Red Sox Fire Pair Of Coaches As Organizational Turnover Continues

Boston has some hiring to do this winter
Red Sox Fire Pair Of Coaches As Organizational Turnover Continues
Red Sox Fire Pair Of Coaches As Organizational Turnover Continues /
In this story:

The Boston Red Sox are starting to get very active after a few years of mediocrity.

The Red Sox made waves weeks ago when they let go of chief baseball officer Chaim Bloom and then moved former general manager Brian O'Halloran into a new role.

Many expected the next move would be to replace the duo. As it turns out, Boston is still working on tearing it down, not building it back up. 

The Red Sox have fired pitching coach Dave Bush and third base coach Carlos Febles according to The Boston Globe's Alex Speier. 

The pitching staff has been atrocious over the last couple of years and Bush was at the center of it. Boston ranked No. 21 with a 4.52-team ERA this season. A year prior, the team posted a 4.53 ERA, which was No. 25 in Major League Baseball. At a glance, it's hard to blame Bush for the results of their pitching staff given the lack of firepower he had to work with. 

That said, the Red Sox have seen the likes of Ryan Brasier, Martín Pérez and even Jake Diekman excel since departing from Boston in recent years. There also has been some regression from young players such as Garrett Whitlock and Tanner Houck. 

It's not fair to solely blame Bush for the lack of production from the Red Sox pitching staff but he hardly appears to be the best man for the job.

As for Febles, he appears to be taking the fall for a horrendous defense. The team was a historically bad fielding team in 2023 and was far below average the season prior as well. 

Again, it's hard to claim Febles is the problem when Bloom appeared to lean toward offensive-minded position players and did not equip the team with much depth.

However, the young players do not appear to be getting any better with experience, which falls on the coaching staff. Rafael Devers regressed heavily this season, Triston Casas struggled mightily after we watched Bobby Dalbec fail to improve across three seasons. Second base has been a black hole for years and shortstop play outside Trevor Story and Yu Chang proved to be a massive issue as well.

Time will tell if Bush and Febles should be classified as worthy firings or scapegoats after another lost season.

More MLB: Red Sox Legend Pedro Martinez Gives His Take On Whether Boston Should Pursue Blake Snell


Published
Scott Neville
SCOTT NEVILLE

Scott Neville covers the Boston Red Sox for Sports Illustrated's new page "Inside The Red Sox." Before starting "Inside The Red Sox", Neville attended Merrimack College, where he earned his Bachelor’s Degree in Communication and Media with a minor in Marketing. Neville spent all four years with Merrimack's radio station WMCK, where he grew as a radio/podcast host and producer.  His propensity for being in front of a microphone eventually expanded to film, where he produced multiple short films alongside his then-roommate and current co-worker Stephen Mottram. On a journey that began as a way to receive easy credits via film classes, he received a call from "It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia" star Charlie Day. Day advised him to make a feature-length film, which he completed his senior year. While writing the film, Neville completed an internship for United Way as part of their NFL Partnership Program. Neville ran the blog for a team of interns and hosted an internet show called "United Way's NFL Partnership Series" where he interviewed NFL alumni. After college Neville wrote for SB Nation's "Over The Monster," a Red Sox sister site of the flagship brand. His work would eventually lead him to a job as a content producer with NESN, where he would cover all sports. After developing as a writer with the top regional network in the world, he was given the opportunity to join the Sports Illustrated Media Group in his current endeavor as the publisher of "Inside The Red Sox." The successful launch and quick rise of "Inside The Red Sox" led to Neville joining the Baseball Essential ownership group, a national baseball site under SIMG. Follow him on Twitter: @ScottNeville46 Email: nevilles@merrimack.edu