Tag: Houston Astros

Forget the AL West, Astros in Danger of Falling Out of Playoffs Altogether

First off, this isn’t a postmortem. If things ended Friday, the Houston Astros would be in the postseason, albeit by the narrowest of margins.

But, whereas the surprising ‘Stros looked like an October lock for much of the season, now they’re hanging on by a thread—one that’s slipping rapidly from their grasp.

After Friday’s 6-2 loss to the Texas Rangers, Houston now sits 4.5 games off the pace in the American League West with eight games to play.

And with the Los Angeles Angels‘ 8-4 win over the Seattle Mariners, Houston is just a half-game ahead of the surging Halos for the AL’s second wild-card slot.

For a moment, it looked like things might get even worse for the Astros, when second baseman Jose Altuve left Friday’s game following a nasty collision with rookie shortstop Carlos Correa:

Altuve showed no signs of a concussion, per MLB.com’s Brian McTaggart, which would have knocked him out for at least seven days.

“We feel like we dodged a little bit of a bullet there,” manager A.J. Hinch said, per McTaggart. “Maybe something went our way.”

Not much else has lately. The Astros are 7-15 in September, and in that span they’ve watched a four-game division lead melt into a daunting deficit. 

FanGraphs’ postseason projections still give the Astros a 58.2 percent chance of making the playoffs, though their odds of winning the West have sunk to 3.6 percent. Given how they’ve been playing, that feels generous.

After two more crucial contests with the Rangers, the Astros finish with six games on the road against the Mariners and Arizona Diamondbacks, sub-.500 squads with losing records against Houston this year.

So there’s hope. Tomorrow is a new day, and other platitudes.

But this isn’t how the Astros’ Cinderella season was supposed to end. They came out of spring as the team no one believed in. Then the pumpkin turned into a coach. Now, it all might vanish in an instant.

There are several explanations for the ‘Stros’ slide. The offense, which ranked No. 4 in baseball in runs scored in the first half, has fallen to a tie for No. 19 since the All-Star break, just ahead of the woeful Philadelphia Phillies.

And the pitching staff has posted an unsightly 5.06 ERA in September, with the formerly stalwart bullpen looking particularly ugly.

Even ace and Cy Young contender Dallas Keuchel has faltered in the final lap, coughing up nine earned runs in 4.2 innings in a blowout loss to the Rangers on Sept. 16.

“It’s extremely disappointing, just because I couldn’t help the guys out like I normally do,” Keuchel said after the dispiriting outing, per McTaggart. “I know they were kind of leaning on me to kind of go out there and perform.”

Keuchel bounced back with a strong start, and a win, against the Angels on Sept. 21. And he could take the mound two more times before season’s end, depending on how the Astros set up their rotation. They’d obviously like to have Keuchel rested and ready for the do-or-die AL Wild Card Game—which will be played Oct. 6, likely in New York against the Yankeesbut they have to get there first.

OK, so the bats have lagged and the arms have sagged. Is there anything else fueling Houston’s collapse?

Experience isn’t everything, but it can tip the scales. And compared to their Lone Star State counterparts, the Astros’ collective postseason resume is thin, as Chron.com’s Evan Drellich noted:

Current Rangers, including the injured Josh Hamilton, have 902 plate appearances in the playoffs lifetime. That’s more than seven times more the Astros’ tally, 125.

Jed Lowrie is the Astros’ leader in postseason experience at the plate, with 66 trips. The Rangers’ Prince Fielder (164), Hamilton (162), Mike Napoli (162) and Elvis Andrus (158) each have more plate appearances as individuals than the Astros do on a whole.

That doesn’t necessarily tell us what’s going to happen, only what has happened. Veteran leadership is a sometimes overrated asset; talent is talent.

But inexperience might cause a club to reach more quickly for the panic button when a once-sparkling season loses its sheen. 

The Astros aren’t buried yet. They still control their own destiny, at least in terms of the wild-card race. All they need to do is win, and keep winning.

And if they don’t? Well, check back here for the inevitable postmortem.

 

All statistics and standings current as of Sept. 25 and courtesy of MLB.com unless otherwise noted.

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Jose Altuve Injury: Updates on Astros 2B’s Head and Return

Houston Astros second baseman Jose Altuve was back in the lineup on Saturday, after he was forced to leave the team’s game against the Texas Rangers on Friday. “He’s sore but he’s in there top of the lineup and good to go,” manager A.J. Hinch said on Saturday, per the team.

