Top of the Order: The Astros Should Shoot for the Stars

Troy Taormina-USA TODAY Sports

Welcome back to Top of the Order, where every Tuesday and Friday I’ll be starting your baseball day with some news, notes, and thoughts about the game we love.

Winning streaks don’t typically change the course of a team’s season. For example, the Dodgers are probably going to finish first in the NL West no matter how many games they win over the next week or so. The same would be true for the White Sox, just in reverse; they could rip off 10 straight wins and their outlook still would be about as bleak as it gets. And yet, in winning seven games in a row, the Astros have completely altered their trajectory for the rest of the season.

Incidentally, the last Astros loss came against those same abysmal White Sox on June 18, when Chicago rookie Jonathan Cannon was one out away from completing an eventual 2-0 shutout. After that game, Houston’s playoff odds fell to 29.3%, its nadir for the season. Since then, the Astros have won seven straight to pull within 3.5 games of the final AL Wild Card, and their odds to make the postseason are back above 50% for the first time since May 26. Now, entering this weekend’s series against the also-surging Mets at Citi Field, the Astros are just 4.5 games out of first place in the AL West.

It wouldn’t have been the least bit unreasonable to suggest prior to the winning streak that the Astros ought to be sellers at the deadline. Kyle Tucker had just been placed on the IL with a shin contusion that is expected to keep him out of the lineup until July. Cristian Javier and José Urquidy had just undergone Tommy John surgery, ending their seasons and making them non-factors for at least the first half of 2025. Houston had also just released veteran first baseman José Abreu, electing to eat the remainder of his disastrous contract that runs through next season rather than roster him any longer. This was a team that simply looked dead in the water, ravaged by injuries and underperformance and unable to get things going. Oh, how a week changes things.

No Kyle Tucker? No problem. All but four of the 14 batters the Astros have sent to the plate during the streak have posted a wRC+ above 100, with the quartet of Jose Altuve, Yordan Alvarez, Alex Bregman, and Jeremy Peña finally clicking at the same time. Impressively, the offense has caught fire despite homering just six times in the seven-game stretch; instead, Houston’s 20 doubles have kept the line moving.

In addition to the aforementioned Javier and Urquidy, the Astros also have been without Justin Verlander during this stretch, after they placed him on the IL with neck discomfort the day before their winning streak began. Instead, they’ve been forced to lean on a group of mostly unheralded pitchers, and boy have those arms delivered. Hunter Brown has turned his season around by revamping his pitch mix (Robert Orr and Ben Zeidman have a great look at it over at Baseball Prospectus), and Spencer Arrighetti just had the best start of his young career; he allowed three hits and no walks while striking out 10 across seven scoreless innings in Wednesday night’s 7-1 win over the Rockies. Ronel Blanco — Houston’s only pitcher who’s survived the injury bug this year — just keeps rolling right along and looks to be in prime position to make the All-Star team in his first full season, at age 30!

Now that the Astros are firmly on the buy side ahead of the deadline, barring something catastrophic to negate their winning streak over the course of the next month, how will they approach things?

Even with Javier, Urquidy, and J.P. France all out for the year, the Astros have rotation help on the way. Verlander and Luis García are expected back soon, with Lance McCullers Jr. not far behind and rookie Jake Bloss able to help out once he too is off the injured list. Verlander, Valdez, Blanco, McCullers Jr., and García would make for a strong playoff rotation (especially because Arrighetti, Bloss, and Brown will be in reserve). But, understanding that they’ve got other positions of issue, namely first base, why not acquire two Birds with one trade? Yes, I’m saying they should trade with the Blue Jays.

Toronto is on the other side of the coin, with its playoff odds down to 5.1% entering Thursday’s drubbing of the Yankees. Perhaps no team this season has been as disappointing as the Jays, whose best course of action looks like selling and rebuilding for the future.

Ideally, the Astros would take advantage of Toronto’s unexpected woes by trading for first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr., who is under club control through the end of next season, while also adding a starting pitcher, though it’s unclear how willing the Blue Jays would be to deal Guerrero. Heck, his trade value alone feels extremely unclear: He’s having a very good year (133 wRC+) but still has infuriating batted ball tendencies, with a grounder rate above 50% and just 10 home runs. Teams will surely line up to acquire Guerrero if he were made available in the hopes that they can optimize his contact. The Astros especially would be drawn in by the thought of Vladito taking aim at the Crawford Boxes, thus giving them their best power threat at first base since Yuli Gurriel clubbed 31 homers in 2019 with the help of the juiced ball.

