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The regular season is over and now the post-season begins.
So how much do the playoff teams get for getting into the postseason?
Gate receipts from the guaranteed post-season games form the player pool of money. The guaranteed games are the minimum number of games in each series that must be played to determine the winner. This would be 2 games for the Wild Card Series, 3 for the Division series, and 4 for the League Championships and World Series games.
60% of these receipts from
Players moving between the Red Sox and the Yankees has been as common and frequent as the express air shuttle between the two cities.
Of the 251 players who played for both teams, here’s some of the most significant switches. Which team has come out ahead?
2024: The Cuban Missile Soars!
Signing Aroldis Chapman as a free agent is one of the more prescient moves by the Sox. A closer who has won two World Series and having played 7 seasons with the Yankees, at the age of 37, Aroldis
If your batting average declines each year for 6 years straight, can you stay in the big leagues?
Although there are many new and more advanced statistics, batting average is still a useful measure of a player's ability.
Is 6 consecutive years of declining batting average irreversible?
Red Sox Dave Stapleton, an infielder who played from 1980-1986, is the only MLB player who played at least seven years whose batting average declined each year throughout his career. [1]
From a
When asked to move positions, why is there is a natural reluctance? From a team perspective, it seems like an ego issue, but it may be more complex than that. During Spring Training of 2025, Rafael Devers was moved to Designated Hitter to allow newly signed free agent Gold Glove 3rd baseman Alex Bregman to play the Hot Corner.
At the age of 28 and having played regularly at no other position than 3rd base, Rafael Devers balked at becoming a full-time designated hitter. He viewed this as cri
Who holds the single season record for RBIs for a shortstop? You may think it would be held by a Hall of Famer like Honus Wagner, Ernie Banks or Cal Ripken, or a recent retired star like Alex Rodriguez, Miguel Tejada, or Derek Jeter, but no, the record is held by Red Sox Vern Stephens and was set in 1949.
That year, batting behind Ted Williams, Vern Stephens had 159 RBIs and it was the first of two consecutive years when Stephens tied for the league lead in RBIs. This RBI total was the high
Top prospect, Roman Anthony, has been called up by the Red Sox to play in the show. How will he perform? Is he here to stay in the big leagues, or will he need more seasoning again in the minors?
Will he stick for the whole season?
Roman Anthony: Batting (2022-2025)
Year
Tm
Ted Williams had a great career, but did this 1950 injury hurt him more than the two interruptions for military service during World War 2 and the Korean War? Three full years and close to two more years were cut short from his baseball career, yet a mid-career injury might have affected him more.
The missing years often are said to have cost him the chance to have higher career totals and preventing him from getting to 3,000 hits and 600 home runs,
In 1950 at the All-Star Break,
Carlton Fisk's first 11 years of a 24-year Hall of Fame Major League Baseball career was with the Red Sox, where he was the Rookie of the Year in 1972, a 7-time All-star, and in the top 10 of the MVP voting 3 times.
Fisk may be the best Red Sox catcher ever, but who else had great careers while catching for the Red Sox?
Carlton Fisk (1969-1980)
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It’s time to play ball, but in some brand-new, swagged-out uniforms. The world-famous Fenway Park: Home of our beloved Boston Red Sox. The Red Sox’s famously known ballpark has been the Red Sox home for baseball for the last 113 years, that’s over a century, which is crazy to think ab
Hall of Famer Jim Rice set a record that may never be broken. As a rookie in 1975, Rice, together with Fred Lynn, shared the nickname the "Gold Dust Twins" for their great performance and future potential. Jim Rice fulfilled that promise with consecutive spectacular seasons from 1977 to 1979, achieving a feat that had not been done before or duplicated since.
During 3 consecutive years, 1977, 1978, and 1979, Jim Rice is the only player in MLB history to achieve these 5 statistical acc
1. Create Your Blog
When you click the Blogs section on the top menu, you'll be taken to a list of most the most recent entries from our community. At the top of this feed you'll see the "Create a Blog" button. Click it and you'll be asked to enter a few high-level details: the title of your blog within the site (i.e., "John's Red Sox Blog" or something more clever/creative), a brief description, and the category it will belong to (if you're not sure, just pick "General").
To hop on over
Every offseason, we offer our You’re The GM! tool (formerly the Payroll Blueprint) to build your ideal Red Sox roster. This year, we’ve updated and streamlined the tool a bit to improve the experience.
The idea behind this feature is to give fans a chance to play the role of General Manager (or CBO or PoBO… you get the idea) for their favorite team, the Boston Red Sox. It’s meant to give fans the opportunity to discuss (and, let’s be honest, argue) how they would approach the long, dark MLB
As opposed to the previous default state of the site, you may want to set a custom feed as your Talk Sox landing page. It's that useful. Instead of having to click through the (kinda insanely large now) site, you can tailor a feed to show basically whatever you want: select authors, topics you've followed, fellow users, unread content only... the list goes on.
First, to find your personal feed, near the top right of the screen you will see a newspaper icon in the red bar below your user inf
Talk Sox Tips & Tricks, Part One: Tables! With this series of blog entries, I'm going to try to cover some of the features of the new site in a few paragraphs. Using the old site, as I'm sure many of you are aware, tables were basically unusable. That has changed! I'll tackle B-Ref tables quickly in this post but you can do similar things with FanGraphs or other sites that use table data (which is how almost all stat sites display their content). First, pop on over to Rafael Dever''s B-Ref p
Baseball overhere in Holland is just a little sport. Most attention goes to soccer, speedskating and speed cycling. Nevertheless,our national team has a rich history aswell as several team.
Media attention is verty poor, Somtimes with a little luck we see our Kingdom of the Netherlands fellow countryman Xander Bogaerts for a few seconds on national tv.
Last saturday I was at our local baseball park to cover a homegame from our The Hawks team. Only me and twelf other people wrre there.A real
Living in a small country like Holland, MLB merchandise is difficult to get. Okay, we do have FootLocker, but there only are caps available. But now, finaly I got a Red Sox jersey.It took some time, but who cares now…!
Please view the following 20 Players. Please feel free to add any sox player whom you feel should have been added.
1.Carl Yastremski
2.Roger Clemens
3.Carlton Fisk
4.Johnny Pesky
5.Jim Rice
6.David "Big Papi" Ortiz
7.Jason Varitek
8.Ted Williams
9.Wade Boggs
10.Nomar Garciaparra
11. Bobby Doerr
12.Babe Ruth
13. Jimmie Foxx
14.Manny Ramirez
15.Tris Speaker
16.Dwight Evans
17.Pedro Martinez
18.Kevin Millar
19.Bill Lee
20.John Lester
Brock, I think when healthy Contreras is a good add. Based on his history in the game, even at DH and 1B his body is subject to historical levels of wear and tear, so I put his GP over/under at 108 since 135 seemed like a career year. I believe we bought high. We have to hope 2/3 of a player can be back filled by Casas, Yoshida and Abreu the lefty platoon player.
We are not ready to win the playoffs - We should get in but we can't win with the current lineup. We have a DH with little power hitting 227 and a replacement first baseman hitting 219. (Yoshida/Lowe). We scored 4 runs in 2 games against good pitching - Just like you will see against playoff teams. I like our young pitching but we must get replacements for the 2 mentioned hitters thru free agency or trade to contend. Don't see a solution in our farm system. Those two spots need to hit with power.