Yankees Embarrassment In Boston Took An Even More Infuriating Turn

Despite a historic sweep of their rivals, the Red Sox's victories over the Yankees highlight Boston's glaring playoff absence and the struggles both teams face.

The Yankees left Fenway Park with a four-game sweep hanging around their necks, and that alone would sting. But what made the weekend feel even uglier was the reminder that Boston’s own people weren’t exactly treating this like some grand Red Sox turning point.

New York was swept by a Red Sox team sitting at the bottom of the American League, and it was the first time since 2018 that Boston took four straight from the Yankees in a series. The matchup had all the familiar noise of the rivalry - a benches-clearing moment, bad calls, ejections, and plenty of Yankee fans fuming over certain Red Sox instigators - but when the dust settled, the Yankees still didn’t steal a single game.

That didn’t make Aaron Boone’s postseries tone any easier for Yankees fans to swallow. And it didn’t help that Boston sports radio was quick to pour cold water on any idea that this sweep meant something bigger for the Red Sox.

Marc “Beetle” Bertrand of 98.5 The Sports Hub was blunt about it. The sweep, he said, meant "absolutely nothing." Bertrand’s point was simple: even with Boston winning seven of 10, it doesn’t suddenly turn the Red Sox into a playoff team, and it doesn’t wipe away the mess Craig Breslow built on the roster.

"It means absolutely nothing."

The Red Sox sweep over the Yankees shouldn't change the outlook of this team ahead of the trade deadline. @ZoandBertrand pic.twitter.com/tXBl7Oh7wR

  • 98.5 The Sports Hub (@985TheSportsHub) June 29, 2026

That blunt read lands because it matches the reality of the 2026 Red Sox. They’re still a bad baseball team, sweep or no sweep. And for Yankees fans, that makes the whole thing feel worse: a supposed World Series contender just got run through by a club that isn’t being sold as anything close to dangerous.

The Yankees’ problems weren’t hard to spot, either. Payton Tolle and Sonny Gray both turned in strong outings for Boston, but New York’s offense is clearly feeling the strain of going this long without Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton. At some point, that kind of missing production catches up.

Stanton was never expected to play a full season, but when the reigning MVP is out and the lineup’s main engine is gone, the margin for error gets thin fast. Without Stanton supplying power in the meantime, the Yankees have had a tougher and tougher time keeping things afloat. Even Paul Goldschmidt’s fountain-of-youth season hasn’t been enough to steady everything.

The odd part is that Boston doesn’t have anything close to the same kind of star power in its lineup. The Red Sox have three good hitters right now, and they still managed to put the Yankees in a vise all weekend.

That’s the bottom line from Fenway: a brutal weekend, a sweep that should embarrass New York, and no real reason for Boston to act like it changes much of anything. The Yankees now have to reset, stay focused, and keep moving. They’re still operating in an American League that’s pretty darn bad in 2026, and that makes it all the more important not to let one ugly series knock them off course.

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Instead of leaning into a different look at the plate, Boone stayed with Oswaldo Cabrera and later framed the call as one rooted in confidence that Cabrera could put the ball in play. It was the kind of explanation that is bound to draw second-guessing when a team is stuck in its worst slump since 2023, especially with injuries and a sputtering offense making every missed opportunity feel even bigger. [Read more 🡒]