*The 2025 mlb season has exactly a month on Sunday, and although it is too early to make general conclusions on how it will come out this season, it is not too soon that the Red Sox is, so far, a disappointment.
After the double head of Saturday, a game is located above .500. No one expected to run away from the rest of the division in the first four weeks. But no one thought he would be so hooked on the mud.
Some problems are familiar, such as the defense of filtration. Some are a bit amazing, such as inconsistent starting launch. And then there are failures that make little sense, like the perpetual struggles of the team with the runners in the marker position, with the team buried in the third part of this category.
They cannot use the injuries as an excuse very well, as they have been significantly healthy when it comes to position players (only Connor Wong has lost a significant time and has returned any day). In the meantime, Orioles launch staff resemble a Mash unit and Yankees have lost the best headline during the year and their DH during the middle of the season. And, although it is true that the SOX started the year with half of their rotation in the IL, Richard Fitts and Hunter Dobbins have worked well as timely headlines.
The two major acquisitions out of season, Garrett Crochet and Alex Bregman, have been as good as announced. The other newcomers, Walker Buhler and Aroldis Chapman, have generally been quality additions. Rookie Kristian Campbell has exceeded all expectations.
Still, something is out.
There are five full months in the program and there is more than enough time to turn it around. It is not as if the Red Sox had buried in the east.
But the Red Sox should not wait too long. And you have to ask if soon, there could be the temptation to promote Roman Anthony and/or Marcelo Mayer to jump to a team that may not seem to go out.
*In retrospective, patriots saw a free agency, with a remarkable exception, as a way to deal with their defensive shortcomings and draft as a means of improving their offensive holes.
*We should not please the discomfort of another person, but let’s leave it: Shedeur Sanders brought a lot of this, with a little help from his father, of course.
It will happen some time until we know if the team after the team mistakenly passed on. But much we know: his bravery was at least bewildering, until the construction of his own set, decorated in dollar signs, in his home for television interviews. And the warning teams that would change their culture, before taking a moment as a professional, was probably quite unpleasant on the teams.
Whatever reasoning, we can eliminate racism as a factor. Discrimination, unfortunately, exists in all walks of life, but this is not an example. Sanders was a victim of the lack of Hubris, as much as anything else.
Also: Calm, Mel Kiper Jr.
*Bruins owe Joe Sacco to apologize. His insistence, in his press conference ending the season, which is still in the mixture to be hired, as the team coach was at best. If the Bruins wanted to eliminate the provisional label, they could have done so. Pretending that he is still considered to be his next coach, and Sacco deserves better.
*I guess it does not matter in the long run, but the inability of the Celtics to sweep the equipment, obviously, continues. A team that played almost .750 ball during the regular season does not have business losing matches to one that struggled to end at .500.
Given the health problems that surround their list, all the additional games that must play the Celts could bite them again while the playoffs climb.
*Earl Weaver, who constantly preached the importance of “throwing and three players”, would love the Red Sox of 2025. Or anyway. The Red Sox already have 10 players from three runs after hitting 19 last season.
In the meantime, if it is Grand Slams you are looking for, look for another team. The SOX have not had a Homer loaded with bases since August 19, 2023 when Swat Sultan, Luis Urias, hit one at the Yankee Stadium.
*I am not sure that Cam Neely’s insistence on relieving the disastrous decisions of the first round of the first round of 2015 was his best decision.
*It’s fun, when you think about it, the WHO (temporarily) fired the Zak Starkey battery for being too strong and out of control. Is this not the same band as before used Keith Moon in this same seat?
*The decision to interpret Kristian Campbell in the field field, especially because it seems promoted to ensure that David Hamilton gets more representations in the second. Hamilton is a basic basic and elite defender, but he also has a career of 77. A start from time to time to give Campbell a respirator, but to move it to another position to house Hamilton more than a bit strange.
*There are few more uncomfortable (or unnecessary) things than having Jonathan Kraft annually for images with the selection of the first round of patriots.
*Name MLB’s bad luck: Paul Skenes seems to be a generational talent, but it becomes a non-competitive and small market team, reducing its visibility. It is not as if the pirates of Pittsburgh appear in the game of the week or to the Sunday base of the ESPN night.
*Once again, for the people on their back: despite what Bruins’ executives are told, it is almost not that a team falls from the structure of the playoff, it can be easily returned to the following season.
Try to say -to the fans of the red wings of Detroit (nine seasons in a row outside the post -season) and Chicago Blackhawks (eight years old and count).
*RIP to the old Game Man, Mike Patrick, that his NFL and university football games do not seem, unfortunately. Patrick, at a time when Espn settled, was a rarity because he did not spread over himself.