2013 Houston Astros season

The 2013 Houston Astros season was the team's first year as a member of the American League, with them switching from the National League Central division to the American League West. This was also their 52nd season as an MLB franchise, their 49th as the Astros, and their 14th at Minute Maid Park.

2013 Houston Astros
Major League affiliations
Location
Results
Record51–111 (.315)
Divisional place5th
Other information
Owner(s)Jim Crane
General manager(s)Jeff Luhnow
Manager(s)Bo Porter
Local televisionCSN Houston
(Bill Brown, Alan Ashby, Geoff Blum)
Local radioSportstalk 790
(Robert Ford, Steve Sparks)
KLAT (Spanish)
(Francisco Romero, Alex Treviño)
StatsESPN.com
BB-reference
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The Astros continued their exceptionally poor records from 2011 and 2012, winning only 51 games, the fewest by any Major League Baseball team since the 2004 Arizona Diamondbacks who finished with an identical record. Perhaps the lowest point of the season came when the Astros finished with a 15-game losing streak. Other lowlights included winning only 12 series (2 of which were sweeps, none outside of the AL West), getting swept 18 times, winning just 2 games against the rival Texas Rangers, getting shut out 18 times (twice in a row against the Rangers and the Rays), and yielding 10 runs or more in 17 games.

Regular season

Season standings

American League West

AL West W L Pct. GB Home Road
Oakland Athletics 9666 0.593 52–29 44–37
Texas Rangers 9172 0.558 46–36 45–36
Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim 7884 0.481 18 39–42 39–42
Seattle Mariners 7191 0.438 25 36–45 35–46
Houston Astros 51111 0.315 45 24–57 27–54

American League Wild Card

Division Winners W L Pct.
Boston Red Sox 9765 0.599
Oakland Athletics 9666 0.593
Detroit Tigers 9369 0.574


Wild Card teams
(Top two qualify for postseason)
W L Pct. GB
Cleveland Indians 9270 0.568
Tampa Bay Rays 9271 0.564
Texas Rangers 9172 0.558 1
Kansas City Royals 8676 0.531
Baltimore Orioles 8577 0.525
New York Yankees 8577 0.525
Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim 7884 0.481 13½
Toronto Blue Jays 7488 0.457 17½
Seattle Mariners 7191 0.438 20½
Minnesota Twins 6696 0.407 25½
Chicago White Sox 6399 0.389 28½
Houston Astros 51111 0.315 40½

Record vs. opponents

2013 AL Records
Source: AL Standings Head-to-Head
Team BAL BOS CWS CLE DET HOU KC LAA MIN NYY OAK SEA TB TEX TOR NL
Baltimore11–84–33–44–24–23–45–23–39–105–22–46–135–210–911–9
Boston8–114–26–13–46–12–53–34–313–63–36–112–72–411–814–6
Chicago3–42–42–177–123–49–103–48–113–32–53–32–54–24–38–12
Cleveland4–31–617–24–156–110–94–213–61–65–25–22–45–14–211–9
Detroit2–44–312–715–46–19–100–611–83–33–45–23–33–45–212–8
Houston2–41–64–31–61–62–410–91–51–54–159–102–52–173–48–12
Kansas City4–35–210–99–1010–94–22–515–42–51–54–36–13–32–49–11
Los Angeles2–53–34–32–46–09–105–21–53–48–1111–84–34–156–110–10
Minnesota3–33–411–86–138–115–14–155–12–51–64–31–64–31–58–12
New York10–96–133–36–13–35–15–24–35–21–54–37–123–414–59–11
Oakland2–53–35–22–54–315–45–111–86–15–18–113–310–94–313–7
Seattle4–21–63–32–52–510–93–48–113–43–411–83–37–123–38–12
Tampa Bay13–67–125–24–23–35–21–63–46–112–73–33–34–411–812–8
Texas2–54–22–41–54–317–23–315–43–44–39–1012–74–41–610–10
Toronto9–108–113–42–42–54–34–21–65–15–143–43–38–116–111–9

