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The Astros — bold, decisive, interesting — are the team the Red Sox used to be: Kepner

The Astros — bold, decisive, interesting — are the team the Red Sox used to be: Kepner

New York Times2 days ago
BOSTON – In the climactic scene of 'The Fabelmans,' the character that serves as an avatar for a young Steven Spielberg meets the director John Ford at his Hollywood office. Describing the artwork on his wall, Ford shares an essential lesson of storytelling:
'Now remember this,' he growls. 'When the horizon's at the bottom, it's interesting! When the horizon's at the top, it's interesting! When the horizon's in the middle, it's boring as [expletive]!'
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Once upon a time, the Boston Red Sox were interesting. Sometimes they won the World Series. Sometimes their egos got in the way of that. But they always acted boldly and decisively. They swung big.
The Houston Astros are the franchise the Red Sox used to be. They've gone to four World Series in the last decade, burning through a few managers and general managers along the way. Controversies? They've had a few. But they're always loaded with stars, and when they lose some, they find others.
On Thursday, they found one in the alumni directory: Carlos Correa, the prodigal shortstop who returned in a trade with the Minnesota Twins. Correa was back in orange on Friday, hitting cleanup and making his career debut at third base. He wore his old No. 1, which also describes Houston's place in the American League West.
'It's a really happy environment right now,' said Bryan Abreu, the Astros' star setup man. 'We feel like we're starting the season again.'
Like Justin Verlander before him, Correa left as a free agent and came back before his contract was over. Owner Jim Crane sometimes spends rashly — José Abreu, Rafael Montero — but he keeps the bedroom just the way you left it.
'The front office and the coaching staff, they do a really good job of developing players and getting the right people here,' Correa said before batting practice Friday, in the visitors' dugout at Fenway Park. 'And they just know how to win. It's only one mentality in this clubhouse, and that's to win — all the way.'
As the old ditty from 'Ball Four' goes, it makes a fellow proud to be an Astro. Correa was fully engaged with the Twins while he played there, but kept his home in Houston and maintained good relations with the Astros.
With Minnesota tearing down its roster amid a franchise sale, Correa eagerly approved a trade to the team that rebuilt around him in the 2010s. It was the only other place he could see himself.
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'You never want to burn bridges in this game,' Correa said. 'You never know how things are going to end up panning out. And even after baseball, when you need a job, front office or whatever, you don't want to ever burn any bridges. My relationship in Minnesota — fantastic with everybody. Same here in Houston when I left. And now you see that I'm back.'
That's one way Houston differs from Boston — when a Red Sox player leaves, it's often with knives in his back. In the old days, though, the Red Sox would shrug it off, replace a Pedro Martínez with a Josh Beckett, and win another World Series.
These are not the old days. These are the boring days — not the players or the games, but the organizational ethos. The Red Sox seem to believe they can build a winner without taking risks, a trait they exhibit every offseason and trade deadline.
This week, Craig Breslow and his staff did the least of any American League contender to upgrade their roster. The Red Sox traded with the Los Angeles Dodgers for Dustin May, a rental righty with a 5.95 ERA in his last eight starts, and with the St. Louis Cardinals for Steven Matz, a rental lefty with a 6.19 ERA in his last 12 appearances.
Boston started the day 59-51, good for the second wild-card spot, two games ahead of Texas. May and Matz should make the team a little bit better. Joe Ryan would have made the team a lot better. There is work to do.
