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Red Sox/MLB 2025 Regular Season IV - Kristian Campbell sent down to Worcester

Uh oh. :amazed:


from espn.com:

The Boston Red Sox are pausing pitcher Kutter Crawford's rehab due to a wrist injury, according to manager Alex Cora.

Crawford, 29, hasn't pitched in a game this season due to knee and wrist issues. He threw his second bullpen session of the week Friday in the hopes of progressing to a rehab assignment but suffered a setback with the wrist.

The right-hander is set to fly to Boston for further testing in the coming days.

"He wasn't able to generate velocity," Cora said Saturday morning. "That's a concern."

Crawford made a league-high 33 starts last season, compiling 183⅔ innings, but a lingering knee issue prevented him from starting the year healthy. That was followed by wrist pain, leading to him being shut down.

"We'll know more next week," Cora said.
 
Team may be winning some games, but it's absolutely in spite of their offense. They were lucky to win the Seattle series, we will see if its enough to win the Giants series
 
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SAN FRANCISCO — In the initial chaos of the franchises-altering trade of Rafael Devers, Giants ace Logan Webb had a message for the departing Kyle Harrison, the big piece the Red Sox received in return.

“He’ll be a star over there,” Webb said, publicly and privately.

Six days later, with Devers, Harrison, and the others beginning to acclimate to their new worlds, Webb’s reasons for that belief are many, he explained.

Foremost among them: Harrison’s raw talent, work ethic, and youth; his to-be-formed relationship with pitching coach Andrew Bailey, who helped Webb break out as an elite arm around the same age; and similarities with Red Sox ace Garrett Crochet.

Crochet, who at 26 is just two years older than Harrison, is an offseason workout buddy of Webb’s. They’ve gotten to know each other in recent winters at Push Performance in Arizona.

“They’re very similar,” Webb told the Globe on Saturday. “They don’t like anybody who is in the box. But when you get around them, they’re quiet and funny and nice. But as soon as they step on the field, it flips a switch.

“[Harrison is] a bulldog out there. He wants to compete, he wants to be the best. It’s not like he’s going out there and trying to skate by. He wants to be the best. He wants to beat everyone out there.”

Knowing what he does about Harrison and Crochet — hard-throwing lefthanders who rely on four-seam fastballs — Webb figures “it’s going to be a similar blueprint.”

“He’s got everything going for him,” Webb said. “He’s got the right mentality, he’s got a little [meanness] in him, which is how I’m competitive. Then he’s got the stuff to go with it. He works his [butt] off, which is awesome. And they got great coaches over there.”

That is where the Bailey factor comes in (though for now Harrison is with Triple A Worcester and working with the Sox’ pitching development staff). Bailey was the Giants’ pitching coach from 2020-23, a stretch that featured Webb’s transformation from “one of the worst statistical pitchers in baseball,” as he described it, to who he is today — an All-Star and Cy Young Award candidate.

His emergence came in 2021, at age 24.

“Andrew was a big reason for that,” Webb said.

Webb had made a bunch of technical and pitch-usage changes — switching from four-seam to sinker and slider to sweeper, plus tweaks to his changeup — but the sentiment from Bailey that impacted him most was simpler than any of that.

“The biggest thing Andrew did was he wanted me to be confident in everything that I threw,” Webb said. “ ‘Throw what you’re good at.’ It’s going to be fun for me to see Andrew do that for him the way he did that for me.”

Harrison has struggled in the majors, posting a 4.48 ERA over parts of three seasons. But he doesn’t turn 24 until August and possesses what Webb called “an unbelievable four-seam” fastball (which the Sox also love).

As Webb explained, Harrison didn’t become the top lefthanded pitching prospect in the sport by accident.

“And he loves the big moments,” Webb said. “He got to be a part of it with us in the Dodgers [series], we got a good rivalry going. Kyle always rose to the occasion in those rivalries. So I’m sure that won’t change when you see Kyle suit up and face the Yankees as a Red Sox. So it’ll be fun for me to follow him and watch.

“To be honest, I know he didn’t like his year last year and even this year, I know before he left he was frustrated with some of the results. But when I was in the big leagues at 22 and 23, I was pretty bad. I was not a very good pitcher. He’s already light years ahead of me in that sense.

“They’re going to get the most out of him. It’s a great spot for him.”
 

Obvious

Bregman getting close

Today Globe for tomorrow

Alex Bregman (right quad strain) — working out at Boston College as Fenway Park prepares to host Hozier concerts — had another big day of running Saturday. “Excited about everything that is going on here, just eager to come back,” Cora said. “Like I told him: We’re in the mix. We’re playing good baseball. We’re pitching, which is the most important thing. Don’t rush it, because we need you. We need you in the long run.”
 
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Couple things kind of sucked today

Giants first homer came after strike 3 a clear miss by ump

Devers should not have been up but Hamilton made another fielding error

Duran seems off - Bregman needs to get him going. Duran seems a bit distracted needs to get the positive vibe going
 
Couple things kind of sucked today

Giants first homer came after strike 3 a clear miss by ump

Devers should not have been up but Hamilton made another fielding error

Duran seems off - Bregman needs to get him going. Duran seems a bit distracted needs to get the positive vibe going
That is what they do. They suck.

A great cash cow for this team is.
 

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