The Houston Astros are reorganizing their baseball operations structure, the third such internal shuffle since winning the 2022 World Series. The moves are being described as a "strategic realignment" ahead of the 2026 season, though the club declined to detail which executives are moving into new roles or whether any positions are being eliminated.
General Manager Dana Brown, hired in January 2023 to replace the departing James Click, now enters his third year with the franchise carrying a $212 million opening-day payroll and consecutive playoff absences. The Astros missed October in 2024 after a 84-78 finish, their first losing season since 2016. The reorganization arrives with no public timetable for announcements, and the club has not scheduled a press availability.
Three factors make this more than administrative housekeeping. First, ownership is underwriting a roster in win-now mode while farm system depth has thinned—Baseball America ranked Houston's system 22nd in its preseason rankings, down from 11th two years ago. Second, the Astros' scouting and player development apparatus, once the model for competitive rebuilding, has not produced an everyday position player since Kyle Tucker in 2018. Third, Dana Brown's contract status remains undisclosed; most GM deals run three to five years, putting him in a prove-it window.
Front-office restructurings often precede coaching changes by six to eight months. Assistant GM Scott Powers, a Jim Crane loyalist who has been with the organization since 2012, is widely regarded as the internal continuity anchor. Whether Powers' role expands or contracts will signal whether Crane views this as a refresh or the start of a deeper reset. Meanwhile, the Astros have $89 million committed beyond 2026, with Alex Bregman unsigned and José Altuve turning 35 in May.
Watch for clarity on Brown's authority over baseball operations versus ownership influence, particularly in international scouting, where Houston has ramped up Dominican Republic infrastructure spending. The next five weeks will reveal whether assistant GMs are promoted, lateral hires are made from outside, or scouting directors are reassigned. Spring training opens February 12 in West Palm Beach.
The Astros begin 2026 with a roster built to contend immediately and a front office searching for the structure that delivered 106 wins three years ago.