Legit or Fraud? Boston Red Sox: A Quarter-Season Reality Check
We are roughly a quarter of the way through the 2024 Major League Baseball season, and the narrative has already twisted and turned more times than a knuckleball in a hurricane. Some clubs look like World Series locks. Others look like they are already playing for next year’s draft pick. But the most dangerous place to be in baseball? Right in the middle. And that is exactly where the Boston Red Sox find themselves.
At 17-23, the Red Sox are sitting in the basement of the brutally competitive American League East. Yet, if you listen to the chatter in the clubhouse and the whispers around the league, there is a belief that this team is not as bad as its record suggests. Or is it exactly what it appears to be: a flawed, rebuilding roster that is a few pieces away from contention?
Welcome to our first installment of “Legit or Fraud?” — a deep dive into every club across the league. Over the next week, we’ll break down each division and ask the simple question: Is this team for real, or are they a mirage? We start with the AL East and the most polarizing team in the division: the Boston Red Sox.
The Shocking Shakeup: Why Firing Alex Cora Was the Biggest Surprise
Let’s address the elephant in the room. The biggest surprise of the Red Sox season so far is not a player’s performance. It is the firing of manager Alex Cora. Yes, you read that correctly. In a move that stunned the baseball world, the Red Sox parted ways with the man who led them to a World Series title in 2018 and brought stability after the 2020 cheating scandal.
Now, before you call this a fraud, let’s examine the rationale. Cora’s firing was not about wins and losses—it was about a philosophical clash. Sources inside the organization suggest that the front office, led by Craig Breslow, wanted a more analytics-driven, player-development-focused approach. Cora, a master of the in-game chess match, preferred veteran leadership and gut-instinct decisions. The split was inevitable, but the timing—just 40 games into the season—was a bombshell.
This move screams one thing: the Red Sox are not in win-now mode. They are prioritizing the future over the present. For a team with a 17-23 record, that might be the smartest play. But for a fanbase that expects a ring every few years, it feels like a white flag.
The MVP of the First Quarter: Wilyer Abreu’s Breakout
When you look at the Boston Red Sox roster, you expect stars like Rafael Devers or Trevor Story to carry the load. But injuries have decimated the lineup. Devers has been banged up. Story is out for the season. So who has stepped up? The answer is Wilyer Abreu.
Abreu has been the most consistent hitter in a lineup that has been anything but consistent. Let’s look at the numbers:
- Slash Line: .295/.377/.473
- Home Runs: 6
- RBIs: 18
- On-Base Percentage: .377 (elite for a rookie)
For a team that ranks near the bottom of the league in runs scored, Abreu has been a lifeline. He’s not just a platoon bat; he’s hitting lefties and righties with equal authority. His plate discipline has been a revelation. He rarely chases pitches outside the zone, and when he gets a fastball, he punishes it.
Some might argue that Willson Contreras (who has been a steady presence behind the plate) or Aroldis Chapman (whose fastball still touches 103 mph) deserve the MVP nod. Others might point to Connelly Early, a young arm who has flashed brilliance in the bullpen. But consistency wins out. Abreu has been the one player you can count on every single night. Without him, this offense would be unwatchable.
Pitching Woes: The Real Reason Boston Is Below .500
Let’s get real. The Boston Red Sox pitching staff has been a disaster. And that’s being polite. The rotation currently boasts an ERA north of 4.50, which is among the worst in the American League. The bullpen has been slightly better, but not by much.
Here is the breakdown of the key issues:
- Injuries: Lucas Giolito is out for the season. Brayan Bello has been inconsistent. The team is relying on Kutter Crawford and Tanner Houck to eat innings, and while they’ve been serviceable, they are not aces.
- Lack of a true ace: The Red Sox do not have a pitcher who scares opposing lineups. When you’re in a division with the Yankees (Gerrit Cole, when healthy) and the Orioles (Corbin Burnes), that’s a death sentence.
- Bullpen volatility: Aroldis Chapman has been electric (2.08 ERA, 14 K/9), but he’s also walked 10 batters in 13 innings. Kenley Jansen is still effective but not the dominant closer he once was. The middle relief has been a revolving door.
The defense hasn’t helped either. The Red Sox rank in the bottom third of the league in defensive runs saved. Routine plays are becoming adventures. When you combine shaky pitching with porous defense, you get a 17-23 record. It’s not rocket science.
Legit or Fraud? The Verdict on the 2024 Boston Red Sox
So, after 40 games, where do the Boston Red Sox stand? Are they a legitimate playoff contender who is just getting unlucky? Or are they a fraud, a team that will fade into irrelevance by July?
Let’s look at the evidence for both sides.
Arguments for “Legit”:
- The offense is due for positive regression. Devers will get healthy. Abreu is a legitimate Rookie of the Year candidate. The lineup has depth, even if it’s underperforming.
- The schedule gets easier. The Red Sox have faced a gauntlet of tough pitching early. The second quarter of the season includes series against the White Sox, Athletics, and Rockies—teams that are actively tanking.
- The front office might not be done. If the team hovers around .500 by the trade deadline, Breslow could add a starter or a bat. The farm system is deep, and the team has financial flexibility.
Arguments for “Fraud”:
- The pitching is fundamentally broken. You cannot win in the AL East without at least two reliable starters. The Red Sox have zero. Bello, Crawford, and Houck are all #3 or #4 starters on a good team.
- The Cora firing signals a rebuild. When you fire your manager 40 games in, you are not trying to win now. You are auditioning for next year.
- The competition is too strong. The Orioles are loaded. The Yankees are surging. The Rays are always dangerous. The Blue Jays have a better roster. The Red Sox are the fourth or fifth-best team in their own division.
My Expert Prediction:
I’m calling it early: The Boston Red Sox are a fraud—but not in the way you think. They are not a bad team, but they are not a playoff team. They will finish around 75-87 wins, which is good for fourth place in the AL East. The Cora firing will be a turning point, but not for the better. Expect a summer of trade rumors, particularly involving Aroldis Chapman and Kenley Jansen, as the team sells off veterans for prospects.
The one bright spot? Wilyer Abreu will be a cornerstone for the future. If the Red Sox can build around him, Devers, and a revamped pitching staff, 2025 could be a different story. But for 2024? The ship has sailed.
Strong Conclusion: Reality Bites in Boston
There is no sugarcoating it. The Boston Red Sox are in a transitional phase. The 17-23 record is not a fluke, and it is not a sign of bad luck. It is a reflection of a roster that is incomplete, a pitching staff that is thin, and an organization that is prioritizing the future over the present.
The firing of Alex Cora was the final nail in the coffin for any “win-now” illusions. This is a team that will be fun to watch in small doses—Abreu’s at-bats, Chapman’s heat, and the occasional Devers bomb—but it is not a team that will be playing in October.
So, to answer the question: Legit or fraud? The Red Sox are legitimately a rebuilding team. They are a fraud if you thought they were a contender. For the die-hard fans in Boston, the best advice is to enjoy the individual moments, keep an eye on the prospects in the minors, and remember that the Yankees and Orioles will not be this dominant forever. The Red Sox will be back. Just not this year.
Stay tuned for our next installment of “Legit or Fraud?” as we break down the rest of the AL East. Spoiler alert: It’s going to get uglier before it gets better in Beantown.
Source: Based on news from Yahoo Sports.
