If we’re going to make early-season assessments of the Red Sox – and we are – then let’s acknowledge that this one has had a little bit of everything, but not enough of anything.
So far, after all, the Red Sox have played 20 games, including 10 at home and 10 on the road, with 10 wins and 10 losses. There have been the requisite good, bag and ugly, which is to say that the Red Sox are pretty much exactly where we thought they would be – in both the middle of the pack in baseball as a whole and at the bottom of the American League East.
Are they horrible? No, But they aren’t good, either.
The injury to Trevor Story has been the defining moment of this Red Sox season so far, but there are two ways to to look at that. The first is that Story’s injury was bad luck. The second is that it exposed a roster construction with nothing behind him at the position – hollow walls, so to speak which has triggered an avalanche of poor defensive play all over the diamond.
If all it took was an injury to Trevor Story for the 2024 Red Sox to start crumbling, well, then they probably weren’t going to accomplish anything in the first place.
Years ago, when Theo Epstein ran the Red Sox and the Sox were hellbent on winning, the team had lofty, simple goals: 90-95 wins per season, the playoffs, above-average play at most every position. But now? It’s hard to find many (any?) sports on the diamond where the Sox are either above average or (heaven forbid) elite, which explains the overall inconsistency and mediocrity as the open a three-game series in Pittsburgh today in Game 21 of the season.
Is it still early? Of course. But based on the personnel, it’s hard to see the Sox improving across the board on some of the play we’ve seen so far.
A position-by-position assessment: