Red Sox rookie-level affiliate wins Dominican Summer League championship

One of the Red Sox’ rookie-level Dominican Summer League affiliates celebrated winning a championship on Saturday afternoon.

DSL Red Sox Red defeated the DSL Angels, 6-0, in the third and final game of the Dominican Summer League Finals at the Sox’ Dominican Academy in El Toro de Guerra.

Four Red Sox Red pitchers combined for a two-hit shutout in Saturday’s finale. Jeison Payano got the start and was responsible for the first three innings. The 18-year-old right-hander issued three walks and struck out four without giving up a hit. Greider Colina followed with 1 2/3 additional scoreless frames before making way for Juan Henriquez.

Henriquez, another 18-year-old righty, surrendered both of the Angels’ hits while walking two and fanning a pair across 2 2/3 scoreless innings en route to notching his second winning decision of the DSL postseason. Gilbel Galvan put the finishing touches on an impressive day for the pitching staff by putting up one last zero in the top of the ninth.

On the other side of things, mid-season DSL All-Stars Anderson Fermin and Justin Gonzales were the driving forces for the Red Sox Red lineup. Fermin, leading off and starting in center field, went 3-for-5 with one run scored and one stolen base. Gonzales, serving as his side’s designated hitter, went 4-for-5 with an RBI double and two runs scored out of the three-hole.

Fermin and Gonzales, both 17, signed with the Red Sox as international free agents coming out of the Dominican Republic back in January. They received signing bonuses of $400,000 and $250,000, respectively.

Fermin, a switch-hitter, batted .293/.408/.337 with six doubles, one triple, 23 RBIs, 33 runs scored, 12 stolen bases, 35 walks, and 22 strikeouts in 49 regular season games (224 plate appearances). He made 39 starts in center field, one in left field, and eight at DH.

Gonzales, a right-handed hitter, slashed .320/.391/.517 with 11 doubles, four triples, five home runs, 29 RBIs, 29 runs scored, eight stolen bases, 19 walks, and 20 strikeouts in 47 regular season games (192 plate appearances). He made 31 starts at first base, 13 in right field, two in center field, and one at DH.

With a regular season record of 42-14, Red Sox Red won the DSL West by 4 1/2 games and went 6-1 in the postseason. DSL Red Sox Blue, Boston’s other Dominican Summer League affiliate, finished with a regular season record of 27-26 and did not qualify for the postseason.

Red Sox Red, meanwhile, swept DSL CLE Goryl (Guardians affiliate) in the quarterfinals and DSL Rangers Red in the semifinals on its way to the championship. It split the first two games of the best-of-three finals against the Angels before coming out on top on Saturday.

For the Red Sox as an organization, this is their first DSL title since 2016 and only their second since the Dominican Summer League was formed in 1985.

(Picture courtesy of the Dominican Summer League)

Red Sox minor-league affiliate wins South Atlantic League championship

The Greenville Drive, the High-A affiliate of the Boston Red Sox, were crowned 2023 South Atlantic League champions on Tuesday night.

Playing in front of a crowd of 4,393 on a warm evening at Fluor Field, the Drive defeated the Hudson Valley Renegades (Yankees’ High-A affiliate) by a final score of 7-3 to sweep the best-of-three series and take home their first SAL title since 2017.

Greenville carried with it a 1-0 series lead heading into Tuesday’s contest after getting six scoreless innings from top pitching prospect Luis Perales and blanking Hudson Valley, 2-0, in Game 1 at Heritage Financial Park in Wappingers Falls, N.Y. on Sunday.

Dalton Rogers got the start for the Drive in Game 2. The 22-year-old left-hander went the first three innings, allowing one run on two hits, two walks, and five strikeouts. He took a shutout bid into the top of the third before giving up a two-out RBI single to Jesus Rodriguez to put the Renegades up, 1-0.

Moments after Rogers’ night came to a close, though, the Greenville bats quickly retaliated while going up against Hudson Valley starter (and Northeastern product) Cam Schlittler. Gilberto Jimenez doubled to lead off the bottom of the third and then moved up to third base on a Nick Decker single.

With no outs and runners on the corners, Eddinson Paulino delivered with a go-ahead, two-run double down the right field line to drive in both Jimenez and Decker and give the Drive a 2-1 advantage. That lead did not last long, however, as Renegades first baseman Rafael Flores led off the top of the fourth by cranking a game-tying solo home run off newly-inserted reliever Zach Penrod.

Despite the rude greeting, Penrod — who posted a 2.18 ERA in four regular season starts for Greenville — settled in nicely. The 26-year-old southpaw retired 15 of the next 16 batters he faced after giving up the homer and watched his side re-take the lead in the process of doing so.

Ronald Rosario, Penrod’s battery mate, crushed a 424-foot, go-ahead solo blast to kick off the latter half of the sixth. An inning later, Tyler Miller provided some additional insurance with a sharply-hit RBI single through the middle of the infield. Kristian Campbell then broke it open by demolishing a three-run home run to deep center field off Matt Keating, giving the Drive a commanding 7-2 edge.

Penrod put up another zero in the eighth before allowing the first two batters he faced in the ninth to reach base on a double and a walk. That prompted Greenville manager Iggy Suarez to pull Penrod and bring in closer Felix Cepeda, who emerged as a steady presence in the back end of the bullpen for the Drive after earning a promotion to Low-A Salem in mid-July.

Cepeda recorded the first two outs of the inning before giving up an infield single on a pop-up he could not catch cleanly. A wild pitch allowed one of the runners Cepeda inherited to score from third, but the hard-throwing righty did not falter and instead punched out Cole Gabrielson on five pitches to end it.

With the victory, the Drive are now two-time South Atlantic League champions (2017, 2023). Campbell, who went 3-for-6 (.500) with one home run and four RBIs in two games, should probably be considered the MVP of this series. Penrod, meanwhile, earned the winning decision on Tuesday after striking out seven over five solid innings of relief and inducing a game-high 19 whiffs.

The Drive, who have been affiliated with the Red Sox since 2005, punched their ticket to this year’s SAL playoffs by going 36-30 and clinching a first-half division title. Despite struggling to a 27-39 record in the second half, Greenville swept the Hickory Crawdads (Rangers’ High-A affiliate) in last week’s division series and wound up marching to a perfect 4-0 in the postseason.

From start to finish, Greenville received contributions from several of Boston’s top prospects this season. Nathan Hickey, Blaze Jordan, Chase Meidroth, Marcelo Mayer, Wikelman Gonzalez, Angel Bastardo, Isaac Coffey, Grant Gambrell, Christopher Troye, and Alex Hoppe were among the talented minor-leaguers who broke camp with the Drive in the spring but earned promotions to Double-A Portland at different points throughout the year.

Mikey Romero, Cutter Coffey, and Roman Anthony (the Red Sox’ first three selections in the 2022 draft) all started in Salem this season before making the jump to Greenville. Anthony, of course, performed so well with the Drive that he was promoted to Portland earlier this month. The same can be said for catcher Kyle Teel, who — like Campbell — was drafted by Boston this summer.

Other notable prospects who played for Greenville this year include Cepeda, Perales, Rogers, Yordanny Monegro, Noah Song, Brock Bell, Reidis Sena, Brainer Bonaci, and Allan Castro.

(Picture courtesy of the Greenville Drive)