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📰 NEWS FLASH: Vladimir Guerrero Jr.’s rare interview after welcoming his third child sparks an emotional wave, as he hints at a difficult chapter the public never saw ⚡.NL

VLADIMIR GUERRERO JR. BREAKS DOWN IN TEARS: “My newborn son was born with the same genetic ‘curse’ that almost killed me as a baby.” The Blue Jays superstar’s gut-wrenching confession about his third child’s secret health battle will leave you speechless

For years, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. has worn the widest smile in baseball. The 26-year-old Toronto Blue Jays megastar, fresh off a monster 48-homer, MVP-caliber 2025 season, always seemed unbreakable.

But in an explosive, never-before-seen interview from his hometown of Don Gregorio, the man they call “Vladdy” finally shattered his invincible image and revealed a family tragedy that has been hidden from the world until this very moment.

Speaking through tears in an intimate sit-down with Dominican journalist Yancen Pujols of Listín Diario, Guerrero dropped the most shocking personal bombshell of the MLB offseason: his third child, a son named Vlady Vladimir Guerrero IV, born November 4, 2025, at just 6 pounds 2 ounces, came into the world fighting the exact same rare genetic heart condition that nearly claimed Vladdy’s own life when he was an infant.

“I cried more the day he was born than the day we lost the World Series,” Guerrero admitted, his voice cracking.

“When the doctors told us the echocardiogram showed the same hole in the heart (atrial septal defect combined with pulmonary valve stenosis) that I was born with in 1999… I felt the floor disappear. History was repeating itself.”

The Guerrero family had successfully kept the pregnancy and birth completely secret. Not even teammates Bo Bichette or Alek Manoah knew. Only Vlad’s wife Nathalie and his Hall-of-Fame father knew the terrifying truth: pre-natal scans in Miami as early as July had already detected the congenital defect.

The same defect that forced baby Vladimir Jr. to undergo emergency open-heart surgery at three months old in Montreal in 1999, a procedure so risky that doctors gave the future slugger less than 50% chance of survival.

“I was that baby on the table,” Guerrero said, wiping tears. “I know what my son is about to go through. The tubes, the machines, the nights you don’t sleep because you’re scared to close your eyes in case he stops breathing.

My dad still has the scar on his soul from 1999. Now it’s my turn to be the father who waits and prays.”

The condition, a complex form of congenital heart disease that affects roughly 1 in 10,000 births, went undetected in Vlad Sr.’s bloodline until Vladdy Jr.

Nearly fatal in 1999, modern medicine offers far better odds today, but the surgery scheduled for January 2026 in Boston Children’s Hospital is still considered high-risk for a newborn.

“This is why I disappeared after the season,” Guerrero confessed. “Everyone thought I was just resting or negotiating my contract. The truth is I haven’t slept more than two hours a night since November 4.

I hold him against my chest and feel his little heart racing too fast, and all I can think is: ‘Please God, let him be stronger than I was.’”

In a moment that instantly went viral across Spanish-speaking media, Vlad Jr.

revealed he has already made a secret $5 million pledge to the Hospital Infantil Robert Reid Cabral in Santo Domingo to create the “Vladito IV Guerrero” pediatric cardiology wing, the largest private donation ever made by a Dominican athlete to children’s healthcare.

“I almost died from this curse,” he said. “If my son beats it, I’m going to make sure no other family in this country ever loses a child to something we can fix with money and love.”

The Blue Jays, informed only days ago, immediately released a statement: “The entire organization is wrapping our arms around Vladimir, Nathalie, Vlady III, Vladdyslen, and baby Vladimir IV during this frightening time. His family’s privacy remains paramount, but his courage in speaking out will save lives.”

Guerrero also addressed the elephant in the room: his looming free agency after the 2026 season and the non-stop trade rumors. “Money doesn’t matter right now,” he said firmly. “If Toronto gives me $600 million or somebody else gives me $700 million, I don’t care.

All I want is to be in a city with the best children’s hospital in case my son needs another surgery in the future. That’s it. That’s the only thing that matters.”

As the interview ended, cameras caught the normally stoic superstar collapsing into his father’s arms, both Guerreros, legends of the game, sobbing uncontrollably while Nathalie cradled their tiny, sleeping warrior in a blanket embroidered with the Blue Jays logo.

Vladimir Guerrero Jr. has given baseball everything: 200 home runs before age 27, a Home Run Derby crown, an AL MVP runner-up. But today he gave something far greater: the raw, bleeding truth behind the smile that carried a franchise.

Little Vladimir IV’s surgery is scheduled for the second week of January. The entire baseball world, from Shohei Ohtani to Aaron Judge, has already flooded social media with #FuerzaVladito (Strength Little Vladito).

Tonight, the Beast of the Field is just a scared dad begging the universe for one more miracle.

The same one the Guerrero family received 26 years ago.

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