July 11: Per Chandler Rome of The Athletic, Meyers has been placed on the 10-day IL with a right calf strain. It’s unclear how much time he’s expected to miss but that opens an active roster spot for Matthews. Infielder/outfielder Zach Dezenzo has been transferred to the 60-day IL to open a 40-man spot. Dezenzo landed on the 10-day IL on June 1st due to left hand inflammation. His 60-day count is retroactive to that initial IL placement, so he can be reinstated at the end of July.
July 10: The Astros are promoting infield prospect Brice Matthews, reports Brian McTaggart of MLB.com. The club is off today but he’ll join them tomorrow. The Astros will need to select him to the 40-man roster and open an active roster spot.
Matthews, 23, was the club’s first-round pick two summers ago. The Astros selected him with the 28th overall pick of the 2023 draft and signed him with a bonus of just under $2.5MM. The Nebraska product drew praise from scouts for his well-rounded toolset and patient approach. More pessimistic evaluators expressed concern about his elevated swing-and-miss rates while questioning whether he had the arm strength to stick on the left side of the infield.
The righty-hitting infielder has lived up to that profile this year. He’s in his first full season at Triple-A after making a 12-game cameo there last year. Matthews carries a .283/.400/.476 slash line through 325 plate appearances. He has connected on 10 home runs and stolen 25 bases in 31 attempts. He has walked at a massive 15.4% clip while striking out more than 30% of the time. His average exit velocity and hard contact rate are both above the MLB averages. Matthews has shown an above-average power/speed combination, a willingness to work deep counts, and below-average contact skills.
Drafted as a shortstop, Matthews has played more second base this year. That’s also not surprising given the questions about his arm strength. Matthews wouldn’t have a long-term path to playing time at shortstop on a team with Jeremy Peña regardless. Peña is currently on the shelf with a broken rib, pushing Mauricio Dubón more frequently to the left side of the infield. That has drawn Jose Altuve back in at second base, moving Taylor Trammell into the starting left field role.
The Astros are facing another potential injured list stint, as center fielder Jake Meyers is being evaluated for a right calf problem. Matthews has two professional innings of outfield experience. It’s unlikely the Astros would throw him into outfield work. (They did push rookie Cam Smith from third base to right field, though he at least had a couple weeks to work out there during Spring Training.) Playing Matthews at second base could move Altuve back to left field and push Trammell to center if Meyers is out of action.
Matthews will remain under club control for at least six full seasons after this one. He won’t be eligible for arbitration for at least three years. There’s a decent chance he’ll be optioned back to the minors at some point, especially if Peña makes a quick return that moves Dubón back to the keystone. Houston fans will get their first look at one of the organization’s better hitting prospects, who will step into a club that has built a 6.5 game cushion in the AL West despite myriad injuries.
Nebraska is becoming a great place for future major leaguers.
Hasn’t it always been though. When I googled it, the players listed aren’t or weren’t exactly superstars but they had some success it listed Darin Erstad, Alex Gordon and Joba the Hut Chamberlain
Congrats Brice…
The smarter play is to put Brice at short, Altuve to 2nd, Dubón to center and Taylor Trammel to AAA. As for this alleged quick return by Peña, he’s only two weeks into a fractured rib in a sport where you often dive on the ground and have to rotate while swinging a bat. I wouldn’t even think about him doing anything baseball related for at least 2-3 more weeks. Fractures take 6 weeks or so to heal and we need that guy in September/october. This whole idea Dana floated him about him possibly returning before the ASB was ludicrous. Personally, I like Brice as a player. He strikes out a lot, yes. But he also walks a lot and steals bases. He can play second and short, though he’s probably better suited for second once Peña returns.
I’m sure they’d love to do that as well, but the Astros don’t feel comfortable enough with Brice’s defense at SS to play him there a lot. 2nd is definitely his best position, by a good margin.
pena likely isn’t coming back till minimum next weekend and I’d suspect they’d likely let him sit next weekend out to give him a few more days
Peña needs to be out until early August at best. Really hard to play through a fractured rib.
I k ow they’ve built the sizable lead and are playoff hopefuls, but I’d rather them a) let the kids play and b) get the budget under control. No big deadline deals that push the payroll beyond where it already is. What we get out of this season is just a bonus ❤️
My hunch is that if they’re bringing up Matthews they plan on playing him. That doesn’t bode well for Shay Whitcomb, who the club doesn’t seem to like much. And if the club doesn’t start getting some of their stars back soon, this lead will deteriorate. These AAA guys can’t be this lucky for ever.
Whitcomb has already been sent back to Sugarland.
Yeah, I saw that right after I posted to my comment, lol. It either happened immediately before or right after I said that. I kinda hope they trade him, ’cause Whitcomb is too good to be in the minors
I wish him well. But… He’s consistently whiffed once every 2.7 at-bats in the minors, including this year in Triple-A. I don’t see that translating well to the show. At least not immediately.
Totally agree, nobody whiffs like that in the minors and whiffs less in the majors. Might be able to provide a temporary spark though
.400 obp…I doubt that translates either, but rather solid…might even outweigh the high strikeout percentage. He’s getting on base, isn’t that the thing in MLB these days? (and as a Rays fan, let me tell you–strikeouts are better than double plays lol)
A high k rate is a red flag about the ability to translate minor league success to the majors. However, a high walk rate imo does mitigate that. Shows they don’t completely lack plate discipline
When the hell is Yordan coming back?!?
I never understood why Brice wasn’t promoted the second we discovered Peña had a fractured rib. We’re late enough in the year where it doesn’t count for his service time. So every day we didn’t promote him, we lost out on a day that wouldn’t have counted against us. I guess we felt he needed more at bats in the minors but he’s not going to be more major league ready facing the Parker Mushinskis and Colton Gordons of the world. He’s gotta get big league ABs to find out if he can hit big league pitching. Plus, no matter what happens, I guarantee that he’s an upgrade over Zack Short.
It’s about time
I don’t really know what you mean with that comment.
I didn’t mean to reply to your comment. I meant to make a comment on the article.
dezenzo on 10day IL for “hand inflammation”, now a month later moved to 60 day.
me thinks the Astros medical staff diagnosis team strikes again
We’ll find out one day they were just googling injuries and going with whatever WebMD said…
Worst medical staff in pro sports. Wasn’t like this when Dave Labossiere was around
Strike 3 (x3). 0-4. It’s only one game but…
It took Bregman a little while to get going too. Not going to say Brice is Bregman but he’s facing the best pitching staff in the AL. Leiter, DeGrom and Eovaldi? Good luck, rook. Let’s see how he is with 100 ABs. Remember, most prospects aren’t Cam Smith, who came in and may be the third or fourth best hitter on the team already.
That’s true, I remember Breggy’s struggles. I’m sure it’s part nerves. The point was made earlier though that when a guy strikes out a lot in the minor leagues, it doesn’t become less than the majors. I agreed. I do wish the young man well, not only because I’m an Astro fan but because everybody likes a success story