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    After A Rough Few Months Is It Time For Alex Cora To Be On The Hot Seat?

    As the Red Sox continue to play consistently inconsistent baseball, might it be time for the organization to look for someone else to manage the club?

    Nick John
    Image courtesy of © David Butler II-Imagn Images

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    Since being hired before the 2018 season, Alex Cora has led the Boston Red Sox as manager, excluding his suspension during the 2020 season, but now it may be time for a different voice. Everyone remembers Cora positively for how 2018 ended with the greatest Red Sox team of all time winning the World Series; unfortunately, things have not been as positive since.

    2019 saw the Red Sox under Cora attempt to repeat, but it’s never easy, and the team struggled with injuries and inconsistencies. The team saw injuries to the rotation as Chris Sale, David Price, and Nathan Eovaldi pitched in 25 or fewer games, with Eovaldi bouncing between the rotation and bullpen. Offensively, the team received only six games out of Dustin Pedroia, 29 games from Steve Pearce, and 91 games from Mitch Moreland. And yet they still had career years from Christian Vázquez, Xander Bogaerts, Rafael Devers, Eduardo Rodríguez, and Brandon Workman. There were great seasons from Mookie Betts and J.D. Martinez, while also getting a quality rookie season from Michael Chavis.

    And still, the team only won 84 games that season.

    2020 was a lost season. Cora was suspended and fired before the season even began due to the 2017 Astros’ cheating scandal. Then, the season was shortened due to COVID-19, limiting it to 60 games plus an expanded playoff. The Sox would stumble through that season before Chaim Bloom rehired Cora in 2021.

    Cora seemed to turn the team around, leading a team that had no reason to be only two games away from the World Series. The roster differed from his 2018 championship team as Betts, Andrew Benintendi, Moreland, Price, and Jackie Bradley Jr. were all gone. Chris Sale was returning from Tommy John surgery and made nine starts for the team. And yet Cora managed to keep the team over-performing as they were in contention for the division until the last few weeks of the season. They got into the playoffs as a wild card team and knocked the Yankees out of the playoffs in the Wild Card Game before taking the Tampa Bay Rays out in the Division Series. Eventually, their magic ran out, and they lost in six games during the Championship Series to the Houston Astros.

    Since then, the team has struggled. The Red Sox under Cora have not been above .500 since 2021, the closest being when they went 81-81 in 2024.

    The usual complaints were that the Red Sox dealt with injuries and didn’t have the depth or the players to make a playoff run. There was no debate as the pitching failed to hold up in 2022 and 2023, as both seasons ended with the same record of 78-84. However, the story couldn’t be different. In 2022, the Red Sox had 52 wins heading into the trade deadline and were indecisive on what to do. They sold off Vázquez to the Houston Astros, getting back two prospects in Wilyer Abreu and Enmanuel Valdez. They also brought in Eric Hosmer, Reese McGuire, and Tommy Pham to try and strengthen the team for a playoff run.

    They collapsed down the season, winning only 27 games across August, September, and October as the pitching failed to hold up.

    2023 was much of the same. Gone was veteran Bogaerts, who Red Sox ownership let sign with San Diego for an 11-year, $280 million contract. He was replaced at shortstop by Kiké Hernández, who was awful defensively. Things were still a struggle on the pitching side as not a single starter had an ERA under 4.00. And despite that, the Red Sox were still in contention. With 56 wins entering the trade deadline, the Red Sox were only 2 ½ games out of a playoff spot and, unlike previous seasons, had a farm system with prospects that could either help at the major league level or be packaged in a trade.

    Cora made it known which way he wanted the team to head in as he said to MassLive’s Chris Cotillo, “We’re in a good place. But at the end of the day, the place that we would like to play is in October. It’s not about how many prospects you have or where your farm system is. It might be No. 1 or 30th or whatever. The one that counts is how many games you win in October and how many games you play in October. That’s what we’re shooting for.”

    At the time, Cora had every right to say that, especially as his team was fighting for a playoff spot after missing the postseason the prior season. They needed help, and they wanted it. They wanted the organization to say they believed the 2023 team could make the playoffs and compete for the World Series. Instead, Bloom failed to address the issues on the team, mostly surrounding the pitching, and the Red Sox collapsed down the stretch once more, winning only 22 games from August 1st until the end of the season.

