Tag: Theo Epstein

Five Major Changes the Boston Red Sox Must Make in 2011

Throughout the 2010 season, the Boston Red Sox have been on the cusp of making  the playoffs. With Dustin Pedroia hitting the disabled list for the second time this season, it appears that it’s finally time to throw in the towel. This team could still make the playoffs and Dustin Pedroia could be back by the end of September, but realistically, this is likely the end of the road.

It’s just been a horrible year full of growing pains for the Red Sox. They lack an identity and they’re not the team that we thought they were.

Besides Jon Lester, Clay Buchholz and to an extent Daisuke Matsuzaka, the starting pitchers have been a disappointment.

Josh Beckett has been the poster boy for disappointment. Granted, he has spent a significant amount of time on the DL but really? 19 earned runs in his past three starts.

Has John Lackey really been even remotely close to good? Terry Francona will tell you he has but that’s just because he has to.

The offense exceeded expectations but they flamed out when everybody realized the season doesn’t end in July. Oh, and missing Kevin Youkilis has been a big reason for the flame out as well. Guys like Adrian Beltre and David Ortiz have quite frankly been the only impact bats on the team who haven’t been injured.

Injuries have definitely been a problem but they shouldn’t excuse the poor structure of the team. The only players on the team who have hit well have been Dustin Pedroia, Kevin Youkilis, Adrian Beltre and David Ortiz. Where is the big bat in the outfield though? Combined, Sox outfielders (Drew, Ellsbury, Hermida, Hall, Cameron, Nava, Kalish, Reddick, Van Every, Patterson, McDonald) have hit 55 home runs.

To put that into perspective, Red Sox outfielders rank dead last in the AL East in long balls. That’s right, they’re worse than the Baltimore Orioles at something.

The bullpen struggles go without mentioning.

It’s time for Theo Epstein and company to get on the phone and make some changes!

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Why the Red Sox Should Let Adrian Beltre Walk This Winter

Adrian Beltre has been absolutely sensational for the Boston Red Sox this year. That’s the thing though; it’s been one sensational year. Beltre’s track record says he will never have a batting average over .300 or an OPS (on base plus slugging percentage) over .900 ever again.

With an on base percentage of .366, Beltre hasn’t been on base this much since 2004 when he had an OBP of .388. His 162 game average is .328. As recently as 2009, Beltre was on base at a clip of .304. He has also had an OPS lower than .800 nine times in his thirteen year career.

Can the Red Sox really count on Beltre to produce this much next year? Quite frankly, the reason he signed here in the first place for such a low salary was to set himself up for a long-term deal at age 31. By rewarding him with an extension, the Sox would be giving him the chance to stop working hard.

The last time Adrian Beltre signed a long-term deal was in 2005. He signed a five-year, $64 million deal with the Seattle Mariners after a career year in which he hit 48 home runs with the Los Angeles Dodgers in 2004. Looks like the Dodgers made the right decision to let him walk.

That’s exactly the approach the Red Sox need to take. Beltre’s track record speaks for itself. Have a monstrous season, get paid, stop working hard. After 2004, he was supposed to be in the prime of his career at age 26. Instead, he hit .255 with an OPS of .716 and had just 19 home runs in 156 games.

Beltre’s defensive prowess has also been grossly exaggerated. He leads all American League third basemen with 16 errors and it isn’t the first time he’s led the league in errors. Beltre did the same thing in 2007. Somehow he won one of his two gold gloves that year.

Don’t get me wrong. I love Adrian Beltre for everything he’s done this year for the Red Sox. He’s a very good hitter but his motivation has to be a question moving forward. It appears that he only plays well when there’s money on the line. An extension would also leave the Sox with little flexibility in the offseason when Adrian Gonzalez and Prince Fielder will likely hit the trade market. Kevin Youkilis could just slide over to third base if the Sox are able to find a power hitting first baseman.

It’s simple: Pay Adrian Beltre and you will pay. Just ask Seattle.

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Boston Red Sox: 2010 Offseason Preview

The Boston Red Sox will have quite a few issues to address this off season.  While their offense has been a nice surprise this year, they still need to improve if they want to compete with the Yankees and Rays in the East. 

The strength of this team was supposed to be their pitching staff however, it has been very inconsistent.  This rotation was expected to be the best in baseball, but in reality, it has been average.  Not to mention the bullpen has been a complete disaster.

