HomeMLBChas McCormick Suffers Fractured Hand

Chas McCormick Suffers Fractured Hand


10:15am: The Astros have now formally placed McCormick on the injured list. They also optioned righty Nick Hernandez to Triple-A. Infielder Grae Kessinger and lefty Bryan King were recalled from Triple-A in a pair of corresponding moves.

10:05am: Astros outfielder Chas McCormick is headed to the 10-day injured list with a small fracture in his right hand, he told the team’s beat last night (video link via MLB.com’s Brian McTaggart). He suffered the injury upon colliding with the outfield fence while pursuing a foul ball. The fracture, located “right underneath” McCormick’s index finger, is “not a serious thing” and is small enough that the outfielder is still hoping to return this season. There are just 17 days left on the regular season schedule, though another deep postseason run for Houston could obviously make that return more feasible.

The team has yet to formally announce the IL placement, though that’ll happen before today’s day game against the A’s. A corresponding move will be announced at the time. With McCormick on the shelf, Houston’s outfield mix will consist of Yordan Alvarez, Jake Meyers, Jason Heyward and Ben Gamel — plus any potential call-up who takes his roster spot. Star right fielder Kyle Tucker has played exclusively as a designated hitter and pinch-hitter since returning from a monthslong absence due to what was originally termed a bone bruise but eventually revealed to be a fractured shin. He’s collected two hits in 16 plate appearances.

The timing of the injury is frustrating for McCormick — “disappointing” to use his own words. The 28-year-old has been struggling through the worst season of his professional career and was even optioned to Triple-A Sugar Land last month, only to return just days later when Meyers was placed on the paternity list. McCormick doubled in his first game back, collected two hits in his second game and has played well enough since that brief minor league assignment that manager Joe Espada has been playing him regularly.

McCormick has tallied three multi-hit games in the past week and told the ’Stros beat the he was “feeling like [him]self finally” at the plate when the injury happened. It’s obviously a minuscule sample, but he’s hitting .417/.440/.583 over his past 25 trips to the plate. That’s only boosted his season slash to .211/.271/.306, but he was obviously trending in the right direction.

Only time will tell whether McCormick can indeed make it back this season. He’s at the mercy of how quickly the small break in his hand mends and at how deep his teammates can progress in the postseason (assuming they indeed qualify; FanGraphs gives them a 94% chance to do so at the moment). Every injury plays out differently, however, and it’s not yet clear who Houston will face in the event that they do indeed reach the playoffs for a ninth straight season.

Prior to this year’s dreadful campaign, McCormick was a quietly productive member of a perennial World Series contender in Houston. He batted .273/.353/.489 with a career-high 22 homers in 2023 and entered the current season as a lifetime .259/.336/.449 hitter with particularly formidable numbers against lefties and quality defensive ratings across all three outfield spots. McCormick is earning $2.85MM and is controlled for two more seasons via arbitration.