By
Site | Subscription Price | Supported Countries |
---|---|---|
FuboTV | 5-day free trial, $10–$90/month | USA, Canada, Spain |
ESPN+ | $11.99/month | USA |
Fanatiz | €6.99–€10.99/month | Worldwide |
StreamLocator | 7-day free trial, no credit card required! $9.90/month | Worldwide |
Ben is a Newsweek contributor based in greater Boston. His focus is MLB content. Ben joined Newsweek in 2024, having previously overseen digital content at the New England Sports Network. He began his career covering high school sports in New Jersey, where he documented the phenomenal rise of a teenaged Mike Trout, and later served as Boston Celtics beat reporter for NESN. He also teaches college classes on a broad array of subjects, including writing, visual communication theory, and the business sides of sports media, fantasy sports and betting. He earned his B.A. from Temple University and his M.S. from Columbia University. You can get in touch with Ben by emailing [email protected].
Ben Watanabe
Contributing Sports Writer
Site | Subscription Price | Supported Countries |
---|---|---|
FuboTV | 5-day free trial, $10–$90/month | USA, Canada, Spain |
ESPN+ | $11.99/month | USA |
Fanatiz | €6.99–€10.99/month | Worldwide |
StreamLocator | 7-day free trial, no credit card required! $9.90/month | Worldwide |
news article
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
✓ Link copied to clipboard!
Site | Subscription Price | Supported Countries |
---|---|---|
FuboTV | 5-day free trial, $10–$90/month | USA, Canada, Spain |
ESPN+ | $11.99/month | USA |
Fanatiz | €6.99–€10.99/month | Worldwide |
StreamLocator | 7-day free trial, no credit card required! $9.90/month | Worldwide |
Listen
Translate
- Español
- 中国人
- Français
- Deutsch
- Portuguese
- हिन्दी
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
Read original
Speed: 0.5xSpeed: 1xSpeed: 1.5xSpeed: 2x
🎙️ Voice is AI-generated. Inconsistencies may occur.
✖
As the Red Sox limp through what was once envisioned as a promising season, all their fans have to look forward to now is the return they could get for some of their stronger pieces at the trade deadline.
So when Aroldis Chapman drew a precautionary mound visit during Sunday’s victory over the Atlanta Braves, more than a few Boston fans surely held their breath.
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS – APRIL 13: Carlos Narváez #75 of the Boston Red Sox and Aroldis Chapman #44 of the Boston Red Sox celebrate winning the game against the Chicago White Sox at Rate Field on…
More
Abigail Dean/Getty Images
Chapman is one of the few Red Sox players to have lived up to his billing, and an injury to the 37-year-old closer would all but decimate one of the few valuable assets on the roster. Manager Alex Cora was asked about the surprising visit by reporters, even though Chapman remained in the game.
“I saw him move his shoulder, kind of like stretching it out,” Cora told reporters, as transcribed by NESN.com’s Gio Rivera. “So I noticed it and we went out there. I asked him and he’s like, ‘I didn’t warm up well,’ which is ironic. He’s probably the hottest arm we have, but the stuff didn’t tell us much.”
Chapman has so far delivered on the one-year, $10.75 million contract his signed last winter. He carries a 1.88 ERA, 1.00 WHIP and 222 ERA+ in 26 appearances for Boston.
Meanwhile, the Red Sox continue to fade despite Sunday’s win. They entered Monday 3 1/2 games out in the American League East and 3 1/2 games out in the AL Wild Card standings.
Among the names that already have been floated in trade rumors are Jarren Duran, Ceddanne Rafaela, Wilyer Abreu and even Rafael Devers. It was also reported over the offseason that chief baseball officer Craig Breslow explored deals involving Triston Casas and Masataka Yoshida, before injuries killed whatever market either might have had.
A meaningful injury to Chapman therefore would be fatal to Boston’s attempt to recoup a return from its offseason acquisition, so Red Sox fans should pray he avoids anything more than minor discomfort.
More MLB: What Aaron Judge Hint Means for Yankees’ ‘Near Impossible’ Pursuit of Ex-Mets Ace