The Boston Red Sox won the World Series for the second time
in four years, but this one seems to be more of a Theo Epstein construction
than the last one. The transition to becoming a team based on its farm system
is underway, and Theo looks to be continuing the Red Sox winning ways for many
years to come.
Strengths
Well, for one, they’re the defending champions. Two, unlike
their last World Series winner, most of this team is under contract for next
year. Third baseman Mike Lowell is the only key player that is a free agent
after Curt Schilling signed a one-year $8M deal, which can increase up to $13M if
he earns all of the bonuses.
When talking about the Red Sox, the conversation usually
starts at the middle of the lineup. When David Ortiz and Manny Ramirez have
been in the middle of the order for as long as they have, it’s hard not to
start there. Both of these players were perceived to have slumped this year,
but Ortiz’s “slump” was actually a career year. It might be the first year in
four that he didn’t hit 40 home runs, but his OBP climbed up to .445, a huge
jump from his previous career high of .413 set last year. Plus, his SLG only
fell 15 points from .636 to .621. Hitting 52 doubles makes up for the drop in
home runs. Meanwhile, Manny really did slump, having the worst year of his major
league career since he had 53 at bats as a 21-year old. When your worst season
is .296/.388/.493, you know you’re good. Papi and Manny were given ample
opportunities to drive in runners because the Greek God of Walks Kevin Youkilis,
and his .390 OBP, was batting in front of them.
PECOTA darling Dustin Pedroia overcame a slow start
(.182/.308/.236 in April) to hit .317/.380/.442 and take home the IBA AL
Rookie of the Year award. Pedroia wasn’t the only homegrown prospect to
make an appearance for the Red Sox. He was joined by Manny Delcarmen, Jacoby
Ellsbury, Clay Buchholz, and Jon Lester. Ellsbury started the year on fire at
AA, where he hit .452/.518/.644 in 73 at bats, before cooling off at AAA. In
363 at bats in the International League, Ellsbury hit .298/.360/.380. During a
September call-up, he again caught fire with a .353/.394/.509 line in 116 major
league at bats. He wasn’t the only Red Sox rookie to have a hot start to his
major league career as Buchholz threw a no-hitter in his second major league
start. Buchholz posted ERAs of 1.77, 3.96, and 1.59 in AA (86.2 IP), AAA (38.2
IP), and MLB (22.2 IP). Delcarmen was up to stay in mid-June and proved he
belonged with a 2.05 ERA in 44 relief innings. Last but not least, Lester spent
the off-season recovering from lymphoma, and after proving his health in AAA
Pawtucket, he rejoined the Red Sox rotation in late July and pitched his way to
a 4.57 ERA in 63 innings.
Of course, Ortiz, Ramirez, Youkilis, and the youngsters
couldn’t have done it without their outstanding pitching staff. Josh Beckett
finished second in the IBA voting for AL Cy Young behind C.C. Sabathia, but finishing
second for the Cy Young still requires a phenomenal year. Beckett definitely
had that with a 3.27 ERA over 200.2 innings. He was backed by Schilling,
Daisuke Matsuzaka, Tim Wakefield, and the two youngsters Buchholz and Lester.
Schilling only threw 151 innings due to an injury and the Red Sox massive lead
in the AL East, while Matsuzaka disappointed some in his first big league
season. Before you get too down on Matsuzaka, a 4.40 ERA when half of your
games are in Fenway Park isn’t a bad thing. He’s my candidate to take a massive
step forward a la Beckett this season. All six guys that have already been
mentioned will most likely be back in 2008 (unless the Red Sox find some reason
to turn down Wakefield’s perpetual $4M team option). Since the Red Sox are
well-known for their sabermetric understanding, they will find ways to get all
six guys into the mix. The scenario I envision is Wakefield in the pen and spotting
in for Lester and Buchholz to keep the innings off their young arms. Of course,
any injury to a SP would force the remaining five to take their turns every
time through the rotation.
Backing up the rotation in the later innings is a phenomenal
bullpen. Led by Jonathan Papelbon and Hideki Okajima, Terry Francona has it
easy when he goes to the bullpen in the 8th and 9th
innings. Plus, when you’ve got Delcarmen, Javier Lopez, Kyle Snyder, and whoever
gets left out of the rotation, it’s not like the earlier innings are hard to endure.
Concerns
World Series MVP Mike Lowell is a free agent. While much of
the talk is about Alex Rodriguez right now, the Red Sox have expressed interest
in re-signing Lowell. If Lowell signs elsewhere, talk will surely head to
Rodriguez, but don’t forget that Youkilis can play third base, which means they
can bring in someone to play either one of the corner infield spots. There aren’t
really any good first basemen on the free agent market, but they could always
get Ortiz out on the field. Before you think about his “horrific” defense,
putting him at first frees up the DH spot for Manny. If you replace LF Ramirez,
3B Lowell, and 1B Youkilis with LF Coco Crisp/Ellsbury, 3B Youkilis, and 1B
Ortiz, do you really lose anything on defense? Clay Davenport’s defensive
metrics suggest that you actually gain defense with this arrangement, and
whatever you lose on offense is okay because the Red Sox would still be the
best team in the AL East and a good bet to return to the postseason.
Last offseason, Julio Lugo was brought in to provide good
offense and defense from the shortstop spot? He provided neither. With $27M and
three years left on the deal, he’s not exactly easily dealt either. The Red Sox
best decision would be to give him another shot next year and hope he can prove
his worth over the first half of the year. Regardless of his first half performance,
their midseason decision would be based on Jed Lowrie. If Lowrie can continue
his hot hitting (.298/.393/.503 split between AA and AAA) next year, he’ll be
an easy choice to replace Lugo. If Lugo performs poorly, it’s time to cut bait
and replace him with Lowrie. If Lugo performs well, it’s time to trade him and
replace him with Lowrie.
Overall
After a World Series championship, it’s easy to expect the
Red Sox to put forth a valiant effort to repeat. While they’re expected to make
it back to the postseason, everyone knows that the postseason is a crapshoot so
it’s anyone’s guess what will happen. Meanwhile, the Red Sox have the decision
of whether or not to bring back Mike Lowell as a luxury item (they don’t need
him) and how to handle their shortstop situation. Next offseason will be more
interesting with Manny’s and Jason Varitek’s contracts expiring. In the
meantime, Red Sox fans, enjoy your championship and I’ll expect to see you
again next postseason.
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