Alex Bregman did not have a good start to his platform year. The two-time All-Star hit .216/.283/.294 through the season’s first month. His production in May was better (.221/.276/.442) but still far below his typical level. Bregman wasn’t the biggest culprit for the Astros’ rough start — rotation injuries and a complete lack of production out of first base shouldered the majority of the blame — but his underperformance was another red flag in a season that looked like it might go off the rails.
That’s all changed in the past two and a half months. Player and team alike have found their stride since the start of June. The Astros are 39-22 going back to June 1. That includes an ongoing seven-game win streak that is the current best in MLB. A team that was once 12 games below .500 and 10 games back in the division race now holds a game and a half lead on the Mariners in the AL West. Houston and Seattle have almost completely pulled away from the defending champion Rangers, who have plummeted 9.5 back of a playoff spot.
Bregman is one of the biggest reasons for that resurgence. He has been a top 25 hitter in MLB since the start of June, hitting .302/.357/.516 with 12 homers. He’s got five longballs in August alone, tying him for fifth (behind Jake Burger, Corey Seager, Ketel Marte and Juan Soto) in that regard. Bregman has put his early-season swoon behind him, albeit with one notable change from his pre-2024 production.
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