2025 Boston Red Sox season
2025 Boston Red Sox | ||
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League | American League | |
Division | East | |
Ballpark | Fenway Park | |
City | Boston | |
Record | 33–36 (.478) | |
Owners | John W. Henry (Fenway Sports Group) | |
President | Sam Kennedy | |
Chief baseball officer | Craig Breslow | |
Manager | Alex Cora | |
Television | NESN: Dave O’Brien or Mike Monaco (play-by-play); Lou Merloni, Will Middlebrooks, Kevin Millar (analyst rotation); Jahmai Webster (in-game reporter); Tom Caron or Adam Pellerin (hosts); Jim Rice, Jonathan Papelbon, Lenny DiNardo, Deven Marrero (studio analyst)[1] | |
Radio | WEEI-FM / Boston Red Sox Radio Network: Will Flemming[a]; Sean McDonough, Mike Monaco, Lou Merloni, Will Middlebrooks (rotation) | |
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The 2025 Boston Red Sox season is the ongoing 125th season in Boston Red Sox franchise history, and their 114th season at Fenway Park. Alex Cora is the team's on-field manager, in the fifth season of his second stint in that role. The team opened the regular season in an away game against the Texas Rangers on March 27, and is scheduled to conclude with a home game against the Detroit Tigers on September 28.[2]
Offseason
[edit]
In September 2024, the team announced they would introduce a new "City Connect 2.0" uniform for the 2025 season, while retaining their existing City Connect uniform (yellow and blue) and retiring their blue alternate road jersey, which had been introduced in 2009.[3] As of late November, the team had 10 players under contract for the 2025 season: Brayan Bello, Rafael Devers, Lucas Giolito, Liam Hendriks, Ceddanne Rafaela, Rob Refsnyder, Trevor Story, Garrett Whitlock, Justin Wilson, and Masataka Yoshida.[4]
October–December 2024
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October[edit]
November[edit]
December[edit]
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January–March 2025
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January[edit]
February[edit]
March[edit]
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Spring training
[edit]
"Truck Day", when the team's equipment departs Fenway Park for Florida, was February 3.[60]
The team's first spring training game, an exhibition contest against the Northeastern Huskies at JetBlue Park on February 21, resulted in a 5–2 victory for the Red Sox.[61] The team's Grapefruit League schedule ran from February 22 through March 23,[62][63] during which the Red Sox compiled a 15–12 record.[64]
The Red Sox concluded their spring training with two games in Monterrey, Mexico, played March 24–25 against the Monterrey Sultanes.[65] The Red Sox took both games, winning by scores of 10–1 and 12–8.[66][67]
Regular season
[edit]Opening Day lineup
[edit]Order | No. | Player | Pos. |
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1 | 16 | Jarren Duran | LF |
2 | 11 | Rafael Devers | DH |
3 | 2 | Alex Bregman | 3B |
4 | 36 | Triston Casas | 1B |
5 | 10 | Trevor Story | SS |
6 | 28 | Kristian Campbell | 2B |
7 | 52 | Wilyer Abreu | RF |
8 | 12 | Connor Wong | C |
9 | 3 | Ceddanne Rafaela | CF |
— | 35 | Garrett Crochet | P |
Source:[68]
March/April
[edit] March/April game summaries
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On March 26, manager Alex Cora announced that Rafael Devers will move to the DH position with Alex Bregman becoming the regular third baseman.[69] March 27–30, at Texas Rangers[edit]The Red Sox began the season with a four game series away at the Texas Rangers. The Red Sox won the first game of the series by a score of 5–2. Wilyer Abreu had three hits, two of which were home-runs; Aroldis Chapman earned the win in relief and Justin Slaten got his first save of the season.[70][71][72] The Red Sox lost the second game, 1–4. Tanner Houck gave up the four runs scored by Texas over his 5+2⁄3 innings start, whilst Devers' struck out during all four of his at-bats (making him 0 for 7 with 6 strikeouts to begin the season).[73][74][75] Texas won the third game of the series, 4–3. Walker Buehler gave up the four runs over 4+1⁄3 innings whilst striking out three opponents. Devers' hitting woes continued with three strikeouts and no hits in the game, making him the first big-leaguer with ten strikeouts in three games to open a season. Kristian Campbell hit his first home run as a major league player.[76][77][78] The Rangers then took the series with a 3–2 victory on March 30, a game that saw rookie starter Richard Fitts saddled with the loss despite a decent pitching line (6 innings, 3 earned runs, 6 hits). Fitts gave up just one run through his first five innings before giving up home runs to Wyatt Langford and Adolis García in the sixth. Devers again went hitless and struck out twice. Wilyer Abreu manufactured both Boston runs, both in the sixth inning, hitting an RBI double to score Kristian Campbell and then scoring himself on an error by Texas' Ezequiel Duran.[79][80][81] Red Sox lost the series 1–3 (11–13 runs) March 31–April 3, at Baltimore Orioles[edit]Boston's troubles from their season-opening Texas series carried into the opener in Baltimore. Sean Newcomb, a surprise addition to the roster out of spring training, was jumped on immediately by the Orioles, as Tyler O'Neill (who spent the previous season with Boston) drove in the game's first run, advanced to third on a Jarren Duran error that scored Adley Rutschman, and then scored himself on a two-run Cedric Mullins double that brought home O'Neill and Mountcastle. Trailing 4–0 after one frame, Duran recorded a two-RBI double in the top 2nd, bringing home Romy González and Kristian Campbell. Campbell hit into an RBI ground out in the 3rd, cutting the Baltimore lead to 4–3. Newcomb was pulled after four innings, having given up four earned runs, eight hits, and two walks while striking out two. The Oriole offense quieted until facing reliever Justin Slaten, who gave up four earned runs in the eighth inning; González and Duran added RBIs in the ninth to bring the final tally to 8–5.[82][83][84] As the calendar turned to April, the Red Sox received a day off before the remainder of the Orioles series, and then shut out the Orioles for their second win of the season on April 2. Garrett Crochet twirled a masterful outing in his second Red Sox start, pitching eight innings and striking out eight while only surrendering four hits. Crochet's pitching helped Boston's three runs (Trevor Story's second inning solo home run, his first of the season, followed by a Ceddanne Rafaela RBI single and a Rafael Devers RBI double in the fifth) hold up.[85][86][87] In the series finale, Boston sent Tanner Houck to the bump to oppose Baltimore's Charlie Morton. Sox fans were treated early with a highly anticipated moment: Alex Bregman's first home run as a Red Sox, which came in the opening half-inning and brought home Devers, setting the tone for Boston with an early 2–0 lead. Cedric Mullins homered in the bottom of the 1st to bring the score to 2–1, but Campbell responded with another two-run homer – the second long ball of his young career – in the top of the 2nd. Triston Casas hit his first home run of the season in the seventh inning. Houck's final line was four innings pitched, three earned runs, five hits, and six strikeouts, not quite good enough for the decision, which went to reliever Zack Kelly, who became the pitcher of record in an 8–4 Boston victory and a 2–1 series win for the Red Sox heading into their home opener against the St. Louis Cardinals.[88][89][90] Red Sox won the series 2–1 (16–12 runs) April 4–6, vs. St. Louis Cardinals[edit]The Red Sox delighted their home fans with a high-scoring 13–9 victory on Friday, April 4 in their home opener against St. Louis. Boston sent Walker Buehler to the mound for his second start in a Red Sox uniform, and he surrendered five earned runs and seven hits in five innings of work. However, Buehler was able to take home the win thanks to immediate run support from Boston, as the Sox plated five runs in the bottom of the 1st, with Alex Bregman hitting an RBI double, Trevor Story hitting his third home run of the season (a three-run blast), immediately followed by Wilyer Abreu cracking his second long ball of the year, bringing the score to 5–0. St. Louis's offense got going in the 3rd and 4th innings, with a three-run top of the 4th bringing the score to 6–5 in favor of the Red Sox. Boston replied, however, with a two-run bottom half of the inning. The Red Sox bats got hot again in the 7th with a three-run frame that included RBIs from Ceddanne Rafaela, Rafael Devers, and Jarren Duran, before adding on two more runs in the 8th with an Abreu RBI groundout and a Carlos Narváez double. Leading 13–6, the contest seemed decided before the Cardinals added three runs of their own in the top of the ninth to cut the Boston lead to four, which necessitated bringing in closer Aroldis Chapman. Chapman shut down the St. Louis rally over 2⁄3 IP to secure the win.[91][92][93] The scheduled Saturday game between the two teams was delayed due to rain, and was to be made up on Sunday as part of a day-night doubleheader.[94] In the afternoon game on Sunday, the makeup game for Saturday's rainout, Sean Newcomb took the hill for Boston, opposing Andre Pallante. Newcomb authored a statline of one earned run, six hits, and four strikeouts across 4+2⁄3 innings. St. Louis drew first blood with a run in the top of the 4th but was immediately answered by David Hamilton singling in Rob Refsnyder for the Red Sox in the bottom half of the inning. Rafael Devers continued to climb out of his slump with a solo homer in the 5th, but the Cardinals scratched out three unanswered runs off the bat of Pedro Pagés, who hit an RBI double in the top 6th and a 2-RBI double in the 8th. Meanwhile, with both starting pitchers gone, the Cardinal bullpen was keeping Boston off the scoreboard. The Sox' fortunes would turn in the bottom of the 9th, however. Trailing 4–2, Boston forced extra innings thanks to a Romy González RBI double and a Devers walk with the bases loaded, which tied the contest. Aroldis Chapman kept St. Louis off the scoresheet in the top of the 10th, paving way for the Sox to load the bases in the bottom half of the inning, where a familiar hero came through yet again: Wilyer Abreu. Abreu unloaded on a Ryan Fernandez pitch with the bases loaded, nearly clearing the Green Monster for a grand slam, but even though Abreu missed a long ball, the resulting RBI single was more than enough to bring home Alex Bregman and claim a 5–4 comeback win.[95][96][97] Hunter Dobbins made his MLB debut when he started in the nightcap and final game of the series. With his parents in attendance, Dobbins fanned five batters and allowed two runs across five innings of work. The story of the series finale, however, was Boston's bats, especially those of Bregman and Devers. Bregman further endeared himself to the Fenway faithful with 6 RBIs and 4 hits in 5 at-bats, including a 3-run double in the 2nd and a 3-run home run in the 3rd. Devers was a perfect 4-for-4, driving home 3 runs and scoring 4 of his own. Boston led St. Louis 10–1 after just three innings, and all told, manufactured 18 runs in total as part of an 18–7 victory to clinch the series sweep. Cooper Criswell, who pitched the final three innings of the game, was credited with his first save of the season.[98][99][100] Red Sox won the series 3–0 (36–20 runs) April 7–10, vs. Toronto Blue Jays[edit]The Red Sox dropped the opener of this four-game series, 6–2, ending their five-game winning streak with a loss to the José Berríos-led Jays on a chilly (37 °F (3 °C) at first pitch) and misty night at Fenway Park. Richard Fitts, opposing Berríos, dropped to 0–2 on the season despite a respectable six-inning, four-strikeout outing in which the youngster surrendered three runs. Berríos outdueled Fitts, however, allowing just one run across seven innings of work. George Springer led the charge offensively for Toronto with three separate RBI singles in the 2nd, 5th, and 7th innings, while Boston's offense was held to a Rafael Devers RBI sacrifice fly in the 2nd and a Triston Casas RBI single in the 8th. The Monday loss carried a lack of offense from Boston that marked a sharp departure from their 36-run series against St. Louis over the weekend.[101][102][103] Boston fell back to a .500 winning percentage with a 6–1 defeat at the hands of the Blue Jays in the second game of the series. The Red Sox sent Garrett Crochet to the mound for his third start in a Red Sox uniform, and he dueled with Toronto's Easton Lucas. Crochet and Lucas kept the scoreboard full of zeroes through the first five innings of the game, but the Jays broke through in the top 6th when Springer homered. Although Crochet held Toronto to two runs (one earned) through 5+2⁄3 innings, with two outs in the 6th, Crochet was the victim of a Bregman error and a Kristian Campbell error, and Crochet also walked two batters. With things unraveling, Crochet was replaced in favor of reliever Zack Kelly, who promptly gave up a 2-RBI single from Bo Bichette before mercifully retiring Vladimir Guerrero Jr. Now trailing 4–0, the Toronto bullpen continued to keep Boston's bats at bay. The Sox scratched out a run in the bottom 7th with a Ceddanne Rafaela RBI single. Bichette and Anthony Santander drove in two more runs in the top 8th to put the game out of reach, and Crochet was saddled with the loss, bringing his record to 1–1 across three starts.[104][105][106] The Red Sox fell below .500 with an extra-innings loss in the third game of the series, officially losing the Toronto slate regardless of the result of the fourth game. Game three was a pitcher's duel between the Sox' Tanner Houck and the Blue Jays' Kevin Gausman. While the contest had offense early, with both teams scoring once in the first (Will Wagner hitting into an RBI ground out for Toronto followed by Bregman belting a sacrifice fly), the 1–1 score remained until the eleventh, when Bichette's own RBI sac fly brought home Ernie Clement, who proved to be the winning run in the 2–1 Toronto victory. Though Houck allowed only the one run with five hits and struck out two batters in 6+2⁄3 innings, Gausman reeled off eight innings of work and punched out ten Red Sox hitters; Kristian Campbell showed signs of his newness by striking out thrice. Neither Houck nor Gausman factored into the final decisions; Josh Winckowski was charged with the loss for Boston, while Toronto's Jeff Hoffman and Nick Sandlin earned the win and a save, respectively.[107][108][109] Boston salvaged the final contest of the series and avoided the four-game sweep with a 4–3 extra-inning win in the Thursday afternoon getaway game. Walker Buehler opposed Chris Bassitt in yet another game where early offense was lacking; in 6+1⁄3 innings, Buehler gave up just one run and four hits while punching out seven Blue Jays, and Bassitt allowed one run and five hits in 5+2⁄3 while striking out five Red Sox. Boston got on the board first, when Bregman singled home Jarren Duran in the bottom 6th. Toronto responded quickly, though, with Tyler Heineman's RBI single tying the game before a Trevor Story error allowed Myles Straw to score, giving the Blue Jays a 2–1 lead. In the bottom 8th, Rob Refsnyder scampered home on a wild pitch to even the score at 2–2, and neither side scored in the 9th, sending a second straight game to extra frames. In the top of the 10th, the Jays retook the lead when Springer scored Andrés Giménez on a sacrifice fly. In the bottom half, Boston tied the game when backup catcher Blake Sabol scored on a Duran RBI single, and later in the inning, Story turned the tables on his earlier error by hitting into a defensive miscue himself: Giménez failed to field Story's infield roller cleanly, allowing David Hamilton to score, which was enough to send the Red Sox to Chicago in a happier mood with a 4–3 victory. An interesting footnote from this contest involves Boston Celtics guard Derrick White, who threw out the ceremonial first pitch – White also threw out the first pitch, along with other members of the 2024 championship Celtics, on June 24, 2024, prior to a game, also against Toronto, that also ended in walk-off fashion.[110][111][112] Red Sox lost the series 1–3 (8–17 runs) April 11–13, at Chicago White Sox[edit]The Red Sox opened this weekend series against the White Sox looking to build on momentum from their walk-off win against Toronto, but Chicago had other plans. Sean Newcomb took the hill for Boston alongside Davis Martin, and while Martin twirled six innings of one-run ball with six strikeouts, Newcomb struggled. In just four innings of work, Newcomb surrendered six runs, although only two of them were earned runs owing to a parade of Red Sox defensive errors – five in total, the Red Sox' first five-error outing since August 2021. Chicago's offensive onslaught started innocently enough: with two on in the bottom 2nd, Jacob Amaya hit a 2-RBI double. It was in the bottom 4th that the White Sox broke the game open. Miguel Vargas doubled to score Omar Narváez and Chase Meidroth; Luis Robert singled up the middle to score Vargas; and Lenyn Sosa singled to right field to score Robert. The four-run ChiSox frame made the score 6–0, and, with Newcomb now out of the contest, the White Sox added another in the 5th when Nárvaez belted a sacrifice fly to drive in Michael A. Taylor. Narváez struck again in the 7th, this time with a 2-RBI single that brought home Taylor and Brooks Baldwin. Up 9–1, Chicago made its humiliation of the Red Sox complete in the 8th with a two-run inning (RBIs from Sosa and Baldwin) to take an 11–1 lead, paving the way for a ten-run margin of victory. Boston's only run of the game came off the bat of Blake Sabol in the top 7th; Sabol's sac fly scored Wilyer Abreu. Newcomb took the loss for the BoSox, while the ChiSox win was credited to Martin. The Red Sox' defeat ended an eight-game winless streak for Chicago.