Pete Crow-Armstrong
Definition
Pete Crow-Armstrong, commonly known by his initials PCA, is an American professional baseball center fielder for the Chicago Cubs of Major League Baseball.
Born March 25, 2002, in Sherman Oaks, California, he was selected 19th overall in the 2020 MLB Draft by the New York Mets before being traded to the Cubs in 2021, where he debuted in 2023 and earned a Gold Glove Award in 2025 after a standout 30-30 season (31 home runs, 35 stolen bases).
Examples
Pete Crow-Armstrong's glove work in center field is so slick, it makes opposing hitters question if gravity even applies at Wrigley.
After launching his first homer of 2026, Pete Crow-Armstrong humbly credited the baseball for doing most of the heavy lifting.
Pete Crow-Armstrong turned a routine fly ball into an MLB highlight reel, reminding everyone why he's the NL's Gold Glove king.
With speed that defies physics and a bat that whispers sweet nothings to fastballs, Pete Crow-Armstrong is the Cubs' secret weapon disguised as a polite Californian.