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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Aug 13, 2023 5:52:48 GMT -5
Red Sox lose to Tigers: Offense 0-for-11 with RISP, Brayan Bello struggles
Updated: Aug. 12, 2023, 7:18 p.m.|Published: Aug. 12, 2023, 7:17 p.m.
By
Christopher Smith | csmith@masslive.com
BOSTON — The Red Sox can’t afford to lose games like this one with their best starting pitcher this season on the mound against a team 11 games below .500. But it happened.
Brayan Bello took the loss. He pitched 4 ⅔ innings and allowed four runs, nine hits (two homers) and no walks while striking out five. Boston fell 6-2 to the Tigers at Fenway Park. The Red Sox are just one game over .500 (25-24) against teams .500 or below this season.
The 24-year-old righty has struggled since returning from the All-Star break. He has a 5.67 ERA (33 ⅓ innings, 21 earned runs) in six starts to increase season ERA from 3.04 to 3.81.
Bello’s 31 sinkers averaged 94.8 mph and topped out at 97.0 mph, per Baseball Savant. He added 20 changeups, 20 four-seam fastballs, 13 sliders and two cutters. He recorded 10 swings and misses: six with his changeup and two each with his sinker and slider.
Boston’s offense was flat. Justin Turner’s homer in the eighth inning was the only highlight. The Red Sox went 0-for-11 with runners in scoring position and left eight men on base.
Bello and the Red Sox fell behind 1-0 in the second inning when Kerry Carpenter took him deep for a 361-foot homer to left field. Carpenter connected on an 82.3 mph slider.
The Tigers jumped ahead 2-0 in the third inning on three singles, including Riley Greene’s RBI single to right field.
Boston cut it to 2-1 in the fourth inning thanks to some bad Detroit defense. Justin Turner singled to open the frame. He scored on third baseman Nick Maton’s error with two outs.
But Detroit regained a two-run lead in the fifth when Eric Haase took Bello 371 feet deep to left field. His solo blast came on an 88.4 mph cutter. The Tigers went ahead 4-1 in the fifth on Matt Vierling’s RBI force-out.
Red Sox lefty Brennan Bernardino allowed a 417-foot solo homer to Spencer Torkelson in the sixth, making it 5-1 Detroit.
Kyle Barraclough gave up a 336 foot homer to Carpenter, making it 6-1 in the eighth.
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Aug 13, 2023 5:55:23 GMT -5
‘Good chance’ Red Sox’s Rafael Devers sits Sunday vs. Eduardo Rodriguez
Updated: Aug. 12, 2023, 9:13 p.m.|Published: Aug. 12, 2023, 9:10 p.m.
By
Christopher Smith | csmith@masslive.com
BOSTON — The Red Sox offense struggled again Saturday, going 0-for-11 with runners in scoring position and leaving eight men on base in a 6-2 loss to the Tigers.
Rafael Devers reached base three times (two singles, one walk) but the third baseman likely will sit Sunday against left-handed starter Eduardo Rodriguez.
“The big boy’s playing a lot at third base,” manager Alex Cora said. “So probably take advantage because then he has to play a lot. So there’s a good chance Raffy takes the day off tomorrow. ... Everybody has to contribute in this. And I think offensively, we’ve been OK but we’re not moving the needle. This homestand, it hasn’t been great.”
Devers has played 21 straight games dating back to July 19 in Oakland. The Red Sox have Monday off but then play 16 straight days and so a difficult stretch lies ahead. Cora often likes to give his stars a day off before or after an off day so they have two full days of rest.
Expect for the Red Sox to go with a right-handed heavy lineup Sunday against Rodriguez who has a 2.75 ERA in 17 starts for the Tigers this season. Left-handed batters have gone just 12-for-81 (.148 average) with a .216 on-base percentage, .272 slugging percentage and .488 OPS against Rodriguez. Right-handed hitters are 69-for-290 (.238) with a .283 on-base percentage, .341 slugging percentage and .624 OPS against him.
“Tomorrow we’ve got Eddie — we’ve got a bunch of righties,” Cora said.
The Red Sox could go with right-handed hitters Rob Refsnyder and Adam Duvall in the outfield along with left-handed hitting Masataka Yoshida. They also could play Pablo Reyes at third base and Luis Urías at second. Trevor Story is expected to play shortstop and Justin Turner DH. So Boston might have just two left-handed hitters, Triston Casas and Yoshida, in the starting lineup against Rodriguez.
