I am a member of the Baseball Bloggers Alliance, and before every season, Daniel Shoptaw, who runs the fine blog covering the Cardinals, C70 At The Bat, puts together a collection of questions for bloggers of every club about how they think the team they cover will do. I have taken part in the Q&A for the last few seasons, and this year is no exception. Here are five questions Daniel asked me about the Red Sox and their chances for 2017. (And here is the complete post for all the Red Sox bloggers involved this year.)
My thanks to Daniel and the Baseball Bloggers Alliance for letting me take part again this year.
C70: Was it a good offseason for the team? Did they do what they
needed to do? Is there any move you wished they had made that they
didn’t?
MQM: I thought it was an excellent offseason for the Red Sox. They filled a huge hole in the rotation with the trade for Chris Sale. It now gives the Sox an amazing 1-2-3 at the top of their rotation. They gave up two of their best prospects in Yoan Moncada and Michael Kopech, but they have a deep system, and Sale is still of MLB’s best left handers. I am also very glad the neither Andrew Benintendi nor Jackie Bradley was sent in the trade. The trade for reliever Tyler Thornburg gives the Sox another power arm at the end of the game, and it offsets the losses of Koji Uehara and Junichi Tazawa. I also like the free agent signing of Mitch Moreland, as he is the current Gold Glove winner at first base, and allows the Sox to give Hanley Ramirez more time at DH.
C70: 2017 starts the post-David Ortiz era. How different will that be for you and for the team?
MQM: There is simply
no replacing David Ortiz. He is the greatest clutch hitter in team
history and a sure Hall of Famer. He went out in 2016 on his own terms,
and I have great respect for him for that. Big Papi’s departure will be
felt by everyone, but it will be up to the guys in the middle of the
order, Hanley Ramirez, Mookie Betts and Xander Bogaerts
to pick up the slack. The Sox have put together a very good young team
that will just get better. We will also see if Pablo Sandoval can return
from the shoulder surgery and return to form. He’s lost a lot of weight
and so far management is happy with his progress. Dustin Pedroia now becomes the “grand old man” on the Sox, and I’d love to see him officially become the team captain.
C70: What’s the thinking on Craig Kimbrel? A bit of an off year or the beginning of a decline?
MQM: It’s hard to say if this is the beginning of a decline for Craig Kimbrel.
It may have just been a year of adjustment to Boston for him. He was
very good after he had knee surgery in July, but there were games when
he simply couldn’t find the plate, and his walk totals just exploded.
The Sox made a wise move bringing in Tyler Thornburg, who has experience
as a closer in the past. If Kimbrel struggles early in 2017, I’m sure
the wolves will be howling at his door.
C70: Is there an unheralded player that people should keep an eye on this season?
MQM: Reliever Carson Smith returns from Tommy John
surgery by mid-season, and it will be interesting to see if he can
bounce back quickly. He put up excellent numbers as a setup man in
Seattle, and most Red Sox fans don’t know much about him. He could be an
excellent addition around the trade deadline. It was also be
interesting to see what the Red Sox do with their catching situation. Is
this the year Blake Swihart goes back behind the plate and has a breakout season?
C70: What’s your projection of the team’s record and/or where will they finish in the division?
MQM: The Sox won 93 games and the division in 2016, and I expect them to top that in 2017.
They’ll take the East this year with 95 wins. The Blue Jays will give
them the most problems, but Toronto has slightly regressed. The Orioles
and Yankees will fight it out for third, and the Rays are still the
bottom team of the division.
C70: Who is your all-time favorite Red Sox and why?
MQM: I became a Red
Sox fan in my youth because I was a Carl Yastzemski fan and he will
always be my favorite. He will be closely followed by David Ortiz and
Dustin Pedroia from this generation. They both were heavily responsible
for bringing championships to Red Sox Nation, and they made my life in
New York City so much more bearable!
No comments:
Post a Comment