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    Home»Boston Sports»Red Sox 5, Orioles 3: A New Normal
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    Red Sox 5, Orioles 3: A New Normal

    BostonSportsNewsBy BostonSportsNewsApril 27, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Red Sox 5, Orioles 3: A New Normal
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    Damn, why didn’t they think of firing Alex Cora earlier? The Red Sox won Chad Tracy’s debut, 5-3. Did anything happen differently than it would have with Cora in charge? It’s impossible to say, but from a strategy perspective, things were more or less the same. Connelly Early was maybe given a longer leash than he normally would have, throwing 6 2/3 innings and 92 pitches. Zack Kelly was the first man out of the bullpen in a spot that Cora usually gives to Greg Weissert, but Weissert pitched yesterday, so it’s tough to say if that was a trust thing or a workload thing. Garrett Whitlock and Aroldis Chapman still handled the eighth and ninth innings, respectively, to protect the lead and close out the game — no change there.

    On the offensive side, Tracy didn’t go to his bench at all. There weren’t any obvious spots to pinch hit late in the game, but Cora was always aggressive with his bench, so that’s an area to watch. On the basepaths, the Red Sox looked to run. They stole four bases, got thrown out another time, were picked off, and ran into an out at third base. Cora always picked his spots to run, and today could have been a matter of getting hitters on base frequently, but it’s notable to see from the Tracy-led Red Sox in game one.

    That out at third base, which came in the second inning, might have been due to the coaching changes. Ceddanne Rafaela tagged from second to third on a ball hit to right field and was called out for popping off the bag after beating the throw. On review, it looked like he kept in contact with the bag through his whole slide, but Tracy elected not to challenge. Did not having a bench coach affect the review process? Was Tracy being conservative early in his first game? I don’t know. He’ll probably address it in his post-game, but I’m on a timer here.

    The first one is out of the way now. We’ll continue to pick up differences between Cora and Tracy over the next few weeks and months, but this is the new normal now. On to Toronto to face the Blue Jays, where we’ll look to get the train back on track and climb back up the American League East standings.

    It was the longest outing of Early’s short career at 6 2/3 innings. The only runs came via solo home runs in the fifth and sixth innings. To his credit, he bounced back from the home runs and didn’t let it snowball. The swing and miss still hasn’t returned to his 2025 rates, but his four-seam fastball command was as good as it’s been this year. He earned four whiffs on 32 pitches, the second-best rate of his season for a single game. The two-strike command of his secondaries still needs to improve, but he didn’t let two-strike counts turn into base runners. His late-game fastball velocity was up as well, which is a great sign for the lefty. I would have liked to see him try to talk Tracy into giving him one more batter so he could finish the seventh, but it was a job well done regardless.

    His fifth-inning home run extended the Red Sox’s lead to three. The team needs him to continue providing power to give the offense a boost.

    Rafaela hit a leadoff double in the second inning and had an RBI triple in the sixth. I mentioned him getting thrown out at third base, but it was less a baserunning error and more an umpiring error. That’s not one to be up in arms about.

    Nobody played particularly poorly.

    0-3 with a walk. First game back from injury, oh well.

    Also 0-3 with a walk. Pretty serviceable day from your backup catcher.

    He gave up a run, but it should probably be unearned. It’s hard to get an error nowadays (I think it’s a conspiracy to inflate batting average), but a runner reached on a play I expect my second baseman to make. The stuff is still sharp. On to Toronto.



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