I'm pretty sure we all agree Bloom was given a high priority task of rebuilding the farm system as quickly as possible, and without seriously damaging the chances of the current team staying competitive or at least have the perception of being competitive or entertaining.
Of course, the results of the farm building won't be known for quite some time, and those who seem to be defending Bloom more than bashing him, know that. Nobody has proclaimed Bloom has fixed the farm as far as it needs to be fixed. Nobody is sure the players he has acquired will amount to more than squat, but all we can expect and hope for as fans, concerning the farm is that we seem to have more quality and quantity of promising players than we had before. I like the road Bloom is taking, but I'm not going to say he has been a success, just yet.
The Whitlock addition, which was technically a farm addition was a great start, but none of the prospects acquired via trades have done anything in the bigs, yet. Only a few (Downs, Wong, Wink, Seabold) have even seen limited time in the bigs, so far. It's way to early to make any final judgement on the farm-building aspect of Bloom's tenure as the Sox GM.
The budget priority is a bit easier to judge, and there seems to be much disagreement about even some of the most basic facts, like was there a limited budget in 2020 and 2021, or even 2022. Much of the longer term contracts- for good or bad are ending, this winter, and the only longer term deal added was Story. I happen to think our finances are better looking in 2023 than they were after 2019. I've yet to hear a Bloom basher say anything convincing about that looking worse.
The last, but likely not the least important priority was to put a competitive team on the field during the rebuild. You can count 2020, if you want, and say Bloom is 1-2, but I see him as being 1-1 or 1-1-1.
So, IMO, he looks good on farm building, but the jury is still out.
He looks good on prepping the budget for 2023 and beyond, but I guess that can be viewed as the jury still being out, until we see what he spends, this winter. I am fine with saying the jury is out, here, too.
He looks to be about even in season competitiveness record, but I can see how those who view recency above all else, saying he's a failure, here, or those who choose to count 2020 in the standings thinking the same way.
Call me an apologist or whatever, but I think Bloom was given some top priorities that maybe don't jive with some fans, and IMO his budgets have been severely limited until March of 2022. That also doesn't jive with those who think and say, Henry can spend as much as he wants, but that is not part of Bloom's reality. JH did not give him an open wallet. That's not an excuse: it's reality.
IMO, Bloom is going to be given a chance to show what he's got, this winter. It will almost certainly seal his legacy as a Sox GM. Depending on how well the 2023 team does and how we look going forward, maybe Bloom's days are numbered. If he makes a few more (too many more) JBJ-type trades and Diekman signings, I'll be calling for a change, too, but I've seen a lot of moves I like (Whitlock, Pivetta, Wacha, Schreiber, Refsnyder, Strahm, Kike, German) and some we all may end up liking, if some of his prospects acquired pan out to think he deserves another winter at the helm.