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Com TW NOw News 2024

MLB Trade Deadline Tracker: Live updates on all buyers and sellers as teams look toward the postseason
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MLB Trade Deadline Tracker: Live updates on all buyers and sellers as teams look toward the postseason

The Astros appear to have overpaid a bit. Sending two talented youngsters with big-league time and another upper-minors prospect to Toronto in exchange for Yusei Kikuchi, a pending free-agent starter rental, seems a bit much given how the market has acted so far at this deadline.

To be clear, the Astros need to go for it. That’s not the issue here. Houston went into Monday tied with the Mariners at the top of the AL West. They’ve climbed admirably out of the abyss after a slow start to 2024. When you hire guys like José Altuve, Alex Bregman and Yordan Álvarez, the World Series is always a possibility. There’s a reason this club has made seven straight ALCSs.

The Astros have also addressed an area of ​​need on their roster: starting pitching. A series of injuries has left Houston’s rotation criminally understaffed. But the issues here are (1) the player they acquired and (2) the price they paid.

Yusei Kikuchi is a solid MLB starter who should slot right into Houston’s rotation and soak up innings until the end. But will he start a postseason game for the Astros? Unless the still-frozen Justin Verlander isn’t healthy in October, probably not. Verlander, Framber Valdez and a couple of standouts in Ronel Blanco and Hunter Brown would be ahead of Kikuchi on the list. The 33-year-old Japanese left-hander started the season well, but his secondary pitching has been absolutely hammered this year and considering he’s a free agent at the end of the season, the price Houston paid seems steep to me.

Jake Bloss, Joey Loperfido and Will Wagner are all in Triple-A or have had time in the big leagues. That suggests Toronto is more interested in a revamp than a rebuild, which makes sense considering Bo Bichette and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. are still under contract through next season. So who are these guys?

Bloss struggled in a three-start debut for Houston this season, but take those numbers with a grain of salt. The 23-year-old right-handed pitcher was drafted out of Georgetown University last season and was rushed to the big leagues as a result of Houston’s injury woes. He has a heater in the mid-90s with excellent carry, giving him a great floor to be a rotation option going forward. There’s more work to be done here, but he’s under the team’s control until the sun melts.

From a physical perspective, Loperfido smells a little like Cody Bellinger. He’s clearly not as good, but there’s athleticism to like with the big-swinging OF/1B. The former Duke Blue Devil also debuted this year and was more boring than disastrous, despite having a yikes-inducing strikeout rate. If he can cut down on some of the in-zone whiff, he could be a decent everyday player.

Wagner, the son of former MLB closer Billy Wagner, is more of an up-down utility bench player with good swing decisions and limited power.

When you consider that Kikuchi will hit the free agent market at the end of the season and compare Toronto’s haul to the disappointing return the White Sox got for a sought-after starter in Erick Fedde, it’s hard not to see this as an overpayment by Houston.