Rays Face A Second-Half Test That Could Change Everything

The AL-leading Rays head to Fenway to face the surging Red Sox in a crucial series that could shape the trajectory of their seasons.

BOSTON -- The All-Star break is over, and Fenway Park is getting the kind of restart that can tell you a lot about the American League race.

The Rays arrive as the AL’s best team, the Red Sox as the league’s hottest one, and the schedule does neither club any favors: four games in three days, beginning with a split doubleheader Friday before Saturday afternoon and Sunday wrap things up. Tampa Bay already has the edge in the season series, taking two of three from Boston at Fenway in May and then sweeping three games at Tropicana Field last month.

For Tampa Bay, the timing feels right. The Rays shook off a rough 9-18 stretch from late May to late June by going 13-5 from June 24 through last Sunday, a run that restored a three-game cushion atop the AL standings.

That rebound also fit the way they’ve operated for most of the season: a team that has outperformed expectations, answered questions about whether it could keep this up, and kept winning anyway. The only real cloud from Tuesday night was the Junior Caminero scare in the All-Star Game, assuming he comes out of it fine.

Boston’s mood is just as different from where it was a few weeks ago. The Red Sox ripped off a 14-2 surge before the break, and now the challenge is carrying that momentum through a four-day pause.

Starting pitching has been the backbone all year, but the rotation took a hit with Connelly Early and Ranger Suarez both landing on the 15-day injured list. The club is hoping Suarez, who was forced to give up his All-Star spot because of a left groin strain, can return in the second series after the break against the Orioles.

Friday’s opener also brings the end of Willson Contreras’ five-game suspension; he’ll serve the final game of it in the first half of the doubleheader.

The series means something different for each side, but both teams have plenty on the line. For Tampa Bay, this is the kind of early post-break test that can set the tone for the stretch ahead.

The Rays are about to play a heavy run of baseball, including eight games over seven days in Boston and Toronto, then three more at home against Cleveland before their next off-day. They’ve been dominant at home at 35-15, but just 21-23 on the road, and Boston has been playing well enough to make Fenway a real proving ground.

For the Red Sox, this weekend is about proving the home-field turnaround is real. Their 17-37 record at Fenway is second worst in the Majors entering the break, a brutal number for a team trying to stay in the race.

Still, the four-game sweep of the Yankees on the most recent homestand hinted that the lineup may be ready to wake up at home. Boston also has a bigger problem inside the division: its 10-17 mark against AL East opponents is the worst in the group.

As for the bigger picture in the division, Tampa Bay’s place at the top looks legitimate. The Rays have played nearly 60% of the season and own the best record in the AL, backed by Yandy Díaz, Junior Caminero and 2025 All-Star Jonathan Aranda at the top of the lineup, plus four strong starters, a pair of dominant relievers including All-Star closer Bryan Baker, and excellent defense up the middle. FanGraphs gives them a 97.7% chance to reach the postseason and a 55.7% chance to win the division.

Boston’s path is much steeper, but at least it exists now. The Red Sox are 10 games behind the Rays and seven back of the Yankees with 68 games left, so the AL East remains a long shot.

Even so, they’re sitting just a half-game out of a Wild Card spot, which is a dramatic shift from when they were 14 games under .500. FanGraphs pegs their chances of winning the East at 1.6 percent, but their playoff odds are up to 40 percent.

The biggest concerns are different, too. Tampa Bay’s priority is keeping its core healthy, especially after the Caminero alarm.

Beyond that, depth is the issue. Outside the Rays’ “Big Three,” the only hitter on the roster with an above-average OPS+ is Ryan Vilade, who has a 117 OPS+ in 152 plate appearances.

There’s also the matter of workload on the pitching staff as the season wears on, which could put more pressure on the bullpen unless the Rays find a way to add innings before the Trade Deadline.

Boston’s concern is more about missing pieces than depth alone. The Red Sox have played well, but it’s hard to see their ceiling without Garrett Crochet and Roman Anthony back.

Crochet hasn’t pitched since April 25, when shoulder inflammation shut him down, and he still had not resumed throwing at last check. Anthony, meanwhile, suffered a partially torn tendon in his left wrist/hand on May 4 and had not started swinging in the days before the break.

That brings the conversation to the Trade Deadline, where Tampa Bay’s next few weeks could matter a lot. If the Rays stay in position to win the division, they’re expected to act aggressively.

President of baseball operations Erik Neander has done that before, and the idea would be to reward what this group has already accomplished while giving it a better shot in October. The message is simple: keep winning now, and the Rays could be big-time buyers.

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