Despite the Astros cruising to a 106-56 record in 2022, rumors began to trickle out during the season that there was some tension between owner Jim Crane and general manager James Click, with the latter on an expiring contract. Despite those reports, the assumption of many was that the success of the team would compel the parties to work something out eventually. However, despite the Astros making the ALCS for a sixth straight year and winning their second World Series title in that time, Click was eventually fired just a few days after the title celebration, as was assistant GM Scott Powers.
ESPN’s Jeff Passan provides a deep dive behind the scenes, taking a look at how such an unusual situation came to be. Interested readers are encouraged to check out the full piece for all the details, but the essence is that Crane didn’t like Click’s approach to the job as much as he liked that of Jeff Luhnow. Luhnow, of course, was fired after the sign-stealing scandal was revealed, with Click quickly hired to replace him.
Over the past year, Crane has seemingly taken a more hands-on approach to the team. He apparently was the one who closed the deal to bring Verlander back for 2022. He also felt the organization needed more “baseball men,” bringing in former big leaguers Jeff Bagwell and Reggie Jackson to take part in front office meetings. He also reportedly blocked a deadline deal, on the advice of manager Dusty Baker, that would have sent José Urquidy to the Cubs for Willson Contreras.
With Click and Powers now gone, it seems as though Crane is running the show, at least to some degree. Bill Firkus, recently promoted to assistant general manager, seems to be handling day-to-day operations. Andrew Ball and Charles Cook, who also have the title of assistant general manager, are also involved to some degree. But according to Passan, Crane personally negotiated the three-year, $34.5MM deal given to reliever Rafael Montero last week and he seems to be directly involved in Verlander’s free agency yet again.
It might continue in this ad hoc fashion for some time as well, with Crane telling Brian McTaggart of MLB.com that he plans to take his time with his search for Click’s replacement, probably not making a hire until the calendar flips to 2023. “I’m going to take my time on it this time,” Crane says. “Last time, I was in a little crunch. I didn’t have a GM and didn’t have a manager. We’ve got a pretty solid baseball ops team that’s been around. Firkus and Charles Cook have been with the team a while. … We’re going to interview a bunch of people and see where we land with that. I don’t expect anything to happen before the first of the year.”
Passan floats some names as candidates who cover a spectrum of styles. Sig Mejdal, formerly of the Astros but now with the Orioles, is known for his expertise on the analytical side of the game. While former player and manager Brad Ausmus is thrown out as someone with an arguably more traditional approach. Passan adds that Ausmus was recently in Houston and met with Bagwell, though it’s unclear if they discussed the open GM position. Even when a new GM is hired, all signs seem to point to Crane staying heavily involved.
There’s still a lot of uncertainty in terms of what lies ahead for the Astros, but the idea of them turning their backs on their calculated approach has the potential to alter the trajectory of the franchise. The club’s current golden age has been achieved not by wild spending, but largely by player development and quantitative analysis. They’ve never given a free agent a deal longer than four years and only crossed the competitive balance tax threshold once, in 2020. Justin Verlander took a sizeable investment but the rest of their rotation was homegrown, either through the draft (Lance McCullers Jr.) or international free agency (Framber Valdez, Cristian Javier, Luis Garcia, Urquidy).
The position player core is similar, with most of the lineup having been drafted by the club and sometimes subsequently extended. Even when players do reach free agency, like George Springer and Carlos Correa, the club has been savvy at replacing them internally. Their primary shortstop and center fielder this year were Jeremy Peña, a third round draft choice playing in his rookie year, and Chas McCormick, a 21st round pick playing in his second season.
That makes it especially eyebrow-raising that Bagwell, who apparently is one of Crane’s most trusted advisors, criticized the club’s player development system. From an outside perspective, it would seem that the Astros’ recent run of success would be credited in large part to their successes in that department, but perhaps Bagwell and Crane don’t see it exactly that way.
Though it seems the Astros are making a pivot on the heels of their second World Series title, we likely won’t know for some time exactly how drastic the changes are. Perhaps any suggestion of a sea change is overblown and the club will continue largely on a familiar path. Though if they do indeed move away from what has made them so successful, it would make for a stunning and fascinating turn of events. For now, the Astros are pushing forward without Click and Powers, and without Pete Putila and Oz Ocampo, two front office members who recently left for the Giants and Marlins, respectively. It seems that Crane is now the one driving the bus, and time will tell where he takes it.
jjd002
What made them successful wasn’t Click. The foundation Lunhow built is what made the Astros what they are today.
