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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on May 24, 2021 3:21:18 GMT -5
Guess I am getting old but when down at did not like this nor do I like it when down big and they wave back to the dugout when getting a hit.
Christopher Gasper @cgasper · 11h Not to go all Tony LaRussa on the Sox, but maybe stash the HR laundry cart when you are down 6-1, and Devers hits a solo blast to make it 6-2, especially on a day when Zack Wheeler owned you with 12 Ks and the HR being celebrated is just your fourth hit all day.
Jon Couture @joncouture · 5h I do not agree!
1. It's a six-month season, at minimum. Game of failure, etc. You're gonna lose 60+. Pouting thru 'em doesn't help.
2. The cart is no more contrived than '13 beards were, which is to say it started organically and got commoditized into a thing like everything.
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on May 24, 2021 3:30:16 GMT -5
Alex Cora content to play the long game, same as he did in 2018 By Peter Abraham Globe Staff,Updated May 23, 2021, 7:12 p.m.
PHILADELPHIA — The Red Sox unveiled their lineup at 10:15 a.m. on Sunday. You knew then it was going to be a difficult day.
Xander Bogaerts and J.D. Martinez were given the afternoon off against tough Phillies righthander Zach Wheeler. Manager Alex Cora decided to take advantage of Monday’s scheduled off day to give them an extended break.
“It’s been a tough week,” Cora said.
The Sox had three 7:37 p.m. starts in Florida against the Blue Jays, and many of the players didn’t leave the ballpark until after midnight.
The team arrived here at roughly 4 a.m. on Friday, and the first two games of the series against the Phillies were long ones on hot nights.
“All those quick games early in the season, those were just a tease,” Cora said. “We’re back to who we are.”
If you want to get all John Wayne about this and complain about soft modern players, go ahead. But giving Bogaerts and Martinez a day game off after a night game made sense.
Cora made moves like this throughout the 2018 season, so the Sox would have something left in September and October. As you may recall, but many are quick to forget, they blitzed through the postseason.
When so many teams are dealing with significant injuries, protecting Bogaerts and Martinez with 114 games still to play seemed like an easy decision for Cora. That the Sox were already 4-1 on their six-game road trip didn’t hurt.
Cora described the 224-pound Bogaerts as the “most physical shortstop in the big leagues.” Given the demands of his position, occasional days off are needed, although Bogaerts usually resists.
“I can tell when he needs [time off],” Cora said.
Alex Verdugo, who strained a hamstring on Friday, also was out of the lineup. He pinch hit in the ninth inning and reached base on a force out, on second base when the game ended.
With three of their best hitters on the bench, the Sox were predictably held to four hits in a 6-2 loss. They were essentially helpless against Wheeler, who retired 17 in a row after Kiké Hernández started the game with a bloop single.
Hernández singled again with two outs in the sixth inning to force Wheeler into the stretch. Danny Santana drew a walk, and suddenly the Sox had Rafael Devers at the plate, down 4-0. Wheeler alternated fastballs and sliders and struck Devers out on five pitches.
Incredibly enough, this was the first game Devers batted third this season. Related: Triston Casas, Jarren Duran add Red Sox flavor to Olympic qualifying roster
The Sox didn’t score a run against Wheeler until Franchy Cordero led off the eighth inning by launching a 474-foot blast that sailed over a corner of the second deck at Citizens Bank Park and landed on the concourse below. It was Big Franchy’s long-awaited first home run of the season.
Wheeler finished with 12 strikeouts over 7⅓ innings. No opposing pitcher had punched out 12 Sox since James Paxton of the Yankees on April 16, 2019, over eight innings.
Wheeler is 4-2 with a 2.38 earned run average. Bogaerts and Martinez could have made a difference, but not necessarily. Wheeler was that dominant.
“He’s really good,” Cora said. “He’s able to elevate with his fastball and he’s got a [sinker] to keep us honest and he threw his breaking ball a little bit . . . he’s one of the best. He’s very impressive.”
Eduardo Rodriguez is supposed to be on a level where he can match Wheeler, but he allowed four runs in the first inning on a day the Phillies rested struggling Bryce Harper.
At 29-19, the Sox are tied for first place in the American League East with the Tampa Bay Rays, who have won 10 straight. The Yankees are a half-game game behind.