'When you look at the Green Monster, we're in third place, five games back,' Manager Alex Cora said, referring to the AL standings on the wall. 'So we feel like we can compete with anybody, and we've got a real shot to win the division.'
The Red Sox haven't done that since 2018, when they took their third consecutive division crown under Dave Dombrowski and raced to their fourth World Series victory of the century. Within a year, though, they had fired Dombrowski and Mookie Betts had played his final game for the team.
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Betts' trade to the Dodgers — under Chaim Bloom in 2020 — was this century's Babe Ruth sale. For a better example of trading a superstar, consider the Astros' GM Dana Brown, who dealt Kyle Tucker to the Chicago Cubs last winter for an All-Star third baseman (Isaac Paredes), a promising rookie outfielder (Cam Smith) and a starter who made the season-opening rotation (Hayden Wesneski) before getting hurt.
With a hamstring injury threatening Paredes' season, the Astros pivoted to Correa, assuming $73.2 million of the $103.2 million left on his contract through 2028. Minnesota will cover the other $30 million and took a token minor leaguer (pitcher Matt Mikulski) in return.
It's a risk, to be sure, given Correa's health history — he has played in 140+ games in just two of his 11 major-league seasons — and performance for the Twins this year: .267/.319/.386, which he attributed to difficulty adjusting to new coaches. But Correa is only 30, and nobody knows him better than the Astros. They took the chance.
'He's a great leader, man,' Jose Altuve said. 'He's a guy that definitely makes your clubhouse better. We all know how passionate he is about baseball, how smart he is, and how he can affect other players and make them better.'
This was an apt setting for a Correa reunion, the spot where he and Altuve turned around the 2021 ALCS. With the Red Sox six outs from taking a three-games-to-one lead, Altuve tied Game 4 with a homer and Correa led off the ninth with a double to spark a seven-run rally. The Red Sox never led again and lost the series in six.
Houston would lose that fall's World Series, but won the next year without Correa. His replacement, Jeremy Peña, was the MVP. Now that they are teammates, Correa sounded relieved to let Peña stay at short. New position, no problem.
'He'll be awesome, he'll be great,' said Alex Bregman, the longtime Houston third baseman who now anchors Boston's lineup. 'Obviously, he's got a Platinum Glove, so he's always been one of the best defenders in the league. We always used to say if he caught the ball, the guy was out because of the big-time arm.'
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The Red Sox signed Bregman to a typically risk-averse contract last winter: three years and $120 million, with an opt-out clause after 2025. They also made one-year deals with Walker Buehler and Aroldis Chapman to go with an actual long-term commitment: a trade for starter Garrett Crochet, who signed a six-year, $170 million contract.
Crochet's deal is the richest on the team after June's trade of Rafael Devers to the San Francisco Giants. Perhaps the Red Sox will redirect Devers' money to Bregman this winter. But Bregman turns 32 in March, and data models rarely endorse the idea of long-term contracts at that age.
Maybe the Red Sox will grow tired of austerity, of one-year contracts and painless trades for fixer-uppers, of waiting for a homegrown core to spark a renaissance. Or maybe this group makes a deep playoff run, validates the front office's approach and makes all the critics look foolish.
But these days, it sure seems like a lot more fun to follow the Astros.
'The credit goes to our players,' Manager Joe Espada said. 'If you put your team in a position to add, you're welcoming players today in your clubhouse. If you don't put your team in a position to add, you're saying goodbye to a lot of your teammates.'
Either way is interesting. In Boston, the horizon's in the middle.
(Photo of Houston's Carlos Correa and Boston's Carlos Narvaez: Charles Krupa / AP Photo)
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Winners and losers after two weeks of Texans training camp
Winners and losers after two weeks of Texans training camp

