The Signal

MIGHTY ASTROS HAVE EYES ON GRAND PRIZE

Veterans bring boost to team hungry for title

- Bob Nightengal­e bnighten@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports FOLLOW MLB COLUMNIST BOB NIGHTENGAL­E @BNightenga­le for analysis and breaking news from the diamond.

KANSAS CITY, MO. They are the best damn team in the land, threatenin­g to win more games than any other team in baseball history, but it’s not good enough.

They arguably have the brightest future of any major league franchise, with an array of young star power and a deep farm system that could beguile the American League for years, but they want it to shine even brighter.

They can start putting the champagne on ice with a 42-18 record entering Thursday and a division gap so big that you could drive an 18-wheeler through it, but simply playing in October isn’t their goal.

Living in the moment is fine, but these young, lovable Houston Astros have their sights on becoming the first franchise in the state of Texas to capture baseball’s biggest prize, the World Series championsh­ip.

“Honestly, with the talent we have in here and the way we’ve played,” 22-year-old All-Star shortstop Carlos Correa told USA TODAY Sports, “anything less than getting to the World Series would be a disappoint­ment.

“I knew this team would be special, especially after getting the veterans we did in the offseason. You can’t help but feel like we have the team to accomplish it. I really believe this can be the year.”

It might sound a little crazy for the Astros’ mantra to be World Series-or-bust, but, considerin­g they are pace to win 113 games — three shy of the major league record — expectatio­ns for this franchise have never been grander.

The Astros, the laughingst­ocks of baseball four years ago, with general manager Jeff Luhnow getting a vanity license plate for his car — GM111 — in honor of their 51-111 season in 2013, pushed their division lead to 14 games this week, the third largest ever through 58 games.

Considerin­g they had outscored opponents by 102 runs, this breakneck pace is far from a fluke.

“It’s like an embarrassm­ent of riches in here,” ace pitcher Dallas Keuchel says. “Our lineup is so dynamic, so talented and deep. It’s not like in a football blowout where you can put in your second team and kind of let off the gas. There’s no drop-off when we bring in guys from the bench. The way the offense is performing, I feel like we’re along for the ride now.”

They had 331 runs, 25 more than the No. 2 AL team. They had homered in 15 games in a row. They scored five runs Wednesday, ending a streak of nine games with at least six, the longest such streak in baseball since 2004.

Their pitching staff had the AL’s lowest ERA, led the league in strikeouts and had the lowest opponent’s batting average.

The plans for a glorious future can also be a pitfall, the Astros quietly say. Sure, it’s nice to have a loaded farm system, with talented, young, controllab­le players at the big-league level and a chance to emulate the Atlanta Braves when they won 14 consecutiv­e division titles.

But sorry, the Astros players say, they’re not concerned with 2018, much less 2028.

They want to win it all. Right now. And they are imploring the front office to deal prized prospects for players who can help them in October. They can handle the next four months on their own, but if the Astros really want to be playing in late October, they’d love to have another front-line starter to go with Keuchel (9-0, 1.67 ERA) and Lance McCullers Jr. (6-1, 2.71 ERA). Oh, and as long as they’re at it, a lefthanded reliever too.

Everyone saw what the Chicago Cubs did last year. They were 59-39 with a seven-game lead when they acquired All-Star closer Aroldis Chapman from the New York Yankees for four players, including prized shortstop Gleyber Torres. They certainly didn’t need Chapman to win the division. But did they ever need him to win the World Series.

“What we’re doing now doesn’t happen that often,” said Keuchel, vying for his second Cy Young Award in three years and leading the AL in ERA. “Usually, you get one shot at this. And if you do happen to take advantage of that one shot and it happens to work out, you’re probably set for the next decade, keeping fans off your heels.

“We’ve got plenty of talented guys in here, so it’s not to say we couldn’t win a World Series right now, but pitching wins in the playoffs. I’d like to see us get somebody who can dominate. Through the course of the World Series winners, you always see a couple of guys just take over.

“So if we’re going to go out and get somebody, I’d rather get somebody who’s a proven winner and who can dominate a game.”

We’re talking about you: Gerrit Cole of the Pittsburgh Pirates, Yu Darvish of the Texas Rangers, Jose Quintana of the Chicago White Sox, Sonny Gray of the Oakland Athletics, Alex Cobb of the Tampa Bay Rays. Or dream even bigger with high-salaried aces Zack Greinke of the Arizona Diamondbac­ks or Justin Verlander of the Detroit Tigers.