The Red Sox have been held to four runs or fewer in 12 of their past 15 games. They have averaged just 3.3 runs per game in their past 15 games, as Red Sox Stats on Twitter noted. Yoshida has gone 10-for-56 (.179) in his past 15 games.
This season, Boston is 13-48 when it scores fewer than five runs.
“I’m more, not concerned, but offensively, we’re better than this,” Cora said. “The line was moving. We put pressure on him early on. I think it was 30-something pitches right away, something we were looking for. Dugie (Alex Verdugo) hit two rockets today for double plays. Casas put good at-bats, hit the ball hard. So it’s one of those weird kind of games.”
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Aug 13, 2023 5:57:37 GMT -5
Red Sox roster moves: Righty optioned to clear spot for Garrett Whitlock
Updated: Aug. 12, 2023, 9:51 p.m.|Published: Aug. 12, 2023, 9:48 p.m.
By
Christopher Smith | csmith@masslive.comChris Cotillo | ccotillo@MassLive.com
BOSTON — The Red Sox will make two roster moves before their game against the Tigers on Sunday. They will option right-hander Kyle Barraclough to Triple-A Worcester to clear a roster spot for righty Garrett Whitlock, according to an industry source.
Whitlock has spent 32 games on the injured list with an elbow bone bruise. He also missed 27 games earlier this season while on the IL with right elbow ulnar neuritis.
Whitlock reached 94.5 mph with his sinker and pitched 2 ⅓ scoreless innings in a rehab outing for Worcester at Polar Park on Wednesday. He allowed two hits and no walks while striking out three.
The Red Sox will use Whitlock in a multi-inning relief role. He has made 10 appearances (all starts) for Boston this season, posting a 5.23 ERA and 1.32 WHIP. But he has been better as a reliever in his career thus far with a 2.24 ERA in 68 career relief appearances (112 ⅔ innings) compared to a 4.76 ERA in 19 starts (90 ⅔ innings).
Whitlock is cool with any role.
“Who cares? As long as I get to play, that’s all that matters,” Whitlock said after his rehab outing Wednesday. “As long as I can contribute, as long as I can bring something to the team, I don’t care what I do.”
Boston selected Barraclough, a 33-year-old veteran, onto the 40-man roster Wednesday. He allowed one run in 3 ⅓ innings over two outings during this brief four-game stint. The Red Sox signed him out of the Atlantic League in June. He has gone 7-0 with a 2.57 ERA and 1.05 WHIP in eight outings, including seven starts for Worcester. He has 28 strikeouts and 19 walks in 42 innings there.
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Aug 13, 2023 6:03:47 GMT -5
Brayan Bello may represent an exciting glimpse into the future, but the Red Sox are trying to keep him well rested for future availability By Varun Shankar Globe Correspondent,Updated August 12, 2023, 10:03 p.m.
Every time Brayan Bello steps on the field, he gives the Red Sox an exciting glimpse of the future as an effective option in a starting rotation that hasn’t had many this season.
But with every outing — the latest coming in Saturday’s 6-2 loss to Detroit, where Bello pitched 4⅔ innings — the 24-year-old righthander inches closer to setting a a career high in innings. After Saturday’s game, he was at 119⅓ innings between the majors and minors 34 shy of what he he threw last year.
But the effects of the workload are starting to show. Bello gave up nine hits and four earned runs Saturday in just the fifth time this season he’s failed to reach the five-inning threshold. In his six starts since the All-Star break, his ERA is 5.71.
“Physically, I bet he’s feeling it, but it’s nothing for us to raise a red flag,” Sox manager Alex Cora said after the game.
“Like you said, it’s a long season,” Bello said, through team interpreter Carlos Villoria Benitez. " I feel good, I feel healthy, I feel strong, so I just try to make adjustments and try to learn on the go.”
The spin rate of each of Bello’s pitches Saturday fell below their season average, per Baseball Savant. That continues a troubling trend — the spin rate on his primary pitch, the sinker, has dropped precipitously over the course of the season.
