সোমবার, ২৫ জুন, ২০১২

Red Sox?are a?real mess

Make no mistake about it: this is a pretty nasty storm the Red Sox have had to weather.

The team has already had to use 41 players. The left fielder and the closer have missed the entire season so far. The All-Star center fielder has missed most of it. At one point, the team?s top five outfielders were all on the disabled list. Two members of the rotation are currently on the DL. The No. 4 starter and the expected eighth-inning guy both blew up. The All-Star second baseman was dealt a nasty thumb injury that limited his production. The All-Star first baseman has failed to produce.

That the Red Sox are 38-34 anyway is actually quite impressive and a testament to all of the talent on hand.

Still, if any word sums up the Boston franchise these last two years, it?s directionless. It?s constantly running through new plans, often abandoning old ones at the drop of a hat.

That?s how a team ends up paying someone to take its former All-Star third baseman and getting only a couple of question marks in return.

The Red Sox probably had no choice. Will Middlebrooks obviously needs to play regularly, which left Kevin Youkilis without a role. The offers weren?t exactly poring in, that?s for sure. Zach Stewart and Brent Lillibridge probably was the best they could do.

Still, the point is that the Red Sox left themselves with no choice yet again. It?s a recurring theme. They let the luxury tax rule their offseason, and in their attempts to save money, gave away Marco Scutaro and parted with Josh Reddick and Jed Lowrie in order to rebuild their pen.

When they let Theo Epstein go to Chicago, they did so without working out compensation beforehand. In the end, all they ended up with was a soon-to-be injured reliever in Chris Carpenter.

The Red Sox probably aren?t through backing themselves into corners. They?ll have to figure out an outfield once Carl Crawford and Jacoby Ellsbury return. The pitching staff, too, could get overcrowded in a hurry if Josh Beckett and Clay Buchholz return in early July and Daniel Bard gets things turned around in Triple-A. If they fail to reach the postseason, they?ll face questions about whether they should blow up the whole team this winter or carry on with the talented but overly expensive group of stars around now.

In the meantime, they?ll just have to hope Middlebrooks keeps producing despite his troubling strikeout-to-walk ratio. They won?t get any immediate help from Stewart, who will be a part of the rotation at Triple-A Pawtucket. Lillibridge, who was hitting just .175 this season, will serve as a fifth outfielder and occasional backup for Middlebrooks.

And they?ll carry on without Youkilis. He surely wasn?t going to be happy in a backup role, and given his history, he shouldn?t have been. Youkilis is definitely past his peak, but from 2008-10, he had a three-year run as one of the AL?s top three hitters. Even last year, he was still well above average at .258/.373/.459. Odds are that he?ll be a quality regular for the White Sox, and my guess is that he?ll outhit Middlebrooks over the rest of the year, though he?ll probably be good for at least one significant injury along the way. Even so, the Red Sox will end up missing him when all is said and done.

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