Hartford Courant

As camp nears, roster dotted with new faces

- By Julian Mcwilliams

Rosters change, much like the seasons.

As the Red Sox embark on their spring training journey, they unquestion­ably will feel a roster shift, one that began in 2020 when they traded Mookie Betts to the Dodgers. Some two years later, they encounter a similar reality following Xander Bogaerts’s departure in free agency.

Still, they have to move forward. Throughout the offseason, the team brass — led by chief baseball officer Chaim Bloom — have expressed confidence that they are well suited to compete in the American League East.

To reach that lofty goal, of course, it will require some new faces.

The Red Sox have a bit more clarity heading into this spring than they did last year. The 99-day MLB lockout in 2022 halted any vision Bloom and his staff had. Boston, like all teams, were allowed to make only minor league transactio­ns during that period.

Bloom has made it clear that his vision involves building a sustainabl­e winner. The Sox didn’t hit on all of their free agents this offseason. Bogaerts trading in his Red Sox jersey for a Padres uniform will be an adjustment. But how much turnover will they have to endure? What new key pieces can make an impact?

The pitching depth, particular­ly in the bullpen, has seen a complete overhaul.

Consider: Just before they opened camp last year, they had 22 pitchers on the 40-man roster. They then added Jake Diekman, which made it 23. Of those 23, just 10 are still around.

The rotation will be some combinatio­n of Chris Sale, James Paxton, Brayan Bello, Garrett Whitlock, Corey Kluber, Nick Pivetta, and Tanner Houck, with Houck seen more as a weapon out of the bullpen.

Kluber, technicall­y, is the only newcomer of the crew, but Sale and Paxton have missed so much time with injuries that they might as well be, too.

Bello, though, is at the head of some young talent that intrigues the Sox.

Last spring, Bello was already a big name within the system, though somewhat of an unknown to Red Sox fans. He had steamrolle­d his way through High A Greenville in 2021, reaching Double A Portland and making a large impression there, too.

He continued that into 2022 with Triple A Worcester, earning a big league call-up in July. When September rolled around, Bello was one of the Sox’ best pitchers, registerin­g a 1.65 ERA in five starts that month. He comes into this spring vying for a spot in the rotation.

Bryan Mata is another young name that will be watched closely this spring. The Sox’ top pitching prospect returned to the mound last year following Tommy John surgery in

2021. Mata worked his way up the ladder from Low A Salem to Worcester. The 6-foot-3-inch, 238-pound righthande­r tossed 83 innings in his four stops, registerin­g a 2.49 ERA while holding opponents to a .201 batting average.

“I think we’re in a better spot now than we have been in recent years,” general manager Brian O’halloran said. “Both in terms of some quality guys like Bello who came up last year and showed obviously great stuff and exciting promise and a whole slew of guys, a couple of whom came up and took a few lumps but showed what they can do, as well as just the depth at Triple A.”

Currently, the pitching depth on the 40-man roster measures out to roughly 10 or so new arms that weren’t at camp last year. It’s a mix of young and older. Chris Martin and Kenley Jansen represent the biggest offseason acquisitio­ns to fortify the bullpen. Brandon Walter and Chris Murphy (both on the 40-man) are intriguing lefty prospects. Taylor Broadway, a nonroster invitee who was traded by the White Sox in August of last year, will make his debut at Fenway South.

When it comes to position players, the catching spot is a huge area of concern. The Sox enter spring training with two catchers on the 40-man roster in Connor Wong and Reese Mcguire. They take the spots of Christian Vázquez, who was traded to Houston last year, and Kevin Plawecki (designated for assignment). The Sox had a chance to add Vázquez back to the fold, but he instead signed with the Twins.

Bloom added 29-year-old catcher Jorge Alfaro to the mix in January, signing him to a minor league deal. Alfaro headlines a list of four nonroster invitee catchers, along with Caleb Hamilton, Ronaldo Hernandez, and Stephen Scott, bringing the total to six.

Depth? Sure. But quality depth is lacking.

Triston Casas was a nonroster invitee last year. Now he’s the clear-cut first baseman.

Infielders Jonathan Aráuz, Bogaerts, Jeter Downs, and Hudson Potts were a part of big league camp last year; they are gone, leaving Kiké Hernández, Bobby Dalbec, Christian Arroyo, and Rafael Devers to open up camp.

Middle infielder Adalberto Mondesí was acquired in a trade with the Royals, but he won’t be ready right away as he is still recovering from an ACL tear. And Trevor Story, of course, will miss a chunk of the season after having elbow surgery.

The Sox also acquired Justin Turner, who should get some reps at first base but is more suited for the designated hitter’s spot, replacing J.D. Martinez.

Red Sox players in WBC: Twelve players from the Red Sox organizati­on will represent their countries in the upcoming World Baseball Classic.

The rosters were revealed on Thursday night. As expected, Rafael Devers (Dominican Republic), Kiké Hernández (Puerto Rico), Nick Pivetta (Canada), Alex Verdugo (Mexico), and Masataka Yoshida (Japan) were selected.

Jarren Duran was picked for Mexico. Lefthander Richard Bleier, who was acquired last month, is with Israel. Kenley Jansen is on the roster for The Netherland­s but will not play in the first two rounds.

The Sox contingent also includes three minor leaguers: catcher Jorge Alfaro (Colombia), infielder Edwin Diaz (Puerto Rico), and lefthander Rio Gomez (Colombia). Righthande­r Norwith Gudino is part of Venezuela’s player pool.

The tournament runs from March 7 to 21.

 ?? JESSIE ALCHEH/AP ?? Red Sox starting pitcher Brayan Bello checks the Yankees runner at first base during the sixth inning of a game in New York on Sept. 25.
JESSIE ALCHEH/AP Red Sox starting pitcher Brayan Bello checks the Yankees runner at first base during the sixth inning of a game in New York on Sept. 25.

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