How Astros face intriguing call with promising young outfielder

How Astros face intriguing call with promising young outfielder
Cam Smith continues to struggle at the plate. Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images.

Counting up "should win" and "should lose" results is routinely a fool's errand. That said, the Astros enter a stretch which features a bunch of "should win" games. On one hand, beginning this weekend at Daikin Park, the Astros run a gauntlet of 10 games in 10 days, then after an off day, they play another 13 days in a row. On the other hand, over the first 17 games of the 23 in 24 days, the Astros play 14 of them against losing teams: seven vs. the American League East cellar-dwelling Baltimore Orioles, three vs. the utter joke Colorado Rockies, and four vs. the not awful but below .500 Los Angeles Angels. Additionally, the Astros get 10 of those 14 games at home.

The only good team they face until after Labor Day is Detroit, with three games at the Tigers next week. That series looms large. If the Astros are successful in fending off Seattle and yet again winning the American League West, they have a real shot of finishing even with or ahead of Toronto and Detroit. Finishing with the best record in the AL is the ideal, but having the second -best record among the division winners means a bye past the high peril best-of-three first round series. The Astros' 2024 postseason was over in an eyeblink because they had the third-best record of the AL division champs, and then had the Tigers dismiss them in two games.

If the Astros can take two of three in Motown next week, they not only gain ground on the Tigers, but clinch the season series (Astros beat the Tigers two of three in Houston back in April) and with it the tiebreaker should that come into play for playoff seeding. The Astros swept the Blue Jays three straight earlier this year, so winning just one of three games in Canada next month would secure that tiebreaker.

Growing pains

Big picture, it's been a fine rookie season for Cam Smith. Nothing special, but plenty acceptable for a guy with just 32 games of minor league experience before earning/being handed the primary right field job coming out of spring training. Smith's tools and athleticism are clear, so are a couple of holes in his game that need patching if he is to develop into a star. The standards are different for a rookie making the minimum MLB salary of 760-thousand dollars versus a big ticket free agent signing making 20 million dollars, but a higher percentage of Smith's official at bats have ended with strikeouts this season than have Christian Walker's.

Along with improving his rate of contact, Smith needs to tweak his swing path to hit the ball in the air more. With his strength Cam can hit it hard. But hard grounders aren't the objective. Cam has a pair of two-home run games this season. In late June he homered in back-to-back games. In the other 100 games Smith has played, he has just one other homer. One in 100 games. His last dinger was June 28. 138 at bats later he's still sitting on seven for the season. Mauricio Dubon and Taylor Trammell have higher slugging percentages, as did Zack Short in his limited time with the team.

Smith has been feeble since just before the All-Star break, posting a paltry 13 hits in his last 90 at bats for a .144 batting average. He figures to play less down the stretch, a lot less should Yordan Alvarez actually return to the lineup. If ever back, Alvarez figures to slot only as the designated hitter, reducing Jose Altuve's DH opportunities. When Altuve plays left field, Jesus Sanchez is the clear better option to play right against righthanded pitching.

Jose Altuve at his best

Credit to manager Joe Espada for realizing that Altuve at 35 years old needed his load lightened. Should have happened last year, but live and learn. Altuve has been the DH 35 times this season (just five times last year). It is highly likely not a coincidence that after a hot start last year, Altuve was mediocre the last three-quarters of 2024 with a .740 OPS over his final 119 games. This season Altuve started atrociously. He was a straight up lousy player into late-May, waking May 22 with his batting average .238 and his OPS a woeful .629 over 47 games played. In 70 games since: .316/.947. In his 2017 AL Most Valuable Player season Altuve finished with a .957 OPS.

Astros HOF weekend

The Astros retire Hall of Famer Billy Wagner's number 13 Saturday. 12 players wore 13 after Wagner's time in Houston ended. They do not exactly comprise a Who's Who of Astros lore. Tyler White may have been the best of the dozen. Hey, I said the pickings were slim! Cooper Hummel goes down as the last to wear 13 as an Astro in an official game. Hummel wore 13 last season, before being assigned number 16 when he rejoined the team this season.

For Astro-centric conversation, join Brandon Strange, Josh Jordan, and me for the Stone Cold ‘Stros podcast which drops each Monday afternoon, with an additional episode now on Thursday. Click here to catch!

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Hunter Brown takes the mound for Houston. Composite Getty Image.

The Houston Astros and Boston Red Sox meet Wednesday night at Daikin Park with the three-game set hanging in the balance. After splitting the first two matchups, both clubs enter looking to grab a momentum-shifting win as the playoff race tightens in August.

Hunter Brown (9-5, 2.51 ERA) takes the mound for Houston, aiming to bounce the Astros back from Tuesday’s blowout loss — a setback that left them tied with Seattle for first in the AL West. The right-hander has been one of baseball’s most effective pitchers this season, limiting hitters to a 0.98 WHIP and striking out 160.

The Red Sox counter with Walker Buehler (7-6, 5.40 ERA), who’s still finding his footing after joining Boston’s rotation. Buehler’s strikeout stuff remains evident, but limiting damage early will be key against a Houston lineup that ranks top 10 in the majors with a .322 on-base percentage.

Jose Altuve continues to power the Astros’ attack, racking up 40 extra-base hits, while Carlos Correa has been scorching hot, batting .400 over his last 10 games. For Boston, Jarren Duran’s blend of gap power and speed remains a constant threat, and rookie Roman Anthony has been a spark plug in August.

For Houston, the night is about more than just the standings. With Boston already owning a 4-1 edge in the season series, a win would help erase Tuesday’s sting and send a message that the banged up Astros can still handle a team with postseason potential. Expect another charged atmosphere, especially with familiar faces and recent drama adding extra juice to what’s already been a lively series.

Betting odds

BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Astros -170, Red Sox +142; over/under is 8 runs

Starting lineup

At first glance, you'll notice Correa is getting the night off. Pena will leadoff and play shortstop, followed by Jesus Sanchez (LF), and Jose Altuve who's back at second base.

Image via: MLB.com/Screenshot

Christian Walker (1B) slides back into the cleanup spot, with Victor Caratini hitting fifth as the DH. Yainer Diaz will catch again, hitting sixth, with the red-hot Ramon Urias filling in for Correa at third and hitting seventh. Cam Smith will hit eighth and play right field, followed by center fielder Jacob Melton.

Roster Moves

RHP Jordan Weems joins the major league roster, with Colton Gordon heading to Sugar Land after a disappointing performance on Tuesday night.

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