    Bloom would be relieved of his position before the end of the season, and a report from The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal didn’t come as a surprise when he wrote that “on the surface, the two seemed to co-exist professionally. But friends of Bloom, who spoke on condition of anonymity in exchange for their candor, believe Cora was not as supportive of Bloom as he could have been”. It isn’t a surprise that Cora wanted to win, and while Bloom did too, he didn’t make the moves Cora wanted to improve the roster. Instead, he wanted to build it up from within and support the next core with free agent signings.

    Bloom would not see his vision through, and Craig Breslow was hired as the President of Baseball Operations for the Boston Red Sox. While Breslow made moves by replacing Dave Bush as pitching coach with Andrew Bailey, 2024 turned into more of the same.

    While the team finished with an 81-81 record, the second-half collapse was the same as the past three seasons. At the end of July, the team had 57 wins, yet they finished down the stretch poorly, only winning 24 games, as once again the pitching collapsed. Unlike Bloom, Breslow did make moves. He brought in James Paxton, Luis Garcia, and Lucas Sims to try and bolster the pitching staff while also trading for Danny Jansen to be the backup catcher.

    After missing the playoffs for three straight seasons, the team finally got aggressive in the offseason. They traded for Garrett Crochet and signed Aroldis Chapman, Alex Bregman, and Walker Buehler. They got the big names they hadn’t signed in previous years, and now the roster was ready to compete.

    And yet on May 25th, the Red Sox now sit 27-28 after splitting a four-game series with the 18-34 Baltimore Orioles. In a 10-game homestand against the Atlanta Braves, New York Mets, and Baltimore Orioles, the team only went 5-5, and something has to give.

    While the team has dealt with injuries, this consistent inconsistency has been a staple of the 2025 season and even longer, dating back to 2022. The pitching fails to go deep into games, the bullpen is overtaxed and mismanaged at times, and the offense can completely vanish at times when needed. In this homestand alone, the Red Sox scored two or fewer runs in five games. In May, they’ve scored two or fewer runs in nine games so far.

    And the one constant since 2022 is the manager, Alex Cora. I’m not calling for him to be fired, but you must start discussing it. The Red Sox have not played very well, and many of their mistakes (fielding, baserunning, starters failing to go deep into games) fall on the coaching staff. The team has changed its pitching coach and defense coaches, yet the same mistakes are happening. It’s a sign of the culture within the team, one that the manager sets. One thing that Cora cannot change is that it might be time for a change in managers.

    Cora can be a skilled manager; there’s no debating that. Sometimes he’s shown it by getting the most out of his players and winning games he had no business winning. But then there are times when you can’t help but question what he’s doing by pulling a pitcher early or handling the bullpen poorly in different situations. A key example being when he brought Sean Newcomb, a guy who pitches when the Sox are up or down by a lot, into a close game with runners on the corners. Or having exhausted his bullpen so much that he needs to rely on Brennan Bernardino and Luis Guerrero for high-leverage innings. But ever since winning the World Series in 2018, he’s had numbers that would have fired other managers. A manager who has better numbers than he did gets fired.

    Let’s look at Cora’s numbers since they won in 2018. Since that season, Cora has a .509 winning percentage, one postseason appearance, two last-place finishes, and three losing seasons. John Farrell's predecessor also won it in his first season in Boston in 2013. After that, he managed four more seasons before being replaced by Cora after 2017. In those four seasons, Farrell had a .517 winning percentage, two division titles, two last-place finishes, and three losing seasons.

    If that could get Farrell fired, why hasn’t there been a discussion about Cora being on the hot seat? There is too much talent on this team for them to struggle this consistently through not just 2025 but since 2022. The Red Sox have had three different people run the baseball operations under Cora, with Dave Dombrowski and Bloom being seen as the problems. Should the team keep losing, will Breslow be viewed as the issue? Coaching-wise, Cora has had three bench coaches, two third base coaches, five first base coaches, two hitting coaches, and three pitching coaches, which shows that the team will replace the coaches around Cora should they fail to produce the desired results.

    On the defensive side, José David Flores and Kyle Hudson handle the infield and outfield defense, respectively, the former taking over for Andy Fox, who had been in that position since 2022. Pitching-wise, the team viewed a need to change it up and bring in Bailey, who had done a magnificent job with San Francisco’s pitchers. That hasn’t been replicated in Boston.

