The Red Sox and Marlins met Tuesday night for the first time since 2006. This was significant -- and only in a minor way -- not because it was the first time the two teams met since the fateful Josh Beckett-Hanley Ramirez (and other significant parts) trade, but because it was the first time where we could even begin to evaluate that swap with any historical perspective.
Back then, Ramirez was just a rookie shortstop with plenty of talent and two good months under his belt. Beckett, brought in as the presumptive ace, was struggling with the transition from the NL to the AL East and sported a bloated ERA hovering near 5.00 for a Boston team headed for a mighty fall in the second half.
SAN DIEGO -- If there were any doubts that Kevin Towers was a baseball lifer, they were answered on his wedding day.
Just before exchanging vows with his wife in December 1996, the Padres general manager exchanged players with Tigers GM Randy Smith, a member of his wedding party.
"Any time you get baseball people together, especially general managers, regardless of what the venue is or what the situation is, baseball will come up," Towers said. "We started talking about players while we were waiting for my wife to show up. She was running a little late, so we decided to consumate a deal, about 30 minutes before our wedding vows."
FanHouse continues its 2009 MLB Preview with a look at the Boston Red Sox.
In a little more than half of a decade, the fortunes of the Boston Red Sox have done a 180-degree turn. Once a franchise of managerial incompetence, front office ineptitude and fatally flawed teams, the Sox have become a well-oiled winning machine -- smarter than the Yankees, but with similar financial might.
On February 23, 2009, the people that brought us the statistical analysis websites Baseball Prospectus and Basketball Prospectus, launched their hockey counterpart, Puck Prospectus.
While hockey is somewhat behind the times when it comes to this sort analysis, it's not completely unheard of at this point. Gabriel Desjardins, for example, has been running the fascinating analytical website Behind The Net for a couple of years now, while there is also the little-knownCorsi Numbers.
After the jump, we had an opportunity to ask Will Carroll, one of the leading people at Puck Prospectus, a few questions on what the site can provide hockey fans.
This has to be considered a small victory for the Sox, especially considering Papelbon's expressed desire to set a new benchmark for closers and the acrimony that comes with any arbitration hearing.
For better or worse, this is Jim Rice's moment in the sun. The former Red Sox outfielder was elected to the Hall of Fame in his final try last week, and now everyone wants to hear what he has to say about anything and everything, no matter how misguided it is.
Enter intrepid Newsday reporter David Lennon, who asked Rice about failing to win a World Series during his playing career and got an answer that seems both faulty and unbecoming of a guy about to be enshrined in Cooperstown.
Other than a dalliance with Mark Teixeira, Boston's offseason has been almost entirely about tying up loose ends -- keeping the core that has brought so much success lately intact and building up the depth around it.
The Red Sox kicked off their winter by locking up American League MVP Dustin Pedroia for the next six years. In recent weeks, they've added a host of familiar faces to their bench and pitching staff -- including John Smoltz, Takashi Saito and Rocco Baldelli. Now, they're "close" to a contract extension with Kevin Youkilis that could keep him in Boston for the next five years and pay him $53 million, according to Tony Massarotti of the Boston Globe.
Somewhat lost in the acrimonious departure of Manny Ramirez from Boston this summer was Jason Bay, the player the Red Sox wound up with on their deadline day swap.
Bay, who is six years younger than Ramirez, performed well down the stretch for Boston, hitting .293 and driving in 37 runs in 49 games as the Red Sox locked up the AL wild card. He followed that by hitting .341 in the ALDS and ALCS.
The left fielder is due to be a free agent at the end of this season, but according to Tony Massarotti of the Boston Globe, the Red Sox aren't about to let Bay walk without making a serious run at signing him to a contract extension.
It's easy to group the Red Sox and the Yankees together. Heck, during the Rays' amazing run last summer the two ancient rivals almost became one word. ('Can the upstart Rays really hold off the YankeesandRedSox?'). And the rush to mash them into one Northeast superpower makes sense, at least on the surface.
Rabid fanbases that are more alike than they would like to admit. Century-old tradition. Deep coffers. Expectations of success that would seem ridiculous anywhere else. There's no doubt the franchises have plenty in common.
Of course, the Red Sox are still big spenders. They were something like $12 million short in the Teixeira sweepstakes, depending on who you believe, and they've given out a few whoppers over the years like the Daisuke Matsuzaka ($103 million between the posting fee and his contract) and J.D. Drew ($70 million) deals.