The Red Sox have given themselves a little breathing room, and that alone has changed the tone around the club.
After a rough start to the season that included the firing of manager Alex Cora, injuries to key pieces like Roman Anthony and Garrett Crochet, and an offense that has been among the worst in baseball, Boston suddenly has a reason to look up instead of down. The Red Sox have won five straight and are now 37-46.
They’re 4 1/2 games out of a playoff spot, which says as much about the American League’s weak season as it does about Boston’s position. In the National League, they’d be seven games back.
The surge has come from the pitching staff. Boston’s rotation is rolling right now, to the point that it has put together 12 straight quality starts, a franchise record.
That kind of run doesn’t just win games; it changes the conversation. Suddenly, the Red Sox no longer feel locked into one lane.
Selling still makes sense if the slide resumes, with Sonny Gray and Aroldis Chapman among the names to watch. But if Boston decides to add instead, the need is pretty clear.
The club needs a right-handed bat.
That’s been the obvious target for a while, especially after chief baseball officer Craig Breslow made it clear he was looking and the rumors got loud enough that ownership got involved. And if Boston wants an affordable swing at that kind of upgrade, Gleyber Torres fits the bill as long as the health checks out.
Torres has not played since June 15, so that’s the first question hanging over any potential fit. But when he has been on the field this season, he’s been productive.
In 43 games, he’s hitting .280/.395/.395 with a .790 OPS, four homers and 18 RBIs. He can handle second base and shortstop, though most of his career work has come at second.
That matters for Boston, because the infield picture is not exactly fixed. Anthony Seigler has been starting at second base recently and is batting .361 in 12 games played. So if the Red Sox were to pursue Torres, they’d still have to figure out the fit on the dirt.
The appeal is obvious, though. Torres is a right-handed bat, he’d come at a manageable price with Detroit sitting at 36-49, and he’s headed for free agency after the season. With the injury uncertainty and the contract situation, he looks like the kind of player Boston could target without paying an outrageous premium.
The Red Sox are still nine games under .500, so nobody’s pretending the work is done. But if this winning streak keeps pushing them closer to .500, Torres is the kind of name that starts to make real sense.
In Other News...
Yankees Suddenly Made Another Change As Tigers Keep Applying Pressure
The Yankees kept churning their bullpen mix Tuesday, sending right-hander Yerry De los Santos down to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre and bringing right-hander Yovanny Cruz back into the major league relief corps. It is another small but notable roster tweak for a club trying to steady itself while the Tigers continue to apply pressure in the standings, and it shows how quickly New York is willing to move pieces around as it searches for the right late-game answers.
Cruz is not a new face to the big leagues this season, and his calling card is obvious enough once he takes the mound. The right-hander brings the kind of fastball velocity that can change the tone of an inning in a hurry, which is why his return is worth watching even in a move that might otherwise look routine on paper. [Read more 🡒]
Braves Suddenly Have A Real Shot At A Deadline Ace
Atlantas need for starting pitching has only grown as the club tries to hold onto first place in the NL East, and that kind of pressure usually pushes a front office toward the top of the market. MLB.coms Mark Feinsand has tied the Braves to Tigers ace Tarik Skubal as a possible deadline target, a sign that Atlantas combination of urgency, financial flexibility and prospect depth is being viewed as a real factor as July approaches.
For Detroit, any conversation around Skubal carries obvious weight because he is the kind of arm contenders covet and rebuilders rarely move without a steep return. The Braves already have a rotation stretched thin by injuries and uneven results, which is why the fit keeps making sense on paper, but the rest of the equation is still very much unsettled as the deadline picture starts to come into focus. [Read more 🡒]
