WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — With eleven days remaining until Opening Day, most of the Houston Astros’ roster picture is coming into focus. The rotation is settling in, the bullpen is taking shape, and Jake Meyers has center field firmly in hand.
What remains unsettled is who lines up alongside him in the corners.
With four players making legitimate cases for two spots, manager Joe Espada has one of the most intriguing decisions in Astros camp still ahead of him.
The math is simple: two spots, four candidates. Someone is going home.
Cam Smith
Smith is the closest thing this competition has to a frontrunner, and for good reason.
The 23-year-old appeared in 132 games in right field last season as a rookie and was a Gold Glove finalist for his defense. He arrived in camp this spring with a reworked swing that has already produced results, hitting .286/.394/.536 with a 1.014 OPS.
Smith has also flashed the arm that made him such a defensive asset last year, throwing out a runner from right field earlier this month.
At just 23, he is the youngest of the four candidates and the player with the most long-term upside. Barring a collapse in the final days of camp, one of the corner outfield jobs appears to be his.
Taylor Trammell
Trammell may be the most intriguing name in the competition.
Removed from the Astros’ 40-man roster in December, he chose to remain with Houston rather than pursue free agency, effectively betting on himself. So far, that bet is paying off.
Trammell is hitting .296/.406/.556 this spring with four extra-base hits, working deep counts and delivering the kind of professional at-bats Espada has praised throughout camp.
“Professional at-bats. He can play anywhere in the outfield,” Espada said earlier this month. “He’s having a really good camp.”
The concern remains his major league track record. Trammell has never hit above .200 in the big leagues, and spring training numbers often prove unreliable indicators of regular-season production.
Still, at 28, with little left to prove and everything to gain, he may be playing the best baseball of his career at exactly the right moment.
Joey Loperfido
Loperfido returned to Houston this spring in a trade from Toronto, where he hit .333 in 96 at-bats last season before becoming expendable in a crowded Blue Jays outfield.
His spring began slowly, as he opened camp hitless through his first several at-bats in February. Since then, the 26-year-old has found his rhythm, hitting .389 in March with a home run and three multi-hit games.
Espada has been particularly encouraged by Loperfido’s willingness to drive the ball the other way.
“That’s when you know Joey’s starting to get synced in,” Espada said, noting that the approach often reflects improved pitch recognition and timing.
Loperfido also brings left-handed power, something the Astros lineup could use more of. His defensive versatility across the outfield gives Espada additional lineup flexibility as well.
Zach Cole
Cole is the wild card in the group.
In just 15 major league games last season, the 25-year-old hit four home runs and posted an .880 OPS—a sample size too small to draw firm conclusions but large enough to capture attention.
His spring numbers have been modest (.158 average), but the underlying indicators remain intriguing. Cole has drawn walks at a strong rate and has gone 3-for-11 in March with a home run.
He also produced two of the highest exit velocities in the Astros’ March 11 game against Miami, reinforcing the raw power that has made him such an interesting development project.
Cole’s profile carries volatility. He could develop into a 25-home-run bat at the major league level or spend significant time refining his approach at Triple-A Sugar Land.
The Bottom Line
Smith appears to have the inside track on one corner outfield job.
The second spot, however, remains very much in play.
Trammell’s strong spring has made him a compelling candidate, though spring training success does not always translate into regular-season production. Loperfido’s left-handed bat and Espada’s evident confidence in him give him a legitimate path onto the roster. Cole’s raw power keeps him firmly in the conversation.
Espada has eleven days to make the call.
However the decision unfolds, someone with a strong argument will be heading elsewhere, which is exactly what makes this the most compelling roster battle in Astros camp.