I will suggest a few moves that the Sox should and could make this off season.  Feel free to comment and give your suggestions.

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Passing on Papi: Ortiz’s Resurgence May Not Be Enough To Stay in Boston

He was over the hill. He couldn’t hit without Manny behind him. He’s older than he lets on. He was on steroids. The injuries got to him. Even some Fenway Faithful began calling him “Big Pop-up.” Then, all of a sudden, David Ortiz started to hit again. The past two years have been the toughest in his tenure in Boston, which may be coming to an end. 

On what was a seemingly routine August night in Baltimore in 2008, Red Sox DH David Ortiz dug in to the box. He fouled off an outside fastball, then grabbed his right hand in agony.

In a freak injury on a swing Red Sox fans have seen a thousand times, David tore the sheath tendon off his right hand. What would follow for Ortiz, nobody could have predicted. Out for the year, David watched as his banged up teammates fell one win short of another World Series appearance.

The off-season went by relatively quietly, as the front office still felt they had more than enough talent to put another banner up at Fenway. The season did not start well for Ortiz, who hit an abysmal .185 with one HR through May.

On top of that, reports began to surface of Ortiz failing a drug test in 2004. Red Sox fans saw a side of him that success had previously protected him from. This was not the fun-loving jokester of the past; this was a dejected, vulnerable David Ortiz.

David actually was able to pick up his production for the remainder of the season, finishing with 28 HR and 99 RBI but hitting just .238 in the process. This light resurgence gave some of “The Nation” hope going into this season.

That washed away in a hurry after a .143 April with just four RBI ended in Ortiz being pinch-hit for, the first such occurrence in his tenure. It appeared to be the end of the road for Boston’s once most beloved sports hero.

He was given another chance by skipper Terry “Tito” Francona, who went through similar pressure to make a change when Dustin Pedroia started slowly in 2007. Ortiz has not disappointed. Since May 1, he has looked like the “Papi” of old, hitting .295 with 22 HR and 68 RBI. He went through tremendous struggles and has emerged as big of a threat as ever.

However, David now faces a new challenge, one that has nothing to do with his plate performance: uncertainty. I find it extremely unlikely that Theo Epstein and Red Sox management decide to pick up Ortiz’s $12.5 million option for 2011. Add that to Victor Martinez ($7.7 million), Adrian Beltre ($10 million), Mike Lowell ($12.5 million), and Julio Lugo ($9 million) all coming off the books after this season as well, the Sox are far more likely to re-invest that money into bringing back Beltre and Martinez at a higher price, allowing Ortiz to walk.

The hard truth of the matter is, as they say, money talks and BS walks. Ortiz is not coming back for anything close to $12.5 million, but given his production this season, he has every right to feel he’s worth it. It is pretty clear by their recent history that the Sox will either bring back Beltre at 3B and Martinez at DH and search for a defensive catcher. Another option is they move Youkilis to third, have Martinez play first, DH J.D. Drew, and look for a catcher and a speedy OF bat (Carl Crawford). 

The reaction to these moves will likely be unpopular as Ortiz is the most beloved player on the team and has certainly produced this year. However, this is the regime that let Pedro Martinez, Manny Ramirez, and Johnny Damon walk. They certainly are not afraid to do the same with Ortiz. Red Sox Nation will miss Ortiz dearly, but another World Series win would do a lot to accelerate the grieving process.

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Bill Simmons Is Wrong: The 2010 Boston Red Sox Are Far From Boring

Sometimes one reads an article that is so far from what one believes, it makes one scream and hastily hammer out an angry comment.

ESPN’s Bill Simmons wrote such an article today, about how the Boston Red Sox have been boring this year. Many things, he says, have contributed to this.

While I agree that the hangover from the Steroid Era and the length of games have added to a general decline in interest across the sport, I vehemently disagree with the charge that the Red Sox have been uninteresting.

Nota bene, I really like the Sports Guy, and in no way intend to rip or criticise one of the better writers at ESPN. I just think he is wrong on this, and was inspired to write this in response.

He said today “Quite simply [JD Drew]’s a boring player on a boring team during a fairly boring season.”

He’s wrong. Here’s why.

First off, I will concede that JD Drew can be an infuriating player at times. Not many people would decide literally five minutes before the game that they were not going to play because their leg was a bit sore. Also, not many would, when at bat, watch his teammate steal home plate (in your home stadium, against the New York Yankees) and not even crack a smile.

