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Red Sox starter says having two young kids has cured day game woes: ‘It's the reality of it'

Red Sox starter says having two young kids has cured day game woes: ‘It's the reality of it'

Yahoo6 days ago
MINNEAPOLIS — During his first full major league season in 2023, Brayan Bello posted a 6.94 ERA in 10 day games compared to a much better 3.06 mark when he started at night.
In 2024, though, he was slightly better (4.09 ERA) in nine day game starts than he was in 21 outings at night (4.67). And in 2025, he has been very good at night — he has a 3.45 ERA in 60 innings — but even better under the sun, posting a stellar 2.88 ERA in 50 day innings, and that doesn't even count his 'relief' outing of five strong innings against the Reds in a suspended game on July 1.
On Wednesday in Minnesota, with an early 12:10 p.m. local start, it was more of the same for Bello, who worked around four walks to give the Red Sox seven strong innings in a 13-1 rout. He allowed a single run (on a Matt Wallner homer) while allowing five hits and striking out four.
Bello no longer struggles to find a routine when he pitches a matinee. Why? Having two young kids has changed him, according to his manager.
'Two kids. He has to get up early now,' said manager Alex Cora, matter-of-factly. 'It's the reality of it.'
The Bello family has changed a lot since Bello debuted in the majors as a 23-year-old in July 2022. He and his wife, Anabely, have welcomed a daughter, Bryanna, born in July 2023, and a son, Brayan Jr., born last August. Bello's family was not with him last season, as was documented by the Netflix documentary, 'The Clubhouse.' But this year, the family is stateside and Bello has posted the most consistent stretch of his career. After having the start of his season delayed to April 22 due to a right shoulder strain, he has logged a 7-5 record and 3.19 ERA in 110 innings, pitching 10 times during the day.
'Obviously, when you have kids, you have to get up early so my body's already used to getting up early every day, pretty much,' Bello said through translator Carlos Villoria Benítez. 'Last year was different because my kids weren't here. For me, it took a lot for me to get ready for day games. This year, I feel like that's in the past.'
Bello arrived at Target Field around 9:15 a.m. on Wednesday, then felt ready to pitch at around 10:30 after some pre-start stretching. He started warming around 11:20 and was on the mound shortly after noon against a banged-up Twins lineup.
Bello allowed a walk and a single in the first but escaped the inning when Kody Clemens was thrown out trying to score from first. In the second inning, with a 1-0 lead after Trevor Story homered, Bello was clipped for a solo shot by Matt Wallner. With a 2-1 lead, he issued two walks in the third, then escaped, before Boston's offense scored four times in the fifth and twice more in the sixth to make it 8-1.
'I felt my body was a little bit in slow motion the first couple of innings, then I got in the rhythm,' Bello said. 'I'm happy I was able to go seven and give our bullpen a little bit of rest.'
Bello wanted to come back for an eighth inning after tossing 93 pitches in the first seven frames. But with lefty Chris Murphy available for a multi-inning stint and Cora wanting to use him before giving the rest of the bullpen back-to-back days off (the team is off Thursday), that was enough.
'Early on, erratic, then he found his groove, made some pitches,' Cora said of Bello's start. 'His fastball command was good and he gave us more than enough.
'From now on, there's not going to be a lot of rest and if we can save bullets, we will.'
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Mindful of painful history, Red Sox make Roman Anthony the one who didn't get away
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  • New York Times

Mindful of painful history, Red Sox make Roman Anthony the one who didn't get away

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  • Yahoo

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