At some point, the Houston Astros need to stop overthinking this and simply accept reality.
Yordan Alvarez can play left field. And more importantly, if the Astros are serious about maximizing their championship window, they should let him.
For years now, the organization has treated Alvarez with extreme caution defensively. The reasoning is obvious: he’s one of the most dangerous hitters in baseball, and keeping him healthy is a top priority. The safest place for him, in theory, is at designated hitter.
But here’s the problem with that logic, the cautious approach hasn’t exactly worked.
Despite limiting his time in the field, Alvarez has still missed large stretches of games over the past several seasons. Injuries happen in baseball. They always have, and they always will. Trying to eliminate that risk entirely is a losing battle. So if the Astros are going to face that reality anyway, they might as well put their best possible team on the field when Alvarez is healthy enough to play.
That includes letting him play left field.
This idea isn’t as radical as it might sound. Alvarez has said himself on multiple occasions that he actually prefers playing the field. He’s talked about how it helps him stay engaged in the game and keeps him mentally sharp between at-bats. For a hitter of his caliber, feeling locked into the rhythm of the game matters.
If your best hitter is telling you he performs better when he’s involved defensively, that should carry some weight.
There’s also a practical reason this makes sense for the Astros right now. The roster construction leaves them juggling pieces in the lineup almost every night. With a crowded infield mix and questions still lingering in the outfield, Alvarez playing left field would give manager Joe Espada far more flexibility when building his lineup.
Simply put, it allows Houston to put its most dangerous offensive lineup on the field more often.
Even if Alvarez doesn’t play left field every single game, making it a regular part of the plan, especially at home at Daikin Park, would help solve some lineup puzzles. Think about it, the talk is, it’s easier to play left in front of the Crawford Boxes. I mean, Jose Altuve was given the opportunity whole heartedly by throwing caution to the wind. Why not Yordan? On days when the Astros want to give him a partial break, he can slide right back into the designated hitter spot.
It’s about creating options instead of limiting them.
And let’s be honest: Alvarez doesn’t need to be a Gold Glove defender. He just needs to be serviceable. Plenty of elite hitters across baseball play the outfield despite not being defensive standouts. Aaron Judge patrols the outfield for the Yankees regularly, and while Alvarez is built differently, there’s no reason he can’t handle left field well enough to make it work.
Meanwhile, Houston’s roster is still taking shape. Jake Meyers seems like the frontrunner to once again handle center field duties alhough others are getting an opportunity to challenge him. While right field remains somewhat unsettled, whether that role goes to Cam Smith or someone the Astros acquire before the season gets too far along, there is still potential and plenty of time to figure out the other two spots in the outfield.
Defensively, there will likely be some growing pains. But offensively, this team has the pieces to compete with anyone in the American League.
That’s especially true if the Astros keep Isaac Paredes, something I’ve been very vocal about supporting.
The bigger picture here is simple. The Astros are still operating within a championship window. That window doesn’t stay open forever, even for organizations as consistently successful as Houston has been during this golden era of Astros baseball.
When you have a generational hitter like Yordan Alvarez in the middle of your lineup, your job as an organization is to maximize what he brings to the field.
Right now, that might mean trusting him with a glove in left field more often.
Some fans will disagree and prefer the cautious route. That’s understandable. Protecting a superstar always feels like the safer choice.
But playing it safe doesn’t necessarily mean playing it smart.
At some point, the Astros need to stop worrying so much about what might happen and focus on giving themselves the best chance to win tonight.
And that might start with letting Yordan Alvarez jog out to left field.