USA Today

time3 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Winners and losers after two weeks of Texans training camp

Ten days of Houston Texans training camp have wrapped up at the Methodist Training Center. There's been good, bad and indifferent play all around through over a week of action, but the next four practices are pivotal toward building a foundation for the team's future. After a four-day trip to The Greenbrier in West Virginia, the first test appears on Houston's schedule. It's a preseason game, so don't expect much from starters, but every win or loss could carry weight and a public perception going into Week 1's showdown against Matthew Stafford and the Los Angeles Rams. Several players are peaking at the right time, like Will Anderson Jr. He's not in jeopardy of losing starting reps, but a strong season could warrant a contract that makes him one of the highest-paid defensive ends in league history. Others have regressed. And yes, those players are fighting for roster spots going into a week of practice at the Greenbrier. As Houston preps for another week of drills, here's Texans Wire's biggest winners and losers of training camp back at home base. Winner: TE Cade Stover Texans general manager Nick Caserio mentioned that Stover was the most improved player of the entire offseason, regardless of position group or side of the ball. So far through 10 days of camp, it's hard to argue. Last season, Stover was still getting comfortable learning how to play the position after starting off his career as a linebacker at Ohio State. Now, the former fourth-round pick is looking more like that security blanket that C.J. Stroud trusted in Columbus amid a College Football Playoff run in 2023. Stover has constantly found himself working with the first-team offense. He looks more comfortable winning his route battles against opposing defenders and has leaned down to become more agile in blocking sets. Dalton Schultz is going to be the main starter this season, but plan for Stover to have a significant role in Nick Caley's offense this season. Loser: OT Blake Fisher It's still early to call it quits on Fisher, but the second-round pick isn't helping his case by avoiding the "b" word after a struggling offseason. When camp broke in mid-July, the former starting right tackle was taking reps solely with the first-team offense. He's been running with 2s since pads came on Monday morning and hasn't even cracked the rotation. Fisher has experience over rookie Tay Ersery, having started in the team's final six games. They weren't pretty, but reps matter. Sadly, so do penalties, which Fisher has been flagged for multiple times in team drills. What's worse is the sack total. Even names like Darrell Taylor and Solomon Byrd are winning their battles and getting pressure on Stroud during team drills. Fisher has an uphill battle to reclaim that top spot over Ersery, whom the Texans drafted to be Laremy Tunsil's replacement on the left side. It could be a long season for the once-thought long-term right tackle in H-Town if he continues to struggle. Winner: DB Calen Bullock Pick a practice. Literally, any day since camp broke last week. You got it? Bullock has been the most impressive player that morning. Yes, every morning, Bullock is the one standing out the most. He's already recorded four interceptions against Stroud in drills and has been more physical when asked to play against tight ends in man coverage. On Wednesday, the second-year defensive back went stride-for-stride with Pro Bowl wide receiver Nico Collins to break up a deep post pattern. Last season, Bullock totaled five interceptions and helped Houston stabilize the back end of its secondary after Jalen Pitre moved into the nickel role. He's a true ball-hawk that's only getting back as a tackler and run-stopper. Loser: LB Christian Harris Harris hasn't been on the field, which is why he should be considered a "loser" through two weeks of camp. The Texans elected not to put the fourth-year linebacker on the PUP list for the start of camp after he was limited in OTAs. Theoretically, Harris could show up at practice tomorrow and make this a moot point. But through two weeks, no one has seen Harris on the field. He's done some work off to the sides, but outside of a couple of glimpes, the linebacker who took over the Texans' defense in 2023 has been absent. That's a massive deal for his future since Henry To'oTo'o and E.J. Speed both have looked promising as the weakside linebacker in drills throughout camp. No, Harris likely won't be cut since his potential trumps both To'oTo'o and Azeez Al-Shaair, but as he enters the final year of his rookie deal, he needs a solid season to earn a contract extension. Winner: DE Darrell Taylor Danielle Hunter and