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It is not every day that we see a team let go of an All-Star and a World Series winner. But this offseason, the Houston Astros may go with that move. After what happened in the regular season, the relationship between the player and the management got a little shaky. But now we can see that someone might break the bridges.

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Jon Heyman reported that the Astros and Framber Valdez chapter might be over. And after that news, hosts on the MLB Network discussed the same.

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“I think he’s trying to beat the race and have some conversations… I don’t think the whole deal with the catcher went over real well… I think it really hurt him a lot more… He has to explain what’s going on in his head… For him to be here this early, it’s not ‘let me try to get the most money’… It’s more, ‘I gotta talk to some folks and let them know what was up.’”

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Framber Valdez’s offseason took an unexpected turn after a heated moment with catcher César Salazar drew national attention.

The Astros left-hander appeared to drill his own catcher following a disagreement on how to pitch Trent Grisham, who had just hit a grand slam. The incident, described by former Red Sox player Will Middlebrooks as “an all-time scumbag move,” raised concerns about clubhouse chemistry and Valdez’s temper.

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That tension reportedly carried into the offseason, with Houston officials and Valdez’s agent denying any intent behind the throw.

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Manager Joe Espada and general manager Dana Brown both defended him, insisting it was a mix-up during an emotional outing. Yet the scrutiny that followed seemed to push Valdez into damage control mode, prompting his surprise appearance at the GM Meetings in Las Vegas to personally address his character.

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Yet, Valdez, 31, remains one of baseball’s most reliable starters, surpassing 175 innings in every season since 2021. His 3.00 ERA across six years and 63 wins this decade place him among the league’s elite. Still, his visit to meet executives face-to-face signals a man focused less on contracts and more on trust, hoping his consistency on the mound and humility off it can rebuild faith in who he is beyond the numbers.

If this is the end of the Framber Valdez era, it ends awkwardly poetic. The Astros built him into a champion, but now they might watch him rebuild elsewhere.

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The Astros already seem to have a successor to Framber Valdez

The Houston Astros never seem to have “quiet offseasons,” do they? Framber Valdez might be gone, but Houston’s brass isn’t worrying. In fact, it looks like they already have someone waiting in the wings, and this one might surprise a few.

The Houston Astros appear to have found their answer in Dylan Cease.

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Cease has struck out over 200 batters in each of the last five seasons, proving consistent durability and elite swing-and-miss stuff. With Houston’s rotation losing stability after Valdez’s departure, Cease’s track record of 30-plus starts a year offers a reliable and immediate solution.

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The challenge lies in the Astros’ payroll, though, which sits less than $20 million below the first tax threshold. Cease’s projected deal between $125 million and $150 million would demand significant financial maneuvering.

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Still, if Houston clears room through trades or adjustments, acquiring Cease could reset the rotation’s identity and give fans a reason to believe this team still expects to win.

If Dylan Cease walks through those clubhouse doors, Houston’s silence might finally make sense. The Astros rarely rebuild when they can reload, and Cease fits that script perfectly. For a team still shadowed by whispers, this move could be the loudest answer.

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Karthik Sri Hari KC

1,459 Articles

Karthik Sri Hari KC is a baseball writer at EssentiallySports who reports from the MLB GameDay Desk. A former national-level baseball player, Karthik brings a player’s instincts combined with a journalist’s precision to his coverage of key moments across the league. Known as a stat specialist, he ranks among EssentiallySports’ top three MLB writers, delivering in-depth analysis that goes beyond numbers to highlight team and player strategies. Karthik’s athlete-informed perspective, shaped by years on the field, has earned him a place in the EssentiallySports Journalistic Excellence Program, our internal training initiative where writers develop their reporting and storytelling skills under industry experts. In addition to his writing, Karthik has experience creating educational content during internships, enhancing his research, writing, and communication skills.

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Ahana Chatterjee

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