Mazz: For Red Sox, second base is among their first priorities
BOSTON, MA - SEPTEMBER 27: Enmanuel Valdez #47 of the Boston Red Sox blows a bubble with the AL East standings behind him during the ninth inning of their 5-0 loss to the Tampa Bay Rays in their final home game of the season at Fenway Park on September 27, 2023 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo By Winslow Townson/Getty Images)
Well it took a while, but we’ve come to a spot where need is indisputable. And among positional needs, you could argue that second base for the Red Sox should be among their first priorities.
Yes, the Sox need pitching – and also a right-handed power bat for the middle of the lineup to complement Rafael Devers and Triston Casas. But in 2023, second base was a veritable sinkhole, the Red Sox literally using a dozen different players to finish 30th in the majors in defense.
Wait … what? That’s right. Collectively, the Red Sox played the worst defense in baseball at second base in 2023, which is no small thing. Couple with the fact that the Sox were without Trevor Story for more than four months of the season, the Sox had a major league-worst, marshmallow-soft, middle-infield defense for much of the year, which proved costly.
Altogether, did the Sox lose five games because of their defense in 2023? Maybe 10? Or 15? Whatever the number, the math is pretty clear. By simply improving the defense and adding to the starting rotation (the real priority), the Red Sox should be a playoff contender next season.
TORONTO, CANADA – SEPTEMBER 30: Junior Caminero #1 of the Tampa Bay Rays is forced out at second as Whit Merrifield #15 of the Toronto Blue Jays turns the double play to first base in the sixth inning of their MLB game at Rogers Centre on September 30, 2023 in Toronto, Canada. (Photo by Cole Burston/Getty Images)
So how do they fix second base? Good question. The best candidate on the free agent market may be veteran Whit Merrifield, who spent the season with Toronto, will be 35 in January and finished with a .700 OPS. He is also a below-average defender. Whether the Sox would consider that route may depend on the rest of their offseason, but Merrifield is hardly a long-term answer at the position.
As for 2020 first-round selection Nick Yorke, he is, in a word, underwhelming. (He has looked pretty pedestrian in spring training.) Yorke batted .268 with a .785 OPS this year at Double-A, but he lacks athleticism. We’ve proposed moving Trevor Story back to second base as a good option if the Sox find a better market available at shortstop, but that free-agent pool, too, is quite thin.
Certainly, something could open up by trade at either position, but the Sox may need some of those resources for pitching or a power right-handed bat (in center field?) for the middle of the order. Maybe Adalberto Mondesi can play second. Maybe Enmanuel Valdez will get better defensively. Maybe Luis Urias will pan out, But it doesn’t feel like there are any obvious, great choices.
The bottom line? This doesn’t feel like a place to make a major move – at least not yet. But the Sox have to do something. At a minimum, defense feels like a priority. Remember 2021? Jose Iglesias helped at the end of the year. It could be that kind of solution again.
Mazz: The 2024 Red Sox offseason plan
For the Red Sox, if it hasn’t already, the 2024 season begins today. Red Sox president Sam Kennedy and manager/general manager/baseball ops alpha Alex Cora will address the media and begin sifting through the rubble of another lost year. Possibly, team officials may give us some insight into the Red Sox’ offseason plan.
In the interim, we’ll deduce some things on our own.
Over the coming days and weeks, beginning with this overview, we will offer a position-by-position breakdown of where the Red Sox stood in 2023 and where they may be headed in 2024 (and beyond). Starting tomorrow, the plan is to provide a relatively detailed look at every position on the diamond by examining where the Sox stand relative to the other teams in the American League and the entirety of Major League Baseball, all with the hopes of exploring what needs to change – and how quickly.
The good news? If the Sox are willing to spend – and longtime MLB.com correspondent Ian Browne recently sounded confident they will – improvement can come relatively quickly.
One final note: Years ago, during the heyday of owners John Henry and Tom Werner, then-general manager Theo Epstein once suggested that the goal of the Red Sox baseball operation was to have an above average major-leaguer at most every position while being no worse than average at any position. Make sense? With that in mind, we give you an opening look at the State of the Red Sox entering a pivotal offseason in an attempt to decipher the 2024 Red Sox offseason plan.
Tony Massarotti is the co-host of the number 1 afternoon-drive show, Felger & Mazz, on 98.5 The Sports Hub. He is a lifelong Bostonian who has been covering sports in Boston for the last 20 years. Tony worked for the Boston Herald from 1989-2008. He has been twice voted by his peers as the Massachusetts sportswriter of the year (2000, 2008) and has authored five books, including the New York times best-selling memoirs of David Ortiz, entitled “Big Papi.” A graduate of Waltham High School and Tufts University, he lives in the Boston area with his wife, Natalie, and their two sons. Tony is also the host of The Baseball Hour, which airs Monday to Friday 6pm-7pm right before most Red Sox games from April through October. The Baseball Hour offers a full inside look at the Boston Red Sox, the AL East, and all top stories from around the MLB (Major League Baseball).