The shortstop was removed after colliding with shortstop Carlos Correa, according to the team’s official Twitter account

“We feel like we dodged a little bit of a bullet there,” Hinch said after Friday’s game, via Brian McTaggart of MLB.com. “Maybe something went our way.” McTaggart also reported Altuve showed no signs of a concussion.

Altuve is a crucial piece of the Astros lineup and one of the most valuable players in the American League when healthy. His ability to get on base and wreak havoc to create extra runs is one of the main reasons for the team’s success.

Unfortunately, injuries have started to become a bigger part of the story for the infielder this season. Earlier in the year, he dealt with nagging hamstring issues that knocked him out of the lineup, and now Houston awaits further word on his latest ailment.

Altuve missed no more than 15 games in any of the previous three seasons. He played in 158 of 162 contests last year as he started to become a household name with a .341 average and 56 stolen bases. He’s continued his strong play throughout 2015, showing those numbers were no fluke.

Altuve is batting .314 with 12 home runs and 59 RBI. His .314 average ranks third among all AL batters behind only Miguel Cabrera and Xander Bogaerts. 

 

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Houston Astros Slugger Evan Gattis Hits Unreal One-Handed Home Run vs. Rangers

That man is STRONG. 

Houston Astros DH Evan Gattis was the lone shining light in his team’s 14-3 loss against the Texas Rangers on Wednesday night. 

In the top of the eighth inning, the big man crushed a two-run home run off pitcher Andrew Faulkner. However, this wasn’t your run-of-the-mill home run. Gattis only needed one hand. 

Yeah. We know.

The 29-year-old seemed to lose his grip while swinging, resulting in one arm doing all of the work. Safe to say he worked out his forearms during the offseason. 

Here’s another look, because why not?

[MLB, Vine]

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Houston Astros’ 2015 Cinderella Rise into the AL Elite Is Coming to an End

Expectations at the big league level were minimal as last April brought the start of the Major League Baseball season.

However, by the time the final out of their 25th game was made, the Houston Astros had transformed into a contender. The only question was, were they more the small-sample variety, or were they the kind of club built to sustain success through the grind of 162 regular-season games?

For about five months, they gave us a definitive answer—they were built for the long haul. Or so they made us think.

Over their last 18 games, the Astros have taken a dozen losses, including Wednesday night’s 14-3 pummeling at the hands of the Texas Rangers, the American League West’s new leading team after the Astros led by 5.5 games less than three weeks ago. Going back further, Houston is five games under. 500 in its last 105, and now its hold on the second wild-card spot is at 1.5 games with the Minnesota Twins lurking.

“We’re a good team. We’ve been a good team all year,” Astros manager A.J. Hinch told reporters after the latest loss. “There’s a reason we’ve been hanging around here with the lead for the better part of this year. We’ll be a good team again by the end of the year.”

The Astros’ four-game series against the Rangers started as a pivotal point in both teams’ seasons. The Rangers were well into their second-half onslaught that made them a surprise contender in the way the Astros were in April. Meanwhile, this was a chance for the struggling Astros, one game over .500 since the All-Star break, to make a stand and push back against their surging in-state rivals.

Doing so would have gone quite a ways in making people forget their recent slide, and it would have halted the panic setting in about this team devolving from a surprise member of the elite into one of the league’s biggest disappointments.

However, even with their two best starting pitchers slated in the first three games, the Astros did nothing to stop the flooding. The Rangers beat both Scott Kazmir (2.63 ERA) and Dallas Keuchel (2.22 ERA entering Wednesday), and their thumping of Keuchel started early Wednesday and ensured they would win the series and walk away from it in first place no matter what happens in Thursday’s finale.

“It’s a confidence-booster,” Rangers outfielder Delino DeShields told reporters. “We have been playing good against these guys all year. To come out like this, it says we’re not going to lie down, we’re here to the end, we’re not going to make it easy.”

Houston’s offense has taken some injury hits, and in the second half it has been in the middle of the pack, which is not much different than it was in the first half.

The rotation has been quite good throughout the season, but over the last couple of weeks, its performance has dipped. The real pitching problem, though, has been in the bullpen. After the relievers were fourth in the league in Fangraphs WAR during the first half, they have dropped to sixth in the second half and 10th over the past couple of weeks.