“It’s just his second season,” said Cora. “And this guy is very important, not only for now, but for the future. And whenever we have a chance to give him a breather, we will.”
That’s been true even as the Red Sox rotation has been riddled by injuries, forcing the team to piece together bullpen games.
Bello threw 86 pitches in six innings against Seattle on Aug. 1. If he made his next start on “normal” rest — four days between starts — he would’ve pitched in the series finale against Toronto on Aug. 6.
But instead, the Sox pushed him back a day and opted for a bullpen game. The Blue Jays series ended in an emphatic sweep as five Red Sox relievers combined to allow 13 runs in eight innings (Pablo Reyes pitched a scoreless ninth).
The next day, Bello allowed just one run in 6⅔ innings against the Royals.
“Bello, he’s getting up there [in innings] and I think it made sense for us to push him back,” Cora said of the move.
The Sox have done this throughout the season; 16 of Bello’s 20 starts have come with at least one extra day of rest and he has a 3.39 ERA in those appearances. When asked to pitch on normal rest — like he was Saturday — that mark balloons to 5.82.
“Nothing really changes, it’s the same routine,” Bello said, when asked about the discrepancy in his performances.
The Sox have done this throughout the season; 16 of Bello’s 20 starts have come with at least one extra day of rest and he has a 3.39 ERA in those appearances. When asked to pitch on normal rest — like he was Saturday — that mark balloons to 5.82.
Bello’s most-thrown pitch, the sinker, was put in play seven times Saturday. Those seven balls in play had an average exit velocity of 95.2 miles per hour, per Baseball Savant — well above the 91.1 m.p.h he’d gotten off that pitch entering the game.
The amount of those scorchers Bello can keep on the ground may dictate his future success.
Across his June 26 and Aug. 1 starts, he had a 5.25 ERA and a groundball rate hovering in the low-60s on the sinker. That shot up to 84.6 percent on Monday,, when he pitched to a 1.35 ERA.
In his latest outing,, just four of the seven sinkers Detroit put in play were on the ground. Three resulted in outs and one was a single — the other three were line drives that landed for singles.
When asked in early July about potentially reaching the career high, Bello seemed unconcerned. He’d added a pre-game trip to the gym to his daily routine in an effort to keep his body active and the blood flowing.
“As long as you keep your body and your arm in shape, the innings aren’t a worry for me,” Bello said.
As he gets further into his season, the Sox will likely look to keep giving Bello extra days of rest. Cora said Bello’s next start will be Friday against the Yankees, giving him five days of rest.
Getting Bello an extra day of rest will become easier with the return of Chris Sale, and Tanner Houck and Garrett Whitlock close behind.
“Hopefully when guys come back, we can do a few things,” Cora said.
Cora said the team will probably use a bullpen game in the near future — particularly in a late-August series against the matchup-focused Dodgers — to break up the schedule.
“They know it’s 162 and there are days that we’re going to give you an extra day and others that you’ve got to go out there and pitch,” Cora said. “[Bello is] okay, he’s been trained for this. Obviously, I mean, stuff-wise, I bet the extra day will benefit you, but here where we’re at schedule-wise, he had to pitch on regular rest.”
After an off-day Monday, the Red Sox will play 16 games in as many days. They’ll be faced with many issues to address as they continue their hunt for a wild card berth.
Potentially, the most important being how and when to pitch Bello.
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Aug 13, 2023 6:07:10 GMT -5
RED SOX NOTEBOOK Chris Sale is back in pitching mix for Red Sox, with Tanner Houck and Garrett Whitlock soon to follow By Julian McWilliams Globe Staff,Updated August 12, 2023, 5:24 p.m.
Perhaps there’s some hope on the horizon for the Red Sox.
Chris Sale, who was reinstated from the injured list ahead of his Friday start, offered a reminder of that in his outing against the Tigers at Fenway Park. The lefthander, who is still going through his progression after suffering a fracture in his shoulder blade, went a strong 4⅔ innings, yielding just one hit (a solo homer) while striking out seven and not walking a batter.
Meanwhile on Friday, over in Worcester, Tanner Houck (facial fracture) put together a promising outing, tossing three scoreless innings, allowing just a hit while striking out three. The righthander didn’t hand out a free pass, tossing 34 pitches (23 strikes). Manager Alex Cora said Houck will probably need one more rehab outing and the hope is that he can rejoin the big league club for a series in Houston against the Astros beginning Aug. 21.
