The Astros announced that right-hander Jose Urquidy will undergo elbow surgery, ending his 2024 season. Houston also confirmed that righty Cristian Javier will undergo season-ending elbow surgery, as was first reported yesterday by The Athletic’s Chandler Rome. The team didn’t specify the nature of either surgery, though Rome indicated in his original report that Javier will require Tommy John surgery. Urquidy’s surgery is being performed today, so more details will likely be available once it’s completed. Javier is slated to have his procedure performed tomorrow.
Urquidy, 29, opened the season on the injured list with a forearm strain and will now miss the entire campaign. He did pitch a bit in the minor leagues on a rehab assignment last month, but he was lifted from what’ll be his final outing of the year after experiencing renewed pain in his forearm/elbow. The Astros subsequently announced that Urquidy was seeking a second opinion, which is frequently an ominous sign for injured pitchers.
When he’s been healthy enough to take the mound, Urquidy has proven himself to be a reliable rotation cog in Houston. Outside of an ugly 5.29 ERA last year in a season that was plagued by shoulder troubles, he’s posted a sub-4.00 ERA in every season of his career, leaving him with a lifetime 3.98 mark in 405 MLB frames. His 19.6% strikeout rate is three percentage points below the league average, but Urquidy has offset that with a terrific 5.8% walk rate in his career. Home runs have been an issue, as is the case for many shorter righties with average fastball velocity, but his changeup has been an excellent pitch that’s helped him keep lefties at bay (.203/.255/.364).
Alden Gonzalez and Jeff Passan of ESPN reported earlier this week that Urquidy could be headed for Tommy John surgery — which would be the second such procedure of his career. He previously had Tommy John surgery as a minor leaguer in 2017. Urquidy has also missed time in both 2021 and 2023 due to shoulder injuries. Whether this new procedure will be a standard Tommy John operation or a newer iteration that includes augmentation from an internal brace remains to be seen.
Either way, if this indeed proves to be a UCL-related surgery, it’s quite possible it’ll end Urquidy’s tenure with the Astros entirely. He’s being paid $3.75MM this season and is arbitration-eligible for the final time this offseason. Houston would likely need to commit the same salary to Urquidy again for a 2025 season that would be mostly spent on the injured list.
Even if Urquidy were to agree to the maximum 40% pay cut permissible under the arbitration system, that’d still be a notable price to pay for a pitcher who might not make it back until late in the season — if he returns at all. If Urquidy had multiple seasons of club control remaining, the ’Stros might make that concession, but the right-hander is slated to become a free agent following the 2025 campaign anyhow. It’s always possible they’ll come to some kind of agreement on a two-year deal that’s backloaded with most of the salary falling in 2026, but the injury unfortunately renders Urquidy a clear non-tender candidate.
With regard to the 2024 season, the official losses of both Urquidy and Javier is a gut-punch for a floundering Astros club. Houston sits at 28-34, placing them seven games behind the division-leading Mariners and six games back of the third AL Wild Card spot.
Poor starting pitching has been the most prominent reason for Houston’s decline in the AL West. In addition to Urquidy and Javier, the Astros have seen Justin Verlander and Framber Valdez both spend time on the injured list. Right-handers Hunter Brown and J.P. France — the latter now on the minor league IL due to a shoulder injury — have both taken significant steps back in 2024. Rookies Spencer Arrighetti and Blair Henley have been hit hard (the latter in a single MLB spot start). Even with Ronel Blanco in the midst of a surprise breakout during his age-30 season, the Astros’ collective 4.71 rotation ERA ranks 26th in the majors.
Reinforcements should be on the horizon in the form of righties Luis Garcia and Lance McCullers Jr., though neither pitcher’s return is imminent just yet. Garcia, on the mend from Tommy John surgery performed last June, is facing live hitters and could soon head out on a minor league rehab assignment. He’d presumably require several starts before being deemed an option for the MLB rotation, however. McCullers, who had flexor surgery last summer, is a few weeks behind Garcia in his recovery process. In theory, Garcia could be back around the All-Star break, with McCullers not terribly far behind him — but that’s assuming no setbacks. And by that point, it’s also fair to wonder whether the Astros would feel the urgency to rush either pitcher.