[113][114][115] Boston dispatched Richard Fitts to the bump for game two, opposing Chicago's Martín Pérez. Fitts had a fine outing in a five-inning start, allowing no runs and just two hits while striking out five White Sox. Pérez, meanwhile, held the Red Sox scoreless through four innings, but Boston broke through in the top 5th with a Ceddanne Rafaela triple that scored Narváez. Romy González singled to bring in Rafaela, giving Boston a 2–0 lead, but that was all the offense the Red Sox would be good for on this day. The White Sox, meanwhile, answered Boston's offense in the bottom of the 6th against reliever Zack Kelly, when Robert homered to center field to score Vargas and himself. With the game tied 2–2, both bullpens kept the contest tied until the bottom 9th, when closer Aroldis Chapman came in to force extra innings and failed, walking Robert and allowing him to steal second base with Baldwin at bat. Baldwin then hit an RBI single for the walk-off game-winning run, a 3–2 final. The White Sox took only their fourth win of the season and the Red Sox allowed Chicago their first series of the season in which they would win more than one game. Boston fell to 7–9 on the season, having lost five of their last six games.[116][117][118] The Red Sox again salvaged the final game of the series, this time thanks to a masterful outing from Garrett Crochet, who showed little mercy in his first start against the team that traded him to Boston. Crochet struck out eleven ChiSox batters and threw a no-hitter through 7+1⁄3 innings. Crochet was pulled only after giving up a hit to Chase Meidroth, who was included in the Red Sox–White Sox deal for Crochet. The Mississippi native's final line was one run (one earned) and just one hit and one walk through 7+1⁄3 innings pitched. With Crochet stifling Chicago's offense, he didn’t need much in the way of run support, and Trevor Story provided all of it. Story doubled in the top 6th to score Wilyer Abreu and Alex Bregman, and then hit a solo home run in the top 9th. Chapman earned his third save of the season to shut the door on the White Sox for a 3–1 Boston victory.[119][120][121] Red Sox lost the series 1–2 (6–15 runs) April 14–16, at Tampa Bay Rays[edit]Boston opened their road series at Tampa Bay's temporary home of George M. Steinbrenner Field and were greeted with yet another series-opening loss, this one a 16–1 humiliation. Tanner Houck started for the Red Sox and was instantly shaky, giving up a Yandy Díaz long ball in the 1st inning for a 1–0 Rays lead. Houck then allowed four runs in the 2nd: a 2–run home run off the bat of Kameron Misner and a 2-RBI Brandon Lowe single. Boston got one back in the top of the 3rd when Kristian Campbell sent a Shane Baz pitch out to left field for a solo homer, but the rookie's knock was all the offense the Sox would be good for, and their worst inning was yet to come. Houck melted completely in the bottom half of the inning, a nine-run onslaught suffered by Houck and reliever Michael Fulmer, who relieved the embattled starter with only one out in the inning. Tampa hit no home runs in the inning, but benefited from an official scorer's delight of different scoring options: two force outs that produced a total of three runs (one off an Alex Bregman error), three RBI singles and two 2-RBI doubles. With Houck out of the game, he was forced to confront a disastrous scoreline: 10 hits and 12 runs, 11 of them earned, across just 2+1⁄3 innings of work. Houck struck out only one batter, walked two Rays and gave up two home runs. Perhaps the worst part of the 14–1 Rays lead is that they weren't done: a Junior Caminero solo home run in the 4th and a second Misner long ball in the 8th furthered Boston's misery. Although a comeback from such a profound thrashing would have been unlikely, Tampa Bay's starter Baz didn't help matters, fanning 11 Red Sox hitters and allowing just one run and two hits across a 6-inning outing. The loss dropped Boston to 8–10.[122][123][124] Looking to put their 16–1 beating behind them, the Red Sox needed some big performances – and they got one from Alex Bregman, who provided the first 5-hit and 5-for-5 game of his career in the middle contest against Tampa Bay. Bregman homered to score Rafael Devers and himself in the top of the 1st to get Boston going early against Rays starter Ryan Pepiot. Jarren Duran took Pepiot deep for a solo shot in the top 2nd to get the Sox out to a 3–0 advantage. Bregman's and Duran's blasts were summarily answered by Jonathan Aranda's home run to center field, but Bregman humbled Pepiot again in the top of the 3rd with his second homer of the game. Later in the inning, Ceddanne Rafaela's shallow right-field single drove in Wilyer Abreu for a 5–1 Boston lead. Batting in the top 4th, Bregman struck again with an RBI double to score Duran. The Rays' Misner scored Caminero in the bottom of the frame to draw Tampa Bay to within four runs, but, following two scoreless innings from both sides, Bregman crushed a third home run in the top 7th, this time a solo blast to center off reliever Hunter Bigge. Down 7–2, Tampa Bay started a rally in the bottom of the 9th, with Taylor Walls and Yandy Díaz providing RBIs to pull the Rays within three runs. Now in a save situation, Aroldis Chapman relieved Zack Kelly for the final out and the save to seal a 7–4 Red Sox win. Starter Walker Buehler provided a solid pitching performance for Boston, as he improved to 2–1 on the season after twirling a 2-run, 3-walk, 3-strikeout outing in five innings of work.[125][126][127] The Red Sox held the Rays to just five hits as they made one run stand up in a 1–0 victory in Game 3, taking the series 2–1. Boston sent Sean Newcomb to the hill as he looked to rebound from his shaky start against Chicago on April 11, a game that culminated in an 11–1 defeat. The Middleborough native was much steadier this time around, allowing four hits but no runs and fanning four Tampa Bay batters in 4+2⁄3 innings of work. However, it was reliever Greg Weissert who was charged with the win after he entered for Newcomb and pitched 1+1⁄3 and struck out three Rays. Weissert was one of three bullpen arms used in this game, and none of them disappointed: Garrett Whitlock suppressed Tampa Bay for two innings, setting up Justin Slaten, who converted a two-strikeout save, his second of the season. All told, Boston's bullpen allowed just one hit and retired thirteen of the last fourteen Rays batters. The single run scored by the Sox belonged to David Hamilton, who lasered a ball into a line-drive solo home run over the right field fence in the top of the 3rd inning. Tampa Bay's Zack Littell surrendered only five hits and the Hamilton blast across six innings of work, but the Red Sox prevailed in this pitching duel.[128][129][130] Red Sox won the series 2–1 (9–20 runs) April 18–21, vs. Chicago White Sox[edit]The Red Sox returned to Fenway and opened their traditional Patriots' Day four-game weekend series with another showdown against the Chicago White Sox, who had surprised Boston with a 2–1 series victory the previous weekend. The BoSox jumped on the ChiSox right out of the gate in Game One, with Trevor Story cracking a home run to center field to give Boston an early 3–0 lead after the first inning. In the bottom 3rd, Boston expanded their lead with a Rob Refsnyder RBI double that scored Story. Former Red Sox Andrew Benintendi replied for Chicago in the top 4th, belting a solo shot to right, but in the bottom half of the inning Ceddanne Rafaela answered back, his home run to left field scoring himself and Carlos Narváez, putting the Red Sox in front 6–1. Chicago plated one run in the 6th to pull within four, but Story put the game out of reach in the bottom 7th with his second home run of the game, another three-run long ball that scored Alex Bregman and Rafael Devers along with himself to put Boston ahead 9–2. Nárvaez kept the home run party going with a solo bomb of his own – his first career major league home run – in the bottom 8th to give the Red Sox double digits. Brooks Baldwin's RBI single in the top of the 9th put the final scoreline at 10–3, a seven-run Boston margin for their third consecutive victory. Hunter Dobbins improved to 2–0 on the mound for the Red Sox, striking out six ChiSox in six innings pitched and allowing just two runs and three hits. Chicago's Martín Pérez was charged with the loss, only going three innings and allowing four runs on five hits with two walks and no strikeouts.[131][132][133] Saturday was Garrett Crochet day again for the Red Sox, as Boston sent their talented new pitcher to the mound for his second start of the season against his former team. Crochet was again sterling – he earned whiffs from seven Chicago hitters and allowed four hits (no runs) across six innings of work. However, the Mississippi native wouldn't earn the decision against the White Sox. In the bottom of the fifth inning, Devers broke a scoreless tie with his second home run of the season, a three-run blast to center field that brought home Rafaela and Jarren Duran. In the top of the 7th inning, with the Boston bullpen now in charge, the White Sox strung together three runs of their own: Chase Meidroth singled to center field to score Josh Palacios, and Luis Robert cracked a two-run home run over the Green Monster, scoring Meidroth and himself, tying the game. All three ChiSox runs in the seventh were charged to Greg Weissert. In the bottom of the 9th, the Red Sox appeared to be on the verge of the victory against Chicago's Jordan Leasure, who intentionally walked Devers to pitch to Bregman. However, Leasure struck out Bregman to force extra innings. In the 10th, Chicago began the frame with the benefit of a ghost runner at second base, but Garrett Whitlock fanned two White Sox hitters. In the bottom of the 10th, Bregman was placed on second as Boston's ghost runner; with one out, Wilyer Abreu was intentionally walked by Chicago's Mike Vasil, and Vasil then walked Kristian Campbell, sending Bregman over to third. Triston Casas then hit a long fly ball off the top of the Green Monster, and Bregman casually jogged home to provide the winning run in this 4–3 BoSox victory. Whitlock was credited with the win, Vasil with the loss, and Chicago starter Shane Smith earned a no-decision after a 3-run, 4-hit, 3-strikeout, 1-walk performance in 4+2⁄3 innings.[134][135][136] Tanner Houck was the starting pitcher for the Red Sox in the Sunday afternoon tilt. Houck immediately ran into trouble when he gave up a 2-run Matt Thaiss long ball in the top 1st. Afterwards, though, Houck settled, ultimately striking out 7 ChiSox hitters and allowing just three hits in six innings pitched. However, like Crochet on Saturday, Houck would not prove to be the pitcher of record for Boston. The Red Sox responded to the Thaiss homer with an Abreu bomb in the bottom 1st, a 3-run shot that brought home Bregman and Devers. In the bottom 2nd, Duran brought home backup catcher Blake Sabol with an RBI single. This is where the scoring for Boston would end, however. With the score at 4–2 Red Sox, the two sides settled in for four straight innings (3rd–6th) of scoreless baseball, until Chicago struck in the 7th against the Sox' Zack Kelly. Brooks Baldwin deftly placed a sacrifice bunt down, scoring Lenyn Sosa, bringing Chicago to within one. Edgar Quero then brought home two runs with a 2-RBI single to shallow center field. Palacios and Miguel Vargas crossed home plate as the tying and go-ahead runs. Now up 5–4, the White Sox kept the momentum going in the top 8th when Andrew Vaughn homered to center field against Liam Hendriks, who was making his first appearance in a Red Sox uniform after a nearly two-year absence since beating non-Hodgkin lymphoma and undergoing Tommy John surgery for an elbow injury. Hendriks gave up another run in the top 9th, hitting Thaiss with a pitch with the bases loaded, which forced Baldwin home for the final run in an 8–4 Chicago victory. Kelly was charged with the loss while Brandon Eisert picked up the win out of the bullpen for the ChiSox.[137][138][139][140] The Red Sox closed out this four-game series with a 4–2 victory in their traditional 11:05 a.m. start on the Patriots' Day holiday. Boston sent Walker Buehler to the bump, and the former Dodger twirled seven innings of four-hit, one-run ball while fanning nine White Sox hitters and walking three. Behind this strong outing from Buehler (who improved to 3–1), the Boston offense didn't need to do much. Though Chicago struck first with a Quero RBI single in the top 1st, Rob Refsnyder answered in the bottom 2nd with a solo shot over the Monster off of Jonathan Cannon to tie the game. Story singled to center field to score Duran in the bottom 3rd, and both Story and Bregman scored on a 2-RBI single to right field by Kristian Campbell. Now up 4–1, this was all the offense the Red Sox would need to produce. In the top 8th, Andrew Benintendi stroked an Aroldis Chapman pitch to right field to make it a two-run contest, but Justin Slaten shut the door on the White Sox in the 9th, hurling a one-two-three inning to earn his fourth save of the year and give the Red Sox a 3–1 series victory.[141][142][143] Red Sox won the series 3–1 (22–16 runs) April 22–24, vs. Seattle Mariners[edit]The Mariners came to Fenway Park and placed Bryce Miller on the mound to oppose Boston's Brayan Bello, who returned from the 15-day injured list to make his first start of the season. While he pitched just 5 innings, Bello showed little signs of rust, posting a one-run, four-hit, three-strikeout scoreline. The lone run Bello surrendered was a Jorge Polanco solo homer to center field in the top 1st. Rafael Devers summarily answered the Polanco long ball with an RBI sac fly in the bottom 1st that scored Jarren Duran. In the 3rd, the Sox took the lead on another timely hit from Alex Bregman, who doubled to left to score Ceddanne Rafaela. In the bottom 5th, Bregman scored again, putting the Red Sox up by three with a 2-RBI double to deep center that scored Devers and Rafaela. Seattle inched to within a run in the top of the 6th, as J. P. Crawford's center field single scored two Mariners. In the bottom 7th, however, Boston would break the game open. A four-run inning began with Triston Casas's second home run of the season – Casas stroked a pitch from Trent Thornton over the center field wall to score three runs, bringing home Kristian Campbell and Wilyer Abreu along with himself. Duran provided additional insurance later in the inning when he singled and then advanced to second base on an error, scoring Carlos Narváez. The back end of the bullpen was lights out for Boston, as the Red Sox benefited from two shutout innings from Garrett Whitlock and a shutout top of the 9th from Liam Hendriks, who shut the door on the Mariners for an 8–3 victory. Although not an official save situation, Hendriks' one-two-three 9th was a nice rebound from his shaky first outing in his return from Tommy John surgery. Bello (1–0) was credited with the win and Miller (1–3) with the loss.[144][145][146] After winning six of seven games, the Red Sox were handed an 8–5 loss in the second game of the series against Seattle. Sean Newcomb's struggles continued – though he struck out eight Mariner batters in his five innings pitched, the Massachusetts native also allowed eight hits and four earned runs, walking two. Mitch Garver's RBI single in the top 1st got things going for the Mariners, and while Newcomb held Seattle scoreless in the 2nd and 3rd, Crawford took Newcomb deep for a 3-run bomb to center field in the top 4th, putting Boston in a 4–0 hole. Romy González provided the first Red Sox run in the bottom half of the inning when his single to right field scored Trevor Story. In the 5th, Devers hit into an RBI ground out that scored Rafaela, cutting the Seattle lead in half. The Mariners would strike for two runs apiece in the top 6th and top 7th, however. In the 6th, a throwing error and a fielding error from Sox reliever Brennan Bernardino allowed Dylan Moore to reach base and then advance to second, which scored Leo Rivas. Moore then scampered home himself when Crawford singled to left. In the 7th, Josh Winckowski was held responsible for the continued Mariner onslaught, as Ben Williamson singled to right field to score Randy Arozarena, and Crawford's single brought in Rowdy Tellez for his fourth RBI of the game. Now up 8–2, Boston did attempt a comeback, drawing to within three runs in the bottom of the 8th when Casas homered to right with two men (Bregman and Devers) on, making the score 8–5 at a stroke. Seattle closer Andrés Muñoz shut the Sox down in the 9th, however, for his eighth save of the season, leveling this series at a game apiece. The Mariners' starter was Emerson Hancock, who struck out seven Red Sox and allowed two runs and six hits over six innings.[147][148][149] With Garrett Crochet becoming a burgeoning ace for Boston, hopes were high heading into the rubber game of the series. However, the Mariners would find Crochet's weak spots on this day, tagging him for four earned runs in five hits and five walks – which was all the offense Seattle needed in their 4–3 win. The M's got to Crochet early, Garver belting a pitch to deep center field for a 2-RBI double in the top of the 1st, scoring Arozarena and Moore. The Red Sox got a run back quickly in the bottom of the 1st, as Bregman took Seattle starter Bryan Woo deep for a solo shot to center, halving the Mariner lead. Up 2–1, however, Seattle continued to expose Crochet in the 2nd, with Moore carrying a fly ball deep enough to score Williamson. Rodríguez then scored Leo Rivas on an RBI ground out, putting the Mariners up 4–1. To Crochet's credit, he recovered for the rest of his outing, striking out nine Seattle hitters in total through five innings of work. But the damage had been done, and Woo was simply better, lasting six frames and only giving up two Boston runs and three hits while fanning eight Red Sox. Bregman struck again for the Red Sox in the bottom of the 3rd, driving in Duran. Narváez pulled the Sox to within a run in the 8th with his second home run of the season, a crack to right field off of Seattle reliever Gabe Speier. However, Muñoz was again effective in a save situation, striking out two Sox to shut the door on a 4–3 Mariners victory and a 2–1 series win for Seattle, with the Red Sox hoping to regroup as they head out on the road.[150][151][152] Red Sox lost the series 1–2 (15–16 runs) April 25–27, at Cleveland Guardians[edit]The first game of this three-game series, scheduled for Friday night, was rained out and would be made up on Saturday as part of a day-night doubleheader.