2020 Boston Red Sox season

2020 Boston Red Sox
LeagueAmerican League
DivisionEast
BallparkFenway Park
CityBoston
Record24–36 (.400)
Divisional place5th
OwnersJohn W. Henry (Fenway Sports Group)
PresidentSam Kennedy
Chief baseball officer
Chaim Bloom
General managerBrian O'Halloran
ManagerRon Roenicke
TelevisionNESN: Dave O'Brien (play-by-play) with Jerry Remy & Dennis Eckersley (color)[1]
RadioWEEI-FM / Boston Red Sox Radio Network: Joe Castiglione with Will Flemming, Sean McDonough and Lou Merloni[2]
StatsESPN.com
Baseball Reference

The 2020 Boston Red Sox season was the 120th season in the team's history, and their 109th season at Fenway Park. The team entered spring training with a new leader in baseball operations, Chaim Bloom, and a new field manager, Ron Roenicke.

On March 12, 2020, MLB announced that because of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the start of the regular season would be delayed by at least two weeks in addition to the remainder of spring training being cancelled.[3] Four days later, it was announced that the start of the season would be pushed back indefinitely due to the recommendation made by the CDC to restrict events of more than 50 people for eight weeks.[4] On June 23, MLB announced that pre-season training would resume by July 1, in anticipation of a regular season of 60 games.[5] The season was held without fans at Fenway Park due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. The Red Sox began their regular season on July 24, in a home game against the Baltimore Orioles. On September 12, the team suffered its 31st loss, assuring them of finishing the season with a losing record, their first since 2015. On September 27, prior to the team's final regular season game, the Red Sox announced that Roenicke would not return as manager for the 2021 season.[6] The team ended the season with a record of 24 wins and 36 losses, finishing in last place in the American League East division, 16 games behind the Tampa Bay Rays. Boston's .400 winning percentage was the lowest for the franchise since the 1965 Red Sox finished with a .383 winning percentage (62–100). Average television viewership for Red Sox games broadcast by NESN fell by 54% from 2019 figures, the largest drop of the 25 MLB teams reporting viewership data.[7][8]

Offseason

The team completed its 2019 season with interim executive leadership, as Brian O'Halloran, Eddie Romero, Zack Scott, and Raquel Ferreira oversaw baseball operations following the September 9 dismissal of Dave Dombrowski, president of baseball operations.[9] As the season came to a close, principal owner John W. Henry and chairman Tom Werner stated that they want the team to get its payroll under the Major League Baseball luxury tax threshold.[10] The team's 2019 payroll of $243 million was $37 million over the $206 million threshold, resulting in the team paying $13 million in luxury tax.[10] The 2020 threshold was set at $208 million.[10]

Regular season

On July 6, MLB announced the revised 2020 regular-season schedule—"each team will play a regionally based schedule featuring 40 divisional games and 20 Interleague games against the corresponding geographical division."[86] The Red Sox' opponents:[87]

Red Sox 2020 Games vs. Opponents (results)
Team Division Game vs. Games at Total
Atlanta Braves NL East 3 3 6
Baltimore Orioles AL East 6 4 10
Miami Marlins NL East 3 3
New York Mets NL East 2 2 4
New York Yankees AL East 3 7 10
Philadelphia Phillies NL East 2 2 4
Tampa Bay Rays AL East 4 6 10
Toronto Blue Jays AL East 8† 2 10
Washington Nationals NL East 3 3
Total 31 29 60

† The Blue Jays' home ballpark during the 2020 regular season was Sahlen Field in Buffalo, New York.[88] One game postponed in Buffalo was played in Boston, with the Red Sox batting as the away team (counts as a home game in statistics).

Opening Day lineup

Order No. Player Pos.
1 16 Andrew Benintendi LF
2 28 J. D. Martinez DH
3 11 Rafael Devers 3B
4  2 Xander Bogaerts SS
5  5 Kevin Pillar RF
6  7 Christian Vázquez C
7 23 Michael Chavis 1B
8 19 Jackie Bradley Jr. CF
9  3 José Peraza 2B
17 Nathan Eovaldi P

Source:[91]

Season standings

American League East

AL East
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
Tampa Bay Rays 40 20 .667 20‍–‍9 20‍–‍11
New York Yankees 33 27 .550 7 22‍–‍9 11‍–‍18
Toronto Blue Jays 32 28 .533 8 17‍–‍9 15‍–‍19
Baltimore Orioles 25 35 .417 15 13‍–‍20 12‍–‍15
Boston Red Sox 24 36 .400 16 11‍–‍20 13‍–‍16


Record against opponents

Game log

Revised schedules for 2020 were released on July 6.[101] MLB scheduled the Red Sox to play a total of 60 games against nine opponents[102][103][104]—four in the American League East and five in the National League East—involving travel to Washington, D.C. (Nationals) and five states outside of Massachusetts: Florida (Marlins and Rays), Georgia (Braves), Maryland (Orioles), New York (Mets, Yankees, and Blue Jays), and Pennsylvania (Phillies).

