José Ramírez tees off on Matt Dermody, Corey Kluber as Red Sox drop below .500 in 10-3 loss to Guardians

The Red Sox gave up three home runs to Jose Ramirez and lost the rubber match of their series against the Guardians on Thursday night as a result. Boston fell to Cleveland by a final score of 10-3 at Progressive Field to drop below .500 for the first time since April 28 at 31-32 on the season.

Matt Dermody was called up from Triple-A Worcester to start Thursday’s finale. The left-hander’s promotion was met with plenty of criticism after it was revealed that he posted — and later deleted — a homophobic tweet in June 2021.

Despite the blowback, the Red Sox still went with Dermody, who allowed three earned runs on four hits, one walk, and one hit batsman to go along with one strikeout over four innings of work in the first start and 31st overall appearance of his major-league career.

After hitting the first batter he faced and inducing a 4-6-3 double play, Dermody served up a 392-foot solo shot to Ramirez to put Boston an early 1-0 hole in the bottom of the first. He retired the side in order in the second, but fell victim to Ramirez again in the third inning.

With two outs and one runner on, Ramirez took Dermody 412 feet deep to left-center field for his 200th career homer. The 106.5 mph blast — Ramirez’s hardest-hit ball of the night — put Cleveland up, 3-0. Dermody then worked his way around a one-out single in an otherwise clean bottom of the fourth.

Finishing with 76 pitches (45 strikes), Dermody induced just six swings-and-misses as he was ultimately charged with the losing decision. The 32-year-old southpaw has since been designated for assignment to free up a 26-man and 40-man roster spot for outfielder Adam Duvall, who is expected to be activated from the 60-day injured list on Friday.

With Dermody’s night done, the Red Sox began to chip away at Guardians starter Aaron Civale in the top of the fifth. Reese McGuire laced a one-out double down the left field line and then came into score his side’s first run on a two-out RBI single from Jarren Duran. Duran advanced to second on the play and took third base on a wild pitch, but he was left there as Masataka Yoshida grounded out to extinguish the threat.

An inning later, though, Triston Casas cut the deficit down to one by pulling a towering, 358-foot solo home run to right field for his seventh of the season. Casas’ big fly knocked Civale out of the game and brought in James Karinchak, who immediately issued a six-pitch walk to Rob Refsnyder. Refsnyder then stole second base but was stranded there as Christian Arroyo grounded out.

Trailing 3-2 going into the latter half of the sixth, Corey Kluber was tasked with keeping the Guardians bats at bay after recording three quick outs in the fifth. The veteran righty, who won two Cy Young Awards during his time in Cleveland, instead surrendered a leadoff home run to Ramirez that traveled 390 feet into the right field seats.

Ramirez’s third homer of the night was followed by seven more consecutive hits. Josh Naylor singled, Josh Bell doubled, Andres Gimenez doubled in two runs, Myles Straw ripped an RBI triple, Will Brennan singled in a run while running into an out at second, and Cam Gallagher and Steven Kwan each singled as well.

Kluber somehow got through the rest of the sixth unscathed and put up a zero in the seventh before running into more trouble in the eighth. More specifically, he yielded another leadoff home run to Brennan to give the Guardians a commanding 9-2 lead. Kluber put two more runners on base before making way for Brennan Bernardino, who subsequently allowed one of those inherited runners to score on an unconventional inning-ending double play.

Down to their final three outs in the ninth, the Red Sox got one of those runs back off Xzavion Curry as Arroyo led off with a double and Enrique Hernandez plated him with a two-base hit of his own. Duran then struck out and Yoshida grounded out to end it.

All told, the Red Sox went 2-for-11 with runners in scoring position on Thursday and left eight runners on base as a team. They have now dropped eight of their last 11 and head into the weekend trailing the first-place Rays by 14 games in the American League East standings.

Next up: Facing the Yankees for the first time this season

The Red Sox will head to the Bronx and open a three-game weekend series against the Yankees on Friday night. To kick off the first meeting of the season between the two division rivals, Garrett Whitlock will take the mound for Boston while New York will counter with fellow right-hander Gerrit Cole.

First pitch from Yankee Stadium is scheduled for 7:05 p.m. eastern time on NESN and MLB Network.

(Picture of Jose Ramirez: Ron Schwane/Getty Images)

Red Sox prospects Jose Ramirez, Giancarlos Santana making strides in Dominican Summer League

Earlier this week, Red Sox pitching prospect Jose Ramirez put together yet another quality outing for one of the club’s Dominican Summer League affiliates.

Over five strong innings of work against the DSL Marlins on Monday, Ramirez kept the opposition off the scoreboard while allowing just one hit and no walks to go along with three strikeouts on the afternoon.

Needing just 40 pitches — 31 of which were strikes — to get through those five scoreless frames, the young right-hander wound up facing the minimum 15 batters, as he worked his way around a leadoff single in the fifth inning by inducing a 5-4-3 double play that was followed by an inning-ending groundout.

Later earning the win in what would go down as a 2-1 road victory for the DSL Red Sox, Ramirez improved to 3-0 on the season while lowering his ERA on the year to a miniscule 0.33.

In addition to posting a 0.33 ERA — and 3.52 FIP — through his first seven outings (six starts) of the 2021 campaign down in the Dominican, Ramirez has also recorded 21 strikeouts to just 11 walks while holding opposing hitters to a .194 batting average against over 27 total innings pitched.