[153] With a two-game slate on Saturday, Boston split the doubleheader, dropping the afternoon game by a score of 5–4 for their third straight loss, but then rebounding with a 7–3 victory in the nightcap. Tanner Houck was the afternoon starter. Through five innings pitched, Houck fanned six Cleveland batters but otherwise struggled to contain the Guardians, who tagged him for eight hits and a walk to manufacture four runs, all of them earned for Houck. Wilyer Abreu had gotten the game off to an excellent start for Boston, his home run off Ben Lively in the top 1st bringing home Trevor Story and Alex Bregman to make the score 3–0 at a stroke. Cleveland, however, responded by pummeling Houck in the bottom half of the inning. José Ramírez singled in Steven Kwan, Carlos Santana hit a sac fly to score Nolan Jones, Gabriel Arias singled home Ramírez, and Daniel Schneemann drove home Arias. All of a sudden, Cleveland held a 4–3 advantage. In the top 3rd, Rafael Devers took Lively deep for another long ball, this one a solo shot to right, knotting the game at 4–4. The winning run came in the 6th, with Houck having been relieved by Brennan Bernardino. Bernardino immediately fumbled by hitting pinch hitter Will Wilson with a pitch, and then allowing a single and a sacrifice bunt to discreetly advance Wilson to third base. Wilson then jogged home easily to score what would prove to be the game-winning run when Kwan singled to shortstop. Despite Houck's four earned runs, Bernardino was charged with the loss thanks to giving up the winning run. Boston's bullpen was strong enough from that point on, but so was Cleveland's, with reliever Tim Herrin earning the win and Cade Smith slamming the door on the Sox for his third save of the season. Boston only manufactured two base guys from innings four through nine.[154][155][156] In the evening tilt, the Red Sox sent Walker Buehler to the bump in hopes he could further improve his 3–1 record in his first year in a Boston uniform. Buehler looked a little shaky, surrendering seven hits through six innings of work and allowing three earned runs, but the former Dodger kept the wheels on the bus enough to pick up his fourth victory of the year, backed up by Boston's offense and the Sox bullpen (a coalition of Justin Wilson, Justin Slaten and Aroldis Chapman allowed no hits and just one baserunner). As for the Red Sox offense, they again got things going early, Trevor Story singling home Devers in the top 1st. In the top 2nd, the Red Sox put their foot on the gas against Guardians starter Doug Nikhazy, with Duran singling to center to score Kristian Campbell; Devers placing a ball in deep left center to score Duran; and Rob Refsnyder drawing a bases loaded walk, which forced Devers to waltz home. The Red Sox, and Duran in particular, weren't finished yet, coming right back in the top of the 3rd with a triple to right field to score Carlos Narváez. Then, with Devers at the plate, Duran stole home while Nikhazy was still beginning his pitching motion. The Red Sox now led, 6–0. However, insurance runs would be called for after the bottom of the 4th, when Cleveland's Ángel Martínez and Jhonkensy Noel provided an RBI single and a 2-run home run, respectively, to make the score 6–3. Bregman put the Red Sox ahead for good in the top 6th, as Duran scored another run on his shallow infield single. Leading 7–3, Boston took the second game from the Guards in relative comfort after that, setting up a rubber game on Sunday afternoon to determine the series winner.[157][158][159] The Red Sox' bats were flaming in the third and final game of the series, and were efficient in their scoring, as Boston plated 13 runs on the Guardians in 15 hits, an output that included a 5-run 5th inning. Brayan Bello twirled six innings of six-hit, three-run ball, keeping Cleveland scoreless through the first five frames, to earn his second victory of the season, while Guardians starter Logan Allen lasted only 4+1⁄3 innings, surrendering nine hits and being tagged for seven earned runs. Ceddanne Rafaela stitched together an RBI sac fly, an RBI double, and a 3-run home run off reliever Jake Junis for a 5-RBI output on the afternoon, and Duran went 4-for-6 with an RBI. For the second straight game, a Boston player stole home, this time Romy González in the top 5th. González benefited from a distracted Allen, who was trying to contain Kristian Campbell on the basepaths. All told, the Guardians only manufactured three runs, all of them coming off of a Nolan Jones 3-run long ball in the bottom of the 6th. With a 13–3 victory, the Red Sox took the Cleveland series with two straight wins after a close loss in the opener.[160][161][162] Boston's big offensive day on Sunday was marred, however, by an incident in the 7th inning involving a fan at Progressive Field. With Jarren Duran within earshot, the fan heckled Duran regarding a prior mental health struggle. The fan was summarily ejected from the game and removed from the premises, and the Guardians released a statement apologizing to Duran and the Red Sox as a whole.[163][164][165] Red Sox won the series 2–1 (24–11 runs) April 29–30, at Toronto Blue Jays[edit]The Red Sox opened a three-game series north of the border, their second of the season against their AL East rivals, with another offensive outburst. Boston's bats connected for five home runs, all of them coming in the opening three innings of the game, overwhelming Toronto starter Bowden Francis (three innings pitched, seven earned runs, eight hits, one strikeout). In the top 1st, Jarren Duran took Francis deep to right field on a solo home run, and Alex Bregman added a solo bomb of his own to left. In the 2nd, Kristian Campbell fired a Francis pitch into the bleachers, and in the top 3rd, Rafael Devers smashed his fifth home run, another solo homer. The Red Sox only led 4–0, however, as all of their home runs had been solo home runs. Fortunately, Boston broke that trend when both Bregman and Trevor Story singled, setting up a 3-run blast from Wilyer Abreu, who continued to be a revelation at the plate for the Red Sox with his sixth home run of the season. Francis was removed after being shelled over the opening three frames. Now up 7–0, Boston went scoreless for the next four innings, but thankfully, Garrett Crochet was twirling yet another sterling performance, striking out four Blue Jays and allowing just two runs and four hits across seven innings of work. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. mustered Toronto's only runs of the game in the bottom 3rd, when he took Crochet deep with Bo Bichette on base for a two-run blast. At this point, Boston rode the coattails of their 7–2 margin a big, but they showed pop in their bats again late in the game. In the top 8th, Duran hit into an RBI ground out that scored Ceddanne Rafaela. In the top 9th, with Bregman on base, Campbell struck again with a left-field double off of Jays reliever Casey Lawrence. Lawrence was also tagged with a Triston Casas RBI ground out that scored Abreu, sending the Boston output into double digits. Luis Guerrero and Brennan Bernardino followed Crochet's outing with an inning each of hitless ball to shut the door on the Jays in the opener of this series at Rogers Centre.[166][167][168] The middle game of this series was a dispiriting one for the Red Sox, who squandered a 6–0 lead to lose 7–6 in ten innings. Lucas Giolito made his long-awaited first start in a Boston uniform and his first since 2023. Giolito lived up to the hype for most of his outing, as he fanned seven Blue Jays hitters and lasted six innings while receiving run support early. Devers doubled, advanced to third base on a wild pitch, and scored on a balk from Jays starter Yariel Rodríguez, and Bregman rattled Rodríguez further with a solo home run. In the top 2nd, Boston added two more runs courtesy of a Duran RBI single to score Rafaela and a Devers RBI double to score Duran. The Sox went scoreless in innings three through five, but Giolito kept putting zeroes on the board, and Boston took a 6–0 lead in the top 6th when Carlos Narváez's 2-run blast also brought home Rafaela. Unfortunately, this was the last of the positive developments for Boston. In the bottom half of the frame, Giolito began to unravel, allowing two home runs – a 2-run bomb from Daulton Varsho and a solo shot from Alejandro Kirk. With their lead cut in half, the Red Sox dispatched Giolito before the start of the 7th, ending with a line of just five hits but also three runs, all of them earned. Garrett Whitlock emerged from the bullpen in the bottom 7th and fell victim to a third Toronto long ball, this one courtesy of Anthony Santander, who stroked a Whitlock pitch to right field for a 3-run home run with Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and Ernie Clement on base. In the 8th and 9th innings, Boston's pitching recovered, as Whitlock hurled a scoreless 8th and Aroldis Chapman volunteered a scoreless 9th, but Jays relievers Brendon Little and Jeff Hoffman (the eventual winning pitcher) also kept the Sox off the board in these innings. Deadlocked at 6–6 after nine, extra innings commenced with Boston placing Devers on second as their ghost runner. Hoffman delivered a one-two-three frame, however, which included strikeouts of Bregman and Abreu. In the bottom 10th, rather than trying Chapman for a second inning, the Sox opted for Justin Slaten. Slaten pitched with Guerrero Jr. as Toronto's ghost runner. Guerrero Jr. advanced to third on a Santander lineout, and Slaten then intentionally walked both George Springer and Varsho. With three baserunners and no room for error, Guerrero Jr. was able to jog home from third and score the winner run when Kirk singled to deep left field to deliver the winning RBI in walk-off fashion. The loss brought the Sox down to 17–15, with the rubber game set for Thursday at Rogers Centre.[169][170][171] Series tied 1–1, continued into following month |
May
[edit] May game summaries
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May 1, at Toronto Blue Jays[edit]The Red Sox opened the month of May hoping to turn the page on a sour note to end April, but instead gave up a second straight come-from-behind loss to the Blue Jays in the rubber game of their series in Toronto. In a game in which Boston utilized only two pitchers, the Jays took advantage of reliever Justin Slaten after being mostly shut down by starter Tanner Houck. Houck twirled what, on most nights, would have been a winning scoreline – 7 innings pitched, and charged with only four hits and one run, while striking out six Toronto batters and allowing no walks. This enviable line, however, would go in the books as a no-decision – as would that of Jays starter José Berríos, who gave up 7 hits and 2 runs but struck out 8 across 6+2⁄3 innings. For the Red Sox, the scoring both began and ended with an Alex Bregman double to deep left field in the top 5th that scored David Hamilton and Rob Refsnyder, giving Boston a 2–0 lead. In the bottom 7th, the Jays cut the lead in half on Houck's only blemish: a solo shot over the left field fence from Daulton Varsho. Heading into the 8th, Slaten replaced Houck, and almost immediately ran into trouble. With one out, Slaten gave up a single to center from Nathan Lukes, followed by a double off the pine of Bo Bichette, advancing Lukes to third. Next to the plate was Vladimir Guerrero Jr., who carries his All-Star father's name for a reason. Guerrero Jr. uncorked a Slaten pitch to center field for a 3-run home run, at a stroke putting Toronto up 4–2. While that was the end of the run scoring, Slaten also walked Varsho before mercifully ending the inning. Suddenly in disaster mode, the Sox bats clammed up against Yimi García, who took the hill for the Jays in the top 9th. García fanned Trevor Story and Triston Casas before inducing a Refsnyder ground out to end the inning and the game. Slaten (0–2) was saddled with the loss while Mason Fluharty picked up the win for Toronto, with García earning the save. Boston crossed the border back into the United States having blown two late leads for a 2–1 series loss to the Blue Jays, hoping to right the ship back at Fenway Park against Minnesota.[172][173][174] Red Sox lost the series 1–2 (18–13 runs) May 2–4, vs. Minnesota Twins[edit]The Red Sox opened a three-game home series against Minnesota looking to put their disappointing Blue Jays series behind them. Brayan Bello made his third start of the season after returning from injury and was very serviceable, working 6+2⁄3 innings and allowing just four hits and one earned run, while striking out five Twins batters. Minnesota dispatched Joe Ryan to the mound and he was equally impressive, fanning eight Red Sox while also allowing just one run and four hits. However, it would turn out to be the bullpens that would decide this game. Ryan's only blemish was also the first run of the game – Alex Bregman sent a pitch arcing high over the Green Monster for a solo shot and an early 1–0 lead in the bottom 1st. In the top 2nd, Jarren Duran made an acrobatic diving catch, sliding into the left field wall to rob Ty France of a potential extra-base hit. Duran hit the wall hard but got up of his own volition and remained in the game, but Triston Casas wouldn't be able to say the same. In the bottom half of the 2nd, Casas beat out a throw to first on an infield dribbler but lost his footing on or near the bag and tumbled to the ground clutching his knee. Casas left the game on a cart and Romy González took over as both pinch runner and first baseman for the remainder of the contest. In the top 3rd, Ryan Jeffers gave Bello his only blemish by sending a solo homer of his own to left field, knotting the game at 1–1. From the bottom 3rd through top 7th, both starters continued their quality outings, both leaving with the 1–1 stalemate intact. Fortunately, Boston's bullpen (Justin Wilson, Greg Weissert and Liam Hendriks) would hold up, while Minnesota's began to show cracks. In the bottom 7th, Rafael Devers punched a 2-RBI single to shallow right field, bringing home baserunners Connor Wong and David Hamilton. Now up 3–1, Boston padded its lead in the 8th, as González doubled to bring in Trevor Story, Hamilton doubled to deep left field to score González, and Hamilton jogged home on a right field single by Duran, breaking the game open with a 6–1 Red Sox lead, which was preserved by Hendriks in a non-save situation. Wilson was named the winning pitcher while the loss was charged to the Twins' Louis Varland. Boston dealt the Twins their fourth straight loss while climbing back up to two games above .500.[175][176][177] Hunter Dobbins took the hill for Boston in the Saturday showdown, as the spot starter took the hill for the third time. However, this outing would result in Dobbins' first loss of the season, as he ran into trouble in the 6th inning from which the Sox could not recover. Dobbins' final line was seven hits and four runs (all earned) allowed across 5+2⁄3 innings with two strikeouts. Bailey Ober pitched opposite Dobbins for the Twins and put together a solid performance – despite also allowing seven hits, Ober fanned six Red Sox hitters and only gave up one run in 6 innings pitched. Devers began the scoring for Boston in the bottom 3rd with a single to center field that scored Jarren Duran. Minnesota responded in kind, however, scoring a run of their own in the top 4th when Ty France scattered a sacrifice ground out to score Carlos Correa from third base. After a scoreless 5th, Minnesota hit Dobbins for three runs in the top 6th: Kody Clemens took the rookie deep to right field to score two runs, bringing France home along with him. Trevor Larnach soon hit an RBI single to left which brought home Harrison Bader, and suddenly the Twins cradled a 4–1 lead. Boston rallied, however, in the bottom of the 7th against Twins reliever Brock Stewart as Duran smoked a pitch to the right center field gap and hustled for an RBI triple, as Connor Wong scampered home on the play. Devers then singled to right field to score Duran, drawing the Red Sox within a run. Unfortunately, once Stewart was relieved, Boston's bats quieted again, as Griffin Jax ended the 7th without further incident, Cole Sands hurled a scoreless Boston eighth and Jhoan Durán earned his third save of the year in the 9th, an inning in which the Sox got Ceddanne Rafaela to second base and saw Durán intentionally walk Bregman, only for Wilyer Abreu to fly out to end the game. With the series split 1–1, the final game of the series yet again became a critical rubber contest, with Garrett Crochet slated to pitch for Boston.[178][179][180] With Garrett Crochet on the mound for the rubber game of the series, the Red Sox faced the Twins' Chris Paddack. However, neither pitcher would earn a decision in this contest, as a crucial game would come down to bullpen strength yet again for Boston. Byron Buxton blemished Crochet early, taking the burgeoning ace deep in the top 1st for a solo home run and a 1–0 Minnesota lead out of the gate. However, the Sox would strike back in the 2nd and 3rd innings to take the lead. In the 2nd, Carlos Narváez notched a 2-RBI single with a hit to shallow left field that scored Abreu and Romy González, instantly putting the Sox up 2–1. In the next frame, González hit a sacrifice fly ball deep enough to score Bregman from third base, giving Boston a 3–1 lead. Crochet would be limited to five innings pitched, but not for a lack of effort – he allowed just four hits and only the Buxton homer in that span, fanning six Twins and giving up two walks. Paddack also went five innings, and while he coughed up the Twins' early lead, he settled down in the 4th and 5th innings, keeping Boston hitless and building a bridge to Minnesota's bullpen. In the 6th, Garrett Whitlock took over for the Red Sox and hurled a scoreless frame, as did the Twins' Brock Stewart. Whitlock allowed Minnesota to rally, however, in the top 7th, walking Harrison Bader and allowing a single to former Red Sox catcher Christian Vázquez. Ryan Jeffers then singled deep to left field to bring home both Bader and Vázquez, tying the game at 3–3. With the Boston lead squandered, Whitlock was relieved by Justin Slaten, who was looking to turn things around after taking two losses in the Toronto series, blowing late Boston leads. Unfortunately, Slaten's bad luck remained; he got two outs before allowing Bader to double to left field, bringing home Correa all the way from first base. Trevor Larnach then took a Slaten pitch to right field, allowing Bader to score and giving the Twins a 2-run cushion (5–3). Boston wasn't done offensively – in the bottom of the 8th, Abreu took Griffin Jax deep to right field for a solo home run, bringing the Sox within one – but Minnesota, still holding a one-run lead after a scoreless top 9th, again brought in closer Jhoan Durán, who set down the Red Sox with relative ease for his second consecutive save. Slaten (0–3) was charged with another loss, while Louis Varland, who pitched the 7th inning for Minnesota, picked up the win. The defeat brought the Red Sox back down to .500 and was their fourth loss in five games. With a day off before welcoming the Texas Rangers to Fenway Park, Boston would hope to get more out of both their offense and their bullpen against a team that took three of four games during the opening weekend.