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June 18, 2025

Schadenfreude 361 (A Continuing Series)

The Red Sox have a 10-5 record in the month of June, with five of those 10 victories against the Yankees.

June 7:  Red Sox 10, MFY 7
June 8: Red Sox 11, MFY 7
June 13: Red Sox 2, MFY 1 (10)
June 14: Red Sox 4, MFY 3
June 15: Red Sox 2, MFY 0

The 2-0 shutout on Father's Day turned the MFY bats into wet noodles. With subsequent losses to the Angels, 1-0 (11) and 4-0, the Yankees have not scored a run in their last 29 innings. As you can see below, that's a grand total of four runs in their last five games (all losses, of course), covering 48 innings. Also, in all five games, the MFY were unable to score a run in the first six innings.

000 000 001 0 000 000 201 000 000 000 000 000 000 00 000 000 000






From the most recent Red Sox series, in which Judge (who, I must admit, is hitting out of his goddamn mind this season) went 1-for-12, with nine strikeouts:






June 16, 2025

WTF: Rafael Devers Traded To Giants

The Boston Red Sox traded Rafael Devers to the San Francisco Giants on Sunday in exchange for pitchers Jordan Hicks and Kyle Harrison and a pair of prospects (outfielder James Tibbs III and pitcher Jose Bello). The teams had been discussing a Devers deal for the past few weeks.

Devers, in his ninth season with the club, had been the last member of the 2018 World Champions still in a Boston uniform. He's also in the second year of a 10-year, $313.5 million contract.

Initial news of the trade stunned the entire SoSH membership like a torpedo bat to the back of the noggin. I mean every. single. poster. Completely out of the blue. I have to assume Devers's reluctance/refusal to move to first base was a factor to some extent. As Ian Browne (mlb.com) reports:

[T]hings got turbulent between Devers and the Red Sox this past Spring Training . . .

Devers, a below-average defender according to the error column and the metrics, had played third base his entire career. He initially balked at the idea of transitioning to DH [after Alex Bregman was signed] in meetings with the Red Sox and in comments to the media before he reluctantly agreed to the arrangement in March. . . .

[A]nother storm cloud arrived when first baseman Triston Casas ruptured his left patellar tendon on May 2 and was lost for the season.

Searching for potential solutions at first base, chief baseball officer Craig Breslow asked Devers if he would consider playing the position. Devers declined.

Devers also reportedly refused (on several occasions) to take grounders at third and first during spring training. It's possible Devers asked to be traded.