Most informed fans think the main problem is pitching. Heck, they've been near the bottom the last few years in pitching, while being near the top in hitting. Anybody can read the stats. Right now, they are missing some key hitters, so that makes the pitching even more vulnerable.
So the question is how to fix the pitching? I've said that I'm suspect of the way the Red Sox management handles pitching. I don't think it's the pitching coach--they keep changing them with no effect. So here's what I think:
First, they have not developed enough pitching in their farm syatem. That tells me the management does not give sufficient priority to pitching--they aren't drafting enough pitchers.
Second, they tend to baby their starters--misusing pitch counting. 100 pitches and out winning or losing.
That often means 5-6 innings in a quality start--which puts ridiculous pressure on the bullpen. Last year, Tito used 4 bullpen guys to finish an 8-2 blowout!
Third, the bullpen is grossly overused. By that I mean, too many appearances and too few innings per appearance. Relievers almost never pitch more than 1-2 innings. That means using 3-4 relievers almost every game. Since bullpen heatup is half the effort for a reliever, that puts tremendous strain on them.
It's no wonder a guy is sharp for a couple of outings, and then goes sour on the 3rd one. They aren't machines.
Fourth, There is too sharp a distinction between starters and relievers. When a starter comes back from injury, he should spend some time in the bullpen to sharpen up, before he's thrown out there to start.
Buchholz is a classic example--the kid clearly wasn't ready to start this year. He belonged in the bullpen--and does right now until he shows he is sharp enough to start again. (This assumes he is healthy, for which there is some doubt.)Conversely, when a reliever looks sharp a couple of times (like Tazawa did when he came up), he ought to be given a start. That's the way it was done for 100 years in baseball before the bean counters --I mean pitch counters-- took over.
What I'm saying is, aside from not drafting enough pitching and signing free agent pitchers poorly, the management has a problem with the way pitchers are handled. I thought maybe Valentine would change things some vs Tito, but he really hasn't. Which tells me the problem goes higher.