[181][182][183] Red Sox lost the series 1–2 (10–13 runs) May 6–8, vs. Texas Rangers[edit]The Red Sox opened their second series of the year against Texas hoping to turn the page on two consecutive series losses to Toronto and Minnesota. Unfortunately, the fates remained against the Boston nine on this day in the form of a 6–1 defeat. Lucas Giolito was dispatched to the hill for the Red Sox, making his second start of the season, and while at bat the team faced former Red Sox starter Nathan Eovaldi. Giolito struggled mightily against the Rangers' bats, which popped off for sixteen hits, ten of them against Giolito. The Red Sox also opened the game with yet another run allowed in the top of the 1st inning. Josh Smith singled to left center field, and Wyatt Langford hit into a force out, retiring Smith, but Langford reached base. Langford then advanced from first to third on a single by Joc Pederson, and with Marcus Semien at bat Giolito hurled a wild pitch that allowed Langford to scamper home for a 1–0 lead. Giolito kept his composure throughout the 2nd and 3rd innings, but let Texas break the game open with a 5-run 4th. The onslaught began with Pederson doubling to deep right field to score Corey Seager. Adolis García then lifted a ball to center for a sacrifice fly that scored Pederson. Jonah Heim kept the line moving, singling to center field to score Semien and advance Evan Carter to third. Carter then scored on Smith's base hit to shallow center. Langford then stroked yet another Giolito offering to center to score Heim. Texas now led 6–0 and had hung 10 hits on the embattled Giolito, who left the game after his disastrous 4th. With two outs in the inning, Brennan Bernardino entered the game and struck out Seager to end the frame, but the damage was done. Giolito's final line was six runs (all earned) on ten hits and just two strikeouts in 3+2⁄3 innings. Bernardino and Sean Newcomb combined to pitch the final 5+1⁄3 innings and kept Texas from expanding their lead, but Boston’s bats were handcuffed by Eovaldi (a final scoreline of five hits across six innings, one earned run, and seven strikeouts). The lone run of the game for Boston when Kristian Campbell hit a line drive to center that allowed Alex Bregman to score from second base. With the 6–1 loss, the Red Sox dropped their third straight game and clumsily backed their way into an 18–19 record, their first losing record since April 15. However, Boston remained in second place in the American League East. Showers and storms scattered throughout New England danced around Fenway Park and delayed the start of the game (scheduled for 6:45 p.m.) by 31 minutes, but the teams did manage to play all nine innings.[184][185][186] Boston struck back in the second game of the series and leveled back at .500 with a 6–4 win, setting up another rubber game on Thursday afternoon. Tanner Houck received the ball for the Red Sox and gave up three runs (two earned) and six hits with two walks and striking out two. Houck's 4+2⁄3-innings outing wasn't his most polished, but the Sox offense and a better outing from Boston's bullpen kept the team in the game in the later innings, though Houck earned a no-decision as the win went to reliever Brennan Bernardino. The run scoring began with Texas in the top 3rd, as Seager grounded out with the bases loaded, permitting Heim to score from third base. In the 4th, García took Houck deep with a solo shot to left field, giving the Rangers a 2–0 advantage. But the Red Sox would tie the game in the bottom 4th with a pair of solo home runs as Bregman and Wilyer Abreu both went deep off of Texas starter Tyler Mahle (who finished with a line of two runs, four hits, and no strikeouts in five innings of work). In the top of the 5th, the Rangers regained the lead as García hit a sacrifice fly that scored Seager. In the bottom 6th, however, Abreu struck again, sending a double to deep left center field that brought home Bregman. Kristian Campbell was also on the basepaths but was called out at home plate. In the bottom 7th, Bregman hit a single to left that was enough to score two runs, as Ceddanne Rafaela and Connor Wong both hustled home. Leading 5–3, Abreu provided pivotal insurance in the bottom of the 8th with his second long ball of the contest, another solo rocket to give Boston a three-run lead. Coming on to close in the 9th, Aroldis Chapman gave up a solo homer to Josh Jung, pulling Texas to within two, but Chapman still earned the save, his fifth of the year, as he hurled a 9th that included a 103.8 mph (167.0 km/h) pitch, the fastest in MLB to date in 2025.[187][188][189] After dropping two straight series deciders, the Red Sox finally got some rubber game luck in the third and final game of the Texas series, a Thursday afternoon getaway-day tilt. Boston managed their first shutout since April 16, defeating the Rangers 5–0. Brayan Bello took the hill for the Sox and had a scoreless yet shaky outing, giving up four hits and walking five Texas batters over a 4+2⁄3-inning performance. With two outs in the top 5th, Justin Slaten relieved Bello and got the final out of the frame and hurled the top 6th as well, ultimately being credited with the win, improving his record to 1–3. Garrett Whitlock pitched the 7th and Liam Hendriks hurled the final two innings and allowed just one baserunner. Hendriks got some theatrical defensive help when Rafaela tracked down a deep center field fly ball from Jung, making an acrobatic catch while slamming into the center field wall near the 420' markings. Offensively, the Sox plated five runs on just six hits, beginning in the bottom 2nd when Trevor Story made it to third base and then scored on a wild pitch to Jarren Duran. Duran then hit an RBI ground out that scored Carlos Narváez. In the top 5th, up 2–0, Boston added a third run on an RBI single from Rafael Devers, as Rafaela ran to home plate. In the 6th, Narváez singled to center field, bringing in Story, and in the 7th, Devers put a cap on Boston's offensive output with a solo home run over the Green Monster, his sixth long ball of the season. With a 2–1 series win, the Sox would pack up and fly to Kansas City to open a weekend series against the Royals, hoping to extend a two-game win streak.[190][191][192] Red Sox won the series 2–1 (12–10 runs) May 9–11, at Kansas City Royals[edit]Boston kicked off its weekend series in Kansas City with a close-fought Friday night tango with the Royals that ended in a 2–1 defeat in 12 innings. In a game in which neither club scored in nine innings. Hunter Dobbins took the hill for the Red Sox and hurled six scoreless innings, giving up just five hits and fanning six Royals hitters. Michael Lorenzen, however, countered with seven shutout frames for Kansas City, allowing just three hits and striking out out seven Red Sox. This contest, however, would prove to be a battle of bullpens. Carlos Estévez pitched the top of the 10th inning for the Royals and pitched a one-two-three inning with Trevor Story as the ghost runner on second base. Aroldis Chapman responded in kind for the Red Sox, answering with a hitless inning of his own. In the top 11th, Boston finally broke the deadlock. Facing Daniel Lynch, Jarren Duran grounded out but succeeded in advancing ghost runner Ceddanne Rafaela from second base to third. Rafael Devers then hit into an RBI ground out that permitted Rafaela to scamper home, giving Boston a 1–0 lead. Alex Bregman then singled to left field but was left stranded by Kristian Campbell. In the bottom half of the 11th, with Garrett Whitlock pitching for the Sox, Kansas City tied the score when Whitlock walked Bobby Witt Jr. and then gave up a single to Vinnie Pasquantino that scored ghost runner Drew Waters. In the 12th, Boston gave the Royals a one-two-three inning, and Sean Newcomb took over on the mound in the bottom half of the inning. With Michael Massey on second base, the Royals needed just two batters to score what would prove to be the winning run – Cavan Biggio advanced Massey to third base with a sacrifice bunt before Freddy Fermín singled up the middle to bring Massey home for the walk-off win, another close late- or extra-inning defeat for Boston. The Red Sox would look to return to winning ways with Garrett Crochet expected to take the mound on Saturday.[193][194][195] Crochet indeed provided a masterful performance on Saturday in the middle game, and Boston's bats woke up as well, halting a 7-game Kansas City win streak with a 10–1 Red Sox win. Crochet provided 7 innings of one-run ball, allowing seven hits but also striking out nine Royal hitters. The outing improved Crochet to 4–2 on the season. Liam Hendriks and Brennan Bernardino hurled the 8th and 9th innings for Boston to shut down Kansas City, who scored only once, on a Mark Canha RBI single in the 3rd. As for the Red Sox, their ten-run output began with a Devers double to deep left in the top 3rd that scored Duran. Tied 1–1, Boston came alive again in the top 5th, with Duran singling with two runners on to score Carlos Narváez. Devers then blooped a single up the middle that scored Rafaela and moved Duran to third, and Duran jogged home on a Bregman single. In the top 7th, having forced Kansas City starter Cole Ragans out of the game and facing the Royals bullpen, Trevor Story stroked a pitch over the left-field fence for a 3-run home run, coming with Bregman and Devers on base. In the top of the 8th, up 7–1, the Sox onslaught continued with another 3-run inning: Narváez took Angel Zerpa deep to center for a 2-run blast that brought home Nick Sogard. Later in the inning, a Devers hit to shallow center field brought home Rafaela for the game's final run. Ragans finished with a line of four earned runs, seven hits, and eight strikeouts in five innings pitched; Boston tagged the Kansas City relief crew for six earned runs, five off of Zerpa. With a commanding win in their back pocket, the Red Sox gear up for yet another rubber game in the series finale on Sunday.[196][197][198] The Red Sox sent Lucas Giolito to the mound in the Sunday afternoon decider, and the embattled starting pitcher finally had a quality performance, earning his first win since 2023 with a scoreline of just two hits, one earned run, one walk and five strikeouts across 6+2⁄3 innings. Giolito let in the only Royals run of the game as Kansas City scored first in the bottom of the 3rd inning, allowing Kyle Isbel to reach on a sacrifice bunt and also permitting baserunner Luke Waters to score when Giolito committed a throwing error. This would prove to be the only blemish on Giolito's afternoon, however, as Boston immediately responded in the top 4th thanks to the bat of Wilyer Abreu, who crushed his tenth home run of the year to right field off of Kansas City starter Seth Lugo (whose final scoreline was three earned runs and six hits with five strikeouts across 6 innings pitched). In the top of the 6th, Rafael Devers continued to work out of his early-season slump with his seventh long ball of the season, a 2-run jack that also brought home Jarren Duran. Once Giolito left the contest, the Red Sox bullpen held down the fort with a coalition of Justin Wilson, Greg Weissert, and Aroldis Chapman. In the bottom of the 9th, Chapman allowed Vinnie Pasquantino to reach on an error by David Hamilton, and Pasquantino then advanced to second on a Salvador Perez single. With the potential winning run now at the plate in the form of Maikel Garcia, Chapman got Garcia to line out to Duran and then induced a pop fly from Mark Canha to end the ballgame and secure a 3–1 victory and a 2–1 series win for Boston, ending their Kansas City stay with back-to-back wins.[199][200][201] Red Sox won the series 2–1 (14–4 runs) May 12–14, at Detroit Tigers[edit]Coming to Comerica Park, the Red Sox faced a three-game litmus test of sorts against the Tigers, the team with the American League's best record. Fortunately, the Sox would have two more opportunities to defeat Detroit after the first tilt went miserably. With Tanner Houck making the start, the Red Sox faced Detroit's Jackson Jobe. Houck showed signs of trouble early, giving up a bottom-1st 2-run home run to Gleyber Torres to give Detroit an early advantage. Houck kept the Tigers off the board in the 2nd inning, but then completely unraveled in the 3rd, allowing the Tigers to tag the Sox for 9 runs in a single inning. The onslaught began with Kerry Carpenter scoring on a wild pitch from third after Houck gave up a double and then walked two Tiger hitters to load the bases. Riley Greene then blasted a pitch to deep right field and made it all the way around the bases for an inside-the-park home run, while also scoring Colt Keith and Torres in a sequence worsened by a Wilyer Abreu fielding error. Later in the inning, with Zach McKinstry on base, Houck hit Dillon Dingler with a pitch as his command continued to struggle. Trey Sweeney then made Houck pay with a 3-run home run to center field – and the nightmare inning just kept rolling. Houck gave up a Javier Báez single, a walk, and a Torres RBI single before finally being relieved by manager Alex Cora, who sent in Sean Newcomb for mop-up duty. Alas, Justyn-Henry Malloy added another run on the inning when he singled up the middle, before Newcomb was at last able to stitch together the two remaining outs needed to retire the Tigers offense. Houck exited with a stunningly crooked scoreline: 11 runs, all earned, on 9 hits, including 3 walks and 2 home runs, while striking out none, all in a mere 2+1⁄3 innings. Sean Newcomb would pitch the entire remainder of the game, going 5+2⁄3 and giving up 3 runs (2 earned) and 9 hits while striking out 4 Tigers. Ahead 11–0, Detroit would add on three more runs throughout the remainder of the contest, while Boston's hitters managed to stitch together a mere two runs, an Abreu solo home run in the 6th (his 11th of the year) and an Abraham Toro solo shot in the 9th (his first of the season as first in a Boston uniform). The Detroit starter Jobe gave up just one run and 3 hits while fanning 7 Red Sox, as the shellshocked Boston nine would have no choice but to flush this forgettable outing down the toilet and try to even the series in the middle game. Houck fell to 0–3 on the season with his disastrous outing; Brayan Bello was the scheduled Tuesday starter for Boston.[202][203][204] In the second game of the series, Brayan Bello took the mound for Boston, while Detroit utilized a bullpen game strategy headlined by Tyler Holton and Keider Montero combining to pitch the first 5 innings. Bello lasted 4+2⁄3 innings with three runs (two earned) and six hits with four strikeouts. This game, however, would feature lots of back-to-back offense from both teams and three blown Boston leads that would ultimately give way to Detroit earning a walk-off win in the 11th inning in a loss that proved just as, if not more, demoralizing than the 14–1 whooping the Sox had received the day before. The offense began in Detroit's favor in the bottom 1st, with Riley Greene hitting an RBI single that scored Kerry Carpenter. In the top 2nd, Carlos Narváez tied the game on an RBI single to left that brought home Nick Sogard. In the bottom of the 3rd, Detroit's Javier Báez walked, advanced to third on a Carpenter single, and then scampered home on a Narváez error while Zach McKinstry was at bat. In the top 4th, the Sox tied the game at 2–2 thanks to a solo shot from Bregman that cleared the left field wall, his tenth home run of the season. Spencer Torkelson answered in kind, though, with his eleventh home run of the season in the bottom half of the 4th, a solo bomb to right that gave Detroit the lead back at 3–2. In the top of the 5th, Boston plated two runs: Rafaela doubled home David Hamilton, and Jarren Duran blooped a single to left to score Rafaela. Up 4–3, the Sox managed to keep the Tigers off the scoreboard in the bottom 5th – but Detroit, and Báez, struck again in the 6th. Báez cracked a pitch from Garrett Whitlock to right field for a 3-run jack, a home run that also brought home baserunners Jace Jung and Torkelson. Boston tied the game yet again, however, in the top of the 8th, courtesy of Hamilton, who vaulted a ball over the right field wall; Narváez was on base, making it a 2-run homer, and the score returned to a deadlock: 6–6. In the bottom 9th, Aroldis Chapman set down the Tigers side to force extra innings, and Boston appeared to have the edge in the top of the 10th after ghost runner Sogard advanced to third on a Narváez single and scampered home on a Rafaela force out. Greg Weissert earned the first two outs of the bottom 10th, and looked to have a save in sight before Trey Sweeney found a hole in the outfield and singled to bring home ghost runner McKinstry, making it a 7–7 ballgame. In the 11th, Kristian Campbell earned his first hit of the game, and it couldn't have come at a better time for the Red Sox – his 2-run home run to right field (his 5th of the season) gave Boston a 9–7 advantage. Curiously, however, manager Alex Cora left Weissert in the game in the bottom half of the inning, and Jace Jung singled off of him to start the inning, moving ghost runner Dillon Dingler to third base. Javier Báez, already with a 3-run blast to his name, came to the plate and launched a moonshot to left field on the first pitch of the at-bat, at a stroke bringing home three runs and giving Detroit the walk-off victory, a 10–9 win. With two painful losses in this series, the Sox went back to .500 (22–22) and braced for the final game of the three-game set: a Wednesday tilt that would pit Boston against defending Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal.[205][206][207] Though it wasn’t for a lack of effort, the Red Sox dropped the third and final game of the Detroit series 6–5 thanks to a second straight Tigers walk-off win, as Boston got swept in a three-game slate for the first time this season. Boston sent Hunter Dobbins to the hill to counter Detroit's ace Tarik Skubal. Dobbins went five innings and gave up five runs (all earned) on nine hits (no walks), though he did manage four strikeouts. Skubal had a solid outing, pitching 7+1⁄3 innings and fanning a total of eleven Red Sox batters, although he also coughed up five earned runs and gave up seven hits. Boston struck first against Skubal with more offense in the top of the 1st, this time a Rob Refsnyder RBI sacrifice fly that scored Devers. Trey Sweeney countered in the bottom 2nd by singling to left to score Riley Greene. The Sox took a 2–1 advantage in the top 4th off of Alex Bregman's 11th home run of the season, as he took Skubal deep to center field. Detroit tied the game again, however, with a Dillon Dingler RBI ground out in the bottom half of the inning that brought home baserunner Colt Keith. In the bottom of the 6th, the Tigers would take their first lead of the game: Riley Greene tagged Dobbins for a 2-run long ball to center. Dingler then reached base and was brought home by Sweeney on a sac fly. Down 5–2, the Sox needed a big inning, and they responded immediately, hanging three of their own on the board in the top of the 7th. Ceddanne Rafaela's RBI single to right scored Nick Sogard; Jarren Duran's single up the middle scored Carlos Narváez; and Devers's single to center brought home Rafaela. In the bottom of the 7th, Liam Hendriks was assisted on the mound by a highlight-reel-worthy defensive play: when Trey Sweeney took a Hendriks pitch deep to center, both Rafaela and Wilyer Abreu advanced on the ball as it neared the fence. At the warning track, Abreu leaped to deflect the ball, which ricocheted out of his glove and into Rafaela's glove for the second out of the inning. Unfortunately, the Boston highlights on the night would end there. In the bottom 9th, with the score still tied at 5–5, Andy Ibáñez pinch hit for Zach McKinstry. Chapman walked Ibáñez, who proceeded to steal second base and advance to third on a throw by catcher Connor Wong that sailed over second base and into the outfield. Chapman struck out Sweeney and induced a Javier Báez pop fly but then gave up a pinch-hit single to Justyn-Henry Malloy, allowing Ibáñez to jog home as the walk-off winning run, bookending a painful series for the Red Sox, who mercifully get a day off before facing Atlanta back at Fenway Park.[208][209][210] Red Sox lost the series 0–3 (16–30 runs) May 16–18, vs. Atlanta Braves[edit]The Red Sox opened up a three-game set at Fenway Park on May 16, facing down the Atlanta Braves in their yearly "crosstown" rivalry series, owing to the Braves' former presence in Boston along the Sox. The Red Sox debuted their new City Connect alternate jerseys, an off-green uniform with yellow numbers meant to be a nod to the colors of the Green Monster. In the Friday opener, the Red Sox faced their former ace pitcher Chris Sale. To counter, Boston dispatched their newest top arm in Garrett Crochet. Both Sale and Crochet had fine outings and pitched deep into the contest, each going seven innings and notching eight strikeouts apiece. However, Sale gave up one earned runs and just five hits, while Crochet's outing was a smidge bumpier, giving up two runs on seven hits. Both of Atlanta's two runs against Crochet came in the top of the 2nd inning, when Matt Olson and Sean Murphy tagged the Mississippi native for back-to-back solo home runs to begin the inning, giving the Braves a 2–0 advantage. Fortunately, Crochet worked out of the inning with three quick consecutive outs. For the majority of the innings, Sale and Crochet simply dueled – no runs were hung on the board from the bottom of the 2nd through the top of the 7th. It was only in the bottom 7th that Boston broke through, breaking the Sale shutout thanks to Rob Refsnyder's solo home run over the Green Monster, his third long ball of the season. With Sale and Crochet both now gone, the bullpens took over, and Sox reliever Greg Weissert kept the Braves off the board in the top 8th, and Daysbel Hernández kept the Sox scoreless in the bottom half of the inning. In the top of the 9th, the Red Sox bullpen ran into trouble when Liam Hendriks walked Marcell Ozuna and then allowed pinch-runner Luke Williams to second on a Murphy ground out. Though Hendriks had two outs, he walked Ozzie Albies and then got the hook in favor of Brennan Bernardino. Bernardino summarily walked Michael Harris II, which loaded the bases. Two subsequent consecutive walks by Bernardino to Stuart Fairchild and Nick Allen forced home two runs, breaking the game open for Atlanta, giving the Braves a 4–1 lead with only a half-inning left for Boston. Raisel Iglesias came on to close for the Braves and shut down the Red Sox, recovering from an Alex Bregman hit-by-pitch and a Trevor Story single, which brought home Bregman, to close out the game, a 4–2 Braves win and the Red Sox' fourth consecutive loss. Despite Boston's bullpen woes, Crochet remained the pitcher of record, and thus his record dropped to 4–3. Sale (2–3) was credited with the win and Iglesias picked up his eighth save.[211][212][213] Boston came back from a shaky start to the second game of the Braves series to earn a 7–6 victory in walk-off fashion, a much-needed win to avoid a five-game losing streak. Lucas Giolito started for Boston while Atlanta sent Grant Holmes to the mound; neither pitcher would factor into the win-loss column. Giolito struggled in a four-inning outing, giving up six runs, all of them earned, on eight hits, while striking out three Braves hitters; Holmes allowed just two runs on three hits in six innings while fanning five Red Sox. Atlanta struck early and with power, with Olson and Ozuna tagging Giolito for back-to-back home runs in the top first; Olson's long ball came with Austin Riley on base while Ozuna's was a solo blast, giving the Braves a 3–0 lead. In the top of the 3rd, Giolito gave up a third Braves home run, this one a 2-run shot by Drake Baldwin that gave Atlanta a 5–0 advantage. Jarren Duran got Boston on the scoreboard in the bottom of the 3rd with a 2–run jack to center field that brought home baserunner Carlos Narváez. Giolito continued to struggle in the 4th, however, giving up an RBI single to Riley that bounced into left field and scored Eli White. With a 6–2 deficit, Boston pulled Giolito and went to the bullpen beginning in the 5th, while Holmes remained through the 6th. The 5th and 6th innings were scoreless for both teams, but the Sox launched their comeback in the bottom 7th against Atlanta reliever Aaron Bummer. Rafael Devers made it a 6–3 game when he singled to left field, bringing home Ceddanne Rafaela. Alex Bregman then hit his 16th double of the season to score Devers. In the top of the 8th, Garrett Whitlock hurled a scoreless inning for Boston, while in the bottom half of the frame, down 6–4, the Red Sox assault continued when Abraham Toro and Narváez tagged Rafael Montero for back-to-back hits. With Narváez at first and Toro at third, Narváez was pinch-run for by David Hamilton, who promptly stole second base, setting the table perfectly for Duran. Duran's single to right field was sufficient to score both Toro and Hamilton, tying the contest for the first time since the top of the 1st. Closer Aroldis Chapman was called upon to pitch the top of the 9th. Atlanta pressed, with Ozuna drawing a walk from Chapman and Ozzie Albies singling to put two runners on with two out. However, Chapman held firm, striking out Harris II to keep the score knotted at 6–6. Headed into the bottom of the 9th, the Sox faced Pierce Johnson, who had relieved Montero late in the 8th. Devers promptly drilled a 2–1 pitch high to deep right field for his first career walk-off home run, sending Fenway into a frenzy and giving the Red Sox a much needed 7–6 victory. With the series now tied at a game apiece, the Sox were expected to call on Brayan Bello to pitch Sunday afternoon in the rubber game.[214][215][216] Sox fans would have hoped that the team would build upon their Saturday walk-off win by building a streak of victories, but the Boston nine went right back to the loss column in the Sunday finisher, as Atlanta pummeled Boston 10–4. Bello faced Spencer Schwellenbach, who took the mound for the Braves. Bello was quick to run into trouble, giving up a Drake Baldwin RBI double that scored ex-Sox Alex Verdugo and Ozzie Albies RBI ground out that scored Austin Riley, both in the top 1st. In the 3rd, Marcell Ozuna tagged Bello for an RBI single that brought home Matt Olson, giving Atlanta a 3–0 advantage. In the bottom half of the frame, the Red Sox roughed up Schwellenbach to take a brief lead: David Hamilton doubled, then advanced to third on a Ceddanne Rafaela single; Schwellenbach then walked Jarren Duran, juicing the bases and setting up a Rafael Devers grand slam home run to center field, putting Boston ahead 4–3. However, Devers' long ball would turn out to be the only run-scoring offense of the game for the Red Sox – Schwellenbach recovered and remained in the game, whereas the Braves' bats picked up where they left off, tying the score at 4–4 when Riley singled to deep left field to score Nick Allen. In the top of the 5th, the Braves knocked Bello out of the game with a 3-run frame that would put Atlanta up 7–4. Michael Harris II walked with the bases loaded, scoring Ozuna; Eli White singled up the middle to drive in Baldwin; and Albies scampered home on an Allen RBI sacrifice fly. In the sixth and seventh innings, reliever Sean Newcomb held Atlanta off the board in the sixth and seventh, but Atlanta's bullpen did the same for the remainder of the game. The Braves added insult to injury with a 3-run top 8th: Matt Olson hit an RBI sac fly and Ozuna crushed his eighth home run of the season, a 2-run blast, to center field. The final 10–4 margin saw Schwellenbach (3–3) take the win after pitching seven innings with three strikeouts, having given up four runs on six hits. Bello was saddled with the loss after pitching 4+1⁄3 innings and allowing seven runs, all earned, on ten hits, and fanning three Braves batters.[217][218][219] Red Sox lost the series 1–2 (13–20 runs) May 19–21, vs. New York Mets[edit]The Red Sox entered into a three-game series against their 1986 rival Mets and started out with a much-needed 3–1 victory in the Monday night opener. Hunter Dobbins toed the rubber for Boston, while New York sent Japanese sensation Kodai Senga to the hill. After Dobbins pitched a scoreless top 1st, the Sox got to Senga early, scoring two runs in the bottom of the first. Alex Bregman hit into an RBI ground out that scored Jarren Duran, and Rafael Devers scored on a bloop single to left from Trevor Story. Up 2–0, Duran laced a Senga pitch to deep right and hustled all the way around for an RBI triple that scored Carlos Narváez – and that was all the offense the Red Sox would need on this evening. The Mets responded in the top of the 3rd, with Tyrone Taylor singling to center field to bring home Francisco Álvarez, but Dobbins held firm and got out of the inning without further damage. The Sox loaded the bases in the 4th when Devers walked with two men on, but Bregman hit into an inning-ending ground out. With Dobbins out after 4+2⁄3 innings (one earned run on five hits, one walk and two strikeouts), the Boston bullpen took over and stitched together a much-needed scoreless effort, with Justin Wilson, Greg Weissert, Justin Slaten, and Aroldis Chapman combining to give up just three hits. Wilson was credited with the win when he came in for Dobbins and struck out Francisco Lindor with two Mets on base to end the top of the 5th. Meanwhile, Chapman picked up his seventh save of the season while Senga (4–3) was charged with the loss after hurling six innings and giving up three runs, all earned, on five hits and three walks; Senga also fanned five Sox hitters. Boston's pitching staff would look to keep New York off the scoreboard on Tuesday with Walker Buehler set to start.[220][221][222] The Red Sox pitching staff, and especially the bullpen, continued their strong performance in the middle game of the Mets series on Tuesday, hurling a shutout to secure a 2–0 Boston victory that sent the Sox back to .500 (25–25). Starter Walker Buehler returned from the injured list and was cruising in the third inning (no hits, no runs, four strikeouts in 2+1⁄3 when he was ejected from the game. Buehler had just hit Francisco Lindor with a pitch that he felt Lindor had leaned into, and Juan Soto had come to the plate and received an 0–1 pitch from Buehler that home plate Mike Estabrook called a ball. Buehler began arguing Estabrook's call and Lindor's behavior on the hit by pitch, and was immediately tossed out of the game by Estabrook. Manager Alex Cora came to defend Buehler and was also tossed. The Buehler and Cora ejections marked the first and second of the season, respectively, for the Red Sox. With Buehler out, the Sox were forced to turn to the bullpen early, and turned to Brennan Bernardino. Luckily for Boston, however, a coalition of Bernardino, Garrett Whitlock, Justin Wilson, Greg Weissert, Justin Slaten, and Aroldis Chapman was sterling for the remainder of the contest, giving up just four hits and stitching together three strikeouts across 5+2⁄3 innings. The win was credited to Whitlock and Chapman earned the save for the second consecutive day, his eighth on the year. Boston's run scoring was both efficient and meager, but the two runs the Sox produced proved to be plenty. Both of the Red Sox runs came in the bottom of the fifth inning, and both were solo long balls. Narvàez took Mets starter Clay Holmes deep to center field on a solo shot to center, and Devers slammed his own solo home run of the inning to almost the same exact spot as Narváez. The dingers were Narvàez's and Devers's fifth and tenth of the season, respectively, as Devers's hot streak continued. New York starter Holmes went six innings and allowed just two runs on four hits while fanning five Boston batters, but he was charged with the loss as the Mets offense was kept off the scoreboard entirely. With two wins in the books, the Sox would look to complete the three-game sweep in the series finale on Wednesday with Garrett Crochet set to pitch.[223][224][225] Boston went for the series sweep on Wednesday, with Garrett Crochet facing off against New York starter Tylor Megill. Crochet has a fine outing, hurling 5+1⁄3 innings and giving up just one earned run and five hits while striking out five Mets. Megill gave up one run on four hits in 4+2⁄3 innings of work while striking out ten Red Sox. In the end, though, this game would end up being decided by the bullpens. The Mets drew first blood when Brett Baty singled to center off Crochet in the top 2nd to bring in baserunner Mark Vientos. Crochet and Megill dueled each other until Megill ran into trouble in the bottom 5th. Nick Sogard singled to the shallow infield to start the inning for Boston, and was advanced to second by a Carlos Narváez infield single. Megill then hit Ceddanne Rafaela with a pitch to load the bases. Jarren Duran then hit a sacrifice fly to deep center field that allowed Sogard to jog home for the Sox' first run of the game, tying the score at 1–1. After walking Rafael Devers with two outs, Megill was relieved by Huascar Brazobán, who struck out Alex Bregman to prevent further damage and keep the score tied. After a scoreless 6th, Boston's bullpen, which had been sterling through the first two games of the series, ran into trouble with Liam Hendriks on the mound. Hendriks gave up consecutive singles to Luis Torrens, Tyrone Taylor, and Luisangel Acuña. Brennan Bernardino came in to relieve Hendriks, but Baty struck again with a 2-RBI single to deep left field that drove home both Torrens and Taylor. Francisco Lindor then hit into a force out that advanced Acuña to third, and, after a Lindor stolen base and a Starling Marte walk, Juan Soto smoked a Bernardino pitch to deep center field for an RBI sac fly that scored Acuña. The Red Sox then struck out in order in the bottom 7th, left Devers on base in the 8th, and the Mets added insult to injury with a Lindor solo shot over the Green Monster in the top 9th; Edwin Díaz set down the Sox in the bottom 9th, securing a 5–1 win for New York. Hendriks was saddled with the loss while Brazobán was the pitcher of record for the Mets. The loss set Boston back below the .500 mark, and the Red Sox would look to make significant strides with a four-game set against surprisingly struggling Baltimore, with Lucas Giolito set to start.[226][227][228] Red Sox won the series 2–1 (6–6 runs) May 22–25, vs. Baltimore Orioles[edit]The first game of this series, scheduled for Thursday, May 22, was postponed due to heavy rain and rescheduled for the afternoon of Friday, May 23, as part of a day-night doubleheader.[229] On May 23, the afternoon game was played, but the evening game was postponed and rescheduled for Saturday, May 24, as part of a day-night doubleheader.