For the first time since April 9, the Sox are not alone in first place. They also play their next 21 games against teams that made the playoffs last season, including getting their first taste of the Yankees. It sets up for a good summer, especially with ballparks coming back to full capacity.
Cora didn’t mail it in on Sunday. But he did play with an eye on the future and trying to get through a tough stretch still in first place.
The Sox were only up by one game after 48 games in 2018. He’s been here before and knows the right path.
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on May 24, 2021 3:35:36 GMT -5
Royals manager: Andrew Benintendi was 'trying to be someone he wasn't' Current Time 0:07 / Duration 1:52
UP NEXT: Three T's
By Rob Bradford
The Kansas City Royals haven't enjoyed the month of May very much at all. Their left fielder, on the other hand, is another story.
The Royals did enter May in first-place, atop the American League Central with a 16-9 record. During that span, newcomer Andrew Benintendi wasn't exactly a key piece of the puzzle, struggling mightily throughout April with a .225 batting average and .624 OPS.
The month, however, Benintendi has become one of the American League's hottest hitters while KC finds itself licking its wounds from an 11-game losing streak. The former Red Sox carries a .356 batting average and .844 OPS for the month. It is the third-highest May batting average for any qualified American League hitter, trailing only Toronto's Marcus Semien and Benintendi's former teammate, Xander Bogaerts.
Speaking on MLB Network Radio, Kansas City manager Mike Matheny offered his analysis of Benintendi's progression.
"I think he came in with the desire to get back to become the hitter he knew he could be," Matheny said. "We talked about this early on, this fine line of always trying to be better so you're always thinking outside the box. OK, what's the game telling me. Take the information, the data. OK, how am I being evaluated. Sometimes it sends guys in a good direction, other times it takes them away from their strengths. I believe Andrew was trying to be somebody that he wasn't, and that was get up and try and yank everything and try and have more pull power when he uses the field so well. I think Kauffman Stadium has really played well for him. The fact that there are big gaps. There is a lot of space to drive the ball the other way. And he's still pulling the ball when he needs to and he's kind of found that middle ground. He's in a nice place. He's very confident."
Coming into Sunday, Benintendi had back-to-back multi-hit games, reaching base three times Saturday.
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on May 24, 2021 9:14:32 GMT -5
How are the Rays tied with the Red Sox for first-place? Current Time 0:01 / Duration 17:03
By Rob Bradford 2 hours ago
We didn't know how it was going to happen, but we just knew it was coming.
The Tampa Bay Rays are atop the American League East.
As great a story as the Red Sox' resurgence has been -- with Alex Cora's club waking up Monday tied with the Rays for the division's top spot -- it truly is remarkable to sit here and once again classify Tampa Bay as one of baseball's top teams.
After 48 games, both the Sox and Rays stand at 29-19. Through the same number of contests a year ago, Tampa Bay was 31-18. The year before, in 2019, that it carried the same mark as it currently owns, 10 games over .500.
The point is ... there is a reason why the Red Sox have no problem hoping Chaim Bloom can duplicate the Tampa Bay way in Boston, and it has nothing to do with payroll. This is all about finding a way to win.
Case in point: What we're witnessing with this latest version of the Rays.
The Yankees (who sit 1/2 game back of the two top teams after winning their sixth in a row), they have a payroll of just more than $200 million with one player (Gerrit Cole) making up 18 percent of their payroll.
The Blue Jays, who have slipped to 4 1/2 games back, had everyone giddy coming into 2021 thanks to youngsters like Vlad Guerrero Jr. and Bo Bichette, who were teaming up with big-money acquisitions Hyun-Jin Ryu, Marcus Semien and George Springer.
But Tampa Bay? Like the Yankees, it also has one player making up 18 percent of the team's payroll. The difference is that Kevin Kiermaier makes $11 million this year compared to Cole's $36 million.
Yes, the Rays are paying their entire ream just $27 million more than the Yankees' No. 1 starter.
That dynamic, however, has always been the case. What put doubts in some minds heading into this season was the absence of two players -- Blake Snell and Charlie Morton -- who some believed was propping up this whole Rays way of doing thing.
