If Bobby Witt Jr. is anxious about the next couple months, he's not showing it. Why should he? Since his major-league debut in 2022, Witt has developed into one of the game's most complete superstars, a true five-tool player capable of clubbing 30 home runs, stealing 30 bases, winning a batting title and playing exceptional defense at arguably the game's toughest position every single season.
So when Witt takes the field for Team USA in the 2026 World Baseball Classic, he won't carry any nerves with him. Sure, there's a lot at stake. Team USA is looking for revenge after a close, crushing loss to Japan in the 2023 WBC championship. Combine that with the U.S. Olympic team's success at the Winter Olympics, and there's a ton of pressure on Team USA to put those 2023 demons to rest and win the 2026 WBC.
To Witt, though, those heightened expectations only motivate him further to go out there and dominate.
"Pressure is a privilege," he told Yahoo Sports. "It’s an honor to have that."
That's something Witt — who spoke to Yahoo Sports while promoting the upcoming MLB The Show 26 video game — has proven he can handle in the years since his first WBC appearance, when he was the youngest player on the roster. Since he was unproven at the time compared to his peers, Witt didn't see the field much. He appeared in five games total and received just three plate appearances, going 1-for-2 with a walk, a double, an RBI and two runs scored in the tournament.
Though he didn't see much playing time back then, Witt did not hesitate when asked to participate in this year's tournament.
"Any time I get asked to do anything for USA, I'm going to do it," Witt says. "Just because of what you represent and what I’ve been able to do with them."
This time around, things look different for Witt. After contending for the MVP award in three straight seasons and making the All-Star Game the past two years, Witt is one of the best players on the team — even on a star-studded roster featuring players like Aaron Judge, Bryce Harper and Cal Raleigh.
Witt also has the unique experience of being one of the few players from that 2023 team to play for Team USA again in 2026. Because of that, Witt is well-prepared to handle the immense crowds and tense atmosphere each game brings, at a time when most MLB players are slowly easing their way back into form.
"It’s playoff baseball. Every game, every pitch, everyone is locked in," Witt says. "The crowd is into it, everyone’s into it.
He compared those WBC games to a regular-season MLB game in August, saying those regular-season games can bring similar intensity, but sometimes that might require a big play to reach those heights. Or, in some cases, a player has to bring that level of intensity to a regular-season game in the middle of the summer.
[Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Baseball league for the 2026 MLB season]
That's not the case in the World Baseball Classic, where that fervor is present from the first pitch.
"Those games, the energy is kinda already brought to the table and you’re just out there doing it," Witt adds.
While Witt seems well-prepared to handle it, the pressure on Team USA should be heightened, especially not that far removed from watching Team USA turn in a strong performance at the Milan Cortina Olympics. The U.S. took home a record 12 gold medals during the event, doing so in dramatic fashion.
Both the men's and women's hockey teams won gold medals thanks to walk-off, overtime goals. Figure skater Alysa Liu turned herself into a household name with her exceptional performance, and Mikaela Shiffrin earned her redemption, overcoming her failures in 2022 to claim her third gold medal.
Witt is well aware that the country's success at the Olympics will place even more of an expectation on Team USA in the WBC.
"As it should, we are USA for a reason," he said. "I think we’re the best country out there.
"With all the gold medals [being brought] back. There’s more motivation for us as players to be able to do that."
Similar to Shiffrin, Team USA is looking for redemption. In 2023, the team came about as close as possible to winning it all that year, with the game coming down to literally the last pitch.
With Team USA trailing 3-2 in the bottom of the ninth, Japan sent two-way star Shohei Ohtani to the mound to close things out. After a walk to Jeff McNeil — which resulted in Witt entering the game as a pinch runner — Ohtani coaxed a double play. That set up the biggest matchup of the entire tournament: Los Angeles Angels superstar Mike Trout — at the absolute height of his power — taking on his then-teammate Ohtani. After working a full count, Trout swung through a perfectly-located slider that broke just on the outside edge of the strike zone.
Witt believes things will be different this time around, though it won't be easy — Japan once again looks formidable, and both the Dominican Republic and Venezuela rosters are stacked with elite major-league talent.
While Team USA was united in its pursuit of a championship in 2023, Witt feels everyone on the 2026 team is fully bought in on what it's going to take to win it all.
"Now, he said, "we know what needs to be done."