    So, who’s to blame this time around? They got Cora the players he wanted, and last year, they changed the coaching staff. Now, the team is still mediocre. Something has to give; either the team starts winning, or John Henry and Breslow must start discussing what to do with Cora and his staff. The Red Sox have too much talent in their organization to let this continue.

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    8 minutes ago, TedYazPapiMookie said:

    That's a tough comment to agree with.  Managers make LOTS of decisions that can hurt a team dramatically in a game but very few can significantly help a team.  I've mentioned a classic Cora negative impact in games.  He uses his bench when he gets a feeling and subs a lesser hitter for a better hitter based on his intuition.  That's bad managing.  He often doesn't run when the team should.  He often sets his line-up with poor logic that causes the team to lose more 1 run games than they should.  An example is batting Devers 2nd behind Duran when Duran is cold. (hitting around .200).  If Duran is cold and Devers is still producing RBIs at a league high rate a good manager understands it's because Rafaela is getting on base in synch with Devers hitting.  Moving Rafaela (a right handed batter) to the 2 spot and moving Devers to 3rd potentially adds a run in the first inning that currently isn't happening.  With all the one run games, a smart manager can make an impact on winning and losing.  1 more run in the first might be the difference in those one run games!!

    I agree with this post. Some fans think batting orders are overemphasized, but when discussing a losing team that leads the majors in LEFT ON BASE and ONE-RUN LOSSES, how can adjusting the order to optimize production not matter?

    5 minutes ago, TedYazPapiMookie said:

    I get that you are having a hard time comprehending the point about Cora being a lazy player who didn't start most of his career but why TIto out of nowhere?  I never said anything about Tito and your big point is Cora was better than Tito.  That doesn't relate to the point of my comment.  I'm not side stepping anything.  You apparently have an issue with Tito that you somehow worked into a comment about Cora.  It makes no sense since Tito was never mentioned in my comment.

    Cora was a lazy player?

    This is a ridiculous criticism for multiple reasons. Please explain the relationship between successful playing career and successful managing career.  Then explain how Hall of Famer Tony LaRussa fits into that evidence …

    45 minutes ago, notin said:

    Cora was a lazy player?

    This is a ridiculous criticism for multiple reasons. Please explain the relationship between successful playing career and successful managing career.  Then explain how Hall of Famer Tony LaRussa fits into that evidence …

    I already tried this line of reasoning LOL  

    TYPM is really locked in here.  Next thing he'll be telling us Cora was lazy even as a child...

     

    2 hours ago, TedYazPapiMookie said:

    Huge deal?  I am building a parallel between his performance as a player and as a manager since his traits were in common.  1 - No Talent, 2 - Uninspired attitude 3 - Willing to gain an advantage over his opponent any way possible.

    Just a parallel not a big deal.

    I go into a meeting and come out to the absolute craziest posts. 

    2 hours ago, TedYazPapiMookie said:

    Make stuff up?  That's vague.  Got any specifics.  

    Don't read what I write and don't respond if you can't articulate your point.

    Unfortunately, I'm cursed with reading every post since I'm a mod. 

    🤠

    16 hours ago, 5GoldGlovesOF,75 said:

    It is mind-boggling sometimes when fans blame the manager for not making the roster he's given by the front office perform better. Why can't he just order players to make better contact, throw more strikes, catch more outs, and never get erased on the bases?

    I laugh when I here people say, "All the manager needs to do is sit down with ____ and tell him he needs to...

    go the other way with the pitch.

    take more pitches

    focus more

    not swing at balls in the dirt

    only swing at strikes..."

     

    Like it's that simple.

     

    That being said, managers can and do make a difference. They make many key decisions that are subjective and may not be made by most or some other managers, including who plays out of the 26 players he is given, where they play and bat in the line-up. They make in game choices that can make or break a game and a team, but many of the chocies are judged in hindsight, without the casual or even maniacal fan knowing all the information needed to make those chocies.

    It's hard to know if this team's issue is a lack of motivation.

    It's hard to know how much a manager can force his players to be more focused.

    Hard to know when the right time is to make a major change to a slot on the playing roster or line-up.