Well, both pitchers are gone ... and the Rays are still in first-place.
What is fascinating about what Tampa Bay is doing this time around is the reality that it is being accomplished without the eye-popping statistics the likes of Snell and Morton have been usually giving the Rays. Sure, they have an in Tyler Glasnow, but after that ... Rich Hill, Josh Fleming, Shane McClanahan, Ryan Yarbrough and Michael Wacha have gotten the brunt of the starts. That group after Glasnow is costing the Rays right around $10 million.
The scary thing is that the arms are to keep on coming, with the Rays getting back two premier pitching prospects (Luis Patino, Cole Wilcox) in the Snell deal.
When you face the Rays, the arms just keep coming. Starter. Bullpen. It doesn't matter. And they also usually make the most of what they have, as is evident by the resurgence of Jeffrey Springs. In case that names sounds familiar, he was a pitcher the Red Sox DFA'd before dealing him to Tampa Bay. Springs has pitched in 19 games, owns an ERA of 3.20 while striking out 23 and walking just four.
It also doesn't hurt that the Rays' defense is elite, carrying the majors second-best fielding percentage.
The offense? It is just good enough. The Rays' hitters strikeout a ton, more than any group in baseball, in fact. And their numbers across the board -- batting average, on-base percentage, slugging percentage -- are all sort of middle-of-the-road. Heck, they don't have a single regular hitting .300.
But Tampa Bay scores runs, the fourth-most in baseball. And isn't that what counts.
The Rays have won 10 in a row, with the victories coming in all shapes and sizes. And it has left Kevin Cash's team once again in a spot it has become all too familiar with.
Surprised? At this point, you shouldn't be.
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on May 24, 2021 13:39:27 GMT -5
Red Sox Stats @redsoxstats · 1h Check in on some names that were batted around this winter.
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Post by scrappyunderdog on May 24, 2021 19:16:28 GMT -5
How are the Rays tied with the Red Sox for first-place?By Rob Bradford That dynamic, however, has always been the case. What put doubts in some minds heading into this season was the absence of two players -- Blake Snell and Charlie Morton -- who some believed was propping up this whole Rays way of doing thing. Well, both pitchers are gone ... and the Rays are still in first-place. What is fascinating about what Tampa Bay is doing this time around is the reality that it is being accomplished without the eye-popping statistics the likes of Snell and Morton have been usually giving the Rays. That's because a lot of Boston writers don't understand baseball. 1-"eye-popping statistics the likes of Snell and Morton" Those two combined for a 6-4 with a 3.89. That's slightly better than average, but certainly not eye popping. 2-They received Patino & Mejia in return. Those two have out-performed Snell & Morton.
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Post by scrappyunderdog on May 24, 2021 19:20:00 GMT -5
Guess I am getting old but when down at did not like this nor do I like it when down big and they wave back to the dugout when getting a hit. Christopher Gasper @cgasper · 11h Not to go all Tony LaRussa on the Sox, but maybe stash the HR laundry cart when you are down 6-1, and Devers hits a solo blast to make it 6-2, especially on a day when Zack Wheeler owned you with 12 Ks and the HR being celebrated is just your fourth hit all day.
Jon Couture @joncouture · 5h I do not agree!
1. It's a six-month season, at minimum. Game of failure, etc. You're gonna lose 60+. Pouting thru 'em doesn't help.
2. The cart is no more contrived than '13 beards were, which is to say it started organically and got commoditized into a thing like everything. I don't like it at all. To me, it is like posing after a HR. If you hit the ball 450 feet, fine, take a second to appreciate it. If JDM hits a 3-run HR in the 9th, sure, enjoy it. But don't pose after every fly ball that sneaks inside the Pesky Pole. Just play the game like you expect this stuff to happen. I never cared much for the 3 Bs posing after every win either.
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Post by scrappyunderdog on May 24, 2021 19:21:55 GMT -5
Red Sox Stats @redsoxstats · 1h Check in on some names that were batted around this winter.
Most of those names were nothing more than speculation by the press.
