The Red Sox’s brief surge hit a wall this week with two losses to the Washington Nationals, but Sonny Gray has been one of the clearest bright spots in an otherwise uneven season.
Boston brought in the three-time All-Star this past offseason from the St. Louis Cardinals to deepen the rotation behind Garrett Crochet, who was expected to be the club’s ace.
Gray has filled the No. 2 role exactly the way the Red Sox hoped. Through 15 starts, he owns a 2.69 ERA and a 9-1 record, with both his nine wins and .900 winning percentage leading the American League.
That kind of start has put him in rare company in franchise history. As former Red Sox director of baseball communications and media relations JP Long noted, Gray and Tim Wakefield are the only pitchers in team history to win at least nine games and lose no more than once over their first 15 starts in a Red Sox uniform.
"Sonny Gray and Tim Wakefield are the only pitchers with 9-plus wins and fewer than 2 losses in their first 15 starts as a member of the Red Sox," Long wrote. "Gray: 9-1, 2.69 ERA, 83.2 IP. Wakefield: 12-1, 1.66 ERA, 113.2 IP."
That’s the sort of list that carries real weight in Boston. Wakefield remains one of the organization’s most beloved figures, so for Gray to land alongside him says plenty about the way he’s been pitching.
And lately, he’s been even sharper. Over his last three starts, Gray has given up just four earned runs in 21 1/3 innings, good for a 1.69 ERA. In a season with plenty of rough patches, he’s been a steady answer every time he takes the mound.
Boston has Thursday off before opening a three-game road series against the Los Angeles Angels on Friday. Gray is scheduled to make his next start on Saturday, July 4.
In Other News...
Another Ugly Fenway Fight Has Red Sox Fans Reliving Old Chaos
Fenway Park has seen plenty of tense moments over the years, and the latest bench-clearing scene only added another chapter to that uneasy history. Willson Contreras was at the center of the latest flare-up after a strikeout led to a confrontation with Washington Nationals pitcher Cade Cavalli, and the situation quickly spilled from a simple on-field exchange into a full dugout-banging scramble.
For Red Sox fans, the sight was familiar enough to stir memories of the old chaos that has flashed through the ballpark before, from classic run-ins involving Boston stars and rivals to other bruising scraps that have long lived in the Fenway lore. It is the kind of scene that reminds everyone how fast a routine game can turn sideways there, even if the latest fight still leaves plenty of the story to sort out. [Read more 🡒]
Red Sox Suddenly Face A Tough Deadline Call On Trusted Closer
Pittsburghs improved start has not solved everything, and the bullpen remains the clearest place for a club trying to push toward October. ESPNs David Schoenfield recently pointed to the need for a late-inning arm, noting how the Pirates have searched for steadier ninth-inning work and could look outside the organization if they want to keep the season moving in the right direction.
For Boston, that creates an interesting deadline layer around one of its most trusted relievers. The lefty in question has been excellent this season and still looks like one of the better short-term bets on the market, which is exactly why his availability is worth watching. The wrinkle is that any deal would also have to account for his contract situation, so this is the kind of call that could shape more than just a one-month stretch for the Red Sox. [Read more 🡒]
