Another day, another trophy. I'm gonna keep awarding these trophies for as long as the Red Sox keep winning.
Today, Boston won their ninth straight game, a first for this season and a feat they haven't achieved since July 12, 2025. More significantly, they swept three series in a row, winning every game of this road trip. The last time the Sox swept three in a row was September 2019, and the last time they swept three in a row all on the road was way back in 1977. They're 14-2 since June 25 of this year and the start of a home stand against the Yankees.
But, my God, the way that they won this game today. The Sox had starter Tolle on a strict pitch count today for some reason and pulled him after 66 pitches and 3⅔ innings. They brought in Brayan Bello, freshly returned from a minor-league reassignment, for long relief. A bold move, but Bello got the job done, striking out five and giving up one run on only two hits over 4⅓ innings.
But the Sox hitting was off today and they hadn't scored a run for the first eight innings of the game. In fact, they only had two hits to show for themselves all game, and went into the ninth trailing, 2-0. I was already rationalizing the loss, thinking "all things eventually end" and "still a helluva run," but then Rafaella singled, Gonzalez advanced him to second, and Durbin loaded the bases with a walk. The Mets walked in Boston's first run of the day, and then a Duran single tied the game, 2-2.
Chapman closed out the ninth inning with only one hit and no runs, and in the top of the tenth, a Seigler fly ball brought Yoshida home from third. Whitlock made three quick outs in the bottom of the inning, and the Red Sox left the field with their ninth straight road win. Bet you didn't have that on your bingo card, did you?
We're going to the World Series, baby!
Boston enters the All Star break at 46-48 and in third place in the AL East. Tampa Bay lost today, so the Sox are now ten games back from first. But their path to the World Series doesn't run through a Division championship but a Wild Card berth. Seattle and Minnesota both won their games today, so Boston remains a tantalizing half game back from qualifying for a Wild Card spot.
The Sox are off until Friday for the MLB All-Star break. They'll return to action at Fenway, where they're still only 17-27, for a four-game series against first-place Tampa Bay (56-38), starting with a Friday double-header. But after that, their odds will improve as they host Baltimore (45-51) and Toronto (45-50).
Not to throw a hex on our mojo, but as a long-suffering Red Sox fan (I was in the stands at Fenway for many of the games in that historic 1977 season) I can't help but think of disappointments in both the distant and recent past. Last season, we went into the All-Star break on a 10-game winning streak, only to go a disappointing 4-6 in the first ten games of the second half.
However, this year, if we can at least split the series with the Rays and then sweep the birds (both Orioles and Blue Jays), then we're 8-2 to start the second half and all will be right with the world.
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