The 20-year-old hurler originally signed with the Red Sox out of Santo Domingo in May 2018 and made his professional debut in the Dominican Summer League shortly thereafter.

At that time, Ramirez was listed at 6-foot and 145 pounds, but has since experienced a bit of a growth spurt that may have something to do with the success he has enjoyed this year, as Red Sox executive vice president and assistant general manager Eddie Romero recently explained to BloggingtheRedSox.com.

“Jose has been one of our better starters,” Romero said via email. “He’s 6-foot-2, 170 pounds now and shows three pitches — a fastball that’s 90-95 mph, a sharp, true curveball in the mid-70s, and a late, fading changeup.”

While Ramirez’s 19.6% strikeout rate to this point in the season does not exactly jump off the page, Romero credits the righty’s ability to attack the strike zone as a reason to why he has been so effective after the 2020 minor-league season was cancelled on account of the COVID-19 pandemic.

One day after Ramirez dominated for the Red Sox Red Dominican Summer League affiliate, outfield prospect Giancarlos Santana put together an impressive day at the plate for the Red Sox Blue affiliate on Tuesday.

Matched up against the DSL Rangers while starting in right field and batting out of the seven-hole, Santana led the way by going 3-for-4 with a triple, a home run, a walk, two RBI, two runs scored, and a stolen base in a 7-5 win for the Sox.

Santana’s homer, which came off Rangers starter Eury Rosado to lead things off in the top of the fifth inning, was the first of the 19-year-old’s professional career. It also got the Red Sox on the board and proved to be the catalyst for a five-run inning.

Fast forward to the top half of the 10th, with things knotted up at five runs apiece, and Santana again provided a boost while leading off an inning. This time, while matched up against reliever Elias Leal, the right-handed hitter ripped a triple — his first of the year — to drive in the winning run from second base.

Santana then scored an important insurance run himself on an RBI single off the bat of Diego Viloria, which in turn gave the Red Sox the two-run lead they would need to secure a 7-5 victory over the Rangers.

With his three-hit day in tow, Santana raised his batting line on the season to a solid .280/.438/.440 (156 wRC+) to go along with one triple, one home run, four RBI, six runs scored, seven walks, five strikeouts, and four stolen bases through 15 games and 32 plate appearances in the DSL.

The Red Sox originally signed Santana as a 17-year-old outfielder out of Santo Domingo for $460,000 back in July 2018. At that time, Baseball America’s Ben Badler wrote that Santana “has a clean, fluid swing with an advanced approach and sprays the ball over the field with a good track record of hitting in games. He’s a line-drive hitter with occasional doubles pop and a hit-over-power offensive profile, though he has the physical upside to grow into more sock.”

After settling in and eventually making his Dominican Summer League debut the following June, Santana got his professional career off to a rough start as he struggled to the tune of a .192/.322/.216 (69 wRC+) slash line over 50 games in 2019.

Despite those struggles, Santana was able to use the COVID-19 shutdown last year to his advantage, as he trained with his cousin — former Red Sox prospect and current Rays outfielder Manuel Margot — to get stronger.

“A rangy outfielder,” Romero said when describing Santana, who has experience at all three outfield positions. “He trains with his cousin Manuel Margot in the offseason. Santana struggled in his 2019 season but worked to get stronger during the pandemic and has performed well to date while showing much better plate command.”

Santana, who is listed at 6-foot-1 and likelier heavier than his listed weight of 180 pounds, struck out in 23% of his plate appearances in 2019 while only drawing a walk 13.5% percent of the time.

So far this year, as Romero indicated, Santana has shown better discipline at the plate considering the fact he has lowered his strikeout rate down to 15.6% in the process of raising his walk rate up to 21.9%.

The 2021 Dominican Summer League Season, which will not include a postseason, will run through October 2, so Ramirez and Santana have a little more than five weeks to continue to build on what they have done as of late.

With that being said, both Ramirez — who does not turn 21 until next March — and Santana — who turns 20 in November — can become eligible for the Rule 5 Draft for the first time in their respective careers next December.

(Picture of Giancarlos Santana: Jesse Sanchez/MLB.com)

Mookie Betts Is Named 2018 American League MVP.

For the first time in his career, Mookie Betts is an MVP, as announced by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America on Thursday evening.

He finished second in voting in 2016, sixth in voting in 2017, but now, the 26-year-old can finally add a Most Valuable Player trophy to his impressive collection.

Coming into the 2018 season as one of the more established outfielders in all of baseball alongside Angels center fielder Mike Trout, the three-time All-Star got his MVP campaign off to a scorching start that he would not have to look back from.

Ending his fourth full year in the bigs with a gaudy .346/.438/.640 slash line to go along with a career-high 32 home runs, 80 RBI and a league-leading 129 runs scored over 136 games, Betts officially received 28 of the 30 first place votes.

Already the recipient of his second Silver Slugger and third Gold Glove Award earlier in the month, the Tennessee native has had himself quite the offseason.

A World Series champion for the first time…

A father for the first time…

And now, an MVP for the first time…

So, congratulations to Mookie Betts, someone who worked his way from a fifth round pick out of high school in the 2011 amateur draft all the way to one of the best all-around players in the American League. Perhaps a hefty contract extension is in order sometime in the coming months?

Betts’ teammate, JD Martinez, who was not listed as one of the three finalists on the American League ballot, officially finished fourth in AL MVP voting.