Sentinel & Enterprise

Red Sox face changes after firing Roenicke

- By Jimmy Golen

BOSTON — The manager won’t be back, and there could be more changes for the Boston Red Sox after their lastplace finish in the pandemic-shortened season.

J.D. Martinez is eligible to opt out of his contract, Jackie Bradley Jr. is a free agent, and the pitching rotation and bullpen were revealed by the unusual year to be in shambles. The team also needs to replace Ron Roenicke, who was told before the season finale that he’s not in their plans.

Chief Baseball Officer Chaim Bloom will need to deal with these issues; he hopes to have a more normal offseason to do it (Last year, he landed in the middle of a cheating investigat­ion that cost the team manager Alex Cora, and a mandate to cut

salary that cost the Red Sox Mookie Betts and David Price — even before the coronaviru­s shut down spring training).

Here is a look at some of the

items on Bloom’s to-do list:

Manager

With Cora tainted by the Astros cheating investigat­ion and spring training less than a month away, Bloom’s options were limited in the rushed job search and Roenicke, already the bench coach, was the best hope for some semblance of continuity.

Now they can get that from Cora. Nothing in the team’s comments has ever ruled out a return. When they cut ties with him, they praised him effusively but said he couldn’t be effective. When Cora was cleared of wrongdoing during his Red Sox tenure, Bloom said, “All the reasons that we parted ways with him then are still the case.”

But are they still?

Bloom flatly declined to say so on Sunday, repeating that “I don’t want to say anything about Alex that I haven’t already said to Alex.” Bloom also said this: “I thought that Ron deserved to be evaluated without anybody looking over his shoulder.”

Red Sox owner John Henry, chairman Tom Werner and President Sam Kennedy all spoke fondly of Cora, even as they let him go in January. Until they say rule it out, the speculatio­n will continue.

Lineup

After making the All-Star team in his first two seasons in Boston, Martinez never got going and finished with a .213 average and power numbers (7 HR, 27 RBIs) that — even pro-rated over a normal season — rank among the worst of his career.

He can opt out of the contract that would pay him $19.35 million next season, but he has already conceded it’s not a good time to be a free agent, with the baseball economy depressed from an abbreviate­d, attendance-free season.

Bradley is eligible to become a free agent for the first time. His spectacula­r defense has helped the team forget streaky batting that has still come out as a .239 average with 18 homers and 70 RBIs over for a 162-game season.

Alex Verdugo (.308, 6 HR, 15 RBIs), who was acquired in the deal that sent Betts and David Price to the Dodgers, gives Boston a building block; he isn’t eligible for free agency until 2025.

Barring another big offseason trade, shortstop Xander Bogaerts (.300, 11, 28) and third baseman Rafael Devers (.263, 11, 43) are expected to remain a part of

the team’s future. Devers’ defense was a step back: His 12 errors over the 60-game season translate to 34 in a regular year.

The Red Sox have a $6.25 million option on lefty starter Martin Perez and seem likely to exercise it.

Rotation

By the end of the 2021 season, the Red Sox might boast a formidable rotation of Chris Sale, Eduardo Rodriguez, Nathan Eovaldi, Perez and one of the two young righties who showed promise this season, Nick Pivetta and Tanner Houck.

But heading into the season, it’s all question marks.

Sale had Tommy John surgery in March. Rodriguez didn’t throw a pitch this season, either, developing myocarditi­s after contractin­g COVID-19. Eovaldi last made it through an injuryfree season in 2014. Perez was the team’s most reliable pitcher this year, but his 3-5 record and 4.50 ERA were hardly the stuff of an ace.

Rags’ next stop TBD

After the team’s final game on Sunday, Roenicke said he wasn’t ready to think about his plans for the future. The 64-year-old baseball lifer popularly called Rags, who played eight years with six major league teams and has essentiall­y been in one dugout or another since he was drafted in 1977, said he isn’t ready to leave the game.

“I don’t want to say that I’m definitely going to work,” he told reporters. “I still think I have a lot to offer. I still enjoy it a lot. I look and see what’s there.”

 ?? STUART CAHILL / BOSTON HERALD FILE ?? Former Red Sox coach Alex Cora could be in line to get his old job back, now that the team has fired manager Ron Roenicke.
STUART CAHILL / BOSTON HERALD FILE Former Red Sox coach Alex Cora could be in line to get his old job back, now that the team has fired manager Ron Roenicke.
 ?? NANCY LANE / BOSTON HERALD FILE ?? Red Sox centerfiel­der Jackie Bradley Jr. will be a free agent this offseason and his stellar defense and streaking hitting may be enough to get other teams to entice him away.
NANCY LANE / BOSTON HERALD FILE Red Sox centerfiel­der Jackie Bradley Jr. will be a free agent this offseason and his stellar defense and streaking hitting may be enough to get other teams to entice him away.

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