[230] Amidst two postponements, the Red Sox and Baltimore Orioles did fit in one game in fair weather on Friday afternoon to start the series. Brayan Bello faced off against Cade Povich. After two scoreless innings, the Orioles drew first blood with a two-run inning in the top of the 3rd. Jackson Holliday tagged Bello for an RBI single that scored Heston Kjerstad, and Adley Rutschman hit into an RBI ground out that scored Jorge Mateo. In the bottom 4th, the Red Sox got on the board with a Nick Sogard RBI ground out of his own, scoring Trevor Story. It would prove to be the first run of many for Boston. In the bottom of the 6th inning, with Povich out of the game, the Sox struck four a five-run frame against the Baltimore bullpen. Ceddanne Rafaela started it off with a bloop single that scored Sogard, and Jarren Duran singled to advance Rafaela to third base and bring home Kristian Campbell, giving Boston their first lead of the game at 3–2. Rafael Devers then crushed his eleventh home run of the season to center field, a 3-run jack that scored Duran and Rafaela. In the top of the 8th inning, Ramón Urías hit an RBI single to right field, making the score 6–3. However, Boston would pull away in a huge way in the bottom of the 8th with a 13-run inning. This otherworldly Sox frame saw the club bat around twice, with 18 Boston hitters coming to the plate and eight of those runs coming against Orioles third baseman Emmanuel Rivera, who was serving as a reliever for an overwhelmed Baltimore bullpen. For the sake of brevity, the circumstances of every run in the inning cannot be elucidated, but highlights included a grand slam from Devers, his second of the season and twelfth home run of the season (Devers finished with 8 RBIs and a 4-for-6 performance on the day), and Rob Refsnyder's fourth long ball of the year, a 3-run shot over the monster. Having finished his outing long before Boston's huge inning, Brayan Bello finished with two runs on six hits in four innings pitched and seven strikeouts; Cade Povich had a scoreline of one earned run on four hits in five innings with six punchouts. The winning pitcher for the Sox was Garrett Whitlock, who pitched two scoreless innings of relief, and the losing hurler for the Orioles was Seranthony Domínguez, who was on the mound when Boston first took the lead in the bottom 6th. The final score of 19–5 made for the most runs scored by the Sox this season, besting their 18-run effort against St. Louis on April 6. Now at 25–25, the Sox would look to continue their hot offense in Saturday’s doubleheader, with Hunter Dobbins scheduled to go for Boston in the first game.[231][232][233] Boston split a day-night doubleheader Saturday in a pair of one-run contests. It began with a 6–5 walk-off victory for the Sox in game one, in which Hunter Dobbins went to the mound to oppose Baltimore's Zach Eflin. Dobbins had a scoreline of four runs on five hits and seven strikeouts across four innings and a sliver of the 5th inning without recording an out; Eflin pitched five frames, giving up five runs (four earned) on five hits – neither starter would earn a decision. Ramón Urías drew first blood for the O's, tagging Dobbins for a double to deep center field that brought home Gunnar Henderson and Adley Rutschman for a 2–0 advantage. In the bottom of the 1st, the Red Sox got to work, tying the game 2–2 on a pair of solo shots from Duran (his fourth homer of the season) and Wilyer Abreu (his twelfth). Dobbins and Eflin matched each other with scoreless innings in the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th, but in the top of the 5th Dobbins started off the inning by allowing a Kjerstad double and a Rivera single, advancing Kjerstad to third. At this point, Dobbins got the hook and was relieved by Sean Newcomb, who promptly induced a Jackson Holliday RBI force out that allowed Kjerstad to scamper home to put the Orioles back on top. Newcomb then walked Rutschman, putting Holliday on second, and Henderson laced a hit to center field to score Holliday, putting the Sox in a 4–2 hole. Baltimore added a fifth run, and third in the inning, when Rutschman scored on a Newcomb wild pitch with Ryan O'Hearn at bat. Abraham Toro got one run back for Boston in the bottom half of the inning when he stroked an Eflin offering over the center field wall for Eflin's third surrendered homer of the contest. It was Toro's second long ball of the season. In the 6th, Carlos Narváez pulled the Red Sox within one when he hit into a force out that allowed Devers to score on a throwing error by Henderson. Later in the inning, Sogard added an RBI ground out of his own when his dribbler allowed Abreu to score. With the game now tied 5–5, Boston's and Baltimore's bullpens duked it out through the late innings, with Aroldis Chapman keeping the Orioles off the board in the top 9th and Félix Bautista hurling a one-two-three inning in the bottom 9th, sending the game to extras. In the top of the 10th, Greg Weissert handled the Orioles competently; with Rutschman placed on second as Baltimore's extra inning ghost runner, Weissert struck out Henderson, induced a Urías lineout, intentionally walked O'Hearn, and then fanned Jorge Mateo. In the bottom of the 10th, Gregory Soto came on to pitch for the Orioles. Ceddanne Rafaela was placed on second as the ghost runner. Duran popped out for the first out of the inning, but Devers continued his hot streak of clutch hitting with a line drive up the middle that brought Rafaela home for the winning run, completing a 6–5 Boston victory. Weissert got the win while Soto was charged with the loss.[234][235][236] In the evening game, Lucas Giolito toed the rubber for Boston against Baltimore's Tyler Rogers. Giolito had his best outing since rejoining the roster, giving up six Oriole hits but no runs while fanning six Oriole hitters, all in a seven-inning outing. Rogers, meanwhile, went 6+1⁄3 innings, also giving up no runs and only surrendering two hits while striking out five Red Sox. No runs were scored by either team until the top of the 8th, when O'Hearn singled to shallow right field to bring home Henderson for a 1–0 lead. In the top 9th, Luis Guerrero walked Rivera and Mateo, who then stole second base. Dylan Carlson's RBI double then scored Mateo, giving the Orioles a 2–0 lead. Abraham Toro slammed his second home run of the doubleheader for the Sox in the bottom 9th, pulling them to within one run, but reliever Seranthony Domínguez recovered to earn his first save of the year as he closed out the Sox for a 2–1 Oriole win. Andrew Kittredge earned the win for Baltimore while Brennan Bernardino was tagged with the loss. The Red Sox would look for a series win by taking three from four out of Baltimore with a victory on Sunday, with Walker Buehler set to pitch the finale.[237][238][239] In the Sunday afternoon finale, Buehler pitched opposite Baltimore starter Dean Kremer, and this time, both starters would prove to be the pitchers of record. Buehler and Kremer dueled through three scoreless innings for both teams, until the Orioles hung a number on the scoreboard first in the top of the 4th. Gunnar Henderson drew a walk, then advanced to third base on a Ryan O'Hearn single, and a Ramón Urías RBI sacrifice fly allowed Henderson to jog home for the first run of the game. Kremer continued his strong start with a scoreless bottom 4th and 5th, while the Orioles added on again in the top 5th, when Buehler gave up a Dylan Carlson long ball to right field, his first bomb of the season and a solo shot that put the Orioles up 2–0. In the top of the 6th, Buehler was relieved by Greg Weissert, who gave up an O'Hearn solo shot to center. Kremer was relieved with one out in the bottom 6th, and the Orioles' bullpen held up, keeping the Red Sox off the board again in the 7th and 8th, putting the O's within range of a shutout. Meanwhile, O'Hearn struck again in the 8th, this time with an RBI double that scored Henderson – and two Boston throwing errors on the same play allowed O'Hearn to take third and ultimately come home, putting Baltimore up 5–0. Abraham Toro prevented the shutout for Boston in the bottom 9th with an RBI single that drove in Marcelo Mayer. Mayer, who had made his MLB debut on Saturday, recorded his first two MLB hits and his first MLB run in this game; however, he also committed one of the two throwing errors on the O'Hearn play in the 8th. Buehler went five innings and was tagged for the loss despite twirling three strikeouts and only giving up two runs on four hits. Kramer earned the win by hurling 5+1⁄3 innings and, despite giving up seven Boston hits, set down four Sox batters and never gave up a run. The Baltimore victory gave them a split on the series, and gave the Red Sox two consecutive losses, a discouraging result after such a strong start to the four-game set. The Sox would look to improve with a trip to Milwaukee to face the Brewers, with Garrett Crochet set to start a Memorial Day matinee.[240][241][242] Red Sox split the series 2–2 (27–17 runs) May 26–28, at Milwaukee Brewers[edit]The Red Sox began a two-series interleague trip in Milwaukee with a Memorial Day matinee against the Brewers, and Garrett Crochet got the nod to take the mound against Chad Patrick. Crochet twirled a fine outing, giving up just two earned runs on five hits and striking out eleven Milwaukee hitters across 6+2⁄3 innings. However, Milwaukee tagged Crochet immediately in the bottom of the 1st, with leadoff hitter Jackson Chourio hitting a solo home run to center field to give the Brew Crew a 1–0 advantage. Crochet kept the Brewers off the board in innings two through four, and Patrick (4+2⁄3 innings, no runs, three hits, six strikeouts) did the same as Boston's offensive woes continued. Milwaukee struck again in the bottom of the 5th when Andruw Monasterio doubled to deep left field to score Joey Ortiz from second base. In the top 8th, down 2–0, the Red Sox at last got some offense going against the Brewers bullpen, as Kristian Campbell hit into an RBI force out that scored Rafael Devers from third. In the bottom 8th, however, Milwaukee restored its two-run lead when Eric Haase tagged reliever Garrett Whitlock for a bloop infield single with the bases loaded that enabled William Contreras to jog home from third. Brewers closer Trevor Megill faced Boston in the top of the 9th, and though Jarren Duran pulled the Red Sox within a run with an RBI single that brought home Trevor Story and advanced Ceddanne Rafaela to third base, Megill was able to intentionally walk Devers and then induce a Connor Wong fly out to end the game and secure the 3–2 win for Milwaukee. Boston lost its third straight game and dropped yet another decision by one run. Crochet, despite a strong performance, was charged with the loss to lower his record to 4–4. The victory was credited to Brewers reliever DL Hall. Veteran Sox outfielder Rob Refsnyder, who came in the game as a pinch hitter and drew two walks, was vocal after the loss, saying he was "tired of losing close games", saying it was "disappointing when we can't come through" for Crochet, and bluntly stating "we suck right now."[243] The Sox would look to get back in the win column in the middle game of the series with the Tuesday starter still to be determined.[244][245][246] In the Tuesday evening game, Boston's losing streak continued with a 5–1 loss to the Brewers that came in extra innings, putting another painful end on a game that was otherwise close for the majority of the contest. Richard Fitts made a spot start for the Red Sox and Aaron Civale toed the rubber for Milwaukee. This game was scoreless through five innings, with Fitts on a short leash, pitching the first three innings and surrendering two hits and striking out a pair; Civale went five frames and pitched to one batter in the 6th and allowed just one run on three hits with four strikeouts. Boston was first to draw blood in the top 6th: Rafaela doubled to left field off of Civale, and Civale was relieved by Aaron Ashby. Devers grounded out to advance Rafaela to third base, and then scored on an Ashby wild pitch, giving the Sox a 1–0 lead. Boston's bullpen kept Milwaukee off the scoreboard in the 6th, 7th, and 8th innings, and closer Aroldis Chapman came on looking to secure a 1–0 victory in the bottom 9th. However, Christian Yelich immediately doubled off of Chapman and then stole third base with Rhys Hoskins at the plate. Chapman then walked Hoskins. Monasterio came on to pinch-run for Hoskins, and Massachusetts native Sal Frelick drove in the game-tying run with a center field RBI single that scored Yelich. Entering extra innings, Trevor Story was placed on second base as Boston's ghost runner in the top 10th. Abraham Toro continued his hot hitting with an infield single to move Story to within 90 feet of home plate. However, Rafaela and Duran whiffed for back-to-back strikeouts against two separate Brewer relievers (Grant Anderson, then Rob Zastryzny), and Devers hit into an inning-ending fly-out. Liam Hendriks came on to pitch the bottom of the 10th, with Joey Ortiz the baserunner on second. Brice Turang hit a leadoff single to center to advance to third base, Jackson Chourio walked, and, after inducing a William Contreras fly-out, Yelich struck again by belting a grand slam walk-off home to right-center field that suddenly gave the Brewers a 5–1 victory. Hendriks was charged with the loss for Boston while Zastryzny was credited with the win. Now nursing a four-game losing streak and three games under .500 at 27–30, the Red Sox were in desperate need of a win, and would look to salvage the final game of the series on Wednesday afternoon, sending Brayan Bello to the mound.[247][248][249] In the Wednesday afternoon finale, Bello faced Freddy Peralta and twirled 4+2⁄3 innings, giving up two runs (one earned) on three hits with two strikeouts. Peralta countered with a five-inning outing and a scoreline of three earned runs on six hits with six strikeouts. For the second consecutive contest, however, neither starter would earn a decision. Boston scored first in the top 2nd when Rafaela's home run off of Peralta sailed over the center field fence for a solo shot and a 1–0 lead. Jake Bauers countered with his own solo dinger for the Brew Crew off of Bello in the bottom 3rd. Devers put the Red Sox ahead 3–1 in the top 4th with a 2-RBI single that scored both Duran and Connor Wong. The back-and-forth scoring continued in the bottom 5th and 6th, as Jackson Chouriou scored Bauers to pull within a run, and Milwaukee tied the contest and took the lead on the same hit in the following inning by way of a 2-RBI double from Caleb Durbin that scored both Frelick and Contreras. Wilyer Abreu tied the game again for Boston with his 13th home run of the season, a solo bomb to center off of Brewers reliever Nick Mears. After a scoreless 8th and 9th (Hunter Dobbins pitched the 8th for the Sox as part of a 3-inning relief appearance; Chapman pitched the 9th), the Sox and Brewers went to extra innings for the second straight game. Nick Sogard was Boston's ghost runner in the top 10th; Story singled to advance Sogard to third. David Hamilton then hit into a force out to allow Sogard to score, giving the Red Sox another one-run lead. In the bottom 10th, however, a crucial error would shift the game in Milwaukee's favor. Daz Cameron was the Brew Crew's ghost runner, and Frelick started the inning with a single that advanced Cameron to third. Isaac Collins then hit into a force out single, but Kristian Campbell was off-line on a throw to home plate, allowing Collins to advance to second, Frelick to third, and Cameron to score, tying the game for the Brewers. Justin Slaten then pitched to Durbin, who hit a sacrifice fly; Durbin's fly ball made for the second out on the inning, but was deep enough to score Frelick from third base, giving Milwaukee a second consecutive extra-inning win by a score of 6–5. The Red Sox' late-inning woes continued as Boston dropped its fifth straight game, falling to four games below .500, its worst mark of the year. The Sox left Milwaukee with their tails between their legs, hoping that a day off on Thursday would allow them to readjust prior to facing the Atlanta Braves again, this time in Atlanta in a three-game weekend series.[250][251][252] Red Sox lost the series 0–3 (8–14 runs) May 30–31, at Atlanta Braves[edit]The Red Sox began a three-game series in Atlanta, the road half of their six-game interleague rivalry series with the Braves. Boston sent Lucas Giolito to the mound to oppose Grant Holmes. The Braves drew first blood in the bottom 1st when Matt Olson singled to right field with two men on; a Wilyer Abreu throwing error allowed Olson to advance to second, Marcell Ozuna to third, and Ronald Acuña Jr. to home plate, giving Atlanta a 1–0 lead. The Red Sox took the lead in the top of the 4th when a slumping Trevor Story belted a pitch over the left-field wall for his much-needed seventh home run of the season, a dinger that also scored Abraham Toro. In the top of the 6th, Toro gave the Sox a 3–1 lead with an RBI double that brought home Carlos Narváez. Still up 3-1 entering the 9th inning, Boston was in need of insurance to pad a bullpen that had given up two straight walk-off losses, and Rafael Devers provided in the form of a line drive up the middle that scored both Ceddanne Rafaela and David Hamilton, giving Boston a 5–1 cushion. Aroldis Chapman came on to close and hurled a one-two-three inning that included two strikeouts, although the four-run lead the Sox had was sufficient that Chapman wasn't considered in a save situation. Giolito tossed 4+1⁄3 innings and gave up just the one Atlanta run on five hits, striking out three, though Garrett Whitlock was credited with the win in relief. Holmes, meanwhile, was saddled with the loss despite a nine-strikeout outing in which he gave up three Sox runs on six hits in 5+2⁄3 innings. Having mercifully broken their five-game losing streak, the Red Sox would look to build on their momentum with a second straight victory in the middle game in Saturday with Walker Buehler scheduled to start.[253][254][255] In the Saturday contest, Buehler got the start for Boston while Spencer Schwellenbach was dispatched to the mound for Atlanta; Schwellenbach had taken the loss for Atlanta in a 10–4 loss to the Red Sox back on May 18; he would fare significantly better this time, pitching 6+1⁄3 scoreless innings while giving up just five hits and fanning eleven Sox hitters. Buehler struck out six Braves but also gave up all of Atlanta's five runs on ten hits in 5+2⁄3 innings of work. Although Brennan Bernardino and Nick Burdi kept the Braves off the scoreboard in relief, Atlanta's bullpen was just as strong, following Schwellenbach with 2+2⁄3 frames of hitless ball while adding three more strikeouts, meaning that 14 Boston hitters went down on strikes on the day. Atlanta’s run scoring began with an Olson RBI double in the bottom 1st that scored Acuña. In the bottom 4th, the Braves tagged Buehler for four runs, as Austin Riley smoked a solo shot to center field for a 2–0 lead, Michael Harris II had an RBI single up the middle to bring home Ozzie Albies, and Acuña took Buehler deep for Atlanta's second home run of the inning, a two-run blast that came with Harris on base. The Red Sox, meanwhile, didn't earn a baserunner until the top of the 4th, when they mustered two men on base with two outs until Schwellenbach struck out Marcelo Mayer swinging. Toro continued his hit streak with a leadoff single in the 5th and was advanced to third base on a Rafaela hit, until a Jarren Duran groundout ended the frame. Schwellenbach improved to 4–4 while Buehler dropped to 4–3; the 5–0 defeat marked Boston's sixth in seven games, ending a miserable May for the Red Sox. The team would try to turn the page when opening June with the rubber game of the series on Sunday, with Garrett Crochet scheduled to start.[256][257][258] Series tied 1–1 (5–6 runs), continued into following month |
