The Houston Astros enter 2026 with legitimate questions about their offense. ESPN’s Bradford Doolittle ranked Houston’s lineup 13th in baseball, describing it as “paper-thin, slow, overly aggressive and dependent on batting average.”
With a farm system still rebuilding and a roster in transition, internal growth matters. Several young players are making early statements in camp.
Walker Janek, C
Janek has been one of the most impressive prospects in camp. The Astros’ 2024 first-round pick has gone 3-for-6 with a double, three walks, four runs scored, and four stolen bases in early Grapefruit League action.
That blend of plate discipline and athleticism is uncommon for a catcher. If he continues throwing out runners near the 31 percent rate he posted at High-A Asheville last season, his timeline could accelerate.
Brice Matthews, 2B/OF
Houston’s top-ranked prospect is pushing for a utility role. Matthews drove in a run against Washington with a seventh-inning groundout and has been getting work in center field as the Astros evaluate outfield depth.
His positional flexibility may be as valuable as his bat in a camp where roster spots remain unsettled.
Lucas Spence, OF
Spence’s path is unconventional. Signed as an undrafted free agent in 2024 after receiving only one tryout opportunity, the 22-year-old is now in big league camp drawing attention for his approach and defense.
He handled multiple chances cleanly in left field Monday, and manager Joe Espada praised his plate discipline.
“He’s got a pretty good idea of the strike zone,” Espada said. “He’s got a pretty good plan, pretty good approach.”
Ranked No. 18 in the system by MLB Pipeline, Spence profiles as a potential 10–15 home run bat with speed and on-base ability, traits the Astros need as they reshape their offensive identity.
AJ Blubaugh, RHP
Blubaugh may be the most roster-ready arm among Houston’s pitching prospects. The seventh-round pick out of Wisconsin-Milwaukee posted a 1.69 ERA over 32 innings with Houston last season and has continued to show life this spring, touching 97 mph while allowing one run in three innings.
With rotation depth unsettled and bullpen length a priority, Blubaugh is firmly in the conversation.
Miguel Ullola, RHP
Ullola remains the system’s hardest thrower. He struck out 131 batters in 113 innings at Triple-A Sugar Land last year while posting a 3.88 ERA.
Command remains the variable, but the Astros protected him on the 40-man roster for a reason. Whether as a starter or multi-inning reliever, his upside gives Houston needed swing-and-miss potential.
Xavier Neyens, SS/3B
Neyens has yet to make his professional debut, but his pedigree is significant. The 21st overall pick in 2025 signed for $4.12 million, the largest bonus the Astros have awarded since Alex Bregman.
Hall of Famer Jeff Bagwell praised Neyens during a January minicamp, citing his maturity and tools, while GM Dana Brown has highlighted his left-handed power.
He is expected to begin 2026 at Low-A Fayetteville. If the bat translates quickly, he could rise fast in a system searching for impact talent.
The Astros are not in a full rebuild, but they are in transition. For a lineup searching for consistency and a pitching staff needing depth, internal development is no longer optional. If even two or three of these names take a meaningful step forward in 2026, Houston’s ceiling looks very different.