Welcome, JD: Red Sox not worried about making room in lineup
FORT MYERS, Fla. — The Boston Red Sox didn’t commit $110 million for J.D. Martinez to be a parttimer.
When he lands in the middle of the order, some of the everyday hitters will have to get used to fewer at-bats each week. New manager Alex Cora must navigate the complexities of lineup construction and defensive arrangements while watching for streaks and slumps and maintaining a harmonious and engaged clubhouse.
Ah, what good problems to have. The Red Sox were more than ready for the arrival of Martinez and his 45 home runs in 119 games last season, no matter the minor complications of making room for him.
“He’s definitely a force,” first baseman Mitch Moreland said, “and it’s good to have him on our side.”
After reaching a longawaited five-year agreement with Martinez on Monday afternoon, the Red Sox took the field on Tuesday morning under picturesque blue skies with the temperature surging into the high 80s. The atmosphere at the beginning of spring training is always sunny, of course, but the news of the bigticket acquisition gave the second full-squad workout a little extra buzz.
“Having that type of presence in the lineup can make a difference. That’s what he is. He’s a difference-maker,” center fielder Jackie Bradley Jr. said.
Because the contract wouldn’t be finalized until a passed physical exam, per standard industry practice, Cora could only speak in hypotheticals about adding such a high-profile, high-impact player to his starting nine.
He graciously indulged reporters, and thus the famously fervent Red Sox fan base, in his questionand-answer session at JetBlue Park in Fort Myers, Florida, by making clear that he was not at all worried about finding space for a player who led the major leagues with a .690 slugging percentage in 2017 over his time with the Detroit Tigers and Arizona Diamondbacks.
“That’s my job. We’ve been talking about resting guys and moving guys and the workload,” Cora said. “It’s very important to have a deep roster. As we know the times of guys playing 162, that doesn’t happen often nowadays. The deeper your roster is, the more options as a manager you have.”
An outfielder throughout his career, the 30-yearold Martinez will likely be the primary designated hitter. That means Hanley Ramirez, who’s making more than $22 million this season, will probably form a platoon at first base with Moreland. They hit 45
home runs between them last year, but they often played at the same time.
“Once we get into the season, it’s not about our at-bats,” Moreland said. “It’s more about the wins and losses, I think. So we’re going to worry about that part of it. Like you’ve heard over and over again, this team, this group, has got one goal in mind. However we get there, it doesn’t
matter, as long as we make that goal happen.”
That’s winning the World Series, of course. After taking the AL East title in 2017, the Red Sox watched the rival New York Yankees advance farther than them in the playoffs and then add slugger Giancarlo Stanton to an already-imposing lineup. Adding Martinez, the premier position-playing free agent on a strangely
slow-moving market this winter, was the kind of move the Red Sox front office needed for a powerlight team that finished last in the AL with 168 homers.
That’s why Moreland, who said he re-signed with the Red Sox without factoring in their widely rumored interest in Martinez, was willing to put aside any concern about lost playing time this summer.