Willson Contreras set off another flashpoint for the Red Sox on June 30, and this one spilled well beyond a routine argument. After striking out looking in the second inning against Washington Nationals pitcher Cade Cavalli, Contreras was walking back to the dugout when Cavalli shouted at him. Contreras took exception immediately, turned back toward the mound and kept jawing until the benches emptied.
The exchange escalated fast. Contreras charged at Cavalli, had to be restrained by roughly five people and, after his helmet came off, threw it into the middle of the scrum. He never got a punch in, but the scene was already out of control by then.
Replay showed Cavalli telling Contreras, "sit down, boy," after the strikeout, and that was enough to light the fuse. Interim manager Chad Tracy stepped in to argue on Contreras’ behalf before he was tossed as well.
It took more than 10 minutes for the umpires to sort out the aftermath. Contreras was ejected, along with Nate Eaton, who was not in the starting lineup, and Nationals pitcher Miles Mikolas.
Eaton and Mikolas had gone after each other off to the side of the main pileup. Cavalli stayed in the game.
For Contreras, it was his second straight ejection. He had been thrown out the previous night after tapping his helmet in response to a check-swing call from first base umpire Nic Lentz.
Contreras has brought plenty of emotion to the field lately, and the last few days have clearly carried extra weight. The devastating earthquakes that rocked Venezuela on June 24 have taken a toll on him.
On June 29, he honored his country with an extra-long trot around the bases after homering off Mikolas in the series opener. It was the kind of moment that can linger, and Cavalli may have taken it personally.
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The search is made tougher by the fact that the market does not offer many easy solutions, especially for a club that still has to balance present-tense urgency with longer-term value. Boston is at least doing the kind of homework that suggests it will explore options, but the gap between asking around and actually landing the right fit is where this deadline puzzle really starts to get interesting. [Read more 🡒]