June
[edit]June 1, at Atlanta Braves
[edit]The Red Sox opened June desperately needing the change in the calendar after an 11–17 May. With burgeoning ace Garrett Crochet in the mound in the rubber game of the Sox' series in Atlanta, the Braves countered by dispatching Bryce Elder to the bump. Crochet outdueled Elder in yet another low-scoring game; the Mississippi native twirled seven full innings and gave up just one run on five hits while striking out twelve Atlanta hitters; Elder didn't perform poorly but was shaky early, surrendering three runs, all of them earned, in the first inning – all the runs the Sox would need – on a total of six hits across 5+1⁄3 innings, walking three and striking out four. The Red Sox' run-scoring came all in the top 1st – indeed, all on one hit – but Crochet's strong outing would make them hold up. Rafael Devers doubled to deep right center field, and Abraham Toro singled to left to advance Devers to third two at-bats later. Marcelo Mayer then drew a walk from Elder to advance Toro to second load the bases. All the baserunners came home on a 3-RBI double that Trevor Story stroked to deep center, instantly putting the Sox up 3-0. A Kristian Campbell groundout got Elder out of the jam. In the bottom half of the inning, Marcell Ozuna hit a solo home run to right field following two Crochet strikeouts. Boston's starter recovered right away, though, inducing a Matt Olson groundout to end the inning. Crochet struck out two more in the 2nd and got revenge on Ozuna by fanning him in the 3rd with two outs and two men on for Atlanta. Crochet hurled only one inning out of seven – the bottom 5th – without striking out a Braves batter. Greg Weissert came on for the Sox in the bottom 8th and pitched a one-two-three frame to build a bridge to closer Aroldis Chapman, who in the 9th retired three of four Braves to secure the 3–1 win and earn his ninth save of the year. Crochet improved to 5–4 while Elder dropped to 2–3. It still was a frustrating road trip for Boston – a 2–4 journey through two cities that included consecutive walkoff losses – but the Red Sox ended the Braves series on a positive note, looking to establish further momentum with a three-game home series against the Angels. Richard Fitts was scheduled to start in the Monday opener, looking for his first win of the season.[259][260][261]
Red Sox won the series, 2–1 (8–7 runs)
June 2–4, vs. Los Angeles Angels
[edit]The first contest of a three-game home series at Fenway was won by the Angels, 7–6. Boston starter Richard Fitts allowed six runs (five earned) in the first inning, including three home runs, and took the loss. It was the first time any visiting team had ever hit three first-inning home runs at Fenway Park.[262] Reliever Hunter Dobbins pitched the next five innings and allowed just one run, giving Boston a chance to make the game competitive, mainly via a four-run bottom of the fourth inning. Entering the ninth with a one-run deficit, the Red Sox were unable to score against Los Angeles (and former Boston) closer Kenley Jansen. Jarren Duran had three hits and scored twice, while Ceddanne Rafaela homered. Defensively, Boston committed two errors.[263][264][265] The second game of the series went to extra innings, with the Angels winning, 4–3. Red Sox starter Brayan Bello had a no decision after allowing three runs on seven hits in six innings. The three runs he allowed all came in the third inning, putting Los Angeles ahead, 3–0. Boston tied the game after scoring once in the bottom of the third, and twice in the bottom of the sixth. After neither team could score in the final three innings of regulation, the Angels scored once in the top of the 10th off of Zack Kelly; he took the loss when the Red Sox were unable to score in the bottom of the frame. Rafaela again homered, but also committed one of Boston's three errors during the game.[266][267][268] Boston avoided being swept in the series by winning the closing game on Wednesday afternoon, 11–9. Starter Lucas Giolito left after 1+2⁄3 innings, having allowed seven runs on eight hits, but escaped with a no decision. Losing 7–5 through the first three innings, the Red Sox outscored the Angles in the final six innings, 6–2. Cooper Criswell, the seventh Boston pitcher of the game, recorded the final five outs and was credited with the win. Rafaela hit a two-run walk-off home run, his third consecutive game with a home run. The homer went around the Pesky Pole—measured at just 308 feet (94 m), it was the second-shortest major-league home run in the Statcast era (since 2015).[269][270][271]
Red Sox lost the series, 1–2 (20–20 runs)
June 6–8, at New York Yankees
[edit]The Red Sox opened a three-game series at the belly of the beast – Yankee Stadium – against their hated rival New York Yankees in the two teams' first meeting of 2025. Boston sent Walker Buehler to the mound to oppose New York's Will Warren. The Yankees pounced on Buehler immediately, tagging the starter for a five-run bottom of the 1st, as Buehler gave up two home runs – a 3-run bomb to center by Jazz Chisholm Jr. that came with Aaron Judge and Trent Grisham on base, and a 2-run long ball over the infamous right-field "short porch", coming with Jasson Dominguez on base. Buehler was pulled after a bottom 2nd that went little better, as he gave up two New York runs to put the Yanks up 7–0. Chisholm struck again when his single with two men on brought home Judge and advanced Paul Goldschmidt to third, and, with the bases loaded, Goldschmidt was forced to jog home after Buehler hit Volpe with a pitch. The Red Sox would come back in this game, but the damage was done, as Buehler exited with an abysmal scoreline of seven runs (five earned) on seven hits and two walks across two innings. Zack Kelly relieved Buehler. In the top of the 5th, the Yankee bats having been quieted temporarily by the Sox pen, Boston got on the board when Marcelo Mayer turned on a pitch from Warren and sent it over the center-field wall for a lead-off solo shot – his first major league home run. The Yankees added an eighth run in the bottom 5th and a ninth in the bottom 7th (a Goldschmidt home run), but Boston scattered five runs across the top 6th and top 7th, efforts that included a Romy González 2-RBI single and a Rafael Devers solo home run, his 13th of the year. However, the Sox offense faltered in the 8th and 9th against the back end of New York's bullpen while trailing by three, and Warren was credited with the win (4 runs on 3 hits with six strikeouts in 5+1⁄3 innings), and Devin Williams earned his seventh save of the year for the Yankees. The Sox would look for better returns in the Saturday middle game with Garrett Crochet set to start.[272][273][274]
In the Saturday evening tilt, nationally televised on FOX, Crochet took to the mound against the Yankees' Ryan Yarbrough, but this game would turn out to be a showcase of power bats rather than power arms. The Sox drew first blood with a Kristian Campbell RBI single in the top of the 2nd, but Crochet struggled in the bottom half of the frame, giving up a leadoff hit to Cody Bellinger and walking DJ LeMahieu prior to hanging a pitch to Yanks catcher Austin Wells that Wells let sail over the right field short porch, at a stroke putting New York up 3–1. Fortunately for the Red Sox, their offense not only recovered in the top 3rd but found a significant groove, keeping the line moving with a five-run inning that put Boston right back ahead, 6–3. The run-scoring started with Abraham Toro singling up the middle with the bases loaded, which allowed Rob Refsnyder to jog home and score to pull the Sox within a run. Trevor Story then laced a double to left field which allowed Toro to score the tying run, let Romy González score the go-ahead run, and enabled Carlos Narváez to hustle home ahead of the throw to score a third run, putting the Sox up 5–3. Boston added its sixth run of the evening two batters later when a Campbell base hit brought home Story. Crochet recovered in the bottom 3rd with a 1-2-3 inning, and in the top 4th González tagged Yarbrough for a 2-run shot to left field that put the Sox up by 5, 8–3. Yarbrough was pulled after four innings. The Yankees weren’t done, however, and a Wells RBI double and a Pablo Reyes RBI ground out in the bottom 4th pulled New York to within three runs with an 8–5 deficit. Crochet was pulled after six innings of work (a final scoreline of five runs on six hits, but with nine strikeouts), and LeMahieu's timely single with two men on in the bottom 8th scored two Yankee runners and cut Boston's lead to 8–7. Rather than risk their fortune in yet another one-run game, however, Boston's offense ignited again in the top of the 9th, as Story's bloop single to center with two men on scored Narváez and Mayer, refreshing Boston's lead to 10–7. Closer Aroldis Chapman then came on for the bottom 9th, and the former Yankee hurled a 1-2-3 frame to shut down his former team and earn his 10th save of 2025. With the victory, the series would again come down to a rubber game, this time a Sunday Night Baseball matchup between Hunter Dobbins and Carlos Rodón.[275][276][277]
Dobbins, after a brief stint on bullpen duty, returned to the starting pitcher role in the rubber match against Rodón and the Yankees in what would prove to be another slugfest. Again, the Yankees took Boston deep early, as Aaron Judge smashed his 22nd long ball of the season – a 2-run homer – to center field to put New York ahead 2–0 after one inning. However, Dobbins recovered, and he and Rodón kept the game otherwise scoreless until the top of the 5th inning. In the 5th, the Red Sox finally put Yankee Stadium's short porch in right field to their advantage, as Campbell squeaked a Rodón offering over the wall with Ceddanne Rafaela on base, tying the game at 2–2. In the bottom 5th, however, DJ LeMahieu returned the favor with a solo homer, also to right, giving the Yankees a 3–2 lead. In the top 6th, Boston's bats broke the game open, beginning with a rather poetic home run – Carlos Narváez, who had spent nearly a decade in the Yankees organization before joining Boston prior to the 2025 campaign, smoked a pitch to left field for his first career home run at Yankee Stadium – against his former team. It was Narváez's 6th home run of the year and came with both Refsnyder and Devers on base, making for a 3-run jack that put Boston up 5–3. The Sox added two more runs on the inning when Jarren Duran's shallow infield single brought home baserunners Story and Toro. Up 7–3, the Red Sox went to the bullpen for the 6th inning after getting five solid frames from Dobbins, who finished with a scoreline of three earned runs on four hits; Rodón also had been pulled after five, having given up five runs on three hits and three walks. In the Yankees' bottom 6th, New York answered Boston's offense with a 2-run frame (a Jazz Chisholm Jr. RBI sac fly; a Trent Grisham bases-loaded walk forcing home a baserunner) to pull the score to 7–5. The 7th inning was scoreless, but Boston added two runs in the top 8th, both off solo long balls (Toro's 4th home run; Story's 8th). After a scoreless bottom 8th from the Boston pen, the Red Sox hitters could have eased off the gas – but didn't, as Devers added his own solo home run and Toro continued a productive evening with an RBI double to score Marcelo Mayer. Now up 11–5, Boston hoped to give Aroldis Chapman a night of rest, but the Yankees tagged reliever Robert Stock for two runs in 2⁄3 of an inning, forcing Boston to summon Chapman, who closed the door on an 11–7 victory to seal the series win for the Sox. Boston took two consecutive and two of three games from the Yankees in the Bronx, and the team would return to Fenway Park for a homestand looking to build on some much-needed momentum. Starters Dobbins and Rodón were credited with the win and loss, bringing their records to 3–1 and 8–4, respectively.[278][279][280]
Red Sox won the series, 2–1 (27–23 runs)
June 9–11, vs. Tampa Bay Rays
[edit]Boston returned to Fenway Park to open a three-game series against division rival Tampa Bay, a highly anticipated contest due to both the MLB debut of Roman Anthony, who had crushed a 498-foot home run with AAA Worcester over the weekend, and also because of Boston's impressive back-to-back wins at Yankee Stadium against a stalwart New York team. However, Anthony would go for 0-for-4 in an extra-inning heartbreaker that the Red Sox would lose in 11 innings, 10–8. Brayan Bello faced Tampa Bay's Shane Baz – neither starter would earn a decision. Bello's outing was middling (4 runs, 3 earned on 7 hits and a walk, with 4 strikeouts in 6+1⁄3 innings), while Baz hurled 5+1⁄3 innings while giving up 3 runs on 3 hits with 3 walks and striking out 5 Red Sox. Bello and Baz kept the contest scoreless through the first three innings, before Jake Mangum drew first blood in the 4th with an RBI single for Tampa. In the top 5th, Brandon Lowe stroked an RBI single to left and Yandy Diaz hit an RBI single to right to advanced all the way to third base on an Anthony fielding error. In the bottom half of the inning, trailing 3–0, Connor Wong hit into an RBI ground out to put Boston on the board. In the 6th, the Rays went scoreless while Boston tied the game courtesy of a 2-RBI double from Romy González, scoring Abraham Toro and Rafael Devers. In the 7th, though, the Rays would retake the lead off Sox reliever Brennan Bernardino. Josh Lowe doubled to deep right center to bring home Taylor Walls, and then scored on a Bernardino wild pitch to Jonathan Aranda, who singled in Díaz. Boston now trailed 6–3, but drew within two runs in the bottom 7th courtesy of a Toro RBI ground out followed by a Story single that drove in Jarren Duran. The 8th passed with neither team scoring, and then the Rays expanded their lead in the top 9th, as Aranda hit a sac fly to put Tampa Bay up by two. In the bottom 9th, the Sox were up against the wall, but scratched out two runs to tie the game at 7–7 and force extra innings – Anthony hit into a ground out that permitted Devers to scramble home, and Kristian Campbell singled in the infield to score Toro. In the top 10th, with the aid of a designated runner on second base, Walls hit a sac fly to put Tampa up by one, but Aroldis Chapman, pitching in his third consecutive game, put out the fire. In the bottom 10th, with Ceddanne Rafaela having been placed on second base, the Sox scored a very lucky game-tying run when Rafaela hustled all the way from second base to home plate on an infield dribbler from Toro, which appeared to be the game-ending putout, until Aranda committed both a fielding and a throwing error enabling Toro to reach and Rafaela to score. Rafaela perhaps angered the baseball gods, however, when he lost track of the score and celebrated as if he had scored the winning run; Story popped out to end the inning and reliever Zack Kelly subsequently allowed two runs to score, including one on a bases-loaded walk to Junior Caminero, in the top of the 11th. In the bottom 11th, needing another two runs just to force a 12th frame, Rob Refsnyder, pinch-hitting for Anthony, drew a walk, but Campbell lined out, González was called out on strikes (a pitch that appeared low to manager Alex Cora, who was subsequently ejected for arguing the call), and Rafaela lined out, ensuring Tampa the victory and Boston yet another extra-inning loss (in their 12th extra-inning game of the season, they fell to 4–8 in such games). Ian Seymour got the win in relief in his own major league debut, while Kelly was saddled with the loss, falling to 1–3. Struggling Lucas Giolito would look to provide a quality start for the Sox in game two of the series on Tuesday.
The Red Sox sent Giolito to the bump on Tuesday to oppose Ryan Pepiot. Giolito had a fine outing, overcoming three walks to give up just one run on three hits while striking out four Rays hitters across six innings of work. For Tampa Bay, Pepiot hurled 5+2⁄3 innings, and, despite striking out nine Boston batters, gave up three runs, all earned, on five hits, with two walks. Boston's bullpen would be strong enough to prop up Giolito's start and shut down the Rays in the late innings. Roman Anthony's middling performance in his major league debut was put in the past with an impressive game two performance, coming with his family in the stands. Anthony gave Boston its first lead of the game and notched his first major league hit and RBIs when, in the bottom of the 1st, he placed a Pepiot pitch in deep left field for a 2-RBI double that brought home baserunners Carlos Narváez and Devers. Giolito and Pepiot traded scoreless frames in the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th before Tampa Bay scratched out a run in the top 5th, courtesy of Díaz, who singled up the middle to score José Caballero. In the bottom of the 6th, the Sox added a pivotal insurance run when Story crushed a Pepiot offering over the Green Monster for a solo shot, giving Boston a 3–1 lead. After six innings pitched, Giolito was pulled in favor of reliever Garrett Whitlock, who struck out three Rays across two innings; in the top 9th, Boston entered a save situation, but with Chapman having pitched in three straight games, the Red Sox opted to rest Chapman in favor of Greg Weissert, who earned his first save of the season with a one-two-three inning. Giolito improved to 2–1 while Pepiot fell to 3–6. Having won three of their last four, Boston would look to take the deciding game of the series on Wednesday with Walker Buehler toeing the rubber.