The club will bring back Houck as a starter, adding to a rotation that had used bullpen games to cover contests for two rotation spots for a month and a half.
In that next rehab appearance, the Sox are hoping Houck can go deeper into the game.
“Obviously, we can’t control that, right, but we want him to go deeper into the game in the next one,” Cora said prior to Saturday’s 6-2 loss to the Tigers. “The goal is to always have at least five [innings] when they come [to the big leagues]. If it’s shorter, it’s shorter. The game will dictate that. But we are building him up to go at least five.”
This is the first season Houck has had a defined role with the club. Since being called up in 2020, Houck has been both a starter and a reliever. The Red Sox played with the idea of Houck as a reliever upon his return but ultimately decided to keep him in his current role.
“The bullpen is really, really good,” Cora said. “And he did an outstanding job early on [as a starter]. So we’ll keep [him] in there and we’ll see how we play it out. There are a lot of games coming up. One extra day for a six-man rotation. We can be creative with the guys that we have.” The Red Sox will bring back Tanner Houck as a starter, adding to a rotation that had used bullpen games to cover contests for two rotation spots for a month and a half.
Garrett Whitlock (elbow) is set to return Sunday, and the Sox will use the righthander as a reliever, amplifying the back part of the bullpen even more. Whitlock wanted to come back as soon as possible, and the Red Sox figured this was the best way to do so.
“I know those guys have been working hard and Tanner had a really good outing,” Sale said. I’m happy and proud that he can get back out there after something like that [being hit in the face by a line drive]. It can’t be easy. So yeah, having him come back having a Whitlock, come back, and Trevor [Story the shortstop who made his season debut last week], gaining some momentum, moving forward with that, this is going to bring a boost to the clubhouse.” Turner returns to lineup
Justin Turner (bone bruise) was back in the lineup Saturday as the Sox’ designated hitter. He had missed seven out of 10 contests since Aug. 2, including the previous four before the middle game against the Tigers. Turner worked out on the field Friday before a decision was made.
“I talked to him today,” Cora said. “He said he’s ready to play today. So we’ll take care of him. But it was up to him. He did everything yesterday. And he felt like giving it a go.”
Turner, who has played some second base, third, and first, will solely be a DH for now. He was 2 for 4 in his return (single, homer No. 18), and scored both runs. Changes at the top
The Red Sox made a lineup switch, moving the struggling Jarren Duran out of the leadoff spot and down to the seven-hole. Alex Verdugo took over the leadoff spot. The move is both due to a lack of production while also serving as a mental breather for Duran.
“Just go down there and hit,” Cora said. “Just put him down there. Less at-bats. Less pressure.”
Duran went 0 for 2 and is in a 1 for 24 slump.
The top of the order consisted of Verdugo, who went 0 for 5 while leading for the first time since July 6, Masataka Yoshida (1 for 4), and Turner. Cora felt as if that trio’s ability to put together quality at-bats and work counts could benefit the offense, which has gotten away from that approach this month.
“The games have been fast for us,” Cora said. “We’ve been very aggressive. So having those three guys, they can set the offense the right way.” Cabrera honored
The Red Sox honored Miguel Cabrera, who will retire at the end of the season, before Saturday’s game. Cora offered some glowing remarks on the Detroit slugger, who is a sure-bet first-ballot Hall of Famer. “Somebody asked me last year or two years ago about Miguel and he’s like Tony Gwynn but with power,” Cora said. “He’s driving the ball to right field, putting the ball in play, hitting for average, hitting for power, driving in runs but he doesn’t strike out. Obviously, I know he bounced back early in his career. He had some issues. But this guy, he doesn’t stop smiling. He’s a great teammate. It’s always fun to be around him. What a career.”… The Sox plan to give third baseman Rafael Devers an offday Sunday … The series finale will be aired on Peacock starting at 12:05 p.m.
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Aug 13, 2023 6:11:36 GMT -5
Tigers @ Red Sox Sunday, August 13th Noon @ Fenway
E-rod 8-5/ 2.75
Crawford 5-6/ 3.80
Tigers' Eduardo Rodriguez back in Boston to face former team FLM
Left-hander Eduardo Rodriguez is scheduled to pitch against his former team on Sunday when the visiting Detroit Tigers wrap up a three-game series against the Boston Red Sox.