LordD99
Beat news for the rest of baseball is the Astros seem to be abandoning their analytics foundation that built this great run, and Crane’s old-school advisors — Reggie Jackson and Jeff Bagwell — have Crane’s ear.
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I thought Reggie only advised the Yanks
boblowlaw2
He didn’t get renewed a couple of years ago and went over to Houston
Yankee Clipper
Actually, the Yankees in all their ingenuity and intelligence told Reggie, one of the most prolific hitters of all time, *to stop talking to their guys about hitting*
I guess he was advising them to do things that were conflicting with the hitting coaches, who were doing things based off the stat nerds. Reggie understandably got pissed.
outinleftfield
Reggie the K Jackson. He led the league in K% 9 times in his career. Never led the league in hits. Only led it in OPS twice. AND the game has changed since he was playing. He did have light tower power, but that is hard to teach. I hope Reggie and Bags have a HUGE influence on the players Crane the GM picks up as guys like Brantley, Gurriel, Diaz, Vazquez, Maldonado, Altuve and Bregman leave. This can only been good for the Angels.
User 3595123227
The only thing about baseball that has changed is that it’s worse now. The analytical approach has sucked the fun right out of baseball and has overall changed the bottom line in baseball zero. If anything it’s everything that’s wrong with baseball.
Stros18
It’s funny how the media and people outside of Houston are swarming all over this as though they’re hoping for the Astros downfall. Meanwhile in Houston everything is calm and the players/coaches trust Crane. Remember back in 2020 when it was widely excepted that the Astro’s window was about to close? Every year it’s something new and every year the Astro’s do well. This is a prime example of “nothing to see here, move along”.
Crane actually has time to pursue a GM that he wants as opposed to having to make a spur of the moment decision on the heals of being blindsided and having to fire your GM and Manager. The Astro’s will be fine and Crane has always been involved in who they acquired and how aggressive they were in their dealings.
Samuel
Stros18;
The best organization in MLB – and there are some great ones out there…..starting with the Dodgers, Guardians, Orioles, and Braves.
I don’t live in Houston, but I too think this is being overblown. Mr. Crane didn’t suddenly get dumb. Most of the rank-and-file employees are still here. Am sure he’ll see to it that Baseball Ops will continue in the direction Mr. Lunhow put it in.
thunderecho
Astros have had significant turnover in the front office the past 4 years yet they keep winning.,
If Jim Crane farted while standing in line at McDonald’s, the mediaverse would be all over it.
The click bait obsession with the Astros is ridiculous.
outinleftfield
After Luhnow was thrown under the bus by Crane, there has been no other turnover in the Astros FO.
stroh
Passan’s story is just that, a story. Crane hired Luhnow and Click due to their analytics approach. The guys he has as Assistant GMs are Firkus and Cook who were hired by Luhnow and Ball who was hired by Click. Crane has always been in charge. He negotiated the Verlander and Brantley deals two years ago. Bagwell has always been an advisor along with Biggio and Enos Cabell – for the last 10 years Crane has been owner and they added Reggie to the advisory team a couple of years ago. Bagwell has been on Astros TV games plenty of times and has been plenty complimentary of their young players and player development. Bagwell is also one of the most astute I’ve heard in dissecting what is going on in a game, player tendencies etc. Lots of hearsay and BS is what Passan’s story is. This is just an East Coast writer knowing nothing about the Astros and writing up something that sells.
outinleftfield
Passan is from the Midwest. The Mistake by the Lake. His first job covering baseball was in Kansas City. When he was with Yahoo for 13 years he based out of the Bay Area of California. Sometimes it is worth it to know WTH you are talking about, before commenting. That way everything you say is not thrown out as total garbage.
lesterdnightfly
Condescending much? As though ugly sprawling Houston were London, Paris, Berlin, Tokyo, or anything close to a world-class city. Knocking the Bay Area as being the sticks totally undermines anything you said.
GarryHarris
I love Houston but I grew up just outside metro Detroit.
StroDawg
Stroh knows what he’s talking about. California, the midwest still ain’t Houston. Passans story is pretty much b.s.