He doesn’t show emotion, he just goes about his business. His face wears the same nonchalant look when he hits a grand slam in the ALCS as it does when he strikes out looking. Again.

So, maybe he is dull. But who else on the 2010 Red Sox is? Adrian Beltré has taken it upon himself to take out as many of his fellow Sox as possible, and has carved out a niche in proposing to his home runs.

OK, the two players who made their Boston debut alongside him, Mike Cameron and Marco Scutaro aren’t the most exciting or dramatic players.

Scutaro hasn’t been electrifying, but he has been vital as a leadoff guy since Jacoby Ellsbury was Beltréd on April 11.

Cameron has been poor—especially in the field, which has surprised most people, not least those who spent the offseason bleating about UZR.

Speaking of the outfield, some suggested before the season that the Red Sox re-sign Johnny Damon, and the outfield’s collapse has only reinforced their cries. I can’t speak for anyone else, but I would have tracked down Theo Epstein and battered him with sticks had he done that.

Victor Martinez, when he’s not nursing a broken thumb in the Sox’ favourite holiday spot, the DL, swings like a pendulum from “great hitter” to “I’m gonna throw my pitchers under the bus”.

Then there’s his backup, Jason Varitek. The captain’s injured, too, of course. But before he hurt his foot, he was one of this season’s better surprises. He may only have 105 plate appearances, but he has the highest slugging percentage of his career and had he continued at that level for the whole season, was on pace to reach a career-high in home runs.

His fellow veteran Big Papi is hitting—21 home runs, 64 RBIs, his highest wOBA since 2007—and is getting back to the status he enjoyed for so long in Boston: when he’s at the plate, you’re not leaving the sofa for another beer.

Those guys were the faces of the franchise for years, but these days, it’s Dustin Pedroia, and to a lesser extent Kevin Youkilis. Youk is on pace for career bests in OBP, SLG, wOBA and homers and perhaps most remarkably of all, he is still healthy. Touch wood.

As for Pedey, he has been what you expect. He plays every game like he’s a six-year-old being allowed out of the house for the first time in a month. He broke his foot, but that didn’t stop him taking grounders from his knees. He epitomises this year’s Red Sox. Scrappy, determined, and imbued with the just-won’t-die attitude of 2004.

The middle relief hasn’t been that boring, either. It’s just sucked.

At the back of the bullpen are Daniel Bard and Jonathan Papelbon. Bard’s been as lights-out and blasé as a closer-in-waiting should be, but Pap has enjoyed a season-long game of the not at all boring How Close Can I Come to Blowing This One? It’s painful to watch, but it’s not dull.

But all of that pales in comparison to the people who have stepped up when the starters have gone down. Bill Hall has played left, centre, right, third, short, second and has even pitched a perfect inning.

Darnell McDonald had a game-tying home run and a walk-off single in his first game. Daniel Nava hit a grand slam on the first pitch of his Major League career.

They should be at Triple-A or in a platoon role on the Pirates, but they are largely responsible for Boston being just 5.5 games out of the Wild Card.

As for the season itself, it’s been exciting. Being stuck in third place all year has been difficult, but for the first time in a long time, the AL East is a race between three teams. It will never—it can never—mean as much or be as important as it did in 2004. Of course not.

But if one stops looking for that level of meaning behind the season, one can see that 2010 has been a damn good year so far. Five no-hitters, two perfect games, a player gunning for a Triple Crown, the Padres, Braves, Reds, and Rangers being in first place attest to that.

The 2010 Red Sox have been at times painfully mediocre, often exasperating and always injured. But they have at no point been boring, regardless of what anyone on the LeBron Network says.

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MLB Trade Rumors: Red Sox Eye Trevor Hoffman, Cast Wide Net For Pitching

Milwaukee Brewer Trevor Hoffman isn’t available at this year’s trade deadline, but that didn’t stop Red Sox General Manager Theo Epstein from asking after the closer he first met while working for the San Diego Padres, according to Fox Sports’ Ken Rosenthal.

Not remotely effective this season, Hoffman owns a 6.82 ERA over 33 innings and joins a nearly all-inclusive group of relievers that the Red Sox are pursuing in the final days leading up to the non-waiver trade deadline this Saturday.