Houston general manager Dana Brown said recently that he doesn’t envision any scenario where the Astros end up as trade deadline sellers, but it’s difficult to see how they’d be aggressive buyers if they fall much further back in the standings. There are just under eight weeks for the team to right the ship, and while a course correction is hardly implausible, the current paper-thin rotation depth means Houston will need its rotation to hold things down and perform much better while waiting on Garcia and McCullers.
Verlander, Valdez, Blanco, Brown and Arrighetti will carry on as the starting five for now, but the aforementioned Henley is the only other healthy starter on the 40-man roster. The Astros did sign lefty Eric Lauer to a minor league deal last month, and they could easily open 40-man space for him by putting Javier or Urquidy on the 60-day injured list. But Henley has been tagged for a 5.44 ERA in Triple-A this season, while Lauer was torched for seven runs over three innings in his first start with Triple-A Sugar Land. Houston can ill-afford another injury of note on the big league staff at the moment.
sambino
Trash news for a trash organization.
Rocker49
Look at all the Los Karens losers that come here immediately to cry about the Astros. Good lord move on with your worthless lives.
avenger65
Rocker49: Don’t be so hard on the Astros haters. I’m still pretty busted up about the Black Sox.
For Love of the Game
“I knew Shoeless Joe. He was a friend of mine. You’re no Shoeless Joe!”
Unclemike1525
That’s some cheery news on 2 days of the same week that you lose 2/5 of your rotation for basically 2 years. Makes you wanna go WTF?
texgal01
Yes you cheating Yankee fans need to move on. Get a life somewhere else.
You are annoying when all you have to talk about is OLD stuff that we are tired of.
Yankee Clipper
Are you…..okay? What Yankees fans are you talking about? And how did the fans cheat? Just curious.
vtadave
Day drinking again gal?
sambino
There there stay calm and put down whatever you’re smoking.
sambino
There there @texgal01 stay calm and put down whatever it is that you are smoking.
Spaced-Cowboy
It is antiquated at best to infer that being high is synonymous with outrageous remarks or stupidity. The valid approach is implying that they are smoking too much, but then again it’s the same old adage, that drug abuse makes you less of a human. In lighter news, can anyone tell me about these Choco Tacos? 😛
GoGreen
Tucker extension would be nice to offset these pitching woes for the Houston fans.
ckc12537
You think Crane is capable of making a good decision at the moment? That’s very optimistic
texgal01
Doubt an extension for Tucker. Be a miracle. He may be with team next season but beyond. Still not fully convinced. Whether Bregman stays is another story in itself. Who knows what team will look like come start of July. By end of July with deadline. Will Houston be a factor . Was not expecting all the rotation injuries and perhaps have Urquidy and Javier out rill 2026. Not sure Urquidy will still be an Astro. Not sure on Javier as not sure with his contract. I do wish both well and hope both can return down the line.
C Yards Jeff
It does look like the ship has sprung a leak. Move Tucker? Well, for max return move him now. Don’t wait until next year when ship is sinking and beyond repair.
ckc12537
I don’t think the Astros will sell at the deadline. The starting rotation has definitely been a concern, but that’s been a concern since 2022. I keep hoping that the ownership and GM will sign some SP’s. Perhaps this season finally woke them from their slumber. Of course, I get told all the time that SP wasn’t anything to be concerned about, until now. shrug
Mr_KLC
Zack Greinke on line 1.
C Yards Jeff
If Zack comes back, he chooses a team with a legit WS winner pedigree. It’s the one accomplishment missing from his potential HOF resume. 3000 ks? Drivel.