On July 24, it was announced that the Blue Jays would play their 2020 home games at Sahlen Field in Buffalo, New York.[88] On August 6, MLB announced changes to several teams' schedules; changes for the Red Sox were:[105]

  • Phillies at Red Sox: August 19 game time changed from 7:05 p.m. to 1:35 p.m.
  • Red Sox at Phillies: games of September 8–9 changed to a doubleheader on September 8
  • Red Sox at Marlins: games of September 14–16 moved to September 15–17

Doubleheaders during the 2020 regular season consisted of two seven-inning games (with extra innings played in the event of a tie). All extra innings played during the 2020 regular season began with a runner on second base, with the runner being the player in the batting order immediately before the first batter of the inning (example: if a team's first batter in an extra inning was fifth in the order, the runner placed on second base was the player batting fourth).[106]

Red Sox Win Red Sox Loss Game Postponed Eliminated from Playoff Race Clinched Playoff Spot Clinched Division

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2020 Boston Red Sox Season Game Log: 24–36 (Home: 11–20; Away: 13–16)
July: 3–5 (Home: 1–4; Away: 2–1)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Stadium Record Box/
Streak
1 Jul 24 Orioles 13–2 Eovaldi (1–0) Milone (0–1) Fenway Park 1–0 W1
2 Jul 25 Orioles 2–7 Cobb (1–0) Pérez (0–1) Fenway Park 1–1 L1
3 Jul 26 Orioles 4–7 LeBlanc (1–0) Weber (0–1) Sulser (1) Fenway Park 1–2 L2
4 Jul 27 Mets 4–7 Wacha (1–0) Osich (0–1) Lugo (1) Fenway Park 1–3 L3
5 Jul 28 Mets 3–8 Peterson (1–0) Hall (0–1) Fenway Park 1–4 L4
6 Jul 29 @ Mets 6–5 Hembree (1–0) Wilson (0–1) Workman (1) Citi Field 2–4 W1
7 Jul 30 @ Mets 4–2 Pérez (1–1) Matz (0–1) Workman (2) Citi Field 3–4 W2
8 Jul 31 @ Yankees 1–5 Montgomery (1–0) Weber (0–2) Yankee Stadium 3–5 L1
August: 9–18 (Home: 5–8; Away: 4–10)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Stadium Record Box/
Streak
9 Aug 1 @ Yankees 2–5 Nelson (1–0) Godley (0–1) Hale (1) Yankee Stadium 3–6 L2
10 Aug 2 @ Yankees 7–9 Ottavino (1–0) Barnes (0–1) Britton (3) Yankee Stadium 3–7 L3
11 Aug 4 @ Rays 1–5 Morton (1–1) Eovaldi (1–1) Anderson (1) Tropicana Field 3–8 L4
12 Aug 5 @ Rays 5–0 Pérez (2–1) Yarbrough (0–2) Tropicana Field 4–8 W1
13 Aug 7 Blue Jays 5–3 Hembree (2–0) Roark (1–1) Workman (3) Fenway Park 5–8 W2
14 Aug 8 Blue Jays 1–2 Kay (1–0) Walden (0–1) Bass (3) Fenway Park 5–9 L1
15 Aug 9 Blue Jays 5–3 Barnes (1–1) Hatch (0–1) Fenway Park 6–9 W1
16 Aug 10 Rays 7–8 Loup (1–0) Springs (0–1) Kittredge (1) Fenway Park 6–10 L1
17 Aug 11 Rays 2–8 Curtiss (1–0) Pérez (2–2) Fenway Park 6–11 L2
18 Aug 12 Rays 5–9 Snell (1–0) Godley (0–2) Fenway Park 6–12 L3
19 Aug 13 Rays 8–17 Beeks (1–1) Hart (0–1) Banda (1) Fenway Park 6–13 L4
20 Aug 14 @ Yankees 3–10 Cole (4–0) Brewer (0–1) Yankee Stadium 6–14 L5
21 Aug 15 @ Yankees 5–11 Paxton (1–1) Eovaldi (1–2) Yankee Stadium 6–15 L6
22 Aug 16 @ Yankees 2–4 Happ (1–1) Mazza (0–1) Britton (8) Yankee Stadium 6–16 L7
23 Aug 17 @ Yankees 3–6 King (1–1) Pérez (2–3) Yankee Stadium 6–17 L8