Poster formerly known as . . .
That’s okay. I don’t like working during the Christmas season anyway.
Ancient Pistol
Crane could be nightmare to work under as a GM.
rememberthecoop
I thought Crane extended him a one year offer which Click refused. This is the first time I’m hearing that he was fired. Now, a one year offer after so much success basically amounts to a firing; however, I have not seen it reported as such.
takeitback
Lol! Just thinking the same thing. How do you fire someone that wasn’t under contract any longer?
outinleftfield
He was fired. Read what Rosenthal said on the Athletic and what Nightengale tweeted.
outinleftfield
Fired. twitter.com/BNightengale/status/159112628022506291…
takeitback
I get that’s what everyone is reporting, but his contract expired so……….
BenBenBen
Yea I don’t get it either. They offered him an extension—even if it’s just one year—after the contract ended, so how is that a firing? I know Nightengale is saying it, but nowhere in Rosenthal’s recent Athletic pieces does he say that Click was “fired.”
Cubensis of Saturn
How can Houston be competitive despite constantly losing talent on and off the field?
It couldn’t be that the infamous cheaters never stopped their systemic cheating.
I’m not so naive to believe that the buck stopped with Lunhow.
kam3hameha
Yawn. It’s the same way other teams stay competitive. Look at the Cardinals. They let Albert Pujols walk and continued to put a good product out on the field. As much as the Astros and Cardinals don’t like each other, their success was built very similarly. Spend enough, but don’t overpay. That allows you to keep some of your home-grown talent but also continue building for the future whenever players get too outrageously expensive. The Cardinals haven’t won the World Series in the last several years but they have stayed competitive. The problem is everyone always wants an excuse. “Why is that team better than my team?” Could it just be your team sucks and is outmatched in every fashion? Nah, let’s take the easy way out and say they cheated and won unfairly.
Cubensis of Saturn
The Astros were caught cheating like no other team ever has before, and years after they won the world series it came out. I wouldn’t be so sure they won’t get caught again.
stroh
You probably follow a sucky team in the same division as the World Champs. Sucks to be sucky.
ChuckyNJ
You mean “in the same division as the World Series winner”.
takeitback
Say you’re a casual fan without saying you’re a casual fan. Haha. Plenty of teams have been proven to have used similar methods of cheating since the 1900’s. The White Sox in the 80’s, the Phillies in the early 2000’s, the Yankees, Redsox, etc when the Astros were caught.
Google is your friend. All you have to do is search for the proof. Takes 5 minutes.
thunderecho
I’m 2018, the Brewers and Mets sent evidence to the league that the Dodgers were cheating.
Rangers, Red Sox, Yankees, and other teams were caught. Red Sox and Yankees were punished.
The big difference here is 3 Astros employees and a former Astros pitcher went public with details.
MLB was made aware of the Astros cheating well before the Athletic piece. Astros stopped the trash can scheme in 2018 when teams started adjusting.
Opposing teams also heard the trash can bangs (there is video evidence of pitchers/catchers reacting to the trash can bangs).
Astros deserved punishment and I’ll even go so far as to say the Astros deserved more severe sanctions.
I find it problematic that MLB waited until after the media started blasting the Astros to start an investigation.
outinleftfield
The Astros stopped at the end of 2017. The ability to have a live feed anywhere other than the replay room was gone as of the 2017 playoffs and an MLB employee has been stationed in the room with the team replay official ever since. No player had access to the replay room from that time on and a TV monitor could not be set up in the hallway from the clubhouse to the dugout, which is what the Astros did in 2017. The system also could not be used on the road in 2017 because the opposing team controlled access. I find it problematic that the Astros were the only team that was penalized heavily. YES, they were the only team that continued on after the Commissioner’s Memo was sent to the owners in September of that year, but as you pointed out they were far from the only team using the same type of electronic sign stealing utilizing the live game feed. If you are wondering who was responsible in Houston, read that sentence from the beginning again.
stroh
It’s called player evaluation, strategy and coaching. The Astros have been best in baseball since Crane took ownership. Yordan Alvarez, Kyle Tucker, Framber Valdez, Cristian Javier, Jeremy Pena to name a few are all products of a terrific organization, one that Crane runs. The Astros will be competitive for a very long time. While the East Coast media fawns over the Yankees and Red Sox farm system, how many above average big leaguers have those systems generated in the last 5 years? The Astros farm system is ranked 28th ( or whatever silly ranking) yet produced Jeremy Pena, David Hensley, Hunter Brown and Seth Martinez just this year. None were ranked by the MLB geniuses in the top 100 until they reluctantly added Brown to the top 100 midway thru the season. They saw him lead the PCL in ERA and strikeouts and saw him throw 99 mph and somehow had missed him. Believe me, we have more like that who will be up next year.
