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The Boston Red Sox have won two consecutive series against the Milwaukee Brewers and St. Louis Cardinals, improving their performance and reducing their deficit to the Yankees to two games. The team's offense and defense have shown significant improvement, raising hopes for a better season ahead.
BOSTON, MA - APRIL 8: Roman Anthony #19 of the Boston Red Sox, lright, and Wilyer Abreu #52 are congratulated by teammates and manager Alex Cora #13, left, after their win over the Milwaukee Brewers at Fenway Park on April 8, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo By Winslow Townson/Getty Images) | Getty Images
If thereâs anything that I learned over the past week of watching the Red Sox, itâs that baseball canâbelieve it or notâbe fun! God, remember what it was like to actually enjoy this teamâs play?
After many in Red Sox Nation (myself included) started to worry about the trajectory of the 2026 season, Boston has won two straight sets against NL Central clubs. A series win against a very good Brewers team got things going, and a two-outta-three swing in St. Louis immediately afterwards helped get the club back on track (relatively). Just like that, guess whoâs two games back of the Yankees (some other teams as well, sure, but I think that narrative more) while posting a positive run differential?
The bats have woken up (more on that in a few paragraphs), the defense looks far better, and starters are actually pitching into the fifth inningâor, hell, even later! By the time we sit here next week, we could be back north of .500 after some existential questions regarding this project were being asked. Granted, we could also be right behind the eight ball again if we fail to take care of business against the Twinkies and the Motor City Kitties in the coming days.
Weird game, baseball.
Regardless, Iâm just happy to see some quality play at long last. So letâs talk about some of that while we still can.
Itâs Monday Morning Brushback time, yâall.
No way to sugar coat it: the Red Soxâs offensive output in the first few weeks of the season was subpar. After dropping the first game to the Cardinals on Friday, Boston ranked 25th in the league in total team OPS; not a great sign for a team that plays half of its game at a hitter-friendly park and has played at other yards that allow for more offense such as Cincy and Houston.
However, an interesting tweet from Thomas Nestico (great follow) crossed my desk this weekendâone that certainly caught me by surprise. That post pointed out that the Red Soxâs hard hit rate has actually been pretty good so far this season, ranking within the top 10 across MLB prior to the start of play on Friday.
Again: those hard hit numbers donât account for the crooked numbers our guys put up on Saturday and Sunday to secure their second consecutive series win. Entering play Sunday, the Soxâs hard hit percentage went up by just over a percentage point to 42.7% per Savant. What it looks like after Sundayâs victoryâŠâŠ.Iâm not sure, since I donât believe that the site has been updated, but the trends are positive for us!
That information did give me some relief from what weâve seen in terms of the run output thus far. Yeah, the offense has looked anemic at points, but the offensive profiles I had been optimistic about before the season still remain. Prior to Sundayâs finale, a total of nine Red Sox hitters had a hard hit rate that ranked within the 50th percentile league-wide or better. A good cohort of those same guys rank within the top half of MLB in other under-the-hood metrics; xwOBA, expected slugging, barrel rate, all that fun stuff.
One name notably not towards the top of those metrics: Roman Anthony, whoâs been slow out of the gates when compared to the expectations many had for him at the seasonâs start. To reemphasize the point about profiles, though, thatâs not someone I worry about. I still think heâs gonna come around in 2026 and be a great bat at the top of the order. I still think Willson Contreras projects to be a key part of this lineup (and youâve really seen that come to fruition over the last few games). While he wonât keep up with the incredible pace heâs had to start the year, I think Wilyer Abreuâs breakout is here in earnest.
The skeleton of a solid (maybe not incredible, granted) offense is there, and the underlying metrics show it. During an entire season, those quality-of-contact traits should start to win out. This offense was never going to be as bad over the course of 162 games that we saw in the first 10. Perhaps this weekend was the shot in the arm this lineup needed to really get things cookinâ. Or, maybe theyâll keep up with the backbreaking strikeouts and revert right back to their old ways. Who knows?
