For the first couple of games, the Astros offense looked like it was trying to force everything.

The swings came early, the contact was weak, and too many innings ended before the opposing starter ever felt uncomfortable. It had that familiar early-season look of a lineup still searching for rhythm.

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But the last few games have felt completely different.

The at-bats are longer. The counts are deeper. Opposing starters are being forced to throw stressful innings much earlier in games, and by the middle innings you can already start to see the pressure building on the other dugout.

That’s the part that should stand out most to Astros fans.

This doesn’t feel like a random hot stretch built on bloops or timely luck. It feels like a real philosophical shift in how this lineup is attacking pitchers.

The Astros are forcing labor-heavy innings, creating more traffic, and putting their best hitters in better run-producing spots.

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More importantly, it feels like something that can actually hold over 162 games.

The Astros’ plate approach can realistically hold up over 162 games

This is the biggest reason the early success feels sustainable.

Houston’s drop in swing rate from 36.5% in 2025 to 31.8% in the early part of 2026 is not random variance. It reflects a lineup-wide commitment to a more disciplined identity.

Hitters are:

  • refusing early chase pitches

  • letting pitchers come into the zone

  • forcing starters into high-stress innings

  • creating earlier bullpen exposure

That process travels.

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