiron against current Mariners outfielder and former teammate with the Giants, Mitch Haniger...His father, Stu, was drafted in 1981 by the Dodgers and played in eight games in 1985…Stu was also a left-handed outfielder and attended Palo Alto High School...Older brother, Tyger, was also drafted by the Dodgers in 2013 out of Palo Alto H.S. before playing at the University of Pacific...Younger sister, Jacey, played soccer at UCLA from 2016-20...In his playing time in Los Angeles, he and his oldest brother, Champ, who has Down syndrome, teamed up with New Era to design a hat with the family motto "Live like a Champ" on it...A portion of the proceeds from cap sales went toward Best Buddies International, a nonprofit organization dedicated to finding and creating opportunities for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD)...The IDD community that Best Buddies serves includes, but is not limited to, people with Down syndrome, autism, Fragile X, Williams syndrome, cerebral palsy, traumatic brain injury and other undiagnosed disabilities...In 2019, was inducted into the Northern California Jewish Sports Hall of Fame...The following year, was inducted into the Southern California Jewish Sports Hall of Fame...Played for Team Israel in the 2023 World Baseball Classic…started in center field in three games and hit .111 (1-for-9) with one double.
2023
Batted .235 (84-for-358)/.348 OBP with 14 doubles, three triples, 15 homers and 51 RBI over 121 games in his second season with the Giants...Tied for the team lead with 11 game-winning RBI (also: Michael Conforto) and was second in walk rate (13.4%), behind Lamont Wade Jr. (14.6)...Tied his career high with four runs on June 11 vs. Cubs...Also on June 11, became the first Giant to record 4+ hits, 4+ RBI and 4+ runs in a game since Alex Dickerson on Sept. 1, 2020 at Colorado, and first to do so at home since Kevin Mitchell and Chris Speier on July 9, 1988 vs. the Cardinals...Recorded his 20th career multi-homer game on June 11...Appeared in 79 games at DH, 32 in left field, six in right and two at first base...Had two stints on the injured list from April 12-23 (right wrist inflammation) and May 13-June 6 (right hand contusion).
2022
Named an All-Star for the second time in his career (his first time being voted in by the fans) in his first season with SF...led the team in homers (23) and slugging percentage (.521) while ranking second in RBI (70)…Was the fifth Giants OF to be selected to the game by fan vote, joining Willie Mays (1970-71), Kevin Mitchell (1989-90), Barry Bonds (eight times) and Melky Cabrera (2012)…Slashed .278/.356/.538 off RHP with 21 of his 23 homers coming versus righties...was .245/.333/.408 with two homers in 49 ABs vs. LHP...His first HR as a Giant came on April 12 vs. SD (off Wil Myers)…Smashed his 24th career leadoff HR on April 24 at Washington...according to Sarah Langs, the 441’ HR was the longest leadoff HR by a Giant in the Statcast-era (since 2015)…Suffered a Grade 1 right groin strain on April 27 vs. OAK while running to second base...missed four games before returning on May 4 at LA...Had the best game of his career on May 24 vs. New York-NL, going 4-for-6 with a career-best three home runs, eight RBI and 13 total bases...became the third player in Oracle Park history to hit three homers in a game (also LA’s Kevin Elster on April 11, 2000 and SF’s Pablo Sandoval on October 24, 2012)…All of Pederson’s HRs that night were multi-run HRs...became the first Giant to do that since Willie Mays did so in his four-homer game on April 30, 1961...Pederson’s eight RBI that night matched the SF-era record held by Mays (1961), Orlando Cepeda (1961) and Brandon Crawford (2019)…Was placed on the seven-day concussion list on July 29 and missed seven games...was diagnosed with a concussion after jumping into the left field wall attempting to rob a home run on July 28 vs. the Cubs...Went 36 straight games without a home run, one away from the longest streak of his career, before launching a solo shot to left field on Aug. 19 at Coors Field...Hit .388 (33-for-85) with runners in scoring position, the second-best figure in the Majors behind LAD’s Freddie Freeman (.391)…was 17-for-34 (.500) with RISP to finish the season...Finished the season with the fifth-best average exit velocity (93.1) and the seventh-best hard hit % (51.9) in the Majors...Hit .352 (19-for-54) with 11 extra-base hits and 11 RBI over 22 games when batting in the leadoff spot...Slashed .133/.221/.200 in 22 July games with no homers and four RBI before going on to slash .336/.419/.578 with seven doubles, six homers and 27 RBI over the final two months of the season.
