November 21, 2024

ImageA slow start after a deep October run. An entire viable starting rotation on the injured list. Intermittent and inconsistent performance from an aging future Hall of Famer. That describes the way the summer set up for the Texas Rangers. Also for the Houston Astros. Their paths diverged from there.

The Rangers never kicked it into gear despite some individual bright spots, and they finished off their season on Sunday with a 78-84 record a year after winning the World Series. A down season will always feel a bit better with a fresh pennant hanging in the rafters, but the team down in Houston presents a stark juxtaposition of the alternative, of what champions can aspire to in the final days of their reign.

Despite failing to reach 90 wins for the first time in a full season since 2016, the Astros won the AL West for the seventh time in eight seasons, and they head into October looking for their eighth consecutive ALCS appearance.

With a ring on their fingers, the challenge for franchise leaders from Chris Young to Corey Seager is different now, and success looks something like the Astros: repeated cracks in the playoffs, even when you don’t get all the breaks. So how wide is the gap? And what can the Rangers do to close it?

There’s one obvious problem with trying to emulate the Astros. You can’t plan your way into Jose Altuve, Yordan Alvarez, Kyle Tucker, and Alex Bregman. Then again, five years ago that sentence also would have included Carlos Correa and George Springer. High-profile departures have not stopped or even particularly slowed the franchise’s momentum.Image

And that hints at the enormous iceberg beneath the surface of every major-league team. The front office efforts that unearth potential, make good players better, and keep great players great have only gotten more complex and more important.

On average, MLB teams in 2024 used 48 hitters and 28 pitchers, up from 44 hitters and 23 pitchers just a decade ago. Getting the most out of every one of those players requires staying ahead of the pack in scouting, player development, transactions, and major-league coaching. It’s a lot of moving parts, but in many cases the parts of the roster you can’t pencil in during spring training wind up being the margin between a postseason appearance and an extra month of golf.

If last year’s title-winning team was inspiring in part because it showed what motivated spending can do, then this year’s comedown is a reminder of what big-ticket free agent moves can’t solve. Sometimes hitters still working to establish themselves are going to have down years, as Jonah Heim did. Sometimes hitters in their 30s are going to have down years that might portend slippage, as evidenced by Marcus Semien and Adolis Garcia. That all three hitters dipped into below-average territory, by park-adjusted OPS+, is both bad timing and a reminder that a core is almost never as stable as it appears.Image

New waves of talent have to be on the way all the time. Wyatt Langford, Josh Jung, and Evan Carter were expected to pick up the slack in the lineup just fine, only for the trio to be hampered by injury and rookie struggles. The Rangers might have even floated along in the standings long enough for Langford’s September surge to prove climactic if the pitching staff had more answers.

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