Red Sox place starting pitcher on injured list
SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - MARCH 29: Nick Pivetta #37 of the Boston Red Sox throws a pitch during the first inning against the Seattle Mariners at T-Mobile Park on March 29, 2024 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Alika Jenner/Getty Images)
After two turns through the starting rotation, the Boston Red Sox have to replace an injured starting pitcher.
The #RedSox today placed RHP Nick Pivetta on the 15-Day Injured List, retroactive to April 6, with a right elbow flexor strain.
To fill Pivetta’s spot on the active roster, the club recalled LHP Brennan Bernardino from Triple-A Worcester.
— Red Sox (@RedSox) April 9, 2024" target="_blank" rel="noopener">The team announced Tuesday that Nick Pivetta is headed to the 15-day injured list with a right elbow flexor strain, retroactive to April 6. The Red Sox recalled lefty Brennan Bernardino from Triple-A Worcester to replace Pivetta on the roster.
MORE: Remembering the 2004 Red Sox
It’s an unfortunate turn of events for Pivetta, who was off to an excellent start in the 2024 season. He was the tough-luck loser in his first outing of the season, taking the L after spinning six strong innings, allowing just one earned run with 10 strikeouts. He won the next time out against the Oakland Athletics, tossing five scoreless.
BALTIMORE, MARYLAND – SEPTEMBER 29: Nick Pivetta #37 of the Boston Red Sox pitches in the fourth inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. (Photo by Greg Fiume/Getty Images)
All in all, Pivetta has a 0.82 ERA, with 13 strikeouts against just one walk in 11 innings.
As for replacing him in the rotation, one of the top candidates is veteran Chase Anderson, who has 200 career starts under his belt. The Red Sox signed the 36-year-old Anderson as a free agent before the season. Bernardino could also be a candidate to take Pivetta’s spot.
Since Pivetta is essentially on the IL for nine days, it’s possible they would only need to replace him for one start. For now, the Red Sox are taking on the Baltimore Orioles in the 2024 home opener at Fenway Park on Tuesday afternoon. We’ll find out in due time how the Red Sox will proceed without Pivetta.
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Matt Dolloff is a writer and podcaster for 985TheSportsHub.com. Any opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect those of 98.5 The Sports Hub, Beasley Media Group, or any subsidiaries. Check out all of Matt’s content.
Mazz: The forgotten game that truly defined Tim Wakefield
Everyone remembers what he did for the Red Sox during the 2004 playoffs, but one of the games that truly defined Wakefield took place during the dog days of 1996.
For nostalgia’s sake, of course, Wakefield taking the bullet during the Sox’ 19-8 loss to the New York Yankees in Game 3 of the 2004 American League Championship Series is the spotlight moment, the Red Sox needing someone to absorb the beating so that they could reset their pitching staff for a historic comeback and World Series championship. No one should ever dispute that. But making a sacrifice at a time when the stakes were highest is, in some ways, more easily understood and accepted because of the potential consequences.
But on July 10, 1996, the enormously disappointing Red Sox were 24-36 when they took the field for a meeting with the White Sox on the south side of Chicago. The Sox were coming off an 11-8 defeat in which they had used five pitchers, and they had lost two straight and 5-of-7. A worn down pitching staff was gasping for air when manager Kevin Kennedy handed the ball to Wakefield, who subsequently allowed the White Sox to score runs in each of the first four innings.
The knuckleball could be unreliable like that.
There were nights when it just wouldn’t cooperate.
Somewhere during that early onslaught, Kennedy – and not the pitching coach – visited Wakefield on the mound for a heartfelt message: I need you to stay out here. After winning the 1995 American League East in surprising fashion – mostly behind the brilliance of Wakefield – the 1996 Red Sox got off to wretched 3-15 start and still had not recovered. Wakefield’s magic, in particular, was gone. The Red Sox were still spinning their wheels by the time they got to Chicago and Kennedy needed Wakefield to sacrifice himself so that the team could try to get some footing.
As would become relatively common over the course of his career, Wakefield gave Kennedy a nod and stayed in the game. He pitched a complete game in an 8-2 Red Sox defeat that felt more like 18-2, and his pitching line was one for the ages: eight innings, 16 hits, eight runs, six earned runs, three walks, zero strikeouts, one home run, 158 pitches and 103 strikes. The pitch total was the third-highest of Wakefield’s career and one of the 34 times during his career that he threw 120 or more pitches in a game. (Wakefield threw 100 or more pitches in 211 career regular season games.)
After the defeat, Wakefield was 4-6 with a 5.80 ERA. He bottomed out about a month later, when he actually recorded a win over the Yankees during which he allowed six runs and 13 hits in an 8-6 victory at Fenway Park that left him with a 6.45 ERA more than halfway through the season.
From that point forward, Wakefield went 10-4 with a 3.83 ERA in his final 14 starts and finished the season with a 14-13 record and 5.14 ERA.
In that way, the entire season was a crystallization of his career: Wakefield made every start; the Red Sox went 18-14 in his 32 outings. He sacrificed. He endured the highs and lows, dips and turns of the knuckleball.
And he showed up five days later prepared to do it all again.
Matt, a North Andover, Massachusetts native, has been with The Sports Hub since 2010. Growing up the son of Boston University All-American and Melrose High School hall-of-fame hockey player Steve Dolloff, sports was always a part of his life. After attending Northeastern University, Matt focused his love of sports on writing, extensively writing about all four major Boston teams. He also is a co-host of the Sports Hub Underground podcast and is a regular on-air contributor on the Sports Hub. Matt writes about all New England sports from Patriots football to Boston Celtics and Boston Bruins.