24 Aug 18 Phillies 6–13 Parker (1–0) Taylor (0–1) Fenway Park 6–18 L9
25 Aug 19 Phillies 6–3 Brice (1–0) Arrieta (1–3) Workman (4) Fenway Park 7–18 W1
26 Aug 20 @ Orioles 7–1 Eovaldi (2–2) Wojciechowski (1–3) Camden Yards 8–18 W2
27 Aug 21 @ Orioles 8–5 Hernández (1–0) Means (0–2) Barnes (1) Camden Yards 9–18 W3
28 Aug 22 @ Orioles 4–5 (10) Castro (1–0) Barnes (1–2) Camden Yards 9–19 L1
29 Aug 23 @ Orioles 4–5 Eshelman (2–0) Godley (0–3) Scott (1) Camden Yards 9–20 L2
30 Aug 25 @ Blue Jays 9–7 Valdéz (1–0) Font (1–3) Barnes (2) Sahlen Field 10–20 W1
31 Aug 26 @ Blue Jays 1–9 Yamaguchi (1–2) Brewer (0–2) Sahlen Field 10–21 L1
Aug 27 @ Blue Jays Postponed (strikes due to shooting of Jacob Blake).[107] Makeup date September 4.[108]
32 Aug 28 Nationals 2–10 Scherzer (3–1) Pérez (2–4) Fenway Park 10–22 L2
33 Aug 29 Nationals 5–3 Brasier (1–0) Sánchez (1–4) Barnes (3) Fenway Park 11–22 W1
34 Aug 30 Nationals 9–5 Osich (1–1) Voth (0–4) Fenway Park 12–22 W2
35 Aug 31 Braves 3–6 Fried (6–0) Brewer (0–3) Melancon (7) Fenway Park 12–23 L1
September: 12–13 (Home: 5–8; Away: 7–5)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Stadium Record Box/
Streak
36 Sep 1 Braves 3–10 Anderson (2–0) Stock (0–1) Fenway Park 12–24 L2
37 Sep 2 Braves 5–7 Matzek (3–2) Triggs (0–2) Melancon (8) Fenway Park 12–25 L3
38 Sep 3 Blue Jays 2–6 (10) Dolis (2–1) Valdéz (1–1) Fenway Park 12–26 L4
39 Sep 4 (1) Blue Jays 7–8 (7) Cole (2–0) Godley (0–4) Bass (5) Fenway Park 12–27 L5
40 Sep 4 (2) Blue Jays 3–2 (7) Taylor (1–1) Stripling (3–2) Barnes (4) Fenway Park 13–27 W1
41 Sep 5 Blue Jays 9–8 Kickham (1–0) Bass (2–3) Fenway Park 14–27 W2
42 Sep 6 Blue Jays 8–10 Hatch (3–1) Hall (0–2) Dolis (2) Fenway Park 14–28 L1
43 Sep 8 (1) @ Phillies 5–6 (7) Neris (2–1) Barnes (1–3) Citizens Bank Park 14–29 L2
44 Sep 8 (2) @ Phillies 5–2 (7) Mazza (1–1) Phelps (2–4) Walden (1) Citizens Bank Park 15–29 W1
45 Sep 10 @ Rays 4–3 Weber (1–2) Fairbanks (4–2) Barnes (5) Tropicana Field 16–29 W2
46 Sep 11 @ Rays 1–11 Snell (4–1) Hall (0–3) Tropicana Field 16–30 L1
47 Sep 12 @ Rays 4–5 Glasnow (3–1) Walden (0–2) Castillo (4) Tropicana Field 16–31 L2
48 Sep 13 @ Rays 6–3 Pérez (3–4) Fairbanks (4–3) Barnes (6) Tropicana Field 17–31 W1
49 Sep 15 @ Marlins 2–0 Houck (1–0) Alcántara (2–2) Barnes (7) Marlins Park 18–31 W2
50 Sep 16 @ Marlins 4–8 García (2–0) Kickham (1–1) Marlins Park 18–32 L1
51 Sep 17 @ Marlins 5–3 Eovaldi (3–2) Ureña (0–2) Barnes (8) Marlins Park 19–32 W1
52 Sep 18 Yankees 5–6 (12) Loáisiga (3–0) Weber (1–3) Fenway Park 19–33 L1
53 Sep 19 Yankees 0–8 Happ (2–2) Mazza (1–2) Fenway Park 19–34 L2
54 Sep 20 Yankees 10–2 Houck (2–0) García (2–2) Fenway Park 20–34 W1
55 Sep 22 Orioles 8–3 Pivetta (1–0) Akin (1–2) Barnes (9) Fenway Park 21–34 W2
56 Sep 23 Orioles 9–1 Eovaldi (4–2) Kremer (1–1) Fenway Park 22–34 W3
57 Sep 24 Orioles 1–13 Cobb (2–5) Pérez (3–5) Fenway Park 22–35 L1
58 Sep 25 @ Braves 7–8 (11) Greene (1–0) Springs (0–2) Truist Park 22–36 L2
59 Sep 26 @ Braves 8–2 Houck (3–0) Davidson (0–1) Truist Park 23–36 W1
60 Sep 27 @ Braves 9–1 Pivetta (2–0) Smith (2–2) Truist Park 24–36 W2