That has helped lead to a 7-12 record in one-run games in the second half, although the team has not been great in that split all season, going 19-26 for the year.

“We’ve played some close games, and one-run losses or two-run losses are tough, especially this time of year,” Hinch told reporters Tuesday night. “There’s a lot of attention, a lot of ‘want’ factor. Our guys are pushing. We’re in it. We’re having a hard time getting to the finish line on the right side of these on a couple of occasions.”

But those numbers on their own aren’t enough to cause a complete collapse. The Rangers have done their part to facilitate it. Their rotation has gone from around the bottom of the league in the first half to very good in August based on ERA and in September based on Fangraphs WAR to help them to a 36-21 record since the All-Star break, the second-most wins in the league in that time.

Some mild faltering by the Astros and a surge by the Rangers have given them a change at the top of the standings—and a significant shift in playoff probabilities, as the Rangers have gone from a 4.7 percent chance of winning the division on Aug. 26 to a nearly 60 percent chance after Wednesday’s win, based on Fangraphs’ postseason projections

Time is running out for the Astros to make good on their fairytale start, and missing the playoffs is now a realistic possibility with 16 games remaining, including three more against the Rangers. 

“We’ll be ready to play,” Hinch told reporters. “Our world’s not coming to an end.”

No, it’s not. But their postseason chances are flirting with it.

 

All quotes, unless otherwise specified, have been acquired firsthand by Anthony Witrado. Follow Anthony on Twitter @awitrado and talk baseball here.

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Scott Feldman Injury: Updates on Astros P’s Shoulder and Return

As the Houston Astros continue their chase for a playoff spot, their starting rotation will be without a key piece the rest of this season thanks to Scott Feldman‘s shoulder injury. 

Continue for updates. 


Astros Shut Feldman Down

Friday, Sept. 11

According to the Astros’ official Twitter, a sprained right shoulder will force Feldman to miss the rest of 2015. 

The 32-year-old right-hander last pitched on September 1 against Seattle, going just 2.2 innings and allowing five walks before calling the training staff out to look at him. 

Feldman made 18 starts this season, posting a 3.90 ERA with 61 strikeouts in 108.1 innings. He has started and pitched out of the bullpen in his career, which would have given Astros manager A.J. Hinch versatility with his staff down the stretch. 

Houston is currently 2.5 games ahead of Texas in the American League West. General manager Jeff Luhnow did add rotation depth before the deadline, acquiring Scott Kazmir to pitch behind Cy Young contender Dallas Keuchel. 

The Astros’ rotation behind that top two will have to step up in Feldman’s absence to ensure this surprising run has a happy ending in October. 

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Where Would the Houston Astros Be Today If They Never Left the NL?

There will be a great many stories to tell about the 2015 MLB season, including the one of how the Houston Astros at last settled into their new home.

It was in 2013 when the Astros jumped from the National League Central to the American League West, thus bringing about an overdue balance between the two leagues. But beyond that, there really wasn’t much to say about the move.

The Astros were, after all, fresh off two straight 100-loss seasons and in the middle of a complicated and intentionally hard-to-look-at rebuilding process. They surprised nobody in losing 203 more games in 2013 and 2014. Given how poorly they were playing ball, where they were playing ball was immaterial.

But now? Yeah, suddenly that matters.

As they embark on the final month of 2015, it’s clear the Astros rebuild is a thing of the past now. Their 73-60 record is the best in the AL West, putting them on the fast track to end a 10-year postseason drought. Whereas it was immaterial the last two years, the Astros’ status as an AL West team is therefore as much a part of their success story as anything they’re doing on the field.

But that’s our cue for a Dun-Dun-Dunny thought experiment: What if the Astros were still in the NL Central?

If nothing else, it’s an intriguing proposal on paper. Putting the Astros back in the NL Central alongside the St. Louis Cardinals, Pittsburgh Pirates and Chicago Cubs would give the division four of MLB’s nine best teams, an arrangement for a playoff race for the ages.

And as Jeff Gordon of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch wrote in June, such a playoff race would be rich with narratives:

Imagine how much fun the National League Central would be if they were still around. This “Hackgate” hoo-hah could have kept an Astros-Cardinals rivalry simmering for years.

