By any measure, the Houston Astros are running out of easy ways to improve their roster. With the signing of Tatsuya Imai and the team operating near the Competitive Balance Tax, ownership has made it clear that more significant free-agent spending is off the table. That leaves one realistic path forward: trades. The problem? Moving […]
By any measure, the Houston Astros are running out of easy ways to improve their roster.
With the signing of Tatsuya Imai and the team operating near the Competitive Balance Tax, ownership has made it clear that more significant free-agent spending is off the table. That leaves one realistic path forward: trades.
The problem? Moving players like Isaac Paredes, Christian Walker, or Jake Meyers is unlikely to bring back the kind of impact talent that would meaningfully improve the team in 2026. Those deals might help on the margins, but they won’t change the Astros’ trajectory significantly for both the short and long term.
If Houston truly wants a trade that strengthens both its present and future, the conversation has to include Jeremy Peña.
Peña is coming off a career year, finishing in the top 10 in the AL MVP voting and toting a top 5 batting average in the American League . But the larger question remains whether that season represents a new normal or a peak that may never be repeated.
More importantly, Peña’s market value is rising fast — and history suggests the Astros won’t meet it.
This organization has consistently avoided long-term, high-dollar contracts for star players approaching free agency. When the price gets too high, Houston usually lets players walk or trades them before losing them for nothing.
Peña is on that same path.
Trading him now, while his value is at its highest, could bring back a strong package of young pitching and position players. That type of return would help the Astros stay competitive not just next season, but for years to come.
There’s also a practical benefit: it simplifies the infield.
A Peña trade allows Carlos Correa to return to shortstop, Isaac Paredes to move back to third base, Christian Walker to remain at first, and José Altuve to stay at second. The logjam disappears, and the defense becomes more natural across the diamond.
Teams like the Red Sox and Blue Jays — both in need of an everyday shortstop — could offer the kind of prospect depth Houston is seeking.
Yes, Peña will always be remembered for his postseason heroics and his role in delivering a championship to Houston. That history matters.
But baseball is still a business.
And the Astros have never been afraid to make tough, unpopular decisions when they believe it’s best for the franchise.
If Peña is ultimately going to leave in free agency, the worst possible outcome is letting him walk for nothing. The smarter move is to explore his trade value now — and ensure Houston gets something meaningful in return.
It may not be the emotional choice.
But it’s the practical one.
Category: General Sports