The 2026 Astros didn’t stumble into this spot by accident. The slide has been building for years, with one choice feeding the next until the whole thing started to crack.
At the center of it all is Jim Crane, whose decisions have shaped nearly every major turn. The pattern starts with the stars who left.
George Springer went to Toronto in 2020 on a six-year, $150 million deal after winning World Series MVP honors. Carlos Correa followed in 2021, taking a five-year, $125 million offer that the source says was likely well below his value; Correa later said there were “not really any negotiations.”
Alex Bregman was next in 2024, after nine years, two rings and seven straight ALCS appearances, and he’s now making $35 million a year at third base for the Cubs. Then Framber Valdez left for Detroit in 2025 on a $115 million deal, and he told the Chronicle the Astros never even called.
That same story is hanging over the next wave, too. Jeremy Peña was reportedly close to a $105 million extension last summer before switching to Scott Boras.
Hunter Brown made the same move after his Cy Young-caliber 2025 season. Dana Brown can keep talking about extensions, but Boras clients are not built for hometown discounts, and the clock is ticking fast on both players.
The front office itself has also been part of the unraveling. Six days after the 2022 World Series, James Click was out.
Crane offered him a one-year deal that was set up to be turned down, and Click did exactly that. It was the first time in 75 years that a World Series-winning GM was pushed out.
There were also reports all season that Crane had overruled trades Click had lined up, including a deadline deal for Willson Contreras that Crane personally stopped.
Meanwhile, the organization’s prospect depth has been drained away. The Astros are 29th out of 30 teams in farm system rankings and have no Top 100 prospects.
Will Wagner and Jake Bloss went to Toronto for Kikuchi. Jacob Melton and Anderson Brito went to Tampa Bay for Burrows.
Drew Gilbert and Ryan Clifford went to New York for Verlander. That’s nine prospects gone in about three years, including two first-day draft picks, and a number of them were moved for rentals who later signed elsewhere.
The cupboard is bare because it was emptied.
Now Joe Espada and Dana Brown are both working in the final year of their contracts, with Crane saying he’ll evaluate them after the season. That leaves both men in a difficult spot.
A manager trying to hold a clubhouse together is doing it with everyone aware October could be his exit point. A GM trying to make deadline moves is doing it while other teams know he’s fighting for his own job.
The story goes back even further than all of that. Before Click, before Dana Brown, before the stars started leaving, there was Jeff Luhnow.
He built the machine that won in 2017 and should have kept rolling for years. After the scandal, A.J.
Hinch took responsibility, served his suspension, and is back managing the Tigers today with Framber Valdez pitching for him. Luhnow chose a different path, went hardline, played the victim and sued Major League Baseball.
He hasn’t been in a front office since.
That’s where the erosion started, and every move since has traced back to that break. Trust faded.
Crane changed. The Astros changed.
One decision led to the next, and now the franchise is paying for all of it at once.
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