The Astros made a move that says as much about their plans as it does about Lance McCullers Jr.
Houston sent the franchise icon to the Milwaukee Brewers for Jaydn Fielder, the son of former Ranger slugger Prince Fielder, in a deal that looks aimed squarely at cutting payroll and creating room before the August 3 deadline. McCullers waived his no-trade clause to make it happen, and the Astros are shedding what’s left of the final year of his 5-year, $85 million contract, which carries a $17 million salary.
The return is a 21-year-old, undrafted player who signed with Milwaukee in 2024 and has spent 2026 with the Brewers’ Single-A affiliate, Wilson. In 133 at-bats there, Fielder has hit .233/.415/.398.
For McCullers, the numbers in 2026 have been rough. He has been on the injured list since mid-May with a rotator cuff impingement and shoulder inflammation, and he’s posted a 6.83 ERA with a 1.52 WHIP and a -0.7 bWAR. He’s still only 32, but the search continues for the efficient version of himself that existed before the arm injuries that changed his career in 2023 and 2024.
For the Rangers, the bigger story may be what Houston does next.
The Astros only save $2.5 million in the deal, but that small amount could still matter if they decide to chase a starter. They just showed the Rangers before the break, when Texas took two of three, that the rotation remains the place where Houston can be attacked. Beyond the surprising Peter Lambert, who has been a strong find, the Astros are carrying plenty of uncertainty on the mound.
Hunter Brown remains a Cy Young candidate when healthy, but since returning from a Grade 2 right shoulder strain, he has not yet fully regained his upper-90s velocity or the sharp bite on his slider. Imaging also revealed a partial muscle tear in his shoulder, and after missing two-and-a-half months, he still doesn’t look like the same pitcher. Christian Javier is also back from a Grade 2 right shoulder strain that kept him out for more than two months, and he’s still working his way back after losing a lot of velocity.
The rest of the roster gives Houston plenty of reasons to believe it can stay in the race. Yordan Alvarez, the AL MVP favorite and Rangers crusher, is in the middle of a dangerous group that includes Jeremy Pena, Christian Walker, Jose Altuve, Isaac Paredes and the emerging Cam Smith. At the back end of the bullpen, Josh Hader gives them a true weapon, while Bryan King and Steven Okert have handled setup duties well.
That’s why the McCullers move feels less like a standalone salary dump and more like the first hint of a deadline push. Houston also has some appealing prospects in outfielder Kevin Alvarez and infielder Xavier Neyens, who is already mashing in the low levels of the system. But Tarik Skubal is out of reach for a 47-51 AL West team that sits several games back in the wild-card chase, so the realistic names are the seller types: Joe Ryan, Sonny Gray and Trevor Rogers, who has been surging over the last month and a half.
What happens next will tell the story. If the Astros can hang around or get hot in the second half and make a run at the Rangers in the division, they may be setting up for a deadline swing at another starting arm.
And McCullers’ performance in Milwaukee will be worth watching too, because the Brewers have a reputation for getting the most out of pitchers. If that happens, Houston could wind up regretting this one.
In Other News...
Rangers Suddenly Have A New Reason To Watch Seager Closely
Corey Seager was back on the field before the game, taking part in running and throwing as he works through the next phase of his recovery from a lower back injury. It was a notable step for a player the Rangers have missed for significant stretches this season, and it comes as he continues trying to build back toward full baseball activities.
The work on the field is part of a seven-day progression, which at least gives Texas something concrete to monitor after another stop-and-start stretch for its star shortstop. For now, there is still no word on what comes next, and Seager will have to keep moving forward before the Rangers can even start thinking about a rehab assignment or a return. [Read more 🡒]
Sebastian Walcotts Return Just Changed The Rangers Prospect Timeline
Sebastian Walcott is back in the mix for Frisco after a February elbow procedure, and his return has already nudged the Rangers prospect timeline forward. Instead of waiting until later in the summer to get him into a full-season affiliate, Texas has him with the RoughRiders now, where the early emphasis is less about defense and more about getting his bat back into a rhythm while his throwing arm catches up.
For the Rangers, the next stretch is about seeing whether Walcott can look like the player he was a year ago in Frisco and keep himself in line for a late-August move to Triple-A Round Rock. He has been used mostly as a designated hitter so far, which is a clear sign the organization is being careful, and it also leaves the bigger question hanging over the rest of his summer: how quickly can he get back to doing everything well enough to force the next step? [Read more 🡒]
Rangers Prospect Watch Suddenly Got Interesting For More Than One Reason
A handful of Rangers prospects finally got their first full-season looks in recent games, and the early returns gave the system a little bit of everything. Mason McConnaughey was tagged for four runs in three innings in his Hickory debut, Jay McQueen chipped in a pair of hits in his own first full-season game, and Yeison Morrobel added a solid showing as he settled into a higher level with Frisco.
For a farm system that has spent plenty of time waiting on health and development to line up at once, those debuts mattered as much for the timing as the box scores. The Rangers are trying to sort out who can handle the next step, who needs more runway, and which performances are more meaningful than a single night usually suggests, so the first wave of fresh faces has already made the prospect watch a lot more interesting. [Read more 🡒]
