The 95th MLB All-Star Game takes place in Atlanta tonight, featuring the sport’s two greatest stars: Shohei Ohtani and Aaron Judge.
The pregame narrative: The two MVP favourites unsurprisingly top the home run odds board, but there are several betting options to choose from, including Home Run Derby champ Cal Raleigh, runner-up Junior Caminero and Toronto Blue Jays star Vladimir Guerrero Jr.
Check out our MLB All-Star Game home run odds for the July 15 showcase at Truist Park.
MLB All-Star Game home run odds
Note: Click linked odds to add selection to betslip. Lines have changed/market no longer available if grey.
| Player | Betting odds |
| Aaron Judge | +550 |
| Shohei Ohtani | +575 |
| Cal Raleigh | +650 |
| Ronald Acuna Jr. | +750 |
| Junior Caminero | +800 |
| Pete Crow-Armstrong | +850 |
| Will Smith | +900 |
| Vladimir Guerrero Jr. | +1,000 |
| Freddie Freeman | +1,000 |
| Manny Machado | +1,000 |
| Francisco Lindor | +1,000 |
| Riley Greene | +1,000 |
| Ryan O’Hearn | +1,000 |
MLB All-Star Game home run odds as of 11:30 a.m. on 07/15/25.
The favourites: Judge (+550) & Ohtani (+575)
They’re the favourites to win AL and NL MVP. They’re the favourites to win All-Star Game MVP. And, you guessed it, they have the shortest odds to hit a bomb on Tuesday night.
Not only are Judge and Ohtani the two best players in baseball, they’re the sport’s top home run hitters.
- Since 2023, they are tied for the MLB lead with exactly 130 homers apiece.
- Judge ranks second in MLB with 35 home runs this season, while Ohtani is third and paces the National League (32).
Ohtani is leading off for the NL, setting up a first-inning clash with Detroit Tigers ace Tarik Skubal.
Judge, on the other hand, is batting third and will see Pittsburgh Pirates fireballer Paul Skenes in his first plate appearance.
Beyond that, there’s no way of telling how many trips to the plate they’ll make or which pitchers they’ll face. But they should both get at least two cracks at sending one out.
Ohtani crushed a homer off Boston Red Sox righty Tanner Houck in last year’s ASG. Judge, meanwhile, went yard in the 2018 Midsummer Classic.
Truist Park has been a neutral stadium for offence over the last few seasons. But it’s been homer-friendly to lefty hitters, ranking No. 7 on Baseball Savant’s home run park factors leaderboard.
You can always bet Ohtani to record a hit at even money as well.
HR odds notes
- Raleigh, fresh off a somewhat controversial win in last night’s Home Run Derby, is batting cleanup for the AL. That puts the MLB home run leader (38) right behind Judge. The switch-hitting Raleigh is slugging 300 points greater vs. lefties this season, hitting 16 bombs in 102 plate appearances compared to 22 in 307 PAs vs. righties. If he gets up in the first inning, he’s all but certain to see the right-handed Skenes.
- Behind the two home run leaders and starting at first base for the American League is the Blue Jays’ Guerrero. Vladdy homered in the 2021 event, winning MVP of the ASG, and he was the winner of the 2023 derby. But he only has 12 home runs this season, and most projection systems, via FanGraphs, expect his lowest output since his rookie year.
- Hometown star Ronald Acuna Jr. is batting second behind Ohtani and has the fourth-shortest odds to go deep. Acuna (12 homers) didn’t play his first game until May 23, but he has been a beast. He sports a career-best 1.035 OPS and has two 40-homer seasons under his belt.
- Caminero, who put on a great show in the derby, headlines the remaining group of players with odds shorter than 10-to-1. Though lefty-batting No. 9 hitter Pete Crow-Armstrong might have more home run upside, especially if he can set himself up against a righty. Crow-Armstrong has demolished righties this season, hitting 19 of his 25 homers vs. them while slugging .613.
- Only the starting players are priced up as of Tuesday morning. But the player with the longest odds to hit a bomb is Athletics shortstop Jacob Wilson, who’s batting No. 9 for the AL. The 23-year-old Rookie of the Year favourite is hitting .332 with nine homers.
Chris joined NorthStar Gaming from Covers.com where he was a publishing editor and wrote betting content. Before that, he was the sports editor at VICE Canada, worked for theScore and covered the Blue Jays for MLB.com. In addition to filling out the lineup card each day for the editorial team, Chris writes frequently himself, primarily on the NBA and MLB.