USA TODAY Sports Weekly

How the Astros rose from 111 losses,

Only four players left from 51-111 team

- Jorge L. Ortiz @jorgelorti­z Ortiz also reported from Houston and New York

As the Houston Astros’ pennant celebratio­n wound down late last week, Dallas Keuchel held a bottle of champagne in each hand, ready to keep the party going and eager to share what made the moment so special.

Everyone in that clubhouse had contribute­d in some way to the Astros reaching the World Series for the second time in their 56year history, and Keuchel was thrilled for them.

But the Cy Young Award-winning left-hander, who was Houston’s designated Game 1 starter for the World Series at press time, and a handful of his teammates have a fuller appreciati­on of what it took to get to this exalted stage. For them the feeling of accomplish­ment ran deeper because of the low points they had endured together.

Keuchel is one of four Astros left from the 51-111 team of 2013, along with second baseman Jose Altuve, utility man Marwin Gonzalez and pitcher Brad Peacock. That was the last season of a three-year spell when Houston lost at least 106 games annually.

“The lean years were really, really tough,” Keuchel said. “For the few guys who are still here from those years, I couldn’t be happier for them. There was no light at the end of the tunnel when I first came up (in 2012). … For us to be here is nothing short of spectacula­r. There are no words to describe it. From where we started to where we’re at now is night and day.”

The process of finding the light, engineered by general manager Jeff Luhnow after his hiring in December 2011, relied heavily on drafting high. Once the Astros stripped the club of veterans such as Hunter Pence and Michael Bourn — both months before Luhnow’s arrival — and then Carlos Lee, those high picks were nearly guaranteed, and the accusation­s of tanking sprouted.

Luhnow took foundation piece Carlos Correa No. 1 overall in 2012 but fumbled the next two top picks — pitchers Mark Appel and Brady Aiken — much to the delight of baseball traditiona­lists who scoffed at the advanced metrics-oriented methods of the former management consultant.

For a club with such a precise rebuilding plan, the Astros experience­d plenty of miscalcula­tions. Hits such as Lance McCullers Jr. and Alex Bregman — chosen with the compensato­ry pick Houston received when it failed to sign lefty Aiken in 2014 — came accompanie­d by misses including the since-traded Appel or first baseman Jon Singleton, who is languishin­g in the minors despite a $10 million contract.

The Astros also gave up on outfielder­s J.D. Martinez and Domingo Santana but surprising­ly made the 2015 playoffs as a wild card.

“We were criticized for some of the things we were doing,” Luhnow said days before the Astros secured their World Series berth. “It was tough, and I feel everybody is sharing the satisfacti­on now knowing that. We weren’t perfect, we made some mistakes, but in general we were doing the right things for the right reason, and now it’s revealing itself.”

They likely wouldn’t be in that position if Luhnow had not relented on his penchant for retaining prized prospects, controllab­le assets who play for low salaries in their early years, and exchanged three of them for a 34-year-old pitcher with $56 million left on his contract.

The Astros, who had coveted 2011 American League MVP and Cy Young winner Justin Verlander of the Detroit Tigers but found the price in prospects and salary too high, stunned baseball followers when they made no major moves at the July 31 nonwaiver trade deadline. The club, 69-36 and running away with the AL West at the time, had an obvious need for help in the rotation, and Keuchel publicly voiced the disappoint­ment his teammates felt.

But Luhnow stayed in touch with Tigers GM Al Avila, his eyes set on trading for Verlander in time for him to be eligible for the playoff roster, completing the deal just moments before the Aug. 31 deadline.

“He came in at the right time, because I think the team was a little down,” Gonzalez said. “We were on a losing streak when he arrived, and after that things changed. We went back to being the same Astros we were earlier in the season.”

Verlander has exceeded the team’s expectatio­ns, winning every one of his nine outings in an Astros uniform — including the first relief appearance of his career — while fashioning a prepostero­us 1.23 ERA. When Houston faced eliminatio­n in Game 6 of the AL Championsh­ip Series after getting swept in the middle three games at Yankee Stadium, it was Verlander who restored order with seven scoreless innings in a 7-1 victory.

His two wins and 16 innings of one-run ball earned him ALCS MVP honors and a hug from Altuve when the award was an- nounced after Houston clinched the pennant with the 4-0 victory over the New York Yankees.

“He’s the kind of pitcher who likes to help his teammates,” said Altuve, who made a public declaratio­n of his love for Verlander. “I always see him talking with the other pitchers, talking with us, telling us how we can improve as a team.”

 ?? ROBERT DEUTSCH, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Astros pitcher Dallas Keuchel, who has since won a Cy Young Award, says the “lean years were really, really tough.”
ROBERT DEUTSCH, USA TODAY SPORTS Astros pitcher Dallas Keuchel, who has since won a Cy Young Award, says the “lean years were really, really tough.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States