Orioles just got more bad SP news. Bradish injured again.
Hey Zack. Check out Baltimore. The fishing is great here in Chesapeake Bay country. Bring your rod, reel and tackle and have the Birds cover the cost of peeler crab as part of your contract.
deepseamonster32
How much does 2024 Greinke actually help?
goastros123
Contact Zack Grienke and Rich Hill.
Yankee Clipper
Pablo Lopez?
goastros123
Why not. Maybe ask the Blue Jays about Alek Manoah and see if you can fix him. All I know is, trotting out rookie after rookie is not the answer.
ckc12537
Spencer is showing a lot of promise and Brown has been solid the past 3 starts. Yes, it’s not much and who knows if it’s sustainable, but things aren’t looking as bad in the rotation as they did in April.
Liberalsteve
My friend says the Astros may be open to trevor bauer if they are desperate. I told him that Astros won’t go for players that do things to women against their will.
Multi Position Eligibility
Sarcasm or did we forget about Roberto Ozuna?
This one belongs to the Reds
He will be forgotten Ozuna or later.
LFGSD619
Bauer doesn’t do things to women against their will.
shortstop
Urquidying me!
BirdieMan
What were these team doctors doing in March and April, that they couldn’t figures this out earlier?
YankeesBleacherCreature
PRP injections and rehab? It didn’t work.
YaGottaBelieveAgain
There are some marginal free agent pitchers Houston can sign as well as many to trade for without trading their best prospects IMHO
Mentioned above Greinke, Hill,
plus Odorizzi, Cueto, Matt Moore, Tyler Anderson,
CHI Fedde, Flexen, Clevinger, Soroka
NYM Sevy, Manaea, Quintana, Megill, Houser
MIA SPs
– MIA needs to trade 1 or 2 to upgrade their offense
Just some ideas.
ckc12537
I liked Odorizzi in 2022. Had a few bad starts. Had a few stellar ones. Got a terrible reputation by Astros fans, but this season has largely shown that our fanbase is really pessimistic on people who don’t have a track record of success.
UWPSUPERFAN77
Good MLB player downed by injuries. The system is harsh on him. Likely declined arb. Young enough to come back and be productive! I wish him well!
Acoss1331
Not one, but two starters down for a year and a half at least. Let’s see if the Astros can weather the storm…
Melchez17
Time to sell… Get something for Bregman before he walks away. I would try and trade Yordan Alvarez… no defensive value… his salary jumps up the next couple seasons… he has value. Could probably get a couple solid prospects for him. Jake Myers would probably bring back a solid prospect. That frees up money to extend Kyle Tucker.
ckc12537
I reluctantly agree. If they can’t get back to .500 baseball by trade deadline, trading Alvarez, Bregman, and Valdez to retool for 2025/2026 makes sense. I doubt Chas has the value he had last year. Too bad Meyers/McCormick can’t figure out how to both be productive at the same time. An outfield of McCormick, Meyers, and Tucker all producing the .800+ OPS they have exhibited at different times would be remarkable.
Melchez17
Do these folks still hate the White Sox because of Shoeless Joe? Hate the A’s because of McGwire? Hate the Yankees because of ARod… German… dugout phone sign stealing? Hate the Red Sox because of the Apple watches?
UWPSUPERFAN77
The List is long. The solution is to enjoy the game. So simple, at times, I need to do as well!
Ezpkns34
At this rate, I’m worried the surgeons are overworking Their arms and will be needing surgeries themselves
deepseamonster32
Looking tough for the Astros. Will be interesting to see how Crane handles a down season, and perhaps a longer-term decline given age and a thin farm system. Was Dana Brown blustering? Happy talk?
Because with that Swiss cheese rotation, hard to see them catching The First Place Seattle Mariners! The First Place Seattle Mariners have been playing some great ball, even if The First Place Seattle Mariners can’t hit much.
aaaaah, gotta enjoy it while it lasts.