Rafael Devers takes stand against Red Sox ownership – How will they respond?
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - JUNE 23: Rafael Devers #11 of the Boston Red Sox tosses his bat after hitting a two-run home run in the fourth inning against the Chicago White Sox at Guaranteed Rate Field on June 23, 2023 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Quinn Harris/Getty Images)
Yesterday, Rafael Devers called out Red Sox ownership.
This is not something to be taken lightly. Its unprecedented. You had an anonymous player talk to Bob Hohler about the misstep of the free headphones during the “Chicken and Beer” story of 2011, you had Dustin Pedroia say to the media “That’s not what we do here” when he was speaking about Bobby Valentine’s public treatment of Kevin Youkilis in 2012, but never has the face of the franchise gone against management/ownership like this since they took over in 2002.
Granted, Devers is bulletproof. He’s making over 31 million dollars a season, and the team can’t afford to trade him with the roster the way it is, so it gives him a lot of freedom to be loose with his language. However, it’s still taking the time to embarrass your bosses in a very public setting the day after the media did the same thing, and less than a week after Pedroia and some of the former players called to complain about the same issues.
Now, we wait to see what the fallout is. The early call here is that it won’t matter too much. Sam Kennedy smiled at all of the writers yesterday who dared discuss this franchise’s plan, and actually offered up the Pedroia story, as if to say that nobody’s opinion matters in this case. He also spoke before Devers did, so God knows when he’ll meet the media again. He and John Henry already ducked the big Winter Wonderland meeting in front of the fans a month ago, so they won’t have to answer for any of this.
No, Sox management will treat Devers like a petulant child who threw a temper tantrum when he had to eat vegetables with his dinner. They’ll pat him on the head, tell him that this season will be good for him, and then gently send him on his way up to his room.
Devers tried. If anyone was going to say it, I’m glad it was him. This should matter.
But it won’t.
Jon Wallach is part of the Toucher & Hardy radio program – Follow Wallach on X/Twitter: @KenGriffeyRules
Mazz: Questions, questions and more questions about the Red Sox
With the Red Sox, there are always questions. This year, there are more – and bigger ones – than usual.
If you’ve read some of these baseball previews before, you know that we subscribe to a pretty simple formula when it comes to predicting the fortunes of the Red Sox (or any team, for that matter) for the coming season: generally speaking, more ifs mean more losses. Given that this is the analytical age when, for whatever reason, people feel the need to control and predict everything – let’s just surgically remove all the entertainment value from sports, shall we? – our formula looks something like this: If = L.
(A word of note: this formula, like all others, will undoubtedly and needlessly increase in complexity over time in hopes of accounting for other variables like Injuries (In), Prospect Integration (PI), Player morale (Pm), Managerial ineptitude (Mi), Weather (We), Faulty expectations (Fe) and others.)
So what does this all mean for the Red Sox? Well, since our offseason plan that was rudely dismissed, Las Vegas odds makers have the Red Sox’ projected win total at 80.5, which seems reasonable given that they have basically been, in aggregate, a .500 team (356-352) for the last four years. The Red Sox haven’t sucked so much as they have been astonishingly average and, well, boring, though average and boring are often synonymous in an American League East that features three or four legitimate playoff contenders. The 2023 Red Sox were the only AL East team to finish with a losing record but will pick a relatively medicore 12th in this year’s annual amateur draft, which is to say they didn’t exactly tank well, either. In fact, during the entire tenure of former general manager Chaim Bloom, the Sox generally failed at contending, tanking or improving the organizational pitching talent that one evaluator recently placed 29th among the 30 major league teams.
So, you want to know what’s wrong with the Red Sox? A lot. And if you’re asking any of the following questions – beginning with the most obvious one – you’re not alone:
Nick Gemelli, the wizard behind the scenes at Toucher & Hardy and a maestro on 985thesportshub.com, kicked off his radio escapade back in 2007 as an intern for Toucher & Rich on WBCN. After navigating through WFNX and the Boston Phoenix, he made a triumphant return to the show in 2016. Hailing from Marshfield but currently holding it down in Tewksbury, Nick’s radio journey is as dynamic as his Twitter feed. Nick writes about what happens on the Toucher & Hardy Show and Boston area lifestyle content.