May 28

TOR0
TEX2
Final
COL3
CHC4
Final
ATH1
HOU11
Final
NYY3
LAA2
Final
MIA6
SD8
Final
WAS1
SEA9
Final
PIT9
ARI6
Final
BOS5
MIL6
Final
LAD4
CLE7
Final
CWS9
NYM4
Final
MIN0
TB5
Final
SF3
DET4
Final
ATH3
HOU5
Final
PIT10
ARI1
Final
MIA10
SD8
Final
STL6
BAL4
Final
ATL0
PHI0
Postponed
CIN2
KC3
Final

May 29

COL1
CHC2
Final
TOR2
TEX0
Final
NYY1
LAA0
Final
WAS9
SEA0
Final
ATL25-28
PHI35-19
NBCSP @5:05 PM UTC
ATL25-28
PHI35-19
NBCSP @10:45 PM UTC
ATH23-33
TOR27-28
NBCSCA @11:07 PM UTC

May 30

TB28-27
HOU30-25
FSUN @12:10 AM UTC
WAS25-30
SEA30-24
FS1 @1:40 AM UTC
CIN28-29
CHC35-21
MLBN @6:20 PM UTC
MIL29-28
PHI35-19
NBCSP @10:45 PM UTC
CWS18-38
BAL19-36
MASN @11:05 PM UTC
ATH23-33
TOR27-28
NBCSCA @11:07 PM UTC
LAA25-30
CLE30-25
FDW @11:10 PM UTC
COL9-47
NYM34-22
SNY @11:10 PM UTC
SF31-25
MIA22-32
NBCSBAY @11:10 PM UTC
BOS27-31
ATL25-28
ATV @11:15 PM UTC

May 31

STL32-24
TEX27-30
KDAF @12:05 AM UTC
DET37-20
KC30-27
FDDT @12:10 AM UTC
TB28-27
HOU30-25
FSUN @12:10 AM UTC
PIT21-36
SD31-23
MLBN @1:40 AM UTC
WAS25-30
ARI27-29
DBTV @1:40 AM UTC
MIN30-25
SEA30-24
TWTV @2:10 AM UTC
NYY35-20
LAD34-22
ATV @2:10 AM UTC
CIN28-29
CHC35-21
MLBN @6:20 PM UTC
ATH23-33
TOR27-28
NBCSCA @7:07 PM UTC
CWS18-38
BAL19-36
MASN @8:05 PM UTC
STL32-24
TEX27-30
RASN @8:05 PM UTC
MIL29-28
PHI35-19
NBCSP @8:05 PM UTC
TB28-27
HOU30-25
FSUN @8:10 PM UTC
DET37-20
KC30-27
FDDT @8:10 PM UTC
SF31-25
MIA22-32
NBCSBAY @8:10 PM UTC
LAA25-30
CLE30-25
FDW @8:10 PM UTC
COL9-47
NYM34-22
WPIX @8:10 PM UTC
BOS27-31
ATL25-28
FDSO @8:10 PM UTC
NYY35-20
LAD34-22
FOX @11:15 PM UTC
MIN30-25
SEA30-24
FOX @11:15 PM UTC

Tomase: Red Sox need mental toughness now more than ever

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On Talkin’ Baseball, John Tomase and Lou Merloni express their frustration with the Red Sox ownership group and the role in played in a quiet trade deadline for Boston.

The thing about avalanches is that once they start, they don't stop until rock bottom. All of that snow and ice and debris gathers speed until no opposing force can stop it, not trees, not boulders, not houses, not people. Only the rocks below.

The Red Sox aren't cascading down the side of a mountain just yet, but the ground is rumbling ominously beneath their feet. They've spent the bulk of this season as not only one of the best teams in baseball, but maybe the best story, too, a likable assemblage of recognizable All-Stars and anonymous grinders playing well beyond the sum of their parts to claim the American League's best record more than halfway through the season.

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They maintained that safe position as recently as last week, but the seismograph has been breakdancing ever since. On Tuesday, they dropped their fifth straight and sixth in seven games, combining their two recent trademarks -- lackluster offense and inadequate starting pitching.

The result was a 4-2 loss to the sub-.500 Tigers that dropped the Red Sox perilously close to the Yankees and Blue Jays, who each pulled within four games of Boston in the loss column.

Not coincidentally, both clubs made major additions at Friday's trade deadline while the Red Sox stood relatively pat. Boston's primary acquisition, outfielder Kyle Schwarber, just started working out at first base and hopes to begin a rehab assignment for a strained hamstring that has sidelined him since early July. Meanwhile, Yankees acquisition Anthony Rizzo continues to mash, and Blue Jays import Jose Berrios just threw six shutout innings in his Toronto debut.

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If the Red Sox are feeling sorry for themselves over management's relative lack of support last week, it's understandable, but it needs to end. We'll even give them a pass for zombie-staggering through a weekend sweep in Tampa, because mental toughness hasn't been an issue all season.

But if the frustration is going to continue to boil over as it did in Detroit -- outfielder Alex Verdugo smashed his helmet in the dugout and right-hander Garrett Richards once again sulked his way through a press conference -- then at a certain point, the narrative becomes less that management didn't support the team and more that it was right not to waste future resources on a flawed roster.

The good news is we're not there yet. I do not believe this team is wired to collapse, not based on what we've seen since that opening series vs. the Orioles. The Red Sox have displayed mental toughness through all manner of trials, whether it's overcoming injuries, surviving brutal scheduling, or constantly needing to rally. Rallying the troops remains one of Alex Cora's greatest skills as a manager.

At some point, however, you worry about the mental toll their style of baseball might extract. It feels like they've already played about two dozen games at playoff intensity, and the race is only going to tighten.

"I think it's more just pressing," said outfielder Hunter Renfroe, who homered on Tuesday to provide a brief 2-0 lead. "The mental side of it, I think we're really good. I think we're mentally tough. We have some guys who have been there, done that. We have a lot of guys with experience in the World Series.

"This game is very hard, but we have some guys that have the mental fortitude that we can go a long way. We just need to keep doing what we're doing, stay relaxed, go out there tomorrow, and we'll figure it out."

If the AL East were a mountain, the Red Sox would still reside near the top. But there's no question the Yankees and Jays -- not to mention the relentless Rays -- have destabilized their perch.

"Our goal is to come tomorrow and win," Cora said. "We don't want this slide to continue."

For now, it's just a slide. Gather much more speed, however, and they may discover just how alarmingly involuntary that ride to the bottom can be.

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