Rodriguez, 30, made his major league debut with the Red Sox in 2015. He had a 64-39 record in 159 appearances (153 starts) over six seasons with Boston.
Rodriguez (8-5, 2.75 ERA) signed a five-year, $77 million contract with the Tigers after the 2021 season but said he recalls his time with the Red Sox fondly.
"I have a lot of good memories here, and it feels good to be back here," Rodriguez said before Boston opened the series with a 5-2 victory on Friday night.
Rodriguez didn't pitch in June because of an injury to his left index finger, but he tossed seven scoreless innings on Tuesday to help Detroit beat Minnesota 6-0. Earlier this month, he invoked the no-trade clause in his contract to keep him from being dealt to the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Rodriguez has made 17 starts for the Tigers this season. Opposing batters are hitting .218 with a .594 on-base-plus-slugging percentage against him. He's 4-1 with a 3.63 ERA in his last seven starts.
Sunday will mark Rodriguez's second career start against Boston. He allowed seven runs -- just two earned -- in 3 2/3 innings versus the Red Sox on April 13, 2022.
Kutter Crawford (5-6, 3.80) will pitch for Boston on Sunday. Crawford took the loss when Kansas City beat the Red Sox 9-3 on Tuesday. He gave up three runs on seven hits in 3 1/3 innings.
Crawford is 1-0 with a 6.75 ERA in two career appearances (one start) against Detroit. He has allowed four runs on eight hits in 5 1/3 innings against the Tigers.
Detroit hit four solo home runs in Saturday's 6-2 triumph over Boston. Kerry Carpenter hit two of them and has three in the series.
"Any time I'm going well, I'm using the opposite field," the lefty-hitting Carpenter said. "In this ballpark (Fenway Park), it's easier to hit them out to left here. Anything they throw hard I want to hit that way."
The Red Sox were 0-for-11 with runners in scoring position on Saturday and saw their three-game winning streak come to an end.
Garrett Whitlock is expected to return from the injured list on Sunday and be available out of the Red Sox bullpen. The right-hander pitched 2 1/3 scoreless innings in a rehab assignment for Triple-A Worcester on Wednesday.
Whitlock has been on the injured list since July 4 because of an elbow bone bruise. Whitlock has made 10 appearances, all starts, for the Red Sox this season, but Boston manager Alex Cora said earlier this week that Whitlock is returning as a reliever.
"He wanted to come back as soon as possible," Cora said. "This is the best way. We'll stretch him out. He's gonna go two, three innings. It was more about his willingness to get ready and help us as soon as possible."
Cora said there is a good chance third baseman Rafael Devers will have Sunday off. The lefty-hitting Devers leads the Red Sox with 26 home runs but will not play because Cora envisions loading his lineup with right-handed batters against Rodriguez.
"Have a good day (Sunday), win the series and move on," Cora said.
--Field Level Media
Tigers at Red Sox Sunday, at 12:05 PM EST Partly Cloudy It's expected to be 78° F with a 42% chance of rain and 10 MPH wind blowing out in Boston at 12:05 PM EST. Hourly Forecasts: Weather.com
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Aug 13, 2023 7:51:15 GMT -5
Red Sox need Brayan Bello to get back on track
By Scott McLaughlin WEEI 93.7
Brayan Bello was supposed to be a part of the equation that had already been solved. As the Red Sox cling to their playoff lives, the questions on the pitching side were supposed to be about Chris Sale (who did his part to try to answer them with an impressive return Friday night), Garrett Whitlock (who will return as a reliever on Sunday) and Tanner Houck (who is expected to make one more rehab start before returning to the starting rotation).
The Red Sox need those guys to come back strong if they’re going to have any chance of making a real push, but they also needed the likes of Bello and James Paxton to keep pitching the way they were pitching before the All-Star break.
Unfortunately, that isn’t happening with Bello right now, with Saturday’s 6-2 loss to the Detroit Tigers the latest stumble for the promising young hurler.
Bello gave up nine hits and four runs while failing to get out of the fifth. He now has a 5.67 ERA in six starts since the All-Star break, allowing four or more runs in three of them.
