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After a tough April and an excellent worse begin to the month of Could, the Boston Pink Sox are surging again in direction of the .500 mark. The Pink Sox have received their final 4 collection and look to disrupt a stacked AL East.
After beginning Could dropping 6 of seven video games, the Pink Sox have gone 13-6, shifting their total report to 23-25 on the season. Whereas it might take a miracle for the Pink Sox to catch as much as the New York Yankees or the Tampa Bay Rays, the Pink Sox have seen their playoff possibilities leap from 19.6% on Could eighth to 37.7% on Could thirtieth.
The massive query is; can the Pink Sox maintain the laundry cart rolling and maintain this stage of play? The reply is not any. No they can’t.
Since Could ninth the Pink Sox have been the very best offense in baseball, posting a league main 161 staff wRC+. That is 26% higher than the second place Los Angeles Dodgers’ offense over that very same time interval.
Whereas that stage of offense just isn’t sustainable, the Pink Sox have a line up stuffed with gifted offensive gamers. However, their pitching has been comparatively mediocre.
Since Could ninth the Pink Sox’s pitching employees is twenty fourth in FIP and nineteenth in employees ERA, which is a testomony to how scorching their offense is in the meanwhile. Even throughout this spectacular run, the Pink Sox have acquired beneath league common manufacturing from their pitching employees, however their offense has carried the load.
The Pink Sox offense is actually a gifted group, however they received’t keep this scorching perpetually. That’s the reason this commerce deadline may very well be an actual take a look at for the Pink Sox.
Presently, the Pink Sox have the quantity 11 farm system per Baseball America. If the Pink Sox genuinely really feel they’ve a shot at successful a title, they might want to fortify their pitching employees.
The Oakland Athletics’ Frankie Montas is a reputation that has been churning across the rumor mill because the season started and could be a slot in Boston. That is the kind of arm the Pink Sox would want to pair with a Nathan Eovaldi to make themselves a brief collection risk.
Montas is only one instance. The Pink Sox have the prospect capital to acquire a frontline arm, however as tempting as which may be for the Sox, it may not be price it to promote the farm this season.
Whereas the signing of Trevor Story actually appeared like a transfer to assist the Pink Sox win now and win later, it additionally might need signaled the tip of the Xander Bogaerts period in Boston.
Frankly, the Pink Sox could must take a sensible have a look at issues and easily attempt to do the very best with what they presently have.
With Chris Sale nearing a rehab project, he may very well be the main midseason acquisition the Pink Sox are hoping for. In 42.2 innings in 2021, Sale didn’t look precisely like his outdated self, however he positively put up numbers approaching what Frankie Montas has produced over the previous two seasons.
Heading into the summer time, the Boston Pink Sox discover themselves in between a rock and a tough place. Their offense is clicking, however their pitching corps are skinny. In the event that they promote their future to compete now, that also may not be sufficient to maintain up with the American League’s elite. To face pat is probably not a transfer that pleases the Pink Sox fanbase, however it could be the very best transfer to make sure the Pink Sox are aggressive down the highway.
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Readers Say
The people — or at least the people who make up Boston.com’s readership — have spoken. A lot of news happened in 2024, but these are the stories that readers cited as the ones that most intrigued them over the course of the last 12 months.
In total readers sent more than 500 responses to our survey, and below you’ll find a countdown of the five they mentioned most often, followed by six more that bubbled up just underneath. (And how much do you want to bet at least a few of these turn up on the list again next year?)
OK, so Boston wasn’t in the “path of totality.” We’ll get our own total solar eclipse on May 1, 2079 (turns out the waiting is the hardest part), but in the meantime Boston.com readers seemed plenty content with getting our own little slice of the natural phenomenon here last April. Silly glasses were de rigueur, schools and businesses stopped everything to check it out, and plenty of people actually headed north to New Hampshire and Vermont to see the thing in toto. (Although a lot of them seemed to run into a few problems getting back home.)
Greater Boston has a lot of colleges, and a lot of students who aren’t particularly shy about speaking up at them. So it probably made sense that when students started protesting over the war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza, our schools would be a hotbed of such activity. And sure enough, MIT, Tufts, and Emerson led the way, followed by Harvard, Northeastern, UMass Amherst, Dartmouth, and UNH, among others. Even the Rhode Island School of Design got into the act, occupying part of an administrative building. Protests, encampments, arrests, and resignations seemed to arise basically every day last spring, and readers followed live updates with interest (and probably no small amount of trepidation).
