Roman Anthony’s return remains on hold, and the Red Sox outfielder isn’t hiding how hard the wait has been.
Anthony missed his 47th straight game on Sunday as Boston completed a four-game sweep of the New York Yankees at home, and the 22-year-old said the grind of rehab has taken a toll. Speaking with WEEI’s Rob Bradford on the “Baseball Isn’t Boring” podcast, Anthony described the process as slow and frustrating.
"It’s been a long, long slow process," Anthony said. "Everything sucks, to be honest.
The team leaves on the road, and it’s like, 'Dang, I miss being around the guys.' You have two days where you feel like it’s encouraging, then you have a really (expletive) two days, and you’re like, 'Oh, man, where am I at?'"
Saturday will mark exactly two months since Anthony last appeared in a game, and on Sunday the former second-round pick was moved to the 60-day injured list. That move was only procedural and does not change the timeline for his eventual return.
Anthony’s rehab has already been interrupted more than once. He first went on the 10-day injured list on May 7 because of a right wrist sprain, then was shut down later in the month after feeling discomfort in his right hand while taking swings off a tee.
He told Bradford that the pain is still there when he tries to swing, but he also feels signs of progress.
"It’s the same kind of coming through, as I push through and kind of extend through in a sense," he said of the pain while trying to swing a bat. "I’m seeing progress and it feels like it’s getting stronger.
Feeling like I got more there to kind of support the hand and then the ring finger. So, positive in that sense."
For Anthony, the hardest part has been being on the outside looking in while Boston tries to stay in the playoff picture.
"Being a competitor, being a baseball player my entire life, it’s all I know," he told Bradford. "Just the most simple thing is that I’m not out there.
And so sitting here, watching games, I’m not meant to watch games. And that’s the way I look at it.
I want to be out there. I want to be helping the boys.
I want to be part of it."
In Other News...
Maple Leafs May Have Just Opened A Door Bruins Can't Ignore
The Bruins have already made one notable move on the restricted free-agent front by keeping defenseman Jordan Harris in the fold, and now the focus shifts to what else Don Sweeney still wants to add before the market opens. Boston has been linked to the idea of bringing in more help up front and a right-shot defenseman, so the qualifying-offer decisions around the league are worth watching closely as the roster picture keeps taking shape.
Matias Maccelli is one name to monitor after Toronto passed on qualifying him, putting a versatile forward into the mix for teams looking for skill and playmaking. For a Bruins club still trying to round out its forward group, that kind of opening matters, even if the fit and timing will have to sort themselves out once free agency begins. [Read more 🡒]
Bruins Tied To Rugged Blue Line Option That Could Divide Fans
After a difficult season on the back end, the Bruins are expected to keep looking for ways to get sturdier on defense, and that has put a familiar hard-nosed type of name into the conversation. NHL analyst Matt Larkin pointed to a defenseman with a long history of bringing physical edge and bite to the blue line as a possible fit in Boston once free agency opens, the sort of addition that could immediately change the tone of a defense that needed more pushback.
The appeal is obvious enough for a front office that has leaned on toughness in the past, but it also comes with the kind of split reaction that usually follows a player built this way. He just finished a seven-year deal and arrived in this discussion after a recent move from the Rangers to the Ducks, so any Bruins pursuit would carry both cost and baggage, even before the debate over whether his style is the right answer for a team trying to get deeper and harder to play against. [Read more 🡒]
Bruins Suddenly Tied To Another Move Fans Can't Ignore
The Bruins are back on the ice for Development Camp, and the timing matters with the offseason already beginning to take shape around them. Boston has made its first major splash by bringing in JJ Peterka from the Utah Mammoth, while the focus inside the organization now shifts toward the younger players trying to turn a busy summer into a bigger role down the road.
James Hagens is expected to spend most of his summer in Boston working on his development under the watch of player development director Adam McQuaid, a sign the Bruins want this stretch to be about more than just routine drills. There is also a quieter but important goaltending note, with Kyle Chauvette slated to be the teams emergency backup next season, a reminder that even the smallest roster details can matter once the schedule gets rolling. [Read more 🡒]
