Jun 21

MIL17
MIN6
Final
ARI14
COL8
Final
HOU3
LAA2
Final
KC6
SD5
Final
CLE1
ATH5
Final
WAS5
LAD6
Final
BOS7
SF5
Final
DET3
TB8
Final
BAL0
NYY9
Final
MIL9
MIN0
Final
CIN5
STL6
Final
SEA7
CHC10
Final
CWS1
TOR7
Final
BOS2
SF3
Final
TEX3
PIT2
Final
ATL7
MIA0
Final
KC1
SD5
Final
NYM11
PHI4
Final

Jun 22

ARI5
COL3
Final
HOU1
LAA9
Final
CLE4
ATH2
Final
WAS7
LAD3
Final
BAL33-43
NYY44-32
Roku @3:35 PM UTC
DET48-30
TB43-34
FSUN @4:10 PM UTC
TEX38-39
PIT30-48
MLBN @5:35 PM UTC
CWS24-53
TOR41-35
CHSN @5:37 PM UTC
ATL35-40
MIA30-45
FDFL @5:40 PM UTC
MIL42-35
MIN37-39
TWTV @6:10 PM UTC
CIN39-38
STL42-35
FDOH @6:15 PM UTC
SEA38-37
CHC46-30
MARQ @6:20 PM UTC
ARI39-37
COL17-60
DBTV @7:10 PM UTC
CLE38-37
ATH32-47
NBCSCA @8:05 PM UTC
BOS40-38
SF43-34
NBCSBAY @8:05 PM UTC
HOU44-33
LAA37-39
FDW @8:07 PM UTC
WAS32-45
LAD47-31
MASN @8:10 PM UTC
KC38-39
SD41-35
FDKC @8:10 PM UTC
NYM46-31
PHI46-31
ESPN @11:10 PM UTC

Jun 23

TEX38-39
BAL33-43
RASN @10:35 PM UTC
NYY44-32
CIN39-38
FDOH @11:10 PM UTC
ATL35-40
NYM46-31
SNY @11:10 PM UTC
ARI39-37
CWS24-53
DBTV @11:40 PM UTC
SEA38-37
MIN37-39
FS1 @11:40 PM UTC
PIT30-48
MIL42-35
SNPT @11:40 PM UTC
CHC46-30
STL42-35
MARQ @11:45 PM UTC

Jun 24

BOS40-38
LAA37-39
MLBN @1:38 AM UTC
WAS32-45
SD41-35
MAS2 @1:40 AM UTC
TEX38-39
BAL33-43
RASN @10:35 PM UTC
TOR41-35
CLE38-37
GDTV @10:40 PM UTC
ATH32-47
DET48-30
NBCSCA @10:40 PM UTC
ATL35-40
NYM46-31
TBS @11:10 PM UTC
NYY44-32
CIN39-38
FDOH @11:10 PM UTC
ARI39-37
CWS24-53
DBTV @11:40 PM UTC
PIT30-48
MIL42-35
SNPT @11:40 PM UTC
SEA38-37
MIN37-39
TWTV @11:40 PM UTC
TB43-34
KC38-39
FSUN @11:40 PM UTC
CHC46-30
STL42-35
MARQ @11:45 PM UTC

Tomase: Here's the issue with calling Red Sox' season a ‘bridge year'

Lou Merloni breaks down what was wrong with Trevor Story’s swing early in the season and explains why he’s encouraged by the adjustments the shortstop has recently made.

This isn't a bridge year. It's a last stand.

Or at least it should be.

Describing the 2022 Red Sox in any other way misreads their rebuild under chief baseball officer Chaim Bloom.

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The concept of the bridge is simple: acquire stopgap veterans to remain competitive until a bountiful farm system assumes the mantle of next great Red Sox team. Theo Epstein caught hell for this admission after the 2009 season, but he actually struck gold with most of his veteran acquisitions, be it Victor Martinez at the 2009 trade deadline, Adrian Beltre on a one-year "pillow contract" that winter, or future World Series hero John Lackey to a multi-year deal in free agency.

The 2010 Red Sox won 89 games and finished with the fifth-best record in the American League. A year later they got impatient and acquired Adrian Gonzalez and Carl Crawford before collapsing epically. Only when Ben Cherington truly bridged things in 2013 did they claim a Boston Strong title, and then the homegrown talent he left behind won another championship five years later.

The bridge is meant to connect cores, but these Red Sox entered the season in a very different place. With veterans Xander Bogaerts, J.D. Martinez, and Nathan Eovaldi on expiring contracts, starter Chris Sale eligible to opt out of his deal, and third baseman Rafael Devers a year away from free agency, the Red Sox should've been in win-now mode, because they're staring at a significant talent deficit next season.

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Instead they got complacent, buoyed no doubt by last year's surprising 92 wins and run to the American League Championship Series. A harder look would've suggested a fair amount of luck breaking their way, however, from consistent health (minus a late-season COVID outbreak) to historic underperformance from the rampaging Blue Jays, who probably should've won 100 games instead of missing the playoffs by one.

If this is a bridge year, then it's made of rope and missing slats, and man is that wind starting to blow. Making matters worse, the farm isn't ready to meaningfully impact this year or next. While we should see slugging first baseman Triston Casas at some point this summer, and maybe even ascendant right-hander Brayan Bello, top prospects like Marcelo Mayer and Nick Yorke remain two or three years away.

A bridge is supposed to lead somewhere promising, but this one's on the verge of collapse. Given the looming losses to the top of their roster, the Red Sox would've been better served spending $16 million on one year of, say, All-Star closer Kenley Jansen. The Braves signed him instead and Jansen has saved eight games, or one fewer than the Red Sox have blown.

They could've been in the market for former Mets standout Noah Syndergaard, who signed a one-year, $21 million deal with the Angels and is off to a 3-1, 2.45 start. They could've outbid the Yankees on slugging first baseman Anthony Rizzo (two years, $32 million), or the Giants on lefty Carlos Rodon (two years, $44 million).

Five players the Red Sox may regret not signing in free agency

In short, if they were going to surpass the luxury tax anyway, they could've added win-now talent without making any long-term commitments. Thus they compete in 2022 while retaining flexibility and an encouraging base of young talent in the minors.

Instead, they mostly maintained the status quo, save for the big signing in free agency of shortstop-turned-second-baseman Trevor Story. Now they find themselves not only in last place, but staring at a true rebuild next season.

That's not a bridge. It's a gorge.

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