2021
Hit 18 home runs and posted a .732 OPS in 137 combined games between Chicago-NL and Atlanta...Batted. 137 in 13 April games for the Cubs but turned it up in May, hitting .314 with an .842 OPS in 23 games during May...Slugged seven of his 18 home runs during the regular season in June while posting a .773 OPS...Acquired by the Braves on July 15 in exchange for IF Bryce Ball...Slugged seven homers in his 64 games with the Braves while posting a .752 OPS...Rattled off a career-best 11-game hitting streak after joining Atlanta from July 24-Aug. 5...Delivered his second career walk-off hit with a 10th-inning, walk-off single vs. Washington on Sept. 9 in the 10th inning.
POSTSEASON: Appeared in 15 postseason games for the Braves en route to winning the World Series...was on a World Series Championship-winning team for a second straight season (Los Angeles-NL) in 2020...Hit .205 (9-for-44) with three homers, nine RBI and a .680 OPS in his 15 postseason games...Was 1-for-15 in the World Series vs. Houston and was 2-for-his-last-26 in postseason play...started the 2021 postseason going 7-for-18 with three homers and eight RBI.
2020
Pederson finished his World Series Championship regular season with a .190 average (23-for-121) with 21 runs, four doubles, seven home runs, and 16 RBI in 43 games...throughout the Dodgers playoff run, he hit .382 (13-for-34) with four runs, two home runs and eight RBI in 16 games...He began the season with hits in seven of his first 10 games (8-for-31) with three home runs and seven RBI...over his final 33 games, recorded 15 hits in 90 at-bats (.167) with four doubles, four home runs and nine RBI...Connected for 21st leadoff homer of his career on August 3 at San Diego...finished Dodgers career seven leadoff homers shy of Davey Lopes' franchise record of 28...In the second game of an August 5 doubleheader at San Diego, connected for two home runs and five RBI...it marked his 15th career multi-home run game, while the five RBI tied a career-high last done on September 2, 2019 vs. Colorado (also a two-HR game)…He hit in seven straight games from August 17-27 to equal a career-long (fourth time)…Over his four postseason rounds, hit .382 with two home runs and eight RBI...he led the Dodgers in average for the post season, and he recorded the highest postseason batting average (min. 35 PA) since George Springer in 2018 (.400)…In Game 3 of the League Championship Series, went 4-for-6 with a three-run home run and three RBI...he was one of three Dodgers to homer in a record-setting first inning, with Edwin Rios hitting a solo homer and Max Muncy connecting for a grand slam...it was the first time in postseason history that a team homered three times in the first inning of a game...the 11 runs scored in the inning were the most in any inning of a postseason game...He connected for his fifth career World Series home run in Game 5 at Tampa Bay, a second-inning solo homer off Tyler Glasnow...his five career WS homers are tied with Gil Hodges for the second-most in Dodgers history, behind Duke Snider (11).
2019
Concluded his sixth Major League season setting career marks in runs (83), hits (112), homers (36), RBI (74), average (.249) slugging (.538) and OPS (.876) across 149 games…all of his homers came off of right-handed pitching…ranked fourth in the Majors for most homers against right-handed pitchers with a .252/.349/.57 1 slashline ... Launched nine homers from the leadoff spot to surpass his former record…his 20 career leadoff homers are just eight shy of the franchise mark set by Davey Lopes (28)…wrapped the season with six multi-homer games from the leadoff spot to tie Francisco Lindor (6 in 2018) for most in MLB history ... Participated in the Home Run Derby where he advanced to the semi-finals and blasted 39 home runs before falling to Toronto rookie Vlad Guerrero Jr. ... Became the fourth Dodger to hit two homers on Opening Day, joining Roy Campanella (1954), Raul Mondesi (1995 and 1999), Yasmani Grandal (2017) and Kiké Hernández (2019)…it was his ninth career multi-homer game and his third homer on Opening Day…he is 7-for-17 with six runs scored, three homers and 10 RBI on Opening Day…hit his first career walk-off home run on April 15 with a two-run shot on Jackie Robinson Day…became the second player in NL history (1st, Larry Walker) to collect an extra-base hit in six consecutive at-bats from Sept. 1-4…matched a career high with a seven-game hitting streak for the third time in his career on July 27 (last: 6/14-6/20/17), going 8-for-24 (.333) with two homers and four RBI during the span…closed out the regular season with his strongest offensive month, roping four doubles, driving in 16 and ranking among the top of the NL with nine homers (3rd) at a .344 (6th)/.414/.852 (1st)/1.267(1st) clip across 23 games in September…one of three Dodgers to reach 20 home runs before July, joining Max Muncy (20) and Cody Bellinger (27) to become the fifth team in Major League history with a trio of players reaching the 20-plus homer mark before July 1…matched his single-game career high in RBI on Sept. 2 against Colorado after driving in five and going 3-for-3 with a double and a pair of home runs.
