Craig Breslow Addresses Red Sox's Trade Deadline Plans
Digest more
When Boston shockingly traded Rafael Devers last month, chief baseball officer Craig Breslow said: "I do think there's a real chance that at the end of the season, we're looking back and we've won more games than we otherwise would've."
Chicago Cubs executive Jed Hoyer spoke out about a shocking move that shipped a franchise slugger out of town.
“There were nine teams who scouted David Robertson in Providence on Saturday, including Boston Red Sox chief baseball officer Craig Breslow and assistant Eddie Romero, with Phillies president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski winning the sweepstakes over his former team,” Nightengale reported on Twitter/X.
As Boston Red Sox chief baseball officer Craig Breslow emphasizes the need for 'impact' starting pitchers, it's worth noting that those pitchers are in extremel
Chief baseball officer Craig Breslow acknowledged before the All-Star break that, once it became clear Rafael Devers wasn’t going to be a first base option, the team hoped Abraham Toro and Romy Gonzalez might provide a stopgap solution. But the duo has surpassed such measured expectations.
Explore more
For the next dozen days, Breslow will be on the clock. It’s hyperbolic to suggest that his job security depends on what he’s able to accomplish; he clearly has the organization — both the parent club and the minor league system — heading in the right direction.
Though Breslow was criticized by many for the trade, one former colleague has been impressed with what he has done so far.
Craig Breslow just got his sign that he needs to be active at the trade deadline because the one player that could have bailed the Boston Red Sox out of a busy trade deadline just hit a setback that now puts his 2025 in jeopardy. Tanner Houck re-aggravated his right foreman injury during a rehab start.