Today, the Boston Globe’s Nick Cafardo reviewed all the relievers the Red Sox have reportedly sought over the past month. The list includes Matt Capps, Scott Downs, Kyle Farnsworth, Mike Gonzalez, Sean Marshall, Will Ohman, Rafael Perez, Kerry Wood, Michael Wuertz, and former Red Sox David Aardsma and Craig Breslow.

True to his word, Epstein has been scouring rosters for available bullpen help. Despite injuries to outfielders, catchers, infielders and starters alike, the Red Sox might would be closer than seven games back in the American League East if they had an effective bullpen.

The 2010 Red Sox pen’s weaker components have blown 14 saves and allowed a Major League-worst 43 homers en route to a 4.42 ERA. This is frighteningly close to the Orioles’ 4.47 mark. Journeyman Scott Atchison (4.05 ERA), trade-candidate Ramon Ramirez (4.57 ERA), flame-thrower Manny Delcarmen (4.86 ERA), and southpaw Hideki Okajima (5.81 ERA) are the primary underperformers.

The Red Sox must make at least one move for a reliever before the deadline if they are to compete through August and into September. The next 48 hours could decide Boston’s 2010 fate.

If you’d like to kno w as soon as Peter’s Red Sox articles have posted, you can follow him on Twitter at BoSoxUpdate.

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MLB Trade Rumors: Diamondbacks’ Chris Snyder On Block, Boston’s Radar

Fresh off sending Conor Jackson to the Oakland Athletics and Dan Haren to the Los Angeles Angels, the Arizona Diamondbacks are shopping virtually every piece on their Major League roster, including catcher Chris Snyder, who has been on the Boston Red Sox’ radar for some time, according to MLB.com’s Steve Gilbert and MLBTradeRumors’ Ben Nicholson-Smith.

Snyder joins the Colorado Rockies’ Chris Iannetta, the Toronto Blue Jays’ John Buck, the Los Angeles Dodgers’ Russell Martin, and the New York Mets’ Rod Barajas as a target of Boston’s catching-hungry front office.

While Buck provides the most current production, Iannetta the most upside, Barajas the most experience, and Martin the most name recognition, Snyder might be the most available option to help stabilize an injury-plagued Red Sox catching crew.

Arizona seems intent on dumping its 29-year-old backstop, whose .231 average and  sub-par defense hardly seem worth the more than $8 million remaining on his three-year contract.

Given Theo Epstein’s distaste for trading top-tier prospects, Snyder’s low price tag could easily land him at Fenway before the week is out.

If you’d like to kno w as soon as Peter’s Red Sox articles have posted, you can follow him on Twitter at BoSoxUpdate.

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Yankees Give Red Sox Literal Bulletin Board Material (Satire)

A shipment of corkboard arrived at Fenway Park today, with a note from New York Yankees GM Brian Cashman.

“Dear Red Sox,” the letter began. “I noticed on a recent tour of your facilities that you didn’t have a bulletin board to hang disparaging articles that might contain offensive quotes from other teams, like ours. That is something all teams must do for motivation, and so sports radio hosts can speculate how big an effect said quotes will have on your performance against that team. Enjoy.”

Red Sox management did not take kindly to being sent this bulletin board material by a rival club. They immediately declared that they will instead buy their own bulletin board, and hang upon it a piece of this bulletin board material from the Yankees, as proof that the Yanks don’t think they are a professional franchise.

“The Yanks think we don’t know what to put in a locker room?” said Red Sox GM Theo Epstein. “We’ve been getting mad at them for years without the need to put quotes on the wall. But so be it, this bulletin board material they sent us will be the ultimate piece of bulletin board material!”

It’s being speculated by New York talk radio that Cashman is currently in the process of hanging Epstein’s quote on the Yankee Stadium bulletin board.

SportsComedian.com

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2010 MLB Draft: Red Sox Snag Hitting and a Scott Boras Sleeper

The Boston Red Sox entered Monday’s 2010 First-Year Player Draft with three of the top 50 overall picks, and according to MLB Network analysts and other draft authorities, Theo Epstein & Co. acquired both some excellent collegiate talent and at least one potential headache.

After signing Type-A free agents John Lackey and Marco Scutaro, the Red Sox surrendered the 29th and 34th overall picks to the Los Angeles Angels and Toronto Blue Jays, respectively.