That’s a far cry from the kinds of numbers Bello was posting for two months leading up to the All-Star break, when he consistently showed the ace potential everyone believes he has. After a couple tough outings to open the year, Bello posted a 2.35 ERA over his final 12 starts before the break.
Opponents hit .219 with a .619 OPS against Bello during that stretch. In this most recent six-start stretch, opponents are hitting .301 with an OPS over .900.
One notable change, as outlined by @redsoxstats below, is that Bello isn’t using and doesn’t seem to trust his breaking ball right now. When you see Kerry Carpenter take a hanging slider over the Green Monster in the second inning Saturday, you understand why. Eric Haase’s home run in the fifth came on a hanging cutter that technically counts as a fastball but that played like a breaking pitch at 88 mph.
Bello is 24 years old. He’s not a finished product, and some hiccups and tough stretches like this are still to be expected.
Unfortunately for the Red Sox, they truly are in desperation mode when it comes to their playoff chances, and they need just about everything to break right at this point. Bello breaking bad for much longer isn’t something they can afford.
Sure, some run support Saturday would have been nice. The Red Sox offense made Matt Manning and his 4.60 ERA look like a bona fide ace. But Bello was facing a Detroit offense that ranks as the second-worst in Major League Baseball this season, with a chance to make up a game on the Blue Jays following their loss earlier Saturday, and simply didn’t get the job done.
Maybe it’s not fair that the Red Sox are already so reliant on Bello, especially when he already put the rotation on his back for the better part of two months. But that’s the reality of the situation, and Boston needs Bello to get back on track if September baseball is going to be meaningful this year.
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Post by Kimmi on Aug 13, 2023 8:13:47 GMT -5
Tigers have chased Bello out of the game as it has come to the end of 5.
Red Sox have a grand total of one hit.
Down 4-1 and up comes Bernandino for the 6th
and that trash just gives up a lead of home run
I am out of here
5-1 Tigers This offense is so frustrating. Since July 29, they've averaged 3.38 runs/game. Matt Manning had not pitched well at all coming into this game.
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Post by Kimmi on Aug 13, 2023 8:14:11 GMT -5
Welcome back to ERod.
That said, I hope the offense knocks him out early. It would be nice to have a blowout game in our favor.
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Aug 13, 2023 9:19:03 GMT -5
Ian Browne @ianmbrowne · 23m Whitlock activated. Barraclough optioned.
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Aug 13, 2023 9:34:44 GMT -5
Noon on Peacock/ NBC
Erod vs Crawford
Akil Baddoo (L) LF Riley Greene (L) CF Matt Vierling (R) 3B Kerry Carpenter (L) RF Spencer Torkelson (R) 1B Zach McKinstry (L) 2B Miguel Cabrera (R) DH Zack Short (R) SS Jake Rogers (R) C
Rob Refsnyder (R) CF Justin Turner (R) DH Trevor Story (R) SS Masataka Yoshida (L) LF Adam Duvall (R) RF Pablo Reyes (R) 2B Triston Casas (L) 1B Connor Wong (R) C Luis Urias (R) 3B
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Aug 13, 2023 10:34:44 GMT -5
Sean McAdam @sean_McAdam · 1h LHP Joely Rodriguez (hip) encountered a setback in recent bullpen and Alex Cora says there’s a chance that he won’t pitch again this season.
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Aug 13, 2023 10:36:32 GMT -5
Ian Browne @ianmbrowne · 1h In Washington, the Sox will likely go an opener in first game with Pivetta playing a big role in that game. Paxton on Wednesday. Sale Thursday.
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Aug 13, 2023 10:38:12 GMT -5
Pete Abraham @peteabe · 5m Miguel Cabrera in the lineup for what would be his 45th career game at Fenway going back to 2003. (Plus 3 in the 2013 postseason).
Career .271/.371/.440 hitter at Fenway.
Miggy has 3,145 hits and 508 HRs. Only Aaron, Mays and Pujols have hit those marks. Quite a career.
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Aug 13, 2023 11:07:57 GMT -5
Red Sox Stats @redsoxstats
In their last 15 games, the Red Sox offense is averaging 3.3 runs per game, their worst 15-game stretch of the season. They have been held to 3 runs or fewer 10 times, and haven't scored more than 6.
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