    We've seen countless times where fans are screaming, "Why do you keep playing this bum?" or "Why don't you demote Devers in the line-up?" Then, BAM! Ooooopsie...

     

    We like to assign blame. I guess that's natural.

     

    1 hour ago, dgalehouse said:

    To say that it has been a rough few months is misleading.  Actually, it has been a few years now, 

    I think most of the blame for 2022-2024 has been assigned to ownership and the front office.

    This year might be different.  If this team keeps sinking into the depths, they're going to have to make a move.

    Even Francona only had an 8 year tenure, and his record was considerably better than Cora's. 

    2 minutes ago, Bellhorn04 said:

    I think most of the blame for 2022-2024 has been assigned to ownership and the front office.

    This year might be different.  If this team keeps sinking into the depths, they're going to have to make a move.

    Even Francona only had an 8 year tenure, and his record was considerably better than Cora's. 

    I'm not so sure they'd make a move this offseason concerning Cora. He has plot armor. Maybe if they retool this offseason and the team still stinks up the joint next year. I did say there was a chance they were going to punt on this season prior to them signing Bregman. Without him in the lineup, it's kinda what it looks like!

    Cora this morning:

    “We’re always aggressive talking about mistakes, it’s not like we let them go by, we just have to pick and choose when, understanding the players,” Cora said, using someone forgetting how many outs there are as an example. “What are we going to do? When they come back be like ‘hey you have to pay attention to the scoreboard! You forgot the outs!’ They frickin’ know they forgot the outs. You tell them ‘hey be on top of it, let’s go.'”

    Cora also noted that this year’s team being so young also makes for a different dynamic compared to his first season in 2018, when the majority of the roster was comprised of established veterans.

    “The only guy that was young on that team was (Rafael Devers). The other guys were veterans, so you manage that one differently,” Cora said. “People are going to say ‘oh he can only manage a veteran team and win it,’ yeah, maybe? I don’t know. Shoot. But it’s different, a lot different, you have to teach the game, you have to be in constant communication about situations.”

    Cora said that working with guys like Jarren Duran, Triston Casas, and more recently Ceddanne Rafaela — all of whom endured early-career struggles — has helped teach him the importance of patience and composure when it comes to managing young players.

    “You have to be level. When things are going great don’t get too high, when things are going bad don’t get too low, especially in that dugout,” Cora said. “A lot of people are watching, especially the players. It’s like when you take your kids to the field and they don’t make a play, the first person they’re going to look at is dad. And if you’re upset that leaves a mark to your kids. So you better be there, be smiling, ‘come on kid you can do it,’ and inside you’re like come on man make that play. It’s the same thing. You’ve got to help them out. We’re here to help them out.”

    But while he stands by his approach, Cora acknowledged that the team’s performance ultimately falls on him and that some kind of adjustments will have to be made.

    “We get frustrated with the results but you have to trust the process, and right now I don’t know if the process is good, because we’re not seeing the results,” Cora said. “Maybe we have to change the process, and that’s on us, that’s on me.”

    He's looking at this team like it's a little league team. That's what he thinks of this roster.

    Counting this season, it's been 7 years since that magical 2018 season, actually, not so magical, when you consider all the planning and spending that went into constructing that team.

    2021 seems like an outlier based on the remnants of the 2018 season along with the confluence of good seasons from just enough players.

    1 in 7 years is not what Sox fans got used to, and when you look at the budget rankings of most of those teams it's hard to accept our placements in the years' standings. Without a doubt, the management and leadership had to be a major component in the lack of success, as was underperforming players, aging talent, too many key injuries and other factors.

    While the farm seemed worse than we thought back in 2018, it was the one area that did improve and seems to still be perhaps our biggest asset, right now. We appear to have some good, young talent under team control at relatively low cost, as well as some well paid vets that have talent. Sure, we have sunken costs that rival other top sunken cost teams with Story, Yoshida & Giolito holding over $60M in AAV, this year. 

    Seven years is a long time to go with the farm still being our biggest pride area, next to maybe Crochet.

    I'm not optimistic about 2025, anymore. It's been one huge letdown, to put it mildly. There is still about 60% of the season to go, but there does not seem to be anything to feel hopeful about.

    I'm tired of "wait til next year."