Game log

Legend
 Astros win
 Astros loss
 Postponement
BoldAstros team member
2013 Game Log: 51-111 (Home: 24-57; Away: 27-54)

Roster

2013 Houston Astros
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

  • 23 Chris Carter

Outfielders

Manager

Coaches

  • 85 Javier Bracamonte (bullpen catcher)
  • 58 Jeff Murphy (bullpen catcher)

Player stats

Batting

Legend
  GP  Games played  AB  At Bats  R  Runs
 H  Hits  HR  Home runs  RBI  Runs batted in
 BB  Base on balls (walks)  SB  Stolen bases  AVG.  Batting average
 OBP.  On-base %  SLG.  Slugging %  OPS  On-base plus slugging
 Bold  Career high
Player GP AB R H HR RBI BB SB AVG. OBP. SLG. OPS
José Altuve 152 626 64 177 5 52 5 52 32 85 .283 35
Jonathan Villar 58 210 26 51 1 8 1 8 24 71 .243 18
Brandon Barnes 136 408 46 98 8 41 8 41 21 127 .240 11
Chris Carter 148 506 64 113 29 82 29 82 70 212 .223 2
Jason Castro 120 435 63 120 18 56 18 56 50 130 .276 2
JD Martinez 86 296 24 74 17 0 7 36 10 82 .250 2
Matt Dominguez 152 543 56 131 25 0 21 77 30 96 .241 0
Trevor Crowe 60 165 18 36 7 1 1 13 16 39 .218 6
LJ Hoes 47 170 24 48 7 2 1 10 12 35 .282 7
Brett Wallace 79 262 35 58 14 1 13 36 18 104 .221 1
Robbie Grossman 63 257 29 69 14 0 4 21 23 70 .268 6
Marwin González 72 204 22 45 8 0 4 14 9 37 .221 6
Carlos Corporan 64 191 16 43 5 0 7 20 10 60 .225 0
Jake Elmore 52 120 16 29 4 0 2 6 13 20 .242 1
Totals 162 4393 503 1092 217 12 121 472 338 1168 .281 97

Pitching

Note: W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; SV=Saves; SVO = Saves Opportunity; IP = Innings pitched; H =Hits; R= Runs; ER = Earned runs allowed; HR= Home Run allowed; BB = Walks allowed; SO = Strikeouts

Player W L ERA G GS SV IP H R ER HR BB SO
Erik Bedard 4 12 4.59 32 26 1 151.0 149 83 77 18 75 138
Bud Norris 6 9 3.93 21 21 0 126.0 135 62 55 11 43 90
Totals 51 111 4.79 162 162 32 1440.0 1530 848 766 191 616 1084

Television coverage

Astros games were televised on the Comcast SportsNet Houston network in 2013. The network broadcasts to about 40% of the households in the Houston area. Writer J. J. Cooper said that a game in September received a 0.0 rating, as "the Nielsen company could not statistically prove that anyone in the Houston market actually watched the game."[1]

Farm system

Level Team League Manager
AAA Oklahoma City RedHawks Pacific Coast League Tony DeFrancesco
AA Corpus Christi Hooks Texas League Keith Bodie
A Lancaster JetHawks California League Rodney Linares
A Quad Cities River Bandits Midwest League Omar López
A-Short Season Tri-City ValleyCats New York–Penn League Ed Romero
Rookie Greeneville Astros Appalachian League Josh Bonifay
Rookie GCL Astros Gulf Coast League Edgar Alfonzo

LEAGUE CHAMPIONS: Quad Cities, Tri-City[2]

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References

  1. Eddy, Matt, Lingo, Will, Manuel, John (eds.) (2014). Baseball America Prospect Handbook 2014. Baseball America. p. 174. ISBN 9781932391503.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)
  2. Leventhal, Josh, ed. (2013). Baseball America 2014 Almanac. Durham, North Carolina: Baseball America. ISBN 978-1-932391-48-0.
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