“I think we need one more guy, a No. 1- or No. 2-type of guy in the rotation — and another reliever,” Correa said. “We get that, it would be a dream come true. And I think Jeff is going to get it done for us. I really do. This is the year.”

Luhnow and the Astros front office have no intention of showing their hand with seven weeks left until the July 31 non-waiver trade deadline, but one Astros executive, speaking on condition of anonymity, said it would be a shock if it didn’t make a significan­t transactio­n. The exec wasn’t authorized to speak publicly.

The Astros know their sterling record will mean nothing once faced with a playoff foe such as the Boston Red Sox, who boast a powerful trio of Chris Sale, David Price and Rick Porcello.

“No matter what your record is, you’d be foolish in our game not to augment even a good roster,” Astros manager A.J. Hinch says. “I believe in this team. I like the players we have on this team, but the nature of this business is to make yourself better.”

Luhnow showed aggressive­ness while getting the Astros to this position, spending $109 million on free agents Josh Reddick, Carlos Beltran, Charlie Morton and Nori Aoki and acquiring catcher Brian McCann from the Yankees.

If not for those moves, the Astros certainly wouldn’t be sitting in the best position in baseball, going 33-8 outside the AL West. They’ve had 21 comeback victories, rallying from three five-run deficits, including their six-run deficit on Memorial Day against the Minnesota Twins, scoring 11 runs in the eighth inning to turn an 8-2 deficit into a 16-8 victory. It was the first time in MLB history that a team trailed by six runs entering the eighth and won by at least six runs.

“There have been multiple games that, if not for them, we would have lost them last year,” outfielder George Springer says. “We don’t quit anymore. You look at the game against Minnesota. Last year, there was no chance we could have come back. We would have just laid down and just kind of accepted defeat.”

Says Correa, “That’s what we were missing, leadership, and now we’ve got it. Just having that blueprint in the clubhouse and the atmosphere they bring, how they bring us all together, is amazing. I’ve learned so much from Beltran. I can’t even begin to tell you how much I appreciate him.”

It’s that way wherever you turn in the clubhouse. The players sit next to Beltran, 40, as much as possible, picking his brain before and during games. They watch the preparatio­n by McCann, who has been relentless studying video. They see Reddick relaxing and acting silly before games with his large personalit­y but becoming deadly serious the moment the game starts.

“We’ve had a lot of talent the last three years,” says second baseman Jose Altuve, a four-time All-Star and two-time batting champion. “But it wasn’t a secret that we were really a young ballclub. So this year they brought the leadership that we needed. Now, we have everything.”

McCann, who has made the playoffs five times but has never advanced, believed so much in the Astros that when the Yankees put him on the trade block, he insisted on only one team.

“This was a team that needed a catcher and had a chance to win a World Series,” says McCann, who had a full no-trade clause. “It was a perfect fit. I couldn’t have asked for anything more.”

It’s too early to plan any parade routes, get their rings sized or spend their playoff shares. Too many strange things can happen during a treacherou­s season.

Still, the Astros are exercising caution, giving position players off days, having only one mandatory batting practice during their 10-game road trip that ended Thursday, keeping their bullpen fresh.

“I try not to look ahead,” says Keuchel, who was placed on the 10-day disabled list with a neck injury Thursday. “But with what we’re doing, it’s hard not to. We’re looking at the big picture. The ultimate goal is to be playing until the end of October, and I think we’re in a really good position to do that.”

Beltran was here for two months in 2004 and lost to the St. Louis Cardinals in a stirring seven-game National League Championsh­ip Series and has reached the postseason five other times.

“This might be my best chance, I don’t know,” says Beltran, who’ll be a strong managerial candidate after he retires. “I know this is a special team. And I believe in my heart that ownership knows it.

“I’m sure ownership will step up and do something to help us. I sure hope so, because I really believe this can be our time.”

 ?? THOMAS B. SHEA, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Dallas Keuchel leads the AL in ERA and is chasing a second Cy Young Award.
THOMAS B. SHEA, USA TODAY SPORTS Dallas Keuchel leads the AL in ERA and is chasing a second Cy Young Award.
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