Anderson aren't in jeopardy of losing reps, but teams are always looking for a secondary pass-rusher who can fill in on certain downs. While Derek Barnett has been a fine addition, Taylor looks moe agile and has been blowing past both Tay Ersery and Cam Robinson when rotating in with the first-team defense. A former part-time starter in Seattle, Taylor averaged six sacks a season with the Seahawks. Last year with Chicago, he only managed to total three, but his pressure rate ranked among the top 10 of non-starting edge rushers. It's been on display throughout drills during team with the second-team unit. Right now, expect Taylor to be the first man up should Anderson or Hunter need a minute to catch their breath. Loser: RB Nick Chubb Let's get this out of the way; no, Chubb isn't a terrible running back who looks overworked after coming off back-to-back season-ending injuries. But the Texans didn't sign Chubb to be the lead back like they did with Joe Mixon. He was supposed to be a solid No. 2 option that could start in a pinch. Right now, starting Chubb might be the biggest red flag for Houston long-term. So far in camp, that burst needed to get through to the second and third level of the defense is nowhere to be found. Now could some of the blame fall on the offensive line? Perhaps, but you can't put all the blame on the unit in a live game if that's all you got. Houston needs Mixon to stay healthy. That was evident last season when he missed three games with an ankle injury. The run game was obsolete at best. Right now, it looks to be the same; should Chubb, or really anyone for that matter, be the lead back? Winner: CB Kamari Lassiter It's hard to stand out when you're competing for reps opposite an All-Pro cornerback daily, but those at practice have noticed growth in Lassiter in drills. He's won nearly every route in man coverage during team drills when not asked to target Collins. He's also forced a handful of incompletions and has yet to give up a touchdown in coverage since the red zone drills on Tuesday against the Pro Bowler from Michigan. By the season's end, Lassiter could be considered the league's best No. 2 corner and a rising star among all defenders in the league with his consistency in mirroring receivers and as a tackler in space. Winner: DB Jaylin Smith There's a good chance we won't see much of Smith on defense, but that doesn't mean he hasn't been standing out in drills. The third-round pick from USC has worked drills at both safety and outside corner, but a majority of his snaps have come in the nickel position. On Saturday, he broke up a pass intended for Jayden Higgins. He also won his one-on-one battle against Collins during seven-on-seven drills. Right now, there's no home for Smith. Maybe that's promising since the Texans could have him line up anywhere in a pinch. Expect to see him play a significant amount of snaps on Saturday against the Vikings, often moving from the nickel to the boundary and maybe even some reps in the C.J. Gardner-Johnson role. Loser: DL Denico Autry Much like with Harris, Autry's loss is more so because of his availability and growth from other talents. He's a rotational defensive end who probably will only see action on pass-rushing downs when they shift him inside. The problem is that Derek Barnett can do the same thing. So can Taylor, who continues to shine at practice. No one is picking up Autry's contract after a suspension that cost him six games and a disappointing first year with the roster. In the end, Houston might just cut its losses with Autry, eat the dead money and use what's left over as a starting point for extensions in the offseason. Winner: WR Jaylin Noel While he's going to start the season as the No. 2 slot option, Texans fans should feel confident in Noel taking over as the long-term starter in 2026. While working mostly with the second-team offense, he's been far and away the best option on the 2s and perhaps the most impressive rookie. Noel isn't going to beat Kirk Week 1 for reps, but the offense allows all three of its receivers to rotate in and out of spots on the field. That means if Kirk ends up being a solid fit on the outside of the rookie Higgins, Noel should shift inside with more first-team reps as the starting slot option. Loser: OL Juice Scruggs Fisher might not be in jeopardy of losing a roster spot, but Scruggs probably isn't so lucky. In two years, the former second-round pick has gone from starting at guard to starting at center to moving back to guard to now working with the third-team unit behind names like Jaylon Thomas. 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Caesars Sportsbook Promo Code NEWSWK2DYW: Double Tigers-Phils Winnings
Caesars Sportsbook Promo Code NEWSWK2DYW: Double Tigers-Phils Winnings