2018
In his fifth big league season, he slashed .248/.321/.522 with 65 runs, 27 doubles (career-high), three triples (career-high), 25 home runs and 56 RBI in 148 games ... In 59 games as the leadoff hitter, posted a .309 (17-for-55)/.356/.818 slash line with two doubles and eight home runs…his eight leadoff homers were tied for the second most in the Majors with the Braves' Ronald Acuña Jr. and the Cardinals' Matt Carpenter, while trailing just the Indians' Francisco Lindor for the most (9)…also broke the Dodgers leadoff home run record, surpassing Davey Lopes, who hit seven in 1979… hit a leadoff home run in back-to-back games on August 2-3, joining Carl Furillo as the only Dodgers to accomplish the feat (July 12 and 13, 1951) - Source: Stats LLC ... Hit .260 against right-handed pitchers, compared to a .170 batting average against lefties…hit 24 of his 25 home runs off right-handers ... Saw time at all three outfield positions, appearing in 116 games in left field, 32 games in center field and two games in right field…also collected six outfield assists, which tied for the 16th most in the NL ... Collected a career-high four hits three times (April 28 at SF, June 2 at COL and July 24 at PHI)…his three four-hit games were the most on the team and tied for the eighth most in the NL ... Appeared in all 16 of the Dodgers' Postseason games, going 8-for-39 (.205) with six runs, a double, two homers and two RBI…hit safely in each game of the NLDS vs. Atlanta to extend his Postseason hitting streak to 10 games, batting .313 (10-for-32) with three doubles, four homers and six RBI during the run, which began in Game 2 of the 2017 World Series vs. Houston.
2017
Spent majority of the season with Los Angeles, hitting .212 with 44 runs, 20 doubles, 11 home runs and 35 RBI along with a .331 on-base percentage in 102 games...Stroked 10 of his 11 home runs off of right-handed pitchers...Appeared mostly in center field throughout the season (92 games), but also played four games in left field... posted a .993 fielding percentage in the outfield, recording just one error in 676.2 innings...Drove in a career-high five runs and slugged the Dodgers first homer of the 2017 season with a grand slam in the third inning on Opening Day...it was the first Dodgers OD grand slam since Eric Karros, who accomplished the feat on April 3, 2000 at Montreal and his five RBI were the most by a Dodger in a season-opener since Raul Mondesi, who recorded six RBI on April 5, 1999 against Arizona...Made two different disabled list stints: placed on the 10-day disabled list on April 24-May 5 with a right groin strain and was placed on the seven-day concussion DL from May 24-June 13...Appeared in a combined 20 games with Single-A Rancho Cucamonga and Triple-A Oklahoma City, going 12-for- 72 (.167) with one doubles, three homers and nine RBI...Made the Dodgers NLCS and World Series roster during the clubs postseason run, slashing .304 (7-for- 23)/.360/.826 with seven runs, three doubles, three home runs and five RBI in 11 games...during the World Series, he hit .333 (6-for-18) with six runs, two doubles, three homers and five RBI along with a .944 slugging percentage in six games...became just the fourth player (fifth time overall) in Dodger history to collect at least three homers in a single WS, joining Duke Snider (4 HR, 1952 and 1955), Reggie Smith (3 HR, 197 7) and Dave Lopes (3 HR, 1978)...according to STATS LLC., also became just the first player in Major League history to collect a hit and run scored in each of his first six career WS games and became just the fourth player to record 1+ hit and 1+ run in six-plus games in a single World Series, joining George Kelly (6 in 1924), Ron Fairly (7 in 1965) and Willie Stargell (6 in 1979).