The division would have also featured [Astros general manager Jeff] Luhnow fighting for attention against Theo Epstein, the Chicago Cubs president who earned his “genius” label from the Eastern Media during his successful run in Boston.

Imagine an Astros-Cubs rivalry: two franchises furiously rebuilding with prospects after swapping veterans for prospects and tanking multiple seasons in the process.

And imagine the rising Astros and Cubs stars trying to gain ground on the Pittsburgh Pirates, a resurgent franchise featuring strong hitting, speed, pitching and defense.

This would have been a heck of show.

A heck of a show, indeed. It would be the Mad Max: Fury Road of division races, all shiny and chrome.

But this is assuming, of course, that what’s worked for the Astros in the AL West would also work for them in the NL Central. And given the particulars, that’s no sure thing.

Now, let’s not diminish what the Astros have done in 2015. They’re not leading the AL West because they’ve overachieved. In fact, the 78-54 Pythagorean record they began Tuesday argued they’ve actually underachieved. And that’s not so hard to believe. 

Combining talented arms with the league’s most efficient defense, per Baseball Prospectus, has led the Astros to the AL’s best ERA at 3.34. Backing this strong pitching is an explosive offense, as the Astros rank second in the AL in homers and first in the AL in stolen bases. Short version: The Astros are legitimately really good! 

But at the same time, anyone who’s even taken so much as a cursory glance at the Astros will know that they have something of a fatal flaw.

As dangerous as the Astros offense has been, it sure does love to swing and miss. It owns a 23.6 strikeout percentage that ranks atop the American League. That’s been a collective effort, as Chris Carter (33.5) and Colby Rasmus (32.4) lead a group of 11 Astros regulars who have struck out in over 20 percent of their plate appearances.

Obviously, this bad habit hasn’t hindered Houston’s offense that much. Especially not against the competition that matters the most, as the Astros entered Tuesday with a reasonable 21.8 K% and a more-than-reasonable .745 OPS in 52 games against AL West clubs. In racking up their 29-24 record within the division, they’ve been an offensive kingpin.

But there’s a reason for that. The pitching staffs of the Texas Rangers, Los Angeles Angels, Seattle Mariners and Oakland A’s entered Tuesday ranked in the bottom 17 of MLB in strikeout percentage. When the Astros go up against them, they’re not going up against clubs that are equipped to exploit their fatal flaw. 

As such, it’s no surprise the Astros have run into more trouble outside of the AL West. Against everyone else, they own a 24.8 K% and essentially a league-average .719 OPS. They’ve been even worse against clubs that rank in the top 12 in MLB in strikeout rate, posting a 26.3 K% and a .663 OPS.

And now’s the point where we get to the point: Struggling to this degree against power-pitching teams would likely hurt the Astros a hell of a lot more within the NL Central than it has within the AL West.

Whereas none of Houston’s four AL West opponents rank in the top 12 of MLB in strikeout percentage, the only NL Central team that doesn’t is the Cincinnati Reds. So, you can use your imagination. The Astros regularly going up against the Cardinals, Pirates, Cubs and Milwaukee Brewers would mean regular action against the kind of pitching that has killed their offense this season.

Would that keep the Astros from making progress after four years of futility? Maybe not. But would it get in the way? Yeah. And probably in a big way, at that.

But given this possibility, the natural question is whether the Astros front office would have crafted a roster of a different flavor.

Case in point: Instead of taking a lineup that already had high-strikeout guys like Carter, Jason Castro and George Springer, and adding more high-strikeout guys like Rasmus, Luis Valbuena and Evan Gattis this past winter, maybe the Astros would have prioritized finding more contact hitters. The effect could have been a less volatile offense.

Maybe so…Or, you know, not.

For one, relative to finding power hitters with holes in their swings, it’s a lot harder to find quality contact hitters in MLB’s current whiff-happy environment. For two, taking the bad (strikeouts) with the good (homers) regarding power hitters sounds like a philosophy the Astros are committed to regardless.

As Astros assistant GM David Stearns told ESPN.com’s Jayson Stark in March, “Clearly, if they’re strikeouts without power, we’re not going to score as many runs as we would like. But our expectation is, we’re going to hit a lot of home runs and we’re going to score plenty of runs. If we do that, then we’ll take the strikeouts that come with it.”