If we presuppose that the Blue Jays are, in fact, willing to trade Guerrero and retool for 2026 and beyond, knowing he could earn close to $30 million next season in his final year of arbitration, the biggest hangup would be agreeing on a price that the Astros would be comfortable paying, especially considering the state of their farm system. Eric Longenhagen and Travis Ice described their farm as “below average on impact and an average one in terms of depth.” But when you consider the uncertainty surrounding Toronto’s top two prospects — Ricky Tiedemann, who hasn’t been able to stay on the field consistently, and Orelvis Martinez, who was just suspended 80 games for PED usage, halting his development — intriguing, higher-floor prospects just might be what the Jays are seeking. Among the players that Houston could offer are Bloss, Jacob Melton, and Joey Loperfido, who would be left without a spot if the Astros were to add Guerrero.

It’d be valid for the Astros to balk at that price, but what if they took on a steady-if-unspectacular starter like Kevin Gausman, Chris Bassitt, or José Berríos along with Guerrero to tamp down the prospect cost? All three pitchers are good, but also on the wrong side of 30. If the Jays are going the path of retooling anyway, it may behoove them to remove a highly paid starter from their payroll because he probably won’t be around to make an impact on the next good Toronto team anyway. Sure, adding one of these starters would likely push Houston’s payroll to unforeseen heights, but the Astros should be game to take on such a contract if it means getting another solid starter without giving up as much in prospect value.

The Astros are having a weird season and may have a weird future as they move away from the risk-averse front offices of Jeff Luhnow and James Click. So they might as well lean fully into it and take some risky shots that could reap them major rewards.





Jon Becker manages RosterResource's team payroll pages and assists with all other aspects of RosterResource, too. Follow him at your own peril on Twitter at @jonbecker_ and on BlueSky at @jon-becker.com.

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sadtromboneMember since 2020
9 months ago

Trading Vlad Jr is an admission that the current core cannot win and it is time to blow up the whole thing and start over.

Trading one of the starters instead of taking more prospects is a bad move by the Blue Jays and they know it. With so few sellers they could get real prospects for almost any of those guys if they ate half the deal. That’s not on the table.

I give it a 3% chance that the Astros will give up enough for the Blue Jays to go that direction. And even if they do it’s very likely that the Yankees or Twins or any number of teams that want a head start on convincing a young 130 wRC+ player to play for them long term will top it. I have real concerns about the top of the Astros system…it isn’t clear any of those guys are even 50s. Are they really going to trade their top 8 guys or whatever it would take to beat other teams?

If Pete Alonso is available he would be a much more realistic target.

PC1970Member since 2024
9 months ago
Reply to  sadtrombone

My sense would be Alonzo won’t be available with The Mets in it.

Here’s an option- Mark Canha-sort of a right handed Michael Brantley “professional hitter”. 1B/LF/DH. Is he great? No, but, he’s average to above average bat & that would be an upgrade for Houston at 1B. Also a FA at year end. He’d come relatively cheap

sadtromboneMember since 2020
9 months ago
Reply to  PC1970

Canha would also be a good fit, although the trade interest in him will be higher than his hitting indicates because he can play the corner outfield. The Phillies, Braves, and Mariners will all be interested in him.

If Alonso isn’t available, what probably will happen is that the Astros are going to whiff Vlad Jr and Yandy Diaz and wind up with Josh Bell instead. Which could work out since he is streaky, but it also might not.

Idli Amin, The Last King of SambarMember since 2024
9 months ago
Reply to  PC1970

And to piggyback off that, why would the Mets take whatever rando prospect(s) the Astros were willing to offer? They’d be better off offering Alonso the QO.

Last edited 9 months ago by Idli Amin, The Last King of Sambar
sadtromboneMember since 2020
9 months ago

Maybe not. The QO will only get them a fourth round pick. That’s somewhere between an FV35 and a 40. While the Astros system is bad, they can top that easily.

Last edited 9 months ago by sadtrombone
fjtorres
9 months ago
Reply to  sadtrombone

Vladito looks very much headed to the Bronx.
His comments made it very clear.

The Jays need volume in return and the Yanks have enough interesting but not guaranteed prospects to outbid pretty much everybody. And if anybody can fix Vladito it is most likely one of the horde of coaches the Yanks can call on.

Funny thing is the yanks have options to sell as they buy so they could pull off a three way deal. It’s going to get interesting. Especially if the O’s chose to go big.

carterMember since 2020
9 months ago
Reply to  fjtorres

I mean the Yankees have judge and Soto working out at first already. Then they have Stanton DH who somehow is still good. Fit makes zero sense

Last edited 9 months ago by carter
Ivan_GrushenkoMember since 2016
9 months ago
Reply to  sadtrombone

It might just be that the Jays think they can compete longer with 2 top 100 prospects plus other stuff and spend the $30 million elsewhere. Rays trade stars all the time and still plan to compete