The Astros have built their first-round draft habits around college bats for most of the Dana Brown era, so the latest MLB Pipeline mock stands out for a different reason: it sends Houston toward pitching.
MLB.com’s Jonathan Mayo and Jim Callis have the Astros taking University of Florida right-hander Liam Peterson with the 18th pick, a departure from the usual bat-first lane that has defined much of Houston’s recent draft approach. Last year, the club still stayed on offense by grabbing high school shortstop Xavier Neyens at No.
- Before that, the last time Houston used a first-rounder on a pitcher was J.B.
Bukaukas in the 2017 draft.
That shift makes sense when you look at the state of the system. Hunter Brown has been the exception, not the rule, and the rest of the young-arm picture has been uneven.
AJ Blubaugh has settled in as a reliever with decent results, though walks remain an issue. Spencer Arrighetti has stumbled lately.
Miguel Ullola has just been called up, but his 5.48 ERA, 6.61 BB/9 and 1.51 HR/9 aren’t exactly flashing green, and he’s projected as a bullpen option too.
The broader issue is simple: the Astros need more upside on the mound. There are interesting pitchers in the system, but the ceilings are still modest. That’s what a farm near the bottom of the league can look like when the bats are ahead of the arms.
Peterson fits the kind of swing that could change that. Mayo explained the pick this way: "I think they're going to go Liam Peterson, who pure-stuff-wise belongs higher than this, but performance-and-command-wise, this is about where you start hearing his name more."
Baseball America’s scouting report on Peterson paints the ceiling in loud colors. The 6-foot-5 right-hander works with a four-pitch mix, led by a fastball that sits 95 and reaches 99 miles per hour.
His slider is described as sharp and capable of biting down and to his glove side, while his changeup is considered superb and useful against left-handed hitters. Both secondaries have whiff rates above 40%.
He also throws a curveball more as a change-of-pace offering than a true weapon.
The stuff is easy to dream on. The numbers at Florida are less polished. Peterson struck out 30.2% of hitters and finally dipped his walk rate below 10%, finishing at 9.8%, but the control issues still showed up enough to help drive a 4.59 ERA this season.
That’s the tradeoff with Peterson: loud arsenal, shaky command, and plenty of room to grow. He turns 21 and would not be expected to race through the minors if Houston does take him. But the upside is obvious, and that kind of ceiling is exactly what stands out on a pitching side of the Astros’ top 30 that is packed with mid-round picks and $100,000-or-less international free agent signings.
In Other News...
Astros Suddenly Face Another Jeremy Pea Problem At The Worst Time
Jeremy Peas latest bump comes at a frustrating stretch for the Astros, who had already leaned on his stability at shortstop all season. Manager Joe Espada said Pea reported discomfort and missed a game against the Twins, and the club moved quickly to cover the position by activating Nick Allen from the injured list and sending Raynel Delgado down to clear the roster spot.
The Astros are hopeful Peas absence will be brief, but even a short detour is enough to matter when a team is trying to keep pace and keep the middle of the infield settled. It also adds to a season in which Pea has already had to navigate more than his share of physical interruptions, leaving Houston to manage another key absence while waiting to see how quickly he can get back. [Read more 🡒]
Astros Suddenly Face A Deadline Decision That Could Define This Season
With the Astros sitting third in the AL West at 52-34 and their playoff odds still hovering in uneasy territory, the front office is headed into a deadline stretch that could say a lot about where this season is going. Houston has not looked like a complete club for a while, with an outfield that needs more production and a bullpen that can still use help, and the clock is now ticking toward Aug. 3 as the market starts to narrow.
Jim Crane has never shied away from making a bold move at this time of year, but this one is not simple. The Astros do not have much prospect capital to spend, the farm system is not overflowing with trade chips, and the luxury tax situation limits how far they can push, so Dana Brown has to balance urgency with restraint while trying to fill multiple holes at once. [Read more 🡒]