    I'm tired of watching key injuries occur, then hoping against hope that returning players from the IL will somehow revive our team. It never happens.

    Sure, we all expected some regression from guys like Houck, Duran and maybe a few others, but this has been extreme. Hardly anyone is doing better than expected, and just a few are doing close to what we expected. We have too many key players on the IL or just off it and not looking in form. Our team can't hit, pitch or field, and even our baserunning has been stumbling and bumbling.

    I'm not sure there is a clear solution. We probably need at least 5-6 things to happen, and it's unrealistic to think they all will happen, together. I've not lost all hope, but I'm down to a thread.

    “We keep making the same mistakes, we’re not getting better. At one point, it has to be on me, I guess, right? I’m the manager, so, I gotta keep pushing them to be better,” Cora said after the 4-3 loss in 10 innings. “They’re not getting better. They’re not. We keep making the same mistakes. I’ll be very honest about it, very open about it. You get frustrated, but at what point it’s like, OK, what we gonna do, what’s going to change? Because we keep doing the same thing.

    “We can keep talking about one-run losses. …. It’s the same thing. Is it effort, preparation, attention to detail? I have no idea. I watched that game, I was like, ‘Wow, this is real.’ It’s frustrating.”

    https://nypost.com/2025/06/04/sports/the-red-sox-have-broken-alex-cora-were-not-getting-better/

    4 hours ago, moonslav59 said:

    Counting this season, it's been 7 years since that magical 2018 season, actually, not so magical, when you consider all the planning and spending that went into constructing that team.

    2021 seems like an outlier based on the remnants of the 2018 season along with the confluence of good seasons from just enough players.

    1 in 7 years is not what Sox fans got used to, and when you look at the budget rankings of most of those teams it's hard to accept our placements in the years' standings. Without a doubt, the management and leadership had to be a major component in the lack of success, as was underperforming players, aging talent, too many key injuries and other factors.

    While the farm seemed worse than we thought back in 2018, it was the one area that did improve and seems to still be perhaps our biggest asset, right now. We appear to have some good, young talent under team control at relatively low cost, as well as some well paid vets that have talent. Sure, we have sunken costs that rival other top sunken cost teams with Story, Yoshida & Giolito holding over $60M in AAV, this year. 

    Seven years is a long time to go with the farm still being our biggest pride area, next to maybe Crochet.

    I'm not optimistic about 2025, anymore. It's been one huge letdown, to put it mildly. There is still about 60% of the season to go, but there does not seem to be anything to feel hopeful about.

    I'm tired of "wait til next year."

    I'm tired of watching key injuries occur, then hoping against hope that returning players from the IL will somehow revive our team. It never happens.

    Sure, we all expected some regression from guys like Houck, Duran and maybe a few others, but this has been extreme. Hardly anyone is doing better than expected, and just a few are doing close to what we expected. We have too many key players on the IL or just off it and not looking in form. Our team can't hit, pitch or field, and even our baserunning has been stumbling and bumbling.

    I'm not sure there is a clear solution. We probably need at least 5-6 things to happen, and it's unrealistic to think they all will happen, together. I've not lost all hope, but I'm down to a thread.

    i think to make the playoffs, we're going to have to win 86 games. and to get to that, we'll have to go 56-42 the rest of the way. realistically, i don't see that happening.

    23 hours ago, 5GoldGlovesOF,75 said:

    It is mind-boggling sometimes when fans blame the manager for not making the roster he's given by the front office perform better. Why can't he just order players to make better contact, throw more strikes, catch more outs, and never get erased on the bases?

    No matter what the manager does, ultimately, the players have to perform.

    IMO, the way a manager handles the clubhouse is much more important than his in-game decisions.

    I don't want to speak too soon about getting someone new to manage, its still too early and one good streak could bring hope back again but since we just played the Angels, I'm a big fan of Ron Washington and his contract is up at the end of the season. He's old school and his players seem to think highly of him, and not in the, "Im the cool coach," kind of way. He seems to be big on fundamentals and basic stuff that seems to be what the Sox are missing. If not, maybe Cora or the FO could take a cue from his style.

    12 hours ago, TedYazPapiMookie said:

    If a manager was a pitcher and a pitching coach before being manager, I am a lot more confident in their choice of pulling a pitcher than a bad middle infielder who never pitched.  He gets blamed for being a political hire rather than a manager who earned his job.