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on May 25, 2021 3:10:41 GMT -5
Tomase: Red Sox are in for a fight in historically loaded AL East
by John Tomase John Tomase
The Boston Red Sox might've picked the wrong year to overachieve.T
In a normal season, their 98-win pace would guarantee not only a playoff berth, but probably a division title, too. Since the AL East realigned in 1998 with the arrival of the expansion Tampa Bay Devil Rays, 98 victories has secured the crown in all but seven seasons.
But if the first two months of 2021 are any indication, 98 wins could leave the Red Sox in a dogfight for third place.
The AL East, quite simply, is loaded.
We paid lip service to that idea for years, but two decades ago it really only applied to the Red Sox, Yankees and their battle for baseball supremacy. The Rays, Toronto Blue Jays, and Baltimore Orioles might periodically rise, but the division earned its reputation for brutality on the I-95 corridor between New York and Boston alone.
That has changed significantly this season, and it's entirely possible we're setting ourselves up for an unprecedented scenario -- a four-team race to the finish.
The Red Sox just completed an impressive 4-2 road trip through Toronto (via Dunedin) and Philadelphia, and all it did was cost them two games in the standings.
That's because the Rays have rampaged to 10 straight wins while greasing the skids for the arrival of super prospect Wander Franco, and the Yankees have peeled off six straight, including a no-hitter by former Cy Young winner and current reclamation project Corey Kluber.
The Red Sox and Rays share the best record in the American League at 29-19, a half game ahead of the 28-19 Yankees. The three clubs are on pace to win 98, 98, and 97 games, respectively.
Three of MLB's top five teams currently reside in the AL East.
Needless to say, that hasn't happened since the division took its current form nearly 25 years ago. Just three times have a trio of AL East clubs won at least 90 games -- 2011, 2012, and 2018, when the Red Sox and Yankees each topped 100 and the Rays finished a distant third at 90-72.
Only once have four teams each reached 86 wins. That was in 2008, when the Jays had the misfortune of leading the league in ERA behind Cy Young runner-up Roy Halladay and still finishing 11 games out.
The most tightly-contested race came in 2011 -- a year Red Sox fans would like to forget -- when Boston opened September with a 1.5-game lead in the division, only to see it disappear during an epic collapse. The Yankees roared to 97 wins, while the Red Sox were eliminated by the 91-win Rays on the final day of the season after a series of events we need not revisit here.
The 2011 Jays were never a factor, finishing .500 at 81-81. It's far too soon to say that will be the case in 2021. This year's Jays were very much in the discussion a week ago after beating the Red Sox to pull within a game of first at 23-17. They have since lost five straight to Boston and Tampa, however, to fall to 23-22. The Jays boast an MVP candidate in Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and await the return of All-Star slugger George Springer, so there's time for them to become a factor.
What does this mean for the Red Sox? For one, they must keep grinding. They've had to play near-flawless baseball to come this far, and all it has gotten them is a half-game lead in the division. They've yet to encounter a serious injury, and they've used the same five-man rotation for all but two starts.
The Rays, meanwhile, have already used 11 different starters, while the Yankees have survived injuries to regulars like Giancarlo Stanton, Aaron Hicks, and Luke Voit, as well as the absence of pitching stalwarts Luis Severino (Tommy John surgery) and Zack Britton. More Red Sox: Meet the other pitching prospect Boston stole from New York
In that sense, the Red Sox haven't cornered the market on finding a way. New York is hitting just .231 as a team and ranks an uncharacteristic 10th in runs, but since a 5-10 start has gone 23-9. The Rays don't boast a single regular batting higher than .298, but have once again received power from an unexpected source -- 11 home runs from catcher Mike Zunino?!? -- and are riding a no-name pitching staff fronted by ace Tyler Glasnow and the ageless Rich Hill.
They also just traded starting shortstop Willy Adames to the Milwaukee Brewers, which should eventually create an opening for Franco, a 20-year-old five-tool star who has been the consensus No. 1 prospect in the game for the last two years. Franco is hitting .268 in his first exposure to Triple-A, so the Rays won't rush him, but he's being primed to provide a boost later this summer.
The Red Sox hope to receive a similar lift from ace Chris Sale, while the Yankees are even further along with Severino, who's almost ready to start a rehab assignment.
That's a ton of talent concentrated in one division, and as the four clubs begin playing each other what amounts to every other series for the next two and a half months, the race should only tighten.
