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2008 Season Preview: Boston Red Sox

MLB Team by Team

By Jeremy C, published Feb 11, 2008
Published Content: 76  Total Views: 11,175  Favorited By: 1 CPs
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Rating: 3.0 of 5
Boston has been the center of the sports world since October. The Red Sox took home the World Series in a box with the hearts of the plucky upstart Colorado Rockies, then the New England Patriots nearly make the 1972 Miami Dolphins a footnote, and the Celtics are running roughshod even without the Big Ticket on the floor. There's not much room for improvement in Beantown.

So, the Red Sox didn't make any moves. Johan Santana was dangled in front of them, they said no thanks, we'll hold on to Coco Crisp, Jacoby Ellsbury, and John Lester, we still have use for them, go ahead and give the Mets a call. The offense is the same, the rotation is basically the same, the bullpen is the same. Change, according to the Sox, not such a good thing.

OFFENSE: A

The only thing that keeps the Red Sox from being an A+ is the possibility of aging. Manny Ramirez had a season most players would gladly take (.296, 20 homers, 88 RBI), but it was below average for him, and injuries are becoming a problem. Mike Lowell had a fantastic year, the best of his solid career, but he's 35, and could be looking over the precipice as well. Thing is, these are only minor concerns when you have Big Papi himself, David Ortiz (.332, 35 and 117) in the middle of the lineup and the Greek God of Walks, Kevin Youkilis, at first, along with still-rising talents Ellsbury and Dustin Pedroia. The difference between A and A+ is tiny, you know.

PROJECTED LINEUP 1 Crisp CF 2 Youkilis 1B 3 Ramirez RF 4 Ortiz DH 5 Lowell 3B 6 Drew LF 7Varitek C 8 Pedroia 2B 9 Lugo SS

STARTING ROTATION: B

Aging in one case, inexperience in another, may be a little more challenging for the starting pitchers. Curt Schilling is having shoulder woes, has been battling injuries seemingly forever, is 42, and sliding (9-8 last year, 3.87 ERA), and Lester, though obviously talented, has only a few starts under his belt. Here's the big however for the rotation: There's still Daisuke Matsuzaka and Josh Beckett, two guys you may have heard of, and Clay Buchholz on the doorstep in case of injury or inconsistency. Again, a little bigger problem, but still relatively minor. Most teams would kill for the Red Sox' issues.

Takeaways
  • The Red Sox are who you thought they were, to quote Dennis Green.
  • Boston's stiffest competition this season may be the Detroit Tigers.
  • If it's not Father Time, and even he may not have a chance.
Comments
Comments 1 - 2 of 2
 
 
Glad you still have Ellsberry...some really want to trade him..he's a local fav from my neck of the woods, even if he was an Oregon State Beaver. Oregon didn't have a baseball program then, so this Duck (and many others) figured it was ok for us to keep rooting for the Beavs as they took the natiional champ. But now we'll have a team (in 09) and a brand new stadium, so I'll leave the Beavs. We're all proud of Jacoby, tho. Nice article

Posted on 02/12/2008 at 10:02:35 PM

 
I think there's more of a chance that Shilling will start on Opening Day than there is of Coco batting in the lead off spot.

Posted on 02/12/2008 at 9:02:07 AM

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