    Perhaps having some experience with pitching before being a manager might help, perhaps not.  I do not agree with the premise that a manager has to have experience as a pitcher in order to make good decisions regarding pitching changes.  That's why there are guys like Bailey and Varitek in the dugout.

    11 hours ago, Bellhorn04 said:

    The point is you keep making a huge deal out of Cora being a mediocre middle infielder as a player.

    Cora was often touted for not making mental mistakes when playing the field.  He might make an error, but his head was always in the game.

    48 minutes ago, Duran Is The Man said:

    i think to make the playoffs, we're going to have to win 86 games. and to get to that, we'll have to go 56-42 the rest of the way. realistically, i don't see that happening.

    Right now, when we can't even win 3 games in a row, it seems like an impossible task.  That said, 56-42 is not an outrageous mark to reach.  Something has to give, though.

    56 minutes ago, Kimmi said:

    Right now, when we can't even win 3 games in a row, it seems like an impossible task.  That said, 56-42 is not an outrageous mark to reach.  Something has to give, though.

    Exactly what about this team leads you to believe that they can play 14 games over .500 the rest of the way?

    15 hours ago, TedYazPapiMookie said:

    Losing Mookie was the 2020 season because Sale was gone too.  Cora's clone managed that year.  Cora provided him with the same mistakes in line-ups, playing time etc.  Cora directed from a far.

    Utter nonsense.  2020 was a nonseason plus Cora had good reason to stay away from the Sox and not jeopardize his chances to return to MLB.

     

    3 hours ago, Kimmi said:

    Perhaps having some experience with pitching before being a manager might help, perhaps not.  I do not agree with the premise that a manager has to have experience as a pitcher in order to make good decisions regarding pitching changes.  That's why there are guys like Bailey and Varitek in the dugout.

    I agree with you.  I just haven't seen Cora using his coaches that way.  I think Breslow would love that to happen as a former pitcher.  Cora seems to like being in charge and he seems to think he's got a great intuition when it comes to in game decisions.  The results of the unusual choices he makes seldom produces good results.

    1 hour ago, notin said:

    The fact that you don’t…

    Let me suggest you move on from responding to me.  This response was childish.  You are embarrassing yourself.  Grow up and stop responding since you can't talk baseball concepts, you can only insult. 

    2 hours ago, Maxbialystock said:

    Utter nonsense.  2020 was a nonseason plus Cora had good reason to stay away from the Sox and not jeopardize his chances to return to MLB.

     

    So you can't comprehend how Cora's influence over Roenicke put the team on an autopilot of Cora's way of doing things? Wow.  I guess you didn't notice that Cora spent his first year quoting Hinch constantly.  He tried to mimic him.  Why wouldn't Roenicke do the same thing?  Heck, Cora was with Hinch one year and Roenicke was with Cora in both 2019 AND 2018.  

    Hasn't anyone told you to declare something utter nonsense is insulting?  How very open minded of you.

    6 hours ago, TedYazPapiMookie said:

    Let me suggest you move on from responding to me.  This response was childish.  You are embarrassing yourself.  Grow up and stop responding since you can't talk baseball concepts, you can only insult. 

    Wait.  Are you also TheSplinteredSplendor?  Am I the only one who didn’t know this?

    It is true that I am still naive enough to believe every login is a unique person, even after all these years of forum posting…

    6 hours ago, TedYazPapiMookie said:

    So you can't comprehend how Cora's influence over Roenicke put the team on an autopilot of Cora's way of doing things? Wow.  I guess you didn't notice that Cora spent his first year quoting Hinch constantly.  He tried to mimic him.  Why wouldn't Roenicke do the same thing?  Heck, Cora was with Hinch one year and Roenicke was with Cora in both 2019 AND 2018.  

    Hasn't anyone told you to declare something utter nonsense is insulting?  How very open minded of you.

    Isn’t starting a sentence with “So you can’t comprehend…” also insulting?  

    7 hours ago, moonslav59 said:

    LMAO!

    How about looking at the rosters of all the other AL teams not named the Tigers and Yankees?

    What makes anyone think enough can't go 14 games under .500?

    Is the Tigers roster really all that impressive?




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