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Astros Lean on Bullpen Early as Rotation Injuries Keep Piling Up

Yahoo Sports

The Astros are facing familiar problems less than a month into the 2026 season: a wave of injuries, mostly impacting the pitching staff. Aside from the struggles of individual starts, the Astros are beginning to face a quieter but potentially more damaging issue: bullpen overuse. Between early exits from starters and injuries thinning the rotation, the workload has already shifted heavily onto relief arms this season.

The balanced pitching staff is quickly turning into a day-to-day survival test for the bullpen. The shorter the outings, the more they lean on their relief corps, stretching roles that were never meant to carry this kind of early-season responsibility. Middle relievers are being asked to bridge longer gaps, and workloads are not being managed the way they were intended to.

The fatigue is already starting to creep in, just a few weeks into the season. This kind of pressure rarely shows itself immediately in the standings, but it tends to surface later in the season when velocity dips, command is off, and depth starts to disappear at the worst possible moments. The concern for Houston is not just getting through the next game or even the next week, but whether the bullpen can sustain this pace if rotation instability continues .

While the return of certain players will eventually stabilize things, every additional inning thrown out of necessity rather than a planned workload management approach hurts in the long run. In a long season, that kind of compounding workload often becomes one of the most decisive factors.