However, by offering arbitration to reliever Billy Wagner and outfielder Jason Bay, the Red Sox actually leapfrogged in the draft selection and acquired the 20th, 36th, and 39th overall picks.

 

Round 1: 20th Overall Pick

In the First Round—utilizing the 20th overall pick they earned when Type-A free agent and former Mets closer Billy Wagner signed with the Atlanta Braves—the Red Sox selected Ball State standout Kolbrin Vitek.

A second baseman, the Ohio-born Vitek bats right and is listed at 6’3”, 195 lbs. According to MLB Network’s Peter Gammons, the Sox plan to convert the potentially powerful Vitek into a third baseman—a position the Sox clearly needed to address looking beyond Adrian Beltre.

Known for near “perfect fundamentals” and a “great natural swing,” Vitek could round out an impressive Red Sox infield of the future should he live up to his potential and team up with Jose Iglesias, Dustin Pedroia, and Kevin Youkilis within the next few years.

In three years at Muncie’s Ball State, Vitek has batted .359 with 35 homers in 569 at bats. His .664 slugging percentage and .440 on-base percentage suggest that Vitek could become a patient and potentially powerful slugger.

Although he has pitched to the tune of a 4.71 ERA and a 13-8 record, Vitek does not project as a gunslinger at the professional level.

 

Sandwich Round: 36th Overall Pick

In the Sandwich—or Supplemental—Round of the 2010 First-Year Player Draft, the Red Sox picked twice, first at 36 overall.

With the 36th pick—acquired as compensation for the New York Mets’ signing of Jason Bay—the Red Sox selected Tennessee-native Bryce Brentz, who was ironically heavily scouted by none other than the Mets.

At 6’1” and 185 lbs, this Middle Tennessee State University outfielder projects with decent power, driven mainly by what MLB Network calls his “strong lower body.”

Originally drafted out of South Doyle High School by the Cleveland Indians during the 30th Round of the 2007 First-Year Player Draft, Brentz has hit .348 with a .636 slugging percentage and a .440 on-base percentage this year.

With similar numbers to those of Kolbrin Vitek, Brentz and his selection start to paint a picture of a 2010 Red Sox organization intent on drafting some high-upside power hitting.

Sandwich Round: 39th Overall Pick

When the Atlanta Braves signed Billy Wagner, the Red Sox actually earned not just the 20th but also the 39th overall pick as compensation. That’s not a bad haul when one considers that the Red Sox merely sent journeyman outfielder Chris Carter to New York to acquire Wagner in what amounted to an ill-timed salary dump for the Metropolitans.

As the 39th pick arrived, the Red Sox must have counted both their blessings and pennies when they realized that former top-ranked pitcher and current Scott Boras client Anthony Renaudo remained on the board.

At one point, the towering Renaudo—he’s 6’7” and 230 lbs—was regarded as the best pitcher at the college level and was originally drafted by the Texas Rangers in the 11th Round of the 2007 First-Year Player Draft.

Renaudo remained so ranked until an elbow injury and a series of dramatically poor performances saw his standing plummet and his scouting reports grow increasingly uncertain.

Realizing that the previously dominant LSU hurler could fall significantly during this draft, Theo Epstein himself flew out to see him pitch, according to Gammons.

Should he regain his once unhittable form, Renaudo could prove a sagacious steal for the Red Sox’ front office.

However, Renaudo is represented by Scott Boras, and Boras may not be willing to accept 39th pick money for his slightly diminished client. Hammering out a deal could be tough if Boras and Epstein butt heads.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Time Traveling Twitter: 15 MLB Draft Tweets That Might Have Been

For many fans of America’s pastime having an insight into the thoughts and daily lives of the players is highly coveted.

Knowing what Derek Jeter had for breakfast would make Brooklyn housewives feel as though they were in his Trump Tower kitchen.

Listening to Albert Pujols buy movie tickets might make the entire midwest stand stiller than it already stands.

These days many professional athletes tweet or otherwise offer up such personal thoughts, though they often come across as a little forced or disappointing.

Ron Artest actually befriends fans through twitter and recently bought two of them a pair of Finals tickets worth $18,000.

Yet we haven’t always been so connected. Imagine what it would be like to hear your favorite players’ thoughts on draft day.

Imagine that they tweeted and you could have known…

Here are 15 tweets I think draft-day participants might have tweeted if they could have.

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