Newsweek

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  • Newsweek

Caesars Sportsbook Promo Code NEWSWK2DYW: Double Tigers-Phils Winnings

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Astros takeaways: Sobering sweep, top prospects' cloudy future, Cam Smith's slump
Astros takeaways: Sobering sweep, top prospects' cloudy future, Cam Smith's slump

New York Times

time34 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Astros takeaways: Sobering sweep, top prospects' cloudy future, Cam Smith's slump

BOSTON — Reuniting with a franchise icon should result in a celebration, so the Houston Astros attempted to conduct one. Excitement oozed from a clubhouse energized by Carlos Correa's arrival on Friday afternoon. One of the team photographers made a rare in-season road trip to chronicle the moments. Houston Mayor John Whitmire even found his way onto the Fenway Park field before Saturday's matinee, snapping photographs in an Astros sweatshirt. Advertisement The Astros responded with a three-day affront to fundamental baseball, prolonging what one high-profile addition cannot camouflage: This is a team amid its worst stretch of the season. A lifeless 6-1 loss on Sunday finished a sobering sweep by the Boston Red Sox, dousing any of the sparks Houston hoped its trade deadline activity would ignite. 'We're a team that takes pride in our fundamentals, how clean we play the game, and I just think we've done a better job,' manager Joe Espada said after Sunday's game. 'We have to do a better job. I just don't think we played our cleanest the last three days.' Two mindless outs on the bases loomed large during a one-run loss on Friday night. Houston stranded 14 baserunners while finishing 2-for-11 with runners in scoring position during Saturday's 7-3 setback — one that included an out at home plate following a questionable send from third-base coach Tony Perezchica. Sunday, however, featured the lowlight. Starter Framber Valdez allowed the first six Red Sox to reach during the fourth inning. All of them scored. Valdez balked home a run, allowed a bunt to roll between his legs and threw a wild pitch. The inning began with center fielder Taylor Trammell misjudging a deep fly ball from Roman Anthony against the green monster. Catcher Yainer Diaz was charged with one passed ball and could've been given another. From right field, deadline acquisition Jesús Sánchez airmailed the cutoff man on a Ceddanne Rafaela single, allowing the Red Sox an extra 90 feet they did not earn — fitting for this wretched weekend. 'We're better than that,' said Espada, whose new-look lineup scored five runs in 27 innings against Red Sox pitching. 'We focus on always doing the small things really well and we're a team known for doing that. That was just not the case.' Advertisement Since sweeping the Los Angeles Dodgers during the first week of July to move 20 games above .500, the Astros are 7-15. Houston has lost eight of its last 10 games, a stretch in which its American League West lead has dwindled as low as three games. Counting just on Correa's cachet to remedy that is asking for trouble. Both Brice Matthews and Jacob Melton boarded a Boston-bound charter on Wednesday afternoon with uncertain fates. Nothing that happened over the next 24 hours afforded much clarity. Short-term assurance is appreciated, though, so both players should take solace that they remain in Houston's organization. They are the two best prospects in an otherwise barren farm system and were asked about throughout the Astros' trade deadline discussions. General manager Dana Brown made three deals without surrendering Melton or Matthews, but the players he acquired clouded both prospects' major-league future. Performance will always dictate roster construction, but on paper, both Melton and Matthews appear to be blocked from everyday big-league roles for at least the next two seasons. The team optioned both to Triple-A Sugar Land prior to Correa and Sánchez's arrival at Fenway Park on Friday. ''You guys helped us win a ton of games and that matters,'' Espada said he told the two prospects prior to their departure. ''But there's a bigger picture, which is your development. We need to get you guys playing every day.' They understood where we're at right now.' Both Sánchez and Melton are left-handed-hitting outfielders, though Melton is a far more natural center fielder than Sánchez, whom Espada will play primarily in either corner spot. That Sánchez hit second in each of his first three games as an Astro signals how significant his role will be — especially against right-handed pitching. Advertisement Sánchez has two more seasons of club control, the same as resurgent center fielder Jake Meyers. Right fielder Cam Smith is still a rookie. Where Melton fits in the picture is a mystery. He will turn 25 in September and, by the end of the season, should eclipse 300 Triple-A plate appearances. Melton acquitted himself well in his 13-game major-league cameo and, if not for a severe ankle sprain, had a chance to cement a real role on the team as a fourth outfielder. Whether that is viable moving forward is a question. Same for Matthews, whom Espada made sure to remind that 'you pretty much won us a series' before demoting him. Correa's arrival changes the entire complexion of Houston's infield now and for his next three seasons under contract. He will play third base alongside shortstop Jeremy Peña, who has two more years of arbitration eligibility. Both Isaac Paredes and Christian Walker are under team control for two more seasons, too. Asked about Houston's future infield alignment on Sunday, Brown told the team's pregame radio show Houston would 'cross that bridge when we get there.' Moving Paredes to second base is a consideration, Brown said. He even mentioned Correa playing second base. According to Espada, Matthews will continue to play primarily second base while at Triple-A Sugar Land. 'I think he played a really good second base,' Espada said. 'I could see him being a very good second baseman for a long time.' Will that be in Houston? On June 29, Cam Smith crafted a signature moment. The Astros' precocious rookie worked a 10-pitch at-bat against Chicago Cubs starter Colin Rea before pulling a majestic home run into the Crawford Boxes at Daikin Park. The blast ballooned Smith's OPS to .789. Doing it during a nationally televised game against the team that drafted him only heightened the conversation surrounding Smith. Advertisement One month later, Smith is slashing .200/.267/.267 in 116 plate appearances since that home run against the Cubs. Of the six extra-base hits he's managed, none have left the ballpark. It stands to reason that Smith, 22, is hitting a wall. He's never played more than 101 games or taken more than 456 plate appearances in any baseball season. On Saturday, Smith appeared in his 97th game of Houston's season and took his 385th plate appearance. Smith finished 0-for-5, falling further into a 7-for-66 funk. 'He's probably chasing up in the zone more than he did earlier in the year, but we're still seeing the quality of his at-bats and when he connects, we're seeing hard hits,' Espada said. 'We just want to see more consistency when it comes to staying in the zone and not trying to do more.' Coaches have implored Smith to arrive later to the field and limit his pregame work. Smith has taken the advice, but the toll of so many games played — coupled with the inherent rigors of being a rookie at the major-league level — is mounting. Smith did not play in Houston's series-opener against Washington on Monday or on Sunday against Red Sox righty Lucas Giolito. In between, the Astros acquired Sánchez, a left-handed-hitting outfielder that Espada wants to play against right-handed pitching. Doing so may come at Smith's expense. (Top photo of Framber Valdez and Carlos Correa: Winslow Townson / Getty Images)

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