Luhnow largely echoed those remarks in an interview with Evan Drellich of the Houston Chronicle and added that a lineup loaded with power threats is “good for our ballpark.” He’s on point there, as ESPN.com can vouch Minute Maid Park is once again one of the top power-friendly parks in MLB.

So instead of a different offense, perhaps Houston’s mission would have been to build an even better pitching staff, with the idea being to beat the Cardinals, Pirates and Cubs at their own game.

In addition to shoring up their bullpen with Luke Gregerson and Pat Neshek, maybe this would have entailed going hard after big rotation upgrades. Perhaps that would have meant a blockbuster trade for Cole Hamels, or maybe topping the Cubs’ offer for Jon Lester and/or signing Francisco Liriano away from the Pirates.

But looking at things now, you wonder how much better such efforts possibly could have made Houston’s pitching. The Astros’ 3.34 ERA is already competitive with the ERAs of the Cardinals, Pirates and Cubs, and it so happens only the Cardinals have the Astros beat in adjusted ERA.

The Astros thus could have done nothing differently and would still have the kind of pitching staff that could go toe to toe with those in the rest of the division. That could have been their excuse to turn their attention back to their offense, which may have led them right back to the whiffs-for-power conundrum.

In so many words, exactly how different the 2015 Astros would look if they still played in the NL Central is a damn good question. There’s a real chance, however, that they’d have put the same team on the field only to be met with drastically different results than the ones they’re enjoying in the AL West. In which case, we might not be talking about their rebuild needing a bit more work rather than them being on the cusp of the postseason.

But this is where the thought experiment ends, and where the only path available is the one that leads back to the bright side.

That’s the reality that all of the above has indeed been a mere thought experiment. The fact is the Astros are not members of the NL Central, nor were they ever going to be this season. They’re not on the cusp of October because they’ve dodged a bullet. They’re on the cusp of October because they spent years building a foundation for a contender, and because they hit all the right notes in taking the next step in recent months.

After doing all that, the Astros being in the right place at the right time is nothing to hold against them. It’s just another part of their story to appreciate.

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked.

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Dallas Keuchel Contract: Latest News, Rumors and Speculation on Astros SP

Houston Astros All-Star pitcher Dallas Keuchel has expressed his desire to remain with the club and is already engaging in talks for a new multiyear contract.  

Continue for updates.


Keuchel, Astros Working on New Deal

Monday, August 24

Evan Drellich of the Houston Chronicle provides an extensive report about Keuchel’s future. The southpaw emphasizes the importance of winning in describing his optimism about the team before getting into the specifics of the contract negotiations:

There have been some talks, but nothing major, and the feeling is mutual between my party and the team. So that’s nice. It’s always a nice feeling when the team wants you to be here longer than just the base and that’s what we’re going on right now. Hopefully something will get done. I know at the end of the day I can sleep well because I love the city of Houston, I love the Astros.

Keuchel will be eligible for arbitration for the next three seasons after giving three full years of service to Houston. He can take his salary demands to an arbitrator if his side cannot strike an agreement with the front office, but all indications are Keuchel would rather avoid any controversy and work something out.

The Houston Chronicle‘s Reid Laymance weighed in on Keuchel’s contract situation:

Keuchel has been instrumental to the Astros’ stunning success in 2015. The 27-year-old ace has posted a 14-6 record with a 2.37 ERA and 1.02 WHIP and has a career-best strikeout rate of 7.86 Ks per nine innings.

An exceptional sinker and biting slider allow Keuchel to stymie the opposition and yield very few home runs. His ground-ball percentage of 63.1 is second in all of baseball, per FanGraphs.

The Astros have a promising young nucleus that has Keuchel rightly excited about what’s in store in the coming years. Although he isn’t trying to “break the bank,” to use his own words from Monday’s news, Keuchel has earned the right to make gaudier demands with his play over the past two seasons.

What often determines success in the postseason is the quality of starting pitching. Keuchel has been a class act and doesn’t appear keen on demanding a paycheck. If he can maintain that mindset and his current level of play, Houston ought to invest what it can to keep him around for the long haul.

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Mike Fiers’ Foreign Substance Controversy Shouldn’t Darken His Historic Night

Talk about drumming up drama where there is none. 