2016
Posted a .847 OPS, batting .246 with a .352 on-base percentage, a .495 slugging percentage, 26 doubles, 25 homers and 68 RBI in 137 games...Tied for 10th among NL outfielders with 25 home runs…according to ESPN's Home Run Tracker, averaged 412.1 feet per home run, the seventh-longest in the Majors…led the Dodgers and ranked 14th in the Majors with a 93.2 average exit velocity (Source: Baseball Savant) ...Batted .281 with runners in scoring position...Saw an average of 4.18 pitches per plate appearance, the 10th most in the NL (min. 400 AB) and drew a walk every 7.56 plate appearances (8th, NL)...Placed on the DL from July 1-19 with a sprained right AC joint, suffered in a collision with the outfield wall June 28 at Milwaukee...Went 9-for-36 (.250) with five runs, two doubles, a homer and four RBI in 11 postseason games...had the game-tying home run off Max Scherzer in the seventh inning of NLDS Game 5, which ignited the Dodgers' rally.
2015
Appeared in 151 games in his first full Major League season, batting .210 with 26 home runs and 54 RBI. ... Tied with Chicago's Kris Bryant for the most home runs by a MLB rookie with 26, which rank as the second-most by a rookie in Dodger franchise history, behind only Mike Piazza's 35 in 1993. ... In addition to home runs, also led MLB rookies in walks (92) and ranked among the NL's best rookies in runs (67, 3rd), hits (101, 10th), doubles (19, T-10th), RBI (54, T-6th)…ranked second with 170 strikeouts…his 92 walks were the third most ever by a Dodger rookie behind only Jim Gilliam (100, 1953) and Billy Grabarkewitz (95, 1970). ... Averaged 421.7 feet on his 26 home runs, the longest average distance of any MLB hitter this year (min. 18 HR) according to ESPN Home Run Tracker. ... Homered in five consecutive games from May 31-June 3, setting a Dodgers rookie record and tying Roy Campanella (1950), Shawn Green (2001) and Matt Kemp (2010) for the franchise record for consecutive games with a home run. ... Hit 20 of his 26 home runs before the All-Star break, while batting .230 (69-for-300) in 89 games, before struggling in the second half (.178, 21-for-180, 6 HR) … his 20 home runs were the second most ever for an NL rookie before the All-Star break, behind only the 21 hit by Dave Kingman (1972, SF) and Albert Pujols (2001, STL). ... Earned an All-Star selection, via player balloting, becoming the first Dodger rookie All-Star since Hideo Nomo in 1995 and the first rookie position player to earn a selection since Mike Piazza in 1993…was the first Dodger rookie position player to start in the Midsummer Classic, batting eighth in left field…in addition to Nomo and Piazza, the only other Dodgers to earn a rookie All-Star selection were Don Newcombe (1949), Fernando Valenzuela (1981) and Steve Sax (1982). ... Was the runner-up to the Reds' Todd Frazier in the Home Run Derby…was the seventh different Dodger to participate in the Derby and second Los Angeles rookie to participate in the event (Mike Piazza, 1993)…joined the Cubs' Kris Bryant as the seventh/eighth rookies to participate in the event. ... Averaged 4.21 pitches per plate appearance, the sixth-most in the Majors. ... Made his first Opening Day roster and his first Opening Day start on April 6 vs. San Diego…played exclusively in center field, committing four errors (.986 fielding percentage) and picking up five assists in 1,223.0 innings over 147 games (137 starts). ... Blasted his first big league home run on April 12 at Arizona with a sixth-inning solo shot of A.J. Schugel…hit his first grand slam on May 1 off Arizona's Rubby De La Rosa at Dodger Stadium. ... Recorded his first multi-home run game on May 6 at Milwaukee, two solo shots off Wily Peralta in the fifth and eighth innings. ... From April 27-May 6, all seven of his hits were home runs, becoming the first Major Leaguer to pull off the feat since Jay Bruce (June 16-22, 2013) and the first Dodger to do so since Hee-seop Choi (June 10-14, 2005). ... Appeared in all five of the Dodgers' NLDS games vs. New York, including two starts in center field…went 0-for-4 with four walks. ... Selected as the Dodgers' 2015 Heart and Hustle Award winner by the Major League Baseball Players Alumni Association.