† In the second game on September 4, Toronto was the home team.[108]

Grand slams

No. Date Red Sox batter H/A Pitcher Opposing team
1 August 12 J. D. Martinez Home Aaron Slegers Tampa Bay Rays
2 September 26 Christian Vázquez Away Tucker Davidson Atlanta Braves

Ejections

The Red Sox did not have anyone ejected during the 2020 season.[109]

Roster

2020 Boston Red Sox
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders Manager

Coaches

Player stats

Batting

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; R = Runs; H = Hits; 2B = Doubles; 3B = Triples; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; SB = Stolen bases; BB = Walks; AVG = Batting average; SLG = Slugging average

Player G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB BB AVG SLG
Rafael Devers 57 232 32 61 16 1 11 43 0 13 .263 .483
J. D. Martinez 54 211 22 45 16 0 7 27 1 22 .213 .389
Xander Bogaerts 56 203 36 61 8 0 11 28 8 21 .300 .502
Alex Verdugo 53 201 36 62 16 0 6 15 4 17 .308 .478
Jackie Bradley Jr. 55 191 32 54 11 0 7 22 5 23 .283 .450
Christian Vázquez 47 173 22 49 9 0 7 23 4 16 .283 .457
Michael Chavis 42 146 16 31 5 2 5 19 3 8 .212 .377
Kevin Pillar 30 117 20 32 7 2 4 13 1 8 .274 .470
José Peraza 34 111 13 25 8 1 1 8 1 5 .225 .342
Kevin Plawecki 24 82 8 28 5 1 1 17 1 5 .341 .463
Bobby Dalbec 23 80 13 21 3 0 8 16 0 10 .263 .600
Jonathan Araúz 25 72 8 18 2 0 1 9 0 8 .250 .319
Mitch Moreland 22 67 14 22 4 0 8 21 0 11 .328 .746
Tzu-Wei Lin 26 52 2 8 1 0 0 3 0 2 .154 .173
Christian Arroyo 14 50 7 12 1 0 3 8 0 4 .240 .440
Yairo Muñoz 12 45 6 15 5 0 1 4 2 0 .333 .511
Andrew Benintendi 14 39 4 4 1 0 0 1 1 11 .103 .128
César Puello 5 8 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 2 .375 .375
Deivy Grullón 1 3 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 .333 .333
Jonathan Lucroy 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .--- .---
Team Totals 60 2083 292 552 118 7 81 278 31 187 .265 .445

Source:[1]

Pitching

Note: W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; SV = Saves; IP = Innings pitched; H = Hits allowed; R = Runs allowed; ER = Earned runs allowed; BB = Walks allowed; SO = Strikeouts