In what might have easily erupted into a full-blown baseball scandal, a shiny substance that may have been anything from sunscreen to sweat was pictured on Houston Astros right-hander Mike Fiers’ glove during his historic performance against the Los Angeles Dodgers on Friday night. 

Fiers’ no-hitter was the 11th in Astros franchise history and the first since 1973 to be thrown by a guy who had been traded in the same season. It was also the first complete game of his career and easily his greatest performance in the major leagues.

But as it’s known to do from time to time, Twitter turned a great event into a potential disgrace when people started tweeting screenshots of the inside of Fiers’ glove, which had some sort of shiny substance on the upper thumb. Cries of cheating followed, attempting to drown Fiers’ shining moment as a professional.

“Last night was about Mike Fiers being a really good major league pitcher, and he had a great accomplishment,” Astros manager A.J. Hinch told reporters Saturday. “Anything that takes away from that is unfortunate, unless there’s this massive proof.”

There was not. The proof was weak at best, and all the pictures did was mildly take away from Fiers’ 134-pitch performance that featured a devastating curveball, aided by a foreign substance or not:

Because of the pictures, Fiers was faced with questions about what exactly was on his glove. He rightfully brushed off the inquiries, ones he shouldn’t have to answer, though the reporters confronting him were forced into the situation by the shots on the Internet.

“I mean, you can try to pick out a lot of things through a lot of games,” Fiers told reporters Saturday. “I don’t know what they are talking about. It could be a different lighting or camera angle or a lot of things. I don’t know.”

Neither did anyone watching at home, which made the tweets reek of hate. They were attempts to knock down a guy who had just reached a personal pedestal.

Thankfully, the Dodgers did not take part in that. Approached with the topic on Saturday, the Dodgers players did not say they believed Fiers cheated. They claimed making that implication would take away from Fiers’ performance. And they were right. The proof did not exist to do so, and it certainly would have cast darkness on the most outstanding night of Fiers’ career.

“I don’t want to take anything away from his night,” Dodgers left fielder Carl Crawford told reporters.

Crawford did add that pitchers using substances on the ball was commonplace in the major league. According to him, it is basically one of the game’s accepted illegal practices.

“I know when I was back in Tampa, I used to see pitchers putting stuff on balls all the time,” Crawford told reporters. “I don’t know how many guys around the league are doing it, but on my team, I used to see them doing stuff all the time, so I just figured it was normal. I’d just be like, ‘Yo, I’m going to tell on you if I ever got to face you,’ just joking around, but I just figure it’s not that big of a deal.

“I don’t know if it’s an advantage. You still have to throw the ball over the plate, but at the same time, there’s a reason why they do it and they know they’re going to get in trouble for it and they still do it.”

Even if the opposing team suspects a pitcher might be using a substance for grip purposes or any other reason, they are unlikely to bring it to an umpire’s attention unless the pitcher scoffs at common sense and makes the violation obvious. Had Fiers put anything on his glove Friday, it would have qualified as blatantly obvious because it was in plain sight, much the same way New York Yankees starter Michael Pineda used a substance last year, drawing himself a 10-game suspension.

But the Dodgers never noticed anything strange on Fiers’ glove. Therefore there was no need to alert the game’s authorities.

“I think if you talk about stuff like that, it seems like you’re whining,” Dodgers manager Don Mattingly told reporters Saturday. “I think a lot of guys use it. It’s kind of accepted unless it’s just blatantly obvious that somebody’s doing it. I had no idea during the game; nobody said anything to us.”

And nobody should say anything about it again. Friday night belonged to Fiers, and believing anything different unfairly clouds one of the most memorable nights of his life to date.

 

All quotes, unless otherwise specified, have been acquired firsthand by Anthony Witrado. Follow Anthony on Twitter @awitrado and talk baseball here.

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Mike Fiers’ No-Hitter Is Latest Triumph in Astros’ Surprising Turnaround

However things turn out, 2015 will go down as a magical season for the Houston Astros. On Friday night, Mike Fiers added a pretty neat trick of his own.

For nine innings and a career-high 134 pitches, Fiers held the Los Angeles Dodgers hitless, scattering three walks and striking out 10. It was the fifth no-hitter thrown in MLB this year and the 11th in Astros franchise history.

Most strikingly, it was the first shutout and the first complete game of Fiers’ career. He’d never even pitched into the ninth inning in a big league contest.

