Roman Anthony Issues Alarming Injury Update

As Roman Anthony opens up about his injury struggles and the emotional challenges of his recovery, the Boston Red Sox must navigate the season without one of their key players.

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...

Jazz Chisholm Added Another Ugly Twist To Yankees Red Sox Spiral

The Yankees offensive frustrations against Boston reached another awkward checkpoint when Jazz Chisholm Jr. found himself in the middle of a disputed check-swing call at the plate. Batting leadoff in a revamped lineup, Chisholm was trying to spark a club that had struggled to create much of anything in the series while the Red Sox kept the pressure on from the mound.

The moment quickly grew tense, with Chisholm arguing the ruling from home plate umpire Adam Hamari before things boiled over and the play drew in the rest of the umpiring crew. It was the kind of scene that fit the night for New York, a team already trying to avoid a no-hit bid and now left to deal with another jolt of frustration in a game that was slipping further out of reach. [Read more 🡒]

Aaron Boone Had Yankees Fans Bracing For More After Boston Mess

The Yankees left Boston with more than just a four-game sweep hanging over them. A trip that already had the look of a test became a reminder of how quickly a season can turn when the injuries stack up, the defense wobbles and the lineup keeps running into the same problems with runners in scoring position. Bostons sweep was its first over New York since 2018, and for a club trying to stay afloat in the AL East, it landed like a fresh wound.

Aaron Boones postgame tone only added to the noise around the club. After a loss that exposed so many of the Yankees current issues, fans were already bracing for what might come next from a manager whose message has come under sharper scrutiny during the slide. With the offense sputtering and the roster still missing key pieces, the bigger question now is whether the Yankees can steady themselves before the frustration around them gets even louder. [Read more 🡒]

Yankees Deadline Pressure Is Building Around Brian Cashman Again

The Yankees have put themselves in the familiar spot of being good enough to buy and pressured enough to keep shopping. At 48-35 and sitting in second place in the American League East, they are in position to play deep into October, but the roster still has some obvious holes that could shape how Brian Cashman approaches the deadline. Bullpen help remains on the checklist, catcher is a lingering question, and shortstop is at least part of the conversation as the front office weighs how much to trust the current mix.

Cashman is expected to be busy, as he usually is this time of year, and the real suspense is less about whether the Yankees will add than how aggressively they will do it. The market will be shaped by health and depth, with the returns of several key players likely to affect how urgent the front office feels and how far it is willing to go. For a club trying to protect a playoff spot while also building a roster that can hold up in October, those decisions are already coming into focus. [Read more 🡒]