It's scary to think that as well as the Red Sox have played so far, they're one bad week away from fourth place.
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on May 25, 2021 9:55:49 GMT -5
Jon Couture @joncouture · 17m Upon learning there are people with (minor) issues about the #RedSox laundry cart, my first thought was, "They're really not going to like the Padres 'Swagg Chain.'"
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Post by Kimmi on May 25, 2021 16:37:29 GMT -5
Alec Lewis @alec_lewis · 55m Andrew Benintendi so far in the month of May:
— .356 AVG (No. 9 in MLB) — .392 OBP — .452 SLG — .844 OPS — Nine multi-hit games
#Royals This one hurts me far more than losing Mookie does.
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Post by Kimmi on May 25, 2021 16:41:38 GMT -5
Alex Cora content to play the long game, same as he did in 2018By Peter Abraham Globe Staff,Updated May 23, 2021, 7:12 p.m. PHILADELPHIA — The Red Sox unveiled their lineup at 10:15 a.m. on Sunday. You knew then it was going to be a difficult day. Xander Bogaerts and J.D. Martinez were given the afternoon off against tough Phillies righthander Zach Wheeler. Manager Alex Cora decided to take advantage of Monday’s scheduled off day to give them an extended break. “It’s been a tough week,” Cora said. I will give Cora the benefit of the doubt here, but I have never agreed with him giving 2 or 3 of his best hitters the day off at the same time. I understand the need for players to have days off, and I have no issue with that. I understand wanting to take advantage of Monday's off day. Why not sit Bogaerts on Sunday and JD on Tuesday?
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on May 26, 2021 2:06:47 GMT -5
Alex Cora content to play the long game, same as he did in 2018By Peter Abraham Globe Staff,Updated May 23, 2021, 7:12 p.m. PHILADELPHIA — The Red Sox unveiled their lineup at 10:15 a.m. on Sunday. You knew then it was going to be a difficult day. Xander Bogaerts and J.D. Martinez were given the afternoon off against tough Phillies righthander Zach Wheeler. Manager Alex Cora decided to take advantage of Monday’s scheduled off day to give them an extended break. “It’s been a tough week,” Cora said. I will give Cora the benefit of the doubt here, but I have never agreed with him giving 2 or 3 of his best hitters the day off at the same time. I understand the need for players to have days off, and I have no issue with that. I understand wanting to take advantage of Monday's off day. Why not sit Bogaerts on Sunday and JD on Tuesday? With Thursday being an off day and after sleep walking thru last nights game I expect the Red Sox to start the taxi squad tonight.
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on May 26, 2021 2:52:02 GMT -5
Jon Couture @joncouture · 13h Bunch of other writers were posting their team's version, so I looked it up and am struck that so many you thought the City Connect #RedSox jerseys were bad.No. *This* is what bad looks like.
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on May 26, 2021 2:57:01 GMT -5
Our preseason expectations for the Red Sox were wrong. But what should they be now? This isn't a bad team anymore, but is it a serious contender?
By Chad Finn May 25, 2021 | 4:00 PM
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COMMENTARY
In my 40-plus years of watching the Red Sox, I’m not sure I’ve witnessed a season where expectations were drastically recalibrated in an optimistic direction before Memorial Day like they have been this year.
The 1986 and ’88 Red Sox both won the American League East after finishing fifth the previous year. But those teams were rich in veteran talent. The emergence of well-regarded young players into true stars – AL Cy Young winner and Most Valuable Player Roger Clemens in ’86 and MVP runner-up Mike Greenwell and Ellis Burks in ’88 – took them to another level.
The 1995 Red Sox were a surprise division champ after going 54-61 in the strike-shortened ’94 season. There are some parallels to this year’s team, as I’ve written about before, especially in the front office’s knack for finding helpful players in the margins of free agency and the waiver wire. You say Garrett Richards, I say Erik Hanson.
The most similar team to this one was probably the ’13 Red Sox, who went 69-93 under preening debacle Bobby Valentine in ’12, dumped him and brought John Farrell (an extremely popular hire at the time) over from the Blue Jays, added more than a half-dozen respected veteran free agents, and became an avatar for the city’s hope and healing after the Marathon bombings en route to winning the franchise’s third World Series in 10 years.