Quite simply, the 30-year-old right-hander elevated his game to a place no one knew it could go.

It may have been uncharted territory, but Fiers never doubted he could get it done, as he explained after the game.

“Obviously everybody wants to throw a no-hitter and do everything you can to do that as a pitcher,” he said, per Jose de Jesus Ortiz of the Houston Chronicle. “I told [manager A.J. Hinch] I wasn’t going to come out of the game. He was literally going to have to throw me in the clubhouse, lock me somewhere. This doesn’t happen often.”

Speaking of things that don’t happen often, at least lately, the ‘Stros have been giving their fans reasons to cheer all season.

A perennially lousy, small-budget club virtually no one picked as a postseason contender, Houston has set the pace in the AL West and holds a 3.5-game division lead over the Los Angeles Angels entering play Saturday.

That’s quite a turnaround after three consecutive 100-loss campaigns between 2011 and 2013 and a 92-loss “rebound” in 2014.

As Jacob B. Lourim of USA Today noted Aug. 4, “There are tangible reasons for the turnaround, from a revamped bullpen…to prospects emerging from a fertile farm system, to new blood coming from winning clubhouses and raising expectations to fit their new potential.”

Still, it’s been an eye-opening about-face.

Now, as if the Astros’ impressive, unexpected rise needed another punctuation mark, here comes Fiers.

Acquired from the Milwaukee Brewers as the “other guy” in the July 30 deal that netted All-Star center fielder Carlos Gomez, Fiers seemed like a decent addition at best, a serviceable arm that wouldn’t make or break the Astros’ October dreams.

On Friday at hitter-friendly Minute Maid Park, against a powerful Dodgers lineup, Fiers convincingly played the role of genuine world-beater.

Yes, it’s only one game. And, impressive as they are, no-hitters are becoming more commonplace in today’s pitching-dominated MLB, as I recently outlined.

More than a harbinger of things to come, though, Fiers’ no-no represents another triumph in a charmed season in East Texas. And all the better that it came against Los Angeles, owner of baseball’s gaudiest payroll.

ESPN Stats & Info broke down the disparity between the thrifty ‘Stros and free-spending Dodgers:

The Astros haven’t won anything yet, other than respect. But, as Fiers’ dominance further solidified, they look like a club with momentum and the wind at their backs. 

They have a leading candidate for AL Rookie of the Year honors in shortstop Carlos Correa. They have a lineup that leads the AL in dingers. They have first place in the West.

And now they have Mike Fiers, unexpected no-hitter thrower.

Add it to the growing pile of magical moments. And don’t be surprised if they have more tricks up their sleeves for the stretch run. 

 

All statistics and standings current as of Aug. 21 and courtesy of MLB.com unless otherwise noted.

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Gomez Hits 100th Home Run of Career, 1st with Astros

Houston Astros outfielder Carlos Gomez hit the 100th home run of his career during Tuesday’s 4-3 loss to the Texas Rangers, blasting a solo shot over the left-center field wall off of Rangers pitcher Yovani Gallardo in the sixth inning, per MLB Milestones.

The long ball pulled the Astros within one run at 4-3, but neither team managed to cross the plate for the rest of the evening.

Tuesday’s home run was also Gomez’s first in an Astros uniform, although he does have eight hits (.348 batting average), four RBI and a stolen base in 23 at-bats since joining the team in a July 30 trade with the Milwaukee Brewers.

Gomez hit 87 of his 100 career home runs in a Milwaukee uniform, with 66 of those coming from 2012 to 2014.

During that three-year stretch, Gomez averaged 22 homers, 65.7 RBI, 82.3 runs and 37 stolen bases in 432 games, with a batting average of at least .260 in each season.

Per FanGraphs, he accumulated 16 wins above replacement (WAR) during that period, with 13 WAR between the 2013 and 2014 seasons alone.

Although he’s at just 1.9 WAR so far this season, Gomez can largely point to injuries as the explanation for his dip in production.

With his game largely built on his excellent speed, hip and hamstring injuries have limited the 29-year-old outfielder, particularly on the basepaths.

Coming off three consecutive seasons with 34 or more stolen bases, Gomez has converted just eight of his 14 attempts this year.

Of course, the Astros are still more than happy to have acquired him, especially because he’s under contract through 2016.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


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