The Day

AP Interview: Decisions all came quickly for Boston’s Bloom

- By JIMMY GOLEN AP Sports Writer

Fort Myers, Fla. — This isn't quite how Chaim Bloom imagined things would go, back when he dreamed of running a baseball team.

Less than two months after taking over the Red Sox — and with the start of spring training looming — Boston's new chief baseball officer needed to replace a World Series-winning manager. Then Bloom incurred the wrath of the Fenway fans when he traded Mookie Betts, the ballclub's best player, as part of a salary dump. And the team is still sweating out the results of an investigat­ion into whether it cheated when it won the championsh­ip in 2018.

Like a manager reshufflin­g his rotation after an 18-inning game, Bloom has been forced to adjust — and quickly.

"Baseball will throw different things at you every day," he last week as he settled into his first spring training with the Red Sox. "I've been in baseball long enough to know that there's a lot of things about this business that don't go according to plan, and it throws you a lot of unexpected surprises. So the fact that there were those surprises didn't catch me off guard. But it was -- obviously, especially within the last month -- a lot more than I thought I'd be dealing with when I got here."

A 36-year-old Yale classics major who started as a Baseball Prospectus intern and worked his way up the Rays masthead, Bloom was brought to Boston to transform the front office from the free-spending, winnow ways of Dave Dombrowksi to a smart-spending and sustainabl­e organizati­on like Tampa's.

He already knew the Red Sox were trying to shed salary to get under baseball's collective bargaining tax threshold; offloading Betts, the 2018 AL MVP, would be one way to do that. But Bloom figured to have all offseason to get comfortabl­e in his new job, build relationsh­ips in and outside of Fenway Park, and explore his options.

Then manager Alex Cora was ousted as a result of the Houston Astros' sign-stealing scandal; instead of the methodical managerial search Bloom might have imagined, he had to navigate the wrong part of the baseball calendar and steer clear of the still-ongoing Major League Baseball investigat­ion into whether Boston's 2018 championsh­ip was tainted by a similar cheating scheme.

Anyone who was on the Red Sox staff was suspect, so promoting from within brought the danger that the new manager might be punished and leave Bloom looking for a yet another replacemen­t.

"That process was very unusual just because of the circumstan­ces, the timing," Bloom conceded.

But the sudden frenzy of activity was "energizing. And it has been since Day 1."

"We've got a big challenge ahead of us, obviously," he said. "You know, a lot of people care about what happens to this team and we want to make sure we're doing everything we can to make them happy."

While still without a manager, Bloom closed the deal that would send Betts to the Los Angeles Dodgers along with pitcher David Price for outfielder Alex Verdugo and a package of prospects. (A first iteration of the deal fell through when the Red Sox balked at the medical reports on pitcher Brusdar Graterol, who would be coming over from the Twins.) The Red Sox saved about $75 million in the deal.

The reaction back home was ... not good. That, Bloom was prepared for. "When you're in a place like Boston, the Red Sox matter so much to so many people," he said. "That certainly adds to the amount of eyeballs watching the team. It adds to the amount of excitement surroundin­g the team. But the mission stays the same. And I don't think we could possibly care more than we already do.

"To me, it just makes it exciting that so many people are interested, that they want the team to do well. They care about what you're doing," Bloom said. "And that, that just is a really exciting thing to wake up to every day."

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