
What began as a lighthearted remark ahead of a podcast discussion has evolved into a topic demanding genuine consideration from baseball insiders. On the show Talkin’ Baseball, former Major League infielder Trevor Plouffe joined co-host Jake Storiale and raised the possibility of the Houston Astros dealing away star slugger Yordan Alvarez.
Plouffe himself seemed surprised by how seriously he began weighing the notion.
“I started to really think about it,” Plouffe said. “He’s got two more years left after this at $26 million per. You would fetch some prospects or whatever you want.”
On paper, the suggestion appears outrageous given Alvarez’s extraordinary production this season. Through just 24 games, the left-handed hitter boasts a .326/.459/.756 slash line and a towering 1.215 OPS. He currently paces all of Major League Baseball with 10 home runs, 25 runs batted in, and 65 total bases.
Advanced metrics further underscore his dominance. Data from Baseball Savant places Alvarez in the 100th percentile for expected weighted on-base average at .553, expected batting average at .370, expected slugging at .866, and batting run value at 16. These figures confirm that few players in the game can match his consistent impact at the plate right now.
“This guy is essentially a top-three hitter in all of baseball,” Plouffe said.
Such elite performance naturally complicates any trade conversation. A hitter operating at this caliber would generate intense demand from contending clubs as the deadline approaches. With roughly two years and $52 million remaining on his deal, Alvarez represents a rare combination of superstar talent and manageable financial commitment, likely prompting serious offer packages to land on Houston’s desk.
Yet the Astros find themselves in a precarious position that might force difficult choices. Sitting at 9-15, the club occupies last place in the American League West. Their pitching staff has struggled mightily, posting a 5.93 team ERA that ranks dead last across the majors.
After failing to reach the postseason in 2025—the first time that has happened since 2016—the roster shows signs of aging without sufficient young reinforcements stepping forward. Plouffe highlighted broader organizational patterns contributing to the current state.
The team has watched key contributors like Gerrit Cole and George Springer depart for other organizations, while internal player development has not produced ready major-league talent in recent cycles.
“They are an older team on the field right now,” he said. “They don’t care about keeping people, they never have.”
Despite the early-season challenges, optimism remains because the campaign is still young. The AL West lacks a dominant leader, with only three and a half games separating the top team from the bottom. A strong stretch of play before the All-Star break could quickly reposition Houston as a legitimate contender once again.
Nevertheless, should the Astros linger near the .500 mark heading into July, the once-casual idea floated during a podcast segment could transform into the most critical strategic question facing the front office.
Deciding whether to buy, sell, or boldly rebuild around a potential Alvarez trade would test the organization’s long-term vision in a highly competitive landscape.
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