Player W L ERA G GS SV IP H R ER BB SO
Martín Pérez 3 5 4.50 12 12 0 62.0 55 33 31 28 46
Nathan Eovaldi 4 2 3.72 9 9 0 48.1 51 20 20 7 52
Ryan Weber 1 3 4.40 17 5 0 43.0 44 23 21 14 27
Phillips Valdéz 1 1 3.26 24 0 0 30.1 33 16 11 16 30
Chris Mazza 1 2 4.80 9 6 0 30.0 34 18 16 15 29
Zack Godley 0 4 8.16 8 7 0 28.2 42 26 26 14 28
Colten Brewer 0 3 5.61 11 4 0 25.2 31 17 16 14 25
Ryan Brasier 1 0 3.96 25 1 0 25.0 24 12 11 11 30
Matt Barnes 1 3 4.30 24 0 9 23.0 18 13 11 14 31
Jeffrey Springs 0 2 7.08 16 0 0 20.1 30 18 16 7 28
Austin Brice 1 0 5.95 21 1 0 19.2 17 13 13 13 25
Tanner Houck 3 0 0.53 3 3 0 17.0 6 2 1 9 21
Josh Osich 1 1 5.74 13 1 0 15.2 16 10 10 5 20
Dylan Covey 0 0 7.07 8 0 0 14.0 18 11 11 2 11
Mike Kickham 1 1 7.71 6 2 0 14.0 21 12 12 5 17
Robert Stock 0 1 4.73 10 0 0 13.1 16 9 7 10 14
Marcus Walden 0 2 9.45 15 0 1 13.1 23 18 14 9 10
Kyle Hart 0 1 15.55 4 3 0 11.0 24 21 19 10 13
Nick Pivetta 2 0 1.80 2 2 0 10.0 8 2 2 5 13
Heath Hembree 2 0 5.59 11 0 0 9.2 9 6 6 3 10
Matt Hall 0 3 18.69 4 1 0 8.2 17 18 18 10 9
Darwinzon Hernández 1 0 2.16 7 0 0 8.1 5 2 2 8 13
Andrew Triggs 0 1 4.50 4 2 0 8.0 8 4 4 3 7
Josh Taylor 1 1 9.82 8 0 0 7.1 7 8 8 5 7
Brandon Workman 0 0 4.05 7 0 4 6.2 8 3 3 4 8
Robinson Leyer 0 0 21.21 6 1 0 4.2 12 11 11 8 9
Domingo Tapia 0 0 2.08 5 0 0 4.1 4 1 1 2 4
Tzu-Wei Lin 0 0 27.00 1 0 0 1.0 4 3 3 0 0
Kevin Plawecki 0 0 0.00 1 0 0 0.2 0 0 0 1 0
José Peraza 0 0 27.00 1 0 0 0.1 2 1 1 0 0
Team Totals 24 36 5.58 60 60 14 524.0 587 351 325 252 537

Source:[2]

MLB debuts

Red Sox players who made their MLB debuts during the 2020 regular season:

Transactions

Notable transactions of/for players on the 40-man roster during the 2020 regular season:

Amateur draft

Boston's selections in the 2020 MLB draft, held on June 10–11, are listed below.[118] The team did not have a second-round pick, as punishment from MLB's investigation about electronic sign-stealing by the 2018 Red Sox.[66] The draft was limited to five rounds, per agreement reached in March 2020 between MLB and the Major League Baseball Players Association (MLBPA).[119] The deadline to sign drafted players was August 1, 2020.[120]

Round Pick Player Position B/T Class School Signing date
1 17 Nick Yorke 2B R/R HS Sr. Mitty HS (CA) July 7[121]
3 89 Blaze Jordan 3B R/R HS Sr. DeSoto Central HS (MS) July 17[122]
4 118 Jeremy Wu-Yelland P L/L 4YR Jr. Hawaii July 15[123]
5 148 Shane Drohan P L/L 4YR Jr. Florida State July 17[122]

Farm system

Minor league managerial assignments were announced by the Red Sox on January 16, 2020.[124] The only change from the prior season was Sandy Madera, named to manage one of the Dominican Summer League teams. In March, MLB Pipeline ranked the Red Sox' farm system 25th, in their evaluation of the minor league organizations of all 30 MLB teams.[125] On June 30, it was announced that the 2020 Minor League Baseball season would not be played, another impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on sports.[76]

Level Team League Manager
AAA Pawtucket Red Sox International League Billy McMillon
AA Portland Sea Dogs Eastern League Joe Oliver
A-Advanced Salem Red Sox Carolina League Corey Wimberly
A Greenville Drive South Atlantic League Iggy Suarez
A-Short Season Lowell Spinners New York–Penn League Luke Montz
Rookie GCL Red Sox Gulf Coast League Tom Kotchman
Rookie DSL Red Sox 1 Dominican Summer League Ozzie Chavez
Rookie DSL Red Sox 2 Dominican Summer League Sandy Madera

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Further reading