Season standings
[edit]American League East
[edit]Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | Home | Road |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
New York Yankees | 40 | 25 | .615 | — | 21–12 | 19–13 |
Toronto Blue Jays | 37 | 30 | .552 | 4 | 22–13 | 15–17 |
Tampa Bay Rays | 36 | 31 | .537 | 5 | 23–20 | 13–11 |
Boston Red Sox | 33 | 36 | .478 | 9 | 18–17 | 15–19 |
Baltimore Orioles | 26 | 39 | .400 | 14 | 12–18 | 14–21 |
American League Wild Card
[edit]Team | W | L | Pct. |
---|---|---|---|
Detroit Tigers | 44 | 24 | .647 |
New York Yankees | 40 | 25 | .615 |
Houston Astros | 36 | 30 | .545 |
Team | W | L | Pct. | GB |
---|---|---|---|---|
Toronto Blue Jays | 37 | 30 | .552 | +1½ |
Tampa Bay Rays | 36 | 31 | .537 | +½ |
Minnesota Twins | 35 | 31 | .530 | — |
Cleveland Guardians | 34 | 32 | .515 | 1 |
Kansas City Royals | 34 | 33 | .507 | 1½ |
Seattle Mariners | 33 | 33 | .500 | 2 |
Los Angeles Angels | 32 | 34 | .485 | 3 |
Texas Rangers | 32 | 35 | .478 | 3½ |
Boston Red Sox | 33 | 36 | .478 | 3½ |
Baltimore Orioles | 26 | 39 | .400 | 8½ |
Athletics | 26 | 43 | .377 | 10½ |
Chicago White Sox | 23 | 44 | .343 | 12½ |
Red Sox team leaders
[edit]Batting[281] | ||
---|---|---|
Batting average† | Alex Bregman | .299 |
RBIs | Rafael Devers | 57 |
Runs scored | 45 | |
Games played | 68 | |
Home runs | 14 | |
Hits | Jarren Duran | 79 |
Stolen bases | 13 | |
Pitching[282] | ||
ERA‡ | Garrett Crochet | 2.35 |
WHIP‡ | 1.07 | |
Strikeouts | 110 | |
Innings pitched | 88 | |
Games started | 14 | |
Wins | 6 | |
Saves | Aroldis Chapman | 11 |
Games pitched | Brennan Bernardino Greg Weissert |
31 |
Updated through June 9, 2025.
† Minimum 3.1 plate appearances per team games played
AVG qualified batters: Abreu, Bregman, Campbell, Devers, Duran, Rafaela, Story
‡ Minimum 1 inning pitched per team games played
ERA & WHIP qualified pitchers: Crochet
Record vs. opponents
[edit]Record vs. American League
[edit]Source: MLB Standings Grid – 2025 |
||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Team | ATH | BAL | BOS | CWS | CLE | DET | HOU | KC | LAA | MIN | NYY | SEA | TB | TEX | TOR | NL |
Athletics | — | 0–0 | 0–0 | 5–1 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–2 | 0–0 | 0–4 | 0–3 | 1–2 | 3–4 | 0–0 | 5–2 | 0–4 | 9–18 |
Baltimore | 0–0 | — | 3–4 | 3–0 | 2–1 | 0–3 | 0–0 | 2–4 | 2–1 | 0–6 | 2–1 | 2–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 3–3 | 5–13 |
Boston | 0–0 | 4–3 | — | 4–3 | 2–1 | 0–3 | 0–0 | 2–1 | 1–2 | 1–2 | 0–0 | 1–2 | 2–1 | 3–4 | 2–5 | 8–7 |
Chicago | 1–5 | 0–3 | 3–4 | — | 0–3 | 1–5 | 2–1 | 0–4 | 1–2 | 2–4 | 0–0 | 1–2 | 0–0 | 2–1 | 0–0 | 6–9 |
Cleveland | 0–0 | 1–2 | 1–2 | 3–0 | — | 3–1 | 0–2 | 4–2 | 3–3 | 4–2 | 3–3 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 2–1 | 9–12 |
Detroit | 0–0 | 3–0 | 3–0 | 5–1 | 1–3 | — | 1–2 | 5–2 | 3–1 | 2–1 | 2–1 | 2–1 | 0–0 | 1–2 | 2–1 | 11–7 |
Houston | 2–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 1–2 | 0–0 | 2–1 | — | 3–3 | 2–1 | 2–1 | 0–0 | 4–3 | 3–4 | 2–2 | 3–0 | 9–11 |
Kansas City | 0–0 | 4–2 | 1–2 | 4–0 | 2–4 | 2–5 | 3–3 | — | 0–0 | 4–3 | 0–3 | 0–0 | 3–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 9–7 |
Los Angeles | 4–0 | 1–2 | 2–1 | 2–1 | 3–3 | 1–3 | 1–2 | 0–0 | — | 0–3 | 0–3 | 0–2 | 2–1 | 0–3 | 2–1 | 10–8 |
Minnesota | 3–0 | 6–0 | 2–1 | 4–2 | 2–4 | 1–2 | 1–2 | 3–4 | 3–0 | — | 0–0 | 1–2 | 1–2 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 7–8 |
New York | 2–1 | 1–2 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 2–3 | 1–2 | 0–0 | 3–0 | 3–0 | 0–0 | — | 2–1 | 4–3 | 3–0 | 2–1 | 14–10 |
Seattle | 4–3 | 0–2 | 2–1 | 2–1 | 0–0 | 1–2 | 3–4 | 0–0 | 2–0 | 2–1 | 1–2 | — | 0–0 | 5–1 | 2–4 | 8–7 |
Tampa Bay | 0–0 | 0–0 | 1–2 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 4–3 | 0–3 | 1–2 | 2–1 | 3–4 | 0–0 | — | 2–3 | 5–1 | 14–10 |
Texas | 2–5 | 0–0 | 4–3 | 1–2 | 0–0 | 2–1 | 2–2 | 0–0 | 3–0 | 0–0 | 0–3 | 1–5 | 3–2 | — | 1–2 | 10–8 |
Toronto | 4–0 | 3–3 | 5–2 | 0–0 | 1–2 | 1–2 | 0–3 | 0–0 | 1–2 | 0–0 | 1–2 | 4–2 | 1–5 | 2–1 | — | 9–5 |
Updated with the results of all games through June 4, 2025.
Record vs. National League
[edit]Source: MLB Standings |
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---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Team | AZ | ATL | CHC | CIN | COL | LAD | MIA | MIL | NYM | PHI | PIT | SD | SF | STL | WSH | |
Athletics | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–3 | 0–0 | 2–1 | 0–0 | 2–1 | 1–2 | 1–2 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 1–2 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | |
Baltimore | 1–2 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 1–2 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 1–2 | |
Boston | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 3–0 | 0–0 | |
Chicago | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–3 | 2–1 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 2–1 | 1–2 | 1–2 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | |
Cleveland | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 3–0 | 0–3 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | |
Detroit | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–3 | 0–0 | 1–2 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 2–1 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | |
Houston | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–1 | 2–1 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 2–1 | 0–3 | 1–2 | 0–0 | |
Kansas City | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 3–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 1–2 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | |
Los Angeles | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 1–2 | 0–0 | 2–1 | 2–1 | 0–0 | |
Minnesota | 0–0 | 0–3 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 2–1 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–3 | 0–0 | |
New York | 1–2 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 3–0 | 2–1 | 0–1 | 2–1 | 0–0 | 1–2 | 0–0 | 0–0 | |
Seattle | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 2–1 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 2–1 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–3 | 0–0 | 0–0 | |
Tampa Bay | 2–1 | 2–1 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 2–1 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 2–1 | 3–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | |
Texas | 0–0 | 0–0 | 1–2 | 2–1 | 0–0 | 1–2 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 1–2 | 0–0 | 0–0 | |
Toronto | 0–0 | 2–1 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–3 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–0 | 3–0 |
Updated with the results of all games through May 5, 2025.
Upcoming games
[edit]Note: all times local to Boston (ET)
# | Date | Day | Opponent | Time |
---|---|---|---|---|
70 | June 11 | Wednesday | vs Rays | 7:10 p.m. |
– | June 12 | Thursday | no game | |
71 | June 13 | Friday | vs Yankees | 7:10 p.m. |
72 | June 14 | Saturday | vs Yankees | 7:15 p.m. † |
73 | June 15 | Sunday | vs Yankees | 1:35 p.m. |
74 | June 16 | Monday | at Mariners | 9:40 p.m. |
75 | June 17 | Tuesday | at Mariners | 9:40 p.m. |
76 | June 18 | Wednesday | at Mariners | 4:10 p.m. |
– | June 19 | Thursday | no game | |
77 | June 20 | Friday | at Giants | 10:15 p.m. ‡ |
78 | June 21 | Saturday | at Giants | 4:05 p.m. |
79 | June 22 | Sunday | at Giants | 4:05 p.m. |
80 | June 23 | Monday | at Angels | 9:38 p.m. |
81 | June 24 | Tuesday | at Angels | 9:38 p.m. |
82 | June 25 | Wednesday | at Angels | 4:07 p.m. |
– | June 26 | Thursday | no game | |
83 | June 27 | Friday | vs Blue Jays | 7:10 p.m. |
84 | June 28 | Saturday | vs Blue Jays | 4:10 p.m. |
85 | June 29 | Sunday | vs Blue Jays | 1:35 p.m. |
86 | June 30 | Monday | vs Reds | 7:10 p.m. ‡ |
87 | July 1 | Tuesday | vs Reds | 7:10 p.m. |
88 | July 2 | Wednesday | vs Reds | 7:10 p.m. |
Game log
[edit]Red Sox Win | Red Sox Loss | Game Postponed | Home Game |
2025 Boston Red Sox Season Game Log: 33–36 (Home: 18–16; Away: 15–20) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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March/April: 17–15 (Home: 8–6; Away: 9–9)
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May: 11–17 (Home: 8–8; Away: 3–9)
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June: 5–4 (Home: 2–2; Away: 3–2)
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July: 0–0 (Home: 0–0; Away: 0–0)
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August: 0–0 (Home: 0–0; Away: 0–0)
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September: 0–0 (Home: 0–0; Away: 0–0)
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Grand slams
[edit]No. | Date | Red Sox batter | H/A | Pitcher | Opposing team | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | May 18 | Rafael Devers | H | Spencer Schwellenbach | Atlanta Braves | [287] |
2 | May 23 | H | Emmanuel Rivera† | Baltimore Orioles | [288] |
† Normally a position player
Ejections
[edit]No. | Date | Red Sox personnel | H/A | Opposing team | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | May 20 | Walker Buehler | H | New York Mets | [289] |
2 | Alex Cora | ||||
3 | June 9 | Tampa Bay Rays | [290] |
Source:[291]
Current roster
[edit]Transactions
[edit] April transactions
|
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April[edit]
|
May transactions
|
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May[edit]
|
June
[edit]- June 1: The team designated Blake Sabol for assignment, optioned Nick Sogard to Worcester, recalled Luis Guerrero from Worcester, and added Nate Eaton to the active roster. The team also placed Justin Slaten on the 15-day injured list retroactive to May 29.[327]
- June 4: Yasmani Grandal informed Worcester that he was stepping away from his minor-league deal.[328]
- June 5: The team sent Blake Sabol outright to Worcester.[329]
- June 7: The team selected the contract of Robert Stock from Triple-A, and Josh Winckowski was placed on the 60-day injured list.[330]
- June 9: The team selected the contracts of Roman Anthony and Brian Van Belle from Worcester, and designated Robert Stock and Ryan Noda for assignment. The team also placed Wilyer Abreu on the 15-day injured list.[331][332]
MLB debuts
[edit]- March 27: Kristian Campbell[333]
- April 6: Hunter Dobbins[334]
- May 24: Marcelo Mayer[335]
- June 9: Roman Anthony[336]
Awards and honors
[edit]Recipient | Award | Date awarded | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
Alex Bregman | AL Player of the Week | April 7, 2025 | [337] |
Kristian Campbell | AL Rookie of the Month | May 2, 2025 | [338] |
Rafael Devers | AL Player of the Week | May 12, 2025 | [339] |
Farm system
[edit]Minor-league coaching assignments were announced on January 16.[340]
Level | Team | League | Division | Manager | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Triple-A | Worcester Red Sox | International League | East | Chad Tracy | |
Double-A | Portland Sea Dogs | Eastern League | Northeast | Chad Epperson | |
High-A | Greenville Drive | South Atlantic League | South | Liam Carroll | |
Single-A | Salem Red Sox | Carolina League | North | Ozzie Chavez | |
Rookie | FCL Red Sox | Florida Complex League | South | Chase Illig | |
DSL Red Sox Blue | Dominican Summer League |
Central | Sandy Madera | ||
DSL Red Sox Red | West | Amaury Garcia |
Notes
[edit]- ^ Longtime Red Sox radio announcer Joe Castiglione retired at the end of the 2024 regular season.
References
[edit]- ^ Finn, Chad (February 19, 2025). "NESN officially announces lineup of Red Sox broadcasters for 2025". The Boston Globe. Retrieved February 19, 2025.
- ^ "Printable Schedule". MLB.com. Boston Red Sox. Retrieved September 29, 2024.
- ^ Cerullo, Mac (September 24, 2024). "Red Sox to retire blue alternate uniforms, introduce new City Connect in 2025". Boston Herald. Retrieved September 29, 2024.
- ^ McWilliams, Julian (November 22, 2024). "Pitchers Isaiah Campbell, Bryan Mata non-tendered, but Red Sox will offer contracts to the 29 remaining unsigned players". The Boston Globe. Retrieved November 26, 2024.
- ^ "Transactions: October 1, 2024". MLB.com. Archived from the original on October 3, 2024. Retrieved October 3, 2024.
- ^ Franco, Anthony (October 1, 2024). "34 Players Elect Free Agency". MLBTradeRumors. Archived from the original on October 3, 2024. Retrieved October 3, 2024.
- ^ "Red Sox parting ways with six coaches, including first base coach Andy Fox and bullpen coach Kevin Walker". The Boston Globe. October 10, 2024. Retrieved October 11, 2024.
- ^ Polishuk, Mark (October 27, 2024). "Red Sox Hire Dillon Lawson As Assistant Hitting Coach". MLBTradeRumors. Archived from the original on November 1, 2024. Retrieved October 28, 2024.
- ^ Smith, Christopher (October 31, 2024). "Eight Red Sox players become free agents; Will any re-sign? Offseason guide". MassLive. Archived from the original on November 1, 2024. Retrieved November 1, 2024.
- ^ "'They need me home': Big Maple makes decision to retire after 2024 season". MLB.com. Retrieved October 9, 2024.
- ^ McWilliams, Julian (October 31, 2024). "Red Sox righthander Lucas Giolito picks up $19 million player option for 2025 season". The Boston Globe. Retrieved November 1, 2024.
- ^ "Transactions: November 4, 2024". MLB.com. Boston Red Sox. November 4, 2024. Retrieved November 5, 2024.
- ^ Smith, Christopher (November 4, 2024). "Red Sox make roster moves; how many spots are open as free agency begins?". masslive.com. Retrieved November 5, 2024.
- ^ Speier, Alex (November 4, 2024). "Red Sox make Nick Pivetta qualifying offer, pass on Tyler O'Neill". The Boston Globe. Retrieved November 5, 2024.
- ^ Touri, Amin (November 4, 2024). "Red Sox exercise Rob Refsnyder's option, keeping outfielder around for 2025". The Boston Globe. Retrieved November 5, 2024.
- ^ Masala, Mike (November 5, 2024). "Red Sox decline $21 million dollar slugger's qualifying offer and send him to free agency". The Sporting News. Archived from the original on November 7, 2024. Retrieved November 7, 2024.
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- ^ McDonald, Darragh (June 5, 2025). "Red Sox Outright Blake Sabol". MLBTradeRumors. Archived from the original on June 9, 2025. Retrieved June 9, 2025.
- ^ Deeds, Nick (June 7, 2025). "Red Sox Select Robert Stock, Place Josh Winckowski On 60-Day IL". MLBTradeRumours. Archived from the original on June 9, 2025. Retrieved June 9, 2025.
- ^ McDonald, Darragh (June 9, 2025). "Red Sox Promote Roman Anthony". MLBTradeRumors. Archived from the original on June 10, 2025. Retrieved June 10, 2025.
- ^ McDonald, Darragh (June 9, 2025). "Red Sox Designate Robert Stock For Assignment, Select Brian Van Belle". MLBTradeRumors. Archived from the original on June 10, 2025. Retrieved June 10, 2025.
- ^ Cole, Mike (March 28, 2025). "What Kristian Campbell Told Red Sox Teammates After Memorable MLB Debut". NESN. Archived from the original on March 28, 2025. Retrieved April 2, 2025.
- ^ Smith, Christopher (April 6, 2025). "Who's Hunter Dobbins? Red Sox Game 2 starter up to 99 mph, making MLB debut". MassLive. Archived from the original on April 8, 2025. Retrieved April 6, 2025.
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Further reading
[edit]- Abraham, Peter (February 10, 2025). "Spring training begins this week. Let's project the Red Sox' 2025 roster". The Boston Globe. Retrieved February 10, 2025.
- McWilliams, Julian (October 1, 2024). "With the Red Sox season in the books, here's the contract status of every player on the roster". The Boston Globe. Retrieved October 1, 2024.
- McWilliams, Julian (October 2, 2024). "Evaluating the Red Sox' position players — how they did this year and where they go from here". The Boston Globe. Retrieved October 3, 2024.