Cubensis of Saturn
You make a compelling case that they’re actually cheating. Being able to turn unheralded scrubs into stars is what would happen if they were electronically stealing signs.
At first it was Lunhow who built this team but now the comments here all give Crane credit. Similar to how it was Lunhow who was responsible for cheating, how long until everyone realizes it was Crane who was responsible for cheating?
stroh
Why don’t you get your team to take some unheralded scrubs and feed them some electronic signs and turn them into World Champions? Must be that your team takes top ranked talent, feeds them slop, and turns them into world chumps.
outinleftfield
Crane was not the one who started the cheating scheme. That would be the players, starting with the former Yankee who said that the system had been in place in NY for 2 seasons. Crane is known as a hands on owner. He has often been in the clubhouse and dugout prior to games. So for him to even try to say he didn’t know about it is taking people for fools. Of course he knew about it. What makes him a terrible owner is that he threw others under the bus for it and never took personal responsibility.
Chicken In Philly?
José Urquidy to the Cubs for Willson Contreras would have been a disastrous move. If Click seriously considered this, that alone explains his firing.
stroh
Totally agree. Would you trade a 15 game winner with 3 more years of arbitration control for 1/2 a year of a starting catcher who was going to split time with Maldonado? Crane and Dusty said “think again”.
outinleftfield
ROTFLMFAO. Wins? Are you for real? The 19th century is calling. 4.60 FIP. 4.32 xFIP. Below average K% and higher than average contact and hard hit ball%. An ERA aided by a BABIP 26 points lower than average. Urquidy is a nice 5th starter. An inning eater, Nothing else.
outinleftfield
It would have? Why? Urquidy is a back of the rotation starter. A 4.60 FIP and below average peripherals show that clearly. In 3 seasons he is worth about what Contreras is worth in a year. So giving him up for a playoff run with Contreras would have been slightly skewed in the favor of the Cubs, but would have given the Astros one of the best hitting catchers in the game. Instead they gave up 2 prospects for a lesser catcher. Now Crane has been quoted as saying that they are in the market to sign Contreras in FA.
Chicken In Philly?
Can you think of an example of another team with a stronger #4? Pitching wins in the playoffs. Contreras is not known for his pitch framing, and throwing a new starting catcher into the mix that late in the season rarely occurs. Maybe they overpaid for Vasquez, but maybe they didn’t need to upgrade at all at catcher.
GarryHarris
The overpay for C Christian Vazquez was enormous. CF Wilyer Abreu and IF/OF Enmanuel Valdez are super prospects yet unnoticed by the media. Maybe this is just one reason why Crane unloaded Click.
Watch the Astros hire Al Avila and Avila becomes Executive of the Decade.
StroDawg
You are so jealous of the Astros success. You reek with envy. Wow give it a rest.
Poster formerly known as . . .
I hear the vetting process is very challenging:
youtu.be/OUd08V2J-fU?t=36
(Sorry, Astros fans. I couldn’t help it!)
outinleftfield
Trash Pandas?
outinleftfield
The Trash Pandas?
Poster formerly known as . . .
It’s a pejorative nickname for raccoons. Me, I stand up for raccoons having lived in a place with a large population of them. They’re remarkably intelligent. But don’t eff with them — they’ve got serious teeth.
Rsox
Craig Biggio for POBO
Jeff Bagwell for GM
Brad Ausmus for assistant GM
Derek Bell for clubhouse weed guy
Come on Crane, put the band back together!
stroh
All good with me except Ausmus. Would prefer Berkman to make it four Bs. Derek Bell is a name I haven’t heard in a while.
steven st croix
Operation Shutdown
Logistics Guy
Jerry Jones 2.0
MLB Top 100 Commenter
Seems like Crane enjoys the attention which could result in him delaying the hire of a new GM.