3 Red Sox players who will need to step up in the ALCS

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - OCTOBER 11: Enrique Hernandez #5 of the Boston Red Sox celebrates with teammates after they defeated the Tampa Bay Rays 6 to 5 during Game 4 of the American League Division Series at Fenway Park on October 11, 2021 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Winslow Townson/Getty Images)
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - OCTOBER 11: Enrique Hernandez #5 of the Boston Red Sox celebrates with teammates after they defeated the Tampa Bay Rays 6 to 5 during Game 4 of the American League Division Series at Fenway Park on October 11, 2021 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Winslow Townson/Getty Images) /
facebooktwitterreddit
Prev
1 of 3
Next

In case you hadn’t heard, the Boston Red Sox are going to the ALCS to face the Astros.

Yes, the same Red Sox everyone picked to finish fourth in the AL East and maybe win 80 games defeated the Yankees in the Wild Card game and the Rays 3-1 in the ALDS to advance to the pennant round.

So many Sox stepped up in the division series to get the team to this point. Tanner Houck, Nick Pivetta, Christian Vazquez, Nathan Eovaldi, Eduardo Rodriguez, Kiké Hernández, and JD ‘Ankles’ Martinez, to name a few, though baseball is almost always a team sport. (I say ‘almost’ because David Ortiz’s 2013 postseason numbers would suggest otherwise.)

However, the ALDS was exhausting. Between the pitching woes of the first two games and the extra-inning madness of Game 3, the Sox have to be thrilled to have most of the week off before the next round begins on Friday.

If they want to have a fighting chance of beating the Astros for the pennant, a few different faces need to step up next…

Xander Bogaerts needs to step up in the ALCS

The unofficial captain of the Red Sox has seven hits so far in their first five postseason games, though he went 0-for-5 in the 13-inning stress fest on Sunday evening.

For Bogaerts, it’s not so much that he hasn’t done enough so far, it’s that he needs to do more if the Sox want to win any ALCS games, let alone the pennant.

In five games in the 2018 ALCS, Bogaerts went 5-for-19 with a double, run scored, three RBI, three walks, and one strikeout against Astros pitchers. The year before, in four ALDS games, Bogaerts’ only hit in 17 at-bats against the Astros was a home run.

Overall, Bogaerts isn’t much of a postseason hitter. In 38 career postseason games dating back to his rookie season, he has a .239/.320/.381 line and .701 OPS, with only five doubles, a triple, four home runs, 22 runs scored, and 14 RBI.

Compared to his regular-season career numbers (.290/.353/.459, .812 OPS), these October numbers are not enough to get the Red Sox where they want to go.