One of two sports stories to make our top five, a sizable number of readers pointed to the departure of Bill Belichick from the Patriots team he had led to six Super Bowl championships. Even though it happened way back in early January, readers reported his leaving as having taken up big chunks of their sports headspace throughout 2024 — maybe because he kept making headlines, whether it was his opinions about the team he left behind, reports about his love life (couples Halloween costume, anyone?), or his eventual landing as coach at North Carolina.
While they might not have had the juice of our omnipresent No. 1 story mentioned below, readers named our Boston Celtics the second most intriguing story of the year, with their decisive championship victory over the Dallas Mavericks in June dispelling any doubt that this was — arguably by far — the best team in the NBA. It almost makes you feel bad for all those other teams that didn’t have Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown, a roster of stellar complementary players, and Coach Joe Mazzulla churning out quotes-of-the-day like an Internet-era Yogi Berra. Oh, and their parade was pretty good too.
In a year that saw the continuation of more than a few disturbing ongoing murder stories — the Brian Walshe and Lindsay Clancy cases come to mind — one captured people’s attention the most, by far. The trial of Karen Read made headlines and spurred water-cooler talk far beyond Boston, leading to the logical assumption among basically everybody that it would eventually be a Netflix documentary. Which of course it will be.
As you’ll probably recall, prosecutors allege that Read was driving drunk and deliberately backed her SUV into her boyfriend, Boston Police Officer John O’Keefe, while dropping him off at a house party in January of 2022. And Read’s lawyers allege that O’Keefe was actually beaten by people inside the house (and attacked by the family dog). It’s a case that has everything, including a Turtleboy. And since her first trial ended in a mistrial, we get to do it all again next April.
Trump makes headway in Mass: People of the MAGA persuasion probably shouldn’t get too excited — Massachusetts remained solidly blue in November’s presidential election, with Kamala Harris earning about 61% of the vote. But Donald Trump took the whole shebang, and readers (well, about half of them) pointed to his gains even in liberal Mass. as part and parcel of his booming comeback — he flipped 10 Massachusetts towns that had voted for Biden in 2020 and shrunk the gap in a lot of others. Meanwhile, the anti-Trump contigent immediately began hand-wringing over how his policies might affect things in the Bay State.
The Mass. migrant crisis: Thanks to the state’s “right to shelter” law, migrants were everywhere — at Logan Airport, in repurposed community centers, at hotels and in a shuttered prison. And despite Gov. Maura Healey’s ever-tightening guidelines for shelter stays, the issue remains a thorn in her political side.
Crime in Downtown Boston: A shoplifting surge and violence on the Common — which many blamed on problems that spread from the former encampments of homeless and addicted individuals at Mass. & Cass — meant much consternation among the city crowd. Mayor Michelle Wu, though, assures us Boston remains the safest big city in America.
Ballot questions: There were five of them! And three — approval of a legislative audit, the elimination of the MCAS as a graduation requirement, and allowing rideshare drivers to unionize — actually passed. Sorry, psychedelics and increased tipped minimum wage.
The arrest of Tania Fernandes Anderson: It just happened a few weeks ago, but Boston City Councilor Fernandes Anderson’s federal public corruption arrest — charges involved a $7,000 cash payment in a City Hall bathroom — immediately caused a stir on Boston’s political scene. (One reader even suggested that outgoing President Joe Biden should pardon her.)
State police troubles: As if the classless texts from State Trooper Michael Proctor revealed during the Read trial weren’t enough, the mysterious training death of recruit Enrique Delgado Garcia cast a further pall over the organization. Plus all the fraud. (Not that your run-of-the-mill municipal police departments got off easy either. Case in point: the Sara Birchmore case in Stoughton.)
Stay tuned for a full list of the most-read stories on Boston.com in 2024 next week.
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BOSTON (WHDH) – Boston Archbishop Richard Henning led his first Christmas Mass in the city on Wednesday, drawing a crowd of followers from across the country who wanted to be on hand for the historic occasion.
The Mass at the Cathedral of the Holy Cross was a lot to take in for the archdiocese’s new leader.
“I’m just feeling a little overwhelmed, it’s my first Christmas in Boston, so that makes it extra special,” he said.
“My mission in life is not to bring people to me but to point them to the heart of Jesus,” Henning added.
The message he delivered, parishioners said, resonated with those on hand.
“It was really profound, I really enjoyed his homily and the way the Mass was celebrated and I really enjoy the spirit of Christmas and the message that he taught us today,” one woman said.
Henning went on to meet with children at Boston’s Children’s Hospital to spread holiday cheer.
(Copyright (c) 2024 Sunbeam Television. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)
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