2014
Had a historic season with Triple-A Albuquerque and earned a September call-up for his first big league action...Batted .303 and led the PCL with 33 home runs, 106 runs scored and 100 walks, while ranking among the league leaders in RBI (78, 10th), stolen bases (30, 3rd), on-base percentage (.435, 2nd) and slugging percentage (.582, 9th) in 121 games...Posted just the fourth 30-home run/30-stolen base campaign in Pacific Coast League history, joining Frank Demaree (1934), Lefty O'Doul (1927) and Tony Lazzeri (1925)...was just the second Dodger minor leaguer to accomplish the feat, joining Chin-Feng Chen (Single-A San Bernardino, 1999)...Honored as a 2014 midseason Pacific Coast League All-Star, with a selection to the All-PCL Team and as the league's Most Valuable Player and Rookie of the Year…was also selected by Baseball America to the publication's Minor League All-Star Team....Was honored as the Dodgers' Branch Rickey Minor League Player of the Year for the second time (also: 2012)…shared the honor with Corey Seager...Proved to be equally dangerous against right-handers (.306/.442/.573) and lefties (.299/.422/.598)...Earned the April Dodger Pride Award, batting .398 with 22 runs scored, nine stolen bases, eight doubles, six homers and 14 RBI in 26 games…posted a .504 on-base percentage and .663 slugging percentage in the month...Was promoted to the big league club on Sept. 1 and made his long-anticipated Major League debut that night...Collected his first big league hit on Sept. 2 with a second-inning single to center off Washington's Doug Fister...On the season, was 4-for-28 (.143) with 11 strikeouts in 18 games...Opened the year by participating in his first big league Spring Training and traveled to Australia with the club in March for the Opening Series...Played for Leones del Escogido in the Dominican Winter League following the season, batting .265 (22-for- 83) with three doubles, a triple, a homer and seven RBI in 22 games
2013
Honored as a 2013 Double-A Southern League Mid-season and Postseason All-Star and also selected to the MLB All-Star Futures Game, batting .278 with 22 homers and 58 RBI in 123 games for Chattanooga...Led the Southern League with a .497 slugging percentage and ranked among the league leaders in home runs (22, T-2nd), stolen bases (31, T-3rd), OBP (.381, 3rd), slugging (.497, 1st), extra-base hits (49, T-4th), runs scored (81, 2nd), total bases (218, 5th) and walks (70, 4th)...Batted .316 against right-handed pitchers (93-for-294) and hit 20 of his 22 homers against righties...Won the April Dodger Pride Award for Chattanooga and during the month tied for seventh in the Southern League with a .304 batting average while hitting a league-leading six home runs in 24 games…also posted a 17-game hitting streak from April 7-24 and hit safely in 19 of 24 April games...named the Southern League Offensive Player of the Week for April 15-21, batting .407 (11-for-27) with five RBI in seven games...Selected as the Dodger Pride Award winner for August, when in 26 games, he ranked among the monthly Southern League leaders in home runs (7, T-3rd, walks (19, 4th) and OBP (.397, 11th)…named the Southern League Player of the Week for the period of August 12-18, batting .435 (10-for-23) with three home runs and eight RBI in six games...Following the season, played for Cardenales de Lara in the Venezuelan Winter League.
2012
In 2012 was selected as the Dodgers' Branch Rickey Minor League Player of the Year, batting .313 with 26 steals, 26 doubles, four triples, 18 homers and 70 RBI in 110 games for Single-A Rancho Cucamonga...ranked among the California League leaders in batting average (8th), on-base percentage (.396, 6th) and slugging percentage (.516, 9th)...Selected to play for Team Israel in its 2012 World Baseball Classic qualifier.
2011
In 2011, was selected as a Topps/Minor League Baseball Short Season-A/Rookie All-Star in his first professional season, combining to hit .323 with 11 homers and 65 RBI in 84 games with Single-A Great Lakes and Rookie-Advanced Ogden...Was also recognized as a 2011 Pioneer League All-Star and a Baseball America Rookie All-Star.
2010
Selected by the Dodgers in the 11th round of the 2010 First-Year Player Draft.