Hey, remember that one-step-forward-two-steps-back pattern of injury recovery we discussed just three days ago? It’s back! Three games into his rehab assignment, Romy Gonzalez missed yesterday’s game with hip flexor soreness. The Red Sox are “collecting information” on the injury before determining next steps. (Chris Cotillo, MassLive)
And, unfortunately, Romy’s setback comes just as the Red Sox lose another infielder. Isiah Kiner-Falefa, the much-maligned offseason acquisition who has been on the team’s better hitters of late, was placed on the 10-day IL with left forearm inflammation. There is some concern, however, that said inflammation could actually be a broken bone. He underwent an MRI yesterday in Seattle, and will undergo a CT scan when the team returns to Boston on Thursday. (Tim Healey, Boston Globe)
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Thankfully the infield is not a totally lost cause. After playing the first two months of the season as arguably the worst hitter in all of baseball, Caleb Durbin has turned this around in June, hitting .271/.294/.583 with 4 homers. (Aaliyan Mahammed, NESN)
Aroldis Chapman has never needed to turn anything around — he’s been one of the very best relievers in baseball for most of his career, and certainly from the moment he put on a Red Sox uniform. And now he’s on the verge of becoming the all-time leader for strikeouts by a reliever. (Daniel Yanofsky, NESN)
But don’t get too attached to Chapman. The 2026 team is still headed towards “massive sell-off” territory as it parallels another recent and disappointing season: 2014. “The dynamics are almost eerily familiar: A team coming off a ‘restoration’ year and believing that an emerging young core had created a title window. An offensive collapse that occurred in no small part because of a power deficiency, and because unestablished big leaguers weren’t ready. A waste of pitching excellence. The early realization that anticipated contention could give way to a massive selloff.” (Alex Speier, Boston Globe)
Chapman is nearing the end of his career, while Connelly Early is just at the beginning of his. Maybe that’s why he needed a pep talk from Carlos Narvaez (Hey! He is still on the team! That’s great.) in the first inning of last night’s game. (Josh Kirshenbaum, MLB.com)

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