But I’d argue that the ’13 team entered its season with more optimism than the ’20 Red Sox did. David Ortiz missed 72 games in ’12, but he was still a monster at the plate (1.026 OPS). Jon Lester, Dustin Pedroia, and Jacoby Ellsbury were all entering their age-29 seasons, still in their prime. Will Middlebrooks looked like the classic power-hitting third baseman in the ’77 Butch Hobson mold, and top prospect Xander Bogaerts was on his way.
There was hope. If a few things broke right, they might be pretty good. As it turned out, everything broke right on the field, and the clubhouse was as unified as any we’ve seen, including 2004. If ’13 is your favorite Red Sox team, I understand why.
I’m not sure anyone outside of the Red Sox clubhouse and front office had high expectations for this 2021 entry – and I’m not convinced everyone within those walls thought they’d be better than adequate this year. I pegged them for around 83 wins and a spot on the fringe of the playoff race in September, which brought on charges of being excessively bullish after last year’s abbreviated 24-36 disaster. Those charges were probably fair, too.
I figured they’d score runs by the barrel, especially if J.D. Martinez found his swing (has he ever), and that roster architect Chaim Bloom had added quality depth and versatility to the roster. Weeding out the half-dozen to a dozen 2020 pitchers that had no business on a major league roster has also helped. Fare thee well, Mike Kickham.
But I did not expect this – a 29-19 record as they begin a three-game series with the Braves Tuesday, and a spot a half-game back of the scorching Rays (11 wins in a row) in the AL East standings. The Red Sox are second to the Astros (are we sure the trash cans have been silenced?) in runs per game (5.19) among American League teams, and rank a respectable sixth in fewest runs allowed (4.21; the AL average is 4.46). Advertisement:
After losing three straight games to the Orioles to open the season – a here-we-go-again bummer in which they were outscored 18-5 – the Red Sox have outscored their opponents 244-184, a margin of 60 runs over their last 45 games.
That’s crazy-impressive given that they’ve had legitimate issues to overcome, such as finding the bridge to Matt Barnes in the bullpen, getting production from the bottom of the order, and recent inconsistency from presumed ace Eduardo Rodriguez as he makes his way back from a season lost to COVID-19 and the aftereffects.
That they’ve been resilient, their collective confidence never waning, is a reflection of manager Alex Cora and their leader and MVP candidate Bogaerts, but it also suggests that like in ’13, taking character into consideration while building a team is paying off in the win column.
I’ve seen enough, roughly a third of the way into the schedule, to believe drastically recalibrating those preseason expectations is absolutely the correct thing to do. The question is no longer whether this team can be decent, or whether the excellent April is for real, or whether it will be in the playoff picture come late September.
The question is whether we should expect them to win the AL East. Fangraphs’ projection model gives the Red Sox an 18 percent chance of winning the division, a 60.7 percent chance of earning a postseason berth, and a 4.9 percent shot at winning the World Series. Baseball-reference’s model (the methodology of which eludes the C+-in-Algebra capabilities of my brain) is more skeptical, putting the Red Sox’ playoff chances at 30.7 percent, with just a 3.6 percent chance at taking the division, and 1.2 percent to win the World Series.
Baseball-reference, my go-to for stuff like this, is much higher on the Rays (96.9 percent chance at the playoffs, 15.2 to win the Series) and Yankees (84 percent, 7.6 percent), who have won six in a row, than it is the Red Sox. Some of that is due to strength of schedule – the Red Sox have already played the Orioles 10 times, twice as often as they’ve played any other team. They have played the Rays just three times, sweeping them in their lone series, and won’t face the Yankees until the first week of June.
It seemed like the Red Sox were miles ahead of everyone in April, but their biggest lead was only 3.5 games on May 9. I think we knew then that the Yankees and Rays would have their say soon enough, and that time has come.
It’s going to be a summer-long battle for the division, carrying into fall. The projections might not like the Red Sox’ chances, but projections can’t account for the palpable sense that something good is going on here. The Red Sox’ lead in the division is gone, at least for the moment, but they’re not going away. There’s a reason those early expectations can be recalibrated: We’ve seen enough to know, even before Memorial Day, that these Red Sox are for real.
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