Another shock has just hit the Houston Astros – and this time, it could be a fatal blow to their 2026 season ambitions.
According to the latest information, Cristian Javier has officially been diagnosed with a Grade 2 shoulder strain and placed on the injury list for 15 days, after leaving the court after just one inning in a recent game due to pain in his shooting shoulder.
But what makes the situation even more serious: this is not an isolated case.

Just a few days ago, the Astros lost ace Hunter Brown to a similar Grade 2 shoulder injury. And now, Javier – one of the team’s most important starters – has also fallen.
Coach Joe Espada admitted Javier’s condition could follow the same recovery path as Brown’s, meaning at least several weeks out of shooting and requiring close monitoring.
“It sounds like it’s similar… we’ll see how he recovers,” Espada shared, hinting at the significant uncertainty ahead.
A rotation that was once Houston’s pride is now falling apart.
The worrying truth: this isn’t just a short-term injury.
A Grade 2 strain is not a minor injury.
It’s a partial muscle tear, which typically requires weeks – even months – to fully recover. In Hunter Brown’s case, he has been out of shooting for at least two weeks and could be out for longer.

If Javier follows the same path, the Astros could lose two key rotation players for an extended period – something almost impossible to compensate for in the early part of the season.
Even before Javier’s injury, the Astros were already struggling:
Rotation ERA: 6.05
Record: 6–7, four consecutive losses
And now, they face the reality:
Losing two key starters
Parting ways with Framber Valdez in the offseason
Rotation is left with only inconsistent players
A team that once dominated the American League is now patching things up game by game.
To cope with the crisis, the Astros have called up pitcher J.P. France from Triple-A, who hasn’t lost a run in his last 5.1 innings.
Additionally, the team is considering:
Using a bullpen game
Maintaining a six-person rotation during a demanding schedule
Experimenting with pitchers from the minor league
But all of these are only temporary solutions.
None of them can replace Javier’s role – a key factor in their 2022 World Series victory.
What worries fans even more is Javier’s injury history.
He underwent Tommy John surgery in 2024 and only returned at the end of last season.
Now, before he could regain his form, a serious shoulder injury has surfaced.

Despite initial tests showing “quite positive” results, Javier admitted:
“I’m trusting everything will be fine.”
A hopeful statement… but also revealing uncertainty.
The Astros are at a turning point.
Just weeks into the season, the Astros have found themselves in a situation few could have imagined:
Rotation is in ruins
Performance is declining
Competitive pressure is mounting
In a turbulent AL West, losing two key pitchers at once could send the entire season slipping away.
Cristian Javier is more than just a pitcher. He’s been part of the winning identity the Astros have built over the years.
But now, as he heads into the recovery room instead of the mound, a big question hangs in the air:
Is this just a temporary setback… or the beginning of the collapse of an entire dynasty?