The Red Sox are making a bullpen move, with veteran reliever Tommy Kahnle being designated for assignment, according to Chris Cotillo of MassLive. Cotillo also reported first that Boston will bring up left-hander Alec Gamboa from Triple-A Worcester tomorrow.
More changes may be on the way, too. Starter Connelly Early left after four innings tonight because of discomfort at the back of his elbow, and interim manager Chad Tracy said the rookie southpaw will get imaging tomorrow, via Gabrielle Starr of The Boston Herald.
Even if the results come back clean, Boston still appears likely to handle the situation carefully and put him on the injured list. Early is scheduled for just two more starts before the All-Star Break.
Before the early exit, Early had been rolling through four scoreless innings. After that, the game turned into a bullpen mess.
The Red Sox used five relievers over the next five innings, and the Nationals put up eight runs against them. Danny Coulombe, Greg Weissert, Justin Slaten and Kahnle all allowed runs, while Rule 5 pick Ryan Watson was the only reliever to get through an inning without giving one up.
Kahnle’s outing was especially rough. He needed 30 pitches to get through a four-run eighth, and CJ Abrams hit a home run off him among four hits allowed.
Since Boston called him up in early June, the 36-year-old right-hander has given up eight runs in nine innings. He’s allowed 12 hits, walked six and struck out five.
The Red Sox also need bodies. Their bullpen is worn down, and Kahnle would not have been available for tomorrow’s matinee finale anyway.
Weissert threw 28 pitches and is probably unavailable as well, while Coulombe pitched for a second straight night. Weissert still has a minor league option left; Coulombe does not.
Kahnle is expected to end up on waivers this week, and if he goes unclaimed, he would have the right to elect free agency. He was much better at Triple-A, where he posted a 1.40 ERA and struck out a quarter of opposing hitters over 19 1/3 innings before getting the call to Boston.
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For Red Sox fans watching from afar, the frustration is easy to understand because this was Contreras' second straight game ejection and the pattern is getting hard to miss. The latest flash point came after a tense night against Washington, and it only added to the sense that the situation around him has become more combustible with each passing inning. [Read more 🡒]
