The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Astros’ homegrown talent is easy to root for

- By PaulNewber­ry

After enduring three straight 100-loss seasons, the success of Houston in 2017is something movies are made of as the young Astros are currently battling it out with the Dodgers in the World Series.

There’s so much to like about the Houston Astros.

We’re not talking about how they’ve buoyed the spirits of a hurricane-ravaged city, though that certainly adds to the appeal now that they’re just two wins away from their first World Series championsh­ip.

And we’re certainly not overlookin­g the racist nonsense from first baseman Yuli Gurriel, who pulled on the corners of his eyes after homering against Japanese pitcher Yu Darvish during Houston’s 5-3 victory Friday night.

But this is about a team that not so long ago endured three straight 100loss seasons, the result of its very conscious decision to strip down to nothing at the big league level, take a lot of lumps, and stay true to a painful but necessary course to rebuild the franchise totally from scratch.

If they ever make amovie about this team, it should be called “All The Right Moves (Mostly), Part II.”

They built around an undersized second baseman, Jose Altuve, who’ll likely be the AL’s Most Valuable Player. They stuck with once- struggling sinkerball­er Dallas Keuchel, who won the Cy Young Award two years ago andwent 14-5 this season. They drafted shortstop Carlos Correa and third baseman Alex Bregman, who now comprise a dynamic left side of the infield. They drafted Lance McCullers Jr. and traded for Brad Peacock, who got the win and the save in Game 3. They plucked Gurriel out of Cuba, signed outfielder Josh Reddick, traded for designated hitter Evan Gattis, and picked up veteran catcher Brian McCann for peanuts coming into this season.

Then, just before the deadline for postseason eligibilit­y, Houston acquired ace pitcher Justin Verlander to bolster its October hopes. How’s that working out? Verlander was 5-0 with a 1.06 ERA in his last five starts of the regular season, and he’s won four more games in the postseason .

“I’mpretty proud of these guys,” said Peacock, who pitched 3 2-3 hitless innings for the save. “It’s a special team, a special lineup, a special group of guys. I’m just glad to be part of it.”

It wasn’t a special team back in 2012, when I sat down with Jeff Luhnow in his office at the Astros’ then-spring training stadium in Kissimmee, Florida, not long after he was hired as general manager.

Disney World was right up the road, but it sounded as though Luhnow was selling an even bigger fantasy .

The Astros were coming off a 106-loss season.

Things would get even worse before they got better Luhnow knew this. He also knew it was the best way forward.

“We want to shake the system, shock the system, to change that mentality,” Luhnow told me that day. “If we change that mental- ity, the results will eventually track your mentality. We have to figure out a way, and we’re already doing it, to make everybody expect that we’re gonna win every game, we’re gonna win every series. Eventually, when you start to do that, it builds on itself.”

With a roster that looked more like an expansion team, the Astros went 55107 in Luhnow’s first season.

In 2013, they fell to 51-111 — the worst record in franchise history.

Now, here they are, just four years later, leading the mighty Los Angeles Dodgers two games to one in the World Series.

What makes this even more appealing is the Dodgers have baseball’s biggest payroll, well past the $200 million mark, while the Astros went into the season ranked 19th at a relatively paltry $122 million. No GMgets ‘em all right. Certainly, Luhnow has a few clunkers he’d like to have back.

Heading into the 2014 season, Luhnow decided to cut outfielder J.D. Martinez, who started out as one of the cornerston­es of the re- building effort but didn’t develop as the Astros were expecting. He wound up in Detroit, where he hit 38 homers with 102 RBIs and made the All-Star Game in 2015. This season, splitting time between with the Tigers and the Arizona Diamondbac­ks, he hit 45 homers with 104 RBIs in just 119 games.

Houston also had a chance to draft Kris Bryant with the top overall pick in 2013. Luhnow used that selection on pitcher Mark Appel, who never made it to the big leagues and is no longer with the Astros. Bryant was taken No. 2 by the Chicago Cubs and led their run to aWorld Series championsh­ip last season.

But the Astros certainly havemore hits than misses.

Again, I’m reminded of that conversati­on with Luhnow in the early days of what became a remarkable rebuilding .job.

He brought up the 1991 Astros, a teamthat finished 65-97 but laid a foundation for the future with burgeoning young stars such as Craig Biggio, Jeff Bagwell, Luis Gonzalez and Curt Schilling.

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 ?? MATT SLOCUM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Houston Astros’ George Springer beats Los Angeles Dodgers’ Cody Bellinger to first base during the sixth inning of Game 3of baseball’s World Series Friday in Houston.
MATT SLOCUM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Houston Astros’ George Springer beats Los Angeles Dodgers’ Cody Bellinger to first base during the sixth inning of Game 3of baseball’s World Series Friday in Houston.

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