Iâm willing to stick my neck out for the former, though. Iâm not saying this is the â27 Yankees, and there are still fair questions to ask (Trevor Story and Caleb Durbin, letâs get some more consistent production with the lumber please) but I like enough of the pieces here in Boston and believe weâll see a competitive lineup this season.
After a couple of false starts, letâs just go ahead and declare Saturday as the true start of the Ranger Suarez era! Best we just forget those first two appearances, right?
In all seriousness, nice job by the newest member of the rotation to bounce back following a pair of bad outings to start his tenure in Boston. Across six shutout innings in the Gateway City, Suarez struck out six Cards while surrendering just a trio of hits and a pair of walks. Things seemed like they were going to get hairy early on, but after a prolonged first inning he was able to lock in and efficiently work his way to a quality start.
It isnât a secret as to how Ranger was able to produce a nice start in St. Louis, because itâs the thing that got him a nine-figure deal in the first place. He could make for a great real estate agent, because Suarezâs game comes down to three words: location, location, location.
According to FanGraphs, Suarezâs Location+ metric (âLocation+ is a count- and pitch type-adjusted judge of a pitcherâs ability to put pitches in the right placeâ) was 111 in the prior two seasons; 100 is always average for these plus stats, in case you werenât aware. Thatâs the second-best mark out of pitchers who threw at least 300 total innings across 2024 and 2025; only Paul Skenes (!!!!!) had him beat. Itâs a huge reason as to why he posted ERAs below 3.50 in both of those campaigns: his location and his pitch mix is his bread and butter.
And yet, we really didnât get to see that bread and butter until Saturday. Iâm glad we eventually saw the blueprint for what works for Suarez, though! After having Location+ figures of 97 and 102 in his first two starts, that mark jumped up to 107 in Rangerâs thirdâand so far, bestâouting.
He threw five offerings on at least seven occasions across his 84 pitches over the weekend, putting an added emphasis on the sinker (which he threw 46% of the time compared to the 31% usage of that pitch on the year) while notably logging three whiffs with his changeup. All of that success starts with the command, as Tommy Bennett points out below.
You can read more about Suarez by taking a look at the great Matthew Grossâ article that was posted onto OTM the other day, but Rangerâs charmed me with this most recent appearance. Once more, this is the profile of a pitcher that Iâm not worried about long term. Thatâs the word of the dayâprofileâbecause I still trust in him to be a strong deputy to Garrett Crochet in the pitching staff considering his track record. Suarez isnât the type of demon that can mow batters down like itâs nothing thanks to an incredible ability to miss bats, like Crochet, but he doesnât have to.
Locate that junk and mix up the pitches. Thatâs how we win, Ranger.
A quick word on southpaw prospect Payton Tolle to wrap things up, as all accounts show that heâs been cooking down in AAA and could be knocking on Bostonâs door once again for a call up soon.
With the WooSox this weekend, Bostonâs top prospect logged six punch outs across five innings and 75 pitches. He gave up three hits and issued only one free pass, while he initiated whiffs on 25% of his pitches. The piglet to Crochetâs pig, indeed.
Whatâs interesting about this stat, to me, is the amount of times he threw his cutter: 20 times, to be specific, so just over a quarter of the time. For reference, Tolle threw his cutter 42 total times (a rate of nearly 14%) in his 16.1 innings of MLB ball in 2025.
I think we all knew that the secondary offerings had to come before Tolle could be fully entrenched within Bostonâs pitching staff. The four-seamer is incredible, yes, but he was throwing it about two-thirds of the time during his cup of coffee. Something with glove-side movement and a change of pace like that cutter, along with the breaking curve and the arm-side bite of a sinker, can keep batters honest. Itâs simple analysis, but it seems to be coming to fruition.
I forget what date for a call up would guarantee the Red Sox another year of team control for Tolle, but I think itâs approaching in a matter of weeks. Iâm sure weâll be seeing him soon enough.
And if the pitching thing doesnât work out, at least Tolle can fall back on his history teaching as a career option.
The boys are back, baby.
Same time and same place next week, friends! Go Sox.
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