
Red Sox trade disgruntled All-Star slugger Rafael Devers to Giants in blockbuster deal
The Boston Red Sox traded slugger Rafael Devers to the San Francisco Giants on Sunday in a deal that could shake up pennant races on both coasts.
San Francisco sent right-hander Jordan Hicks, lefty Kyle Harrison, outfield prospect James Tibbs III and minor league righty Jose Bello to Boston for the 28-year-old designated hitter, who had bristled at his demotion from third base this year.
The Giants are two games back of NL West-leading Los Angeles after losing 5-4 to the Dodgers on Sunday night.
Harrison was on his way to the bullpen to warm up for Sunday's start when he was called back to the clubhouse and informed of the trade. Reliever Sean Hjelle was told about 30 minutes before first pitch that he would start.
'Yeah, it was a lot, and it was late, but you know what? This is something we really needed,' Giants manager Bob Melvin said. 'To get a guy like Devers … there's a lot you have to give up for him, but this fits us perfectly. It's a power left-handed bat, a guy that can go the other way and hit for power in our ballpark. I mean, it's tailor-made for us, so kudos to the front office to swing this.'
A three-time All-Star who signed a 10-year, $313.5m contract with the Red Sox in 2023, Devers is batting .272 with 15 homers and 58 RBIs in 73 games, including a solo shot in Boston's 2-0 victory over the New York Yankees on Sunday that completed a three-game sweep.
But his relationship with the team began to deteriorate when the team signed Gold Glove third baseman Alex Bregman during spring training and asked Devers to move to DH; he balked before agreeing to the switch. When first baseman Triston Casas sustained a season-ending knee injury, the Red Sox approached Devers about playing the field and he declined, saying the front office ' should do their jobs ' and look for another player.
A day after Devers' comments to the media about playing first, Red Sox owner John Henry, team president Sam Kennedy and chief baseball officer Craig Breslow flew to Kansas City to meet with Devers and manager Alex Cora. The situation became more difficult when Bregman sustained a significant quadriceps injury on 23 May.
'Everybody around the league, I think, was paying attention to that. When any team is having some kind of drama like that, with a player like Devers – he basically was the face of the franchise,' San Francisco shortstop Willy Adames said in an on-field interview during the ESPN broadcast.
Buster Posey, a seven-time All-Star who took over as San Francisco's president of baseball operations in September, said he reached out to Craig Breslow, Boston's chief baseball officer, about two weeks ago. Trade talks picked up momentum over the past few days.
Posey and Melvin declined to address what position Devers would play in San Francisco – 'That's a conversation for myself, Bob and [general manager Zack Minasian] to have with him,' Posey said – but they are convinced Devers' bat will have a significant impact on a lineup that has produced only 16 homers from the left side this season.
'We're excited about adding one of the best hitters in all of major league baseball to our lineup,' Posey said. 'We're obviously taking on a lot of dollars, but there's a belief that adding a guy like this puts us in a good position keep winning ballgames, get into the playoffs and try to win a World Series, which is our ultimate goal.'
The Red Sox have won five out of six against the rival Yankees over the last two weekends to improve to 37-36, but they are still fourth in the AL East, 6.5 games behind division-leading New York.
Devers was 20 when he made his major league debut with the Red Sox in 2017. He helped the Red Sox win the 2018 World Series and led the team in RBIs for five consecutive seasons from 2020-24. He has finished in the top 20 in voting for AL MVP five times.
The Giants have lacked slugging since Barry Bonds hit 45 homers in 2004; they are the only team in the majors who have not had a batter hit 30 homers since then. Devers has hit at least 30 homers in three different seasons.
'It's tough losing [Harrison and Hicks] … but we're getting a guy back who changes the lineup, who's probably a top-10 hitter in baseball every year,' Giants pitcher Logan Webb said. 'Any time you add a player of that caliber, I think you give yourself a chance every day. I don't know where he's gonna hit, but I don't think it really matters. The guy's a stud, plain and simple. I'm excited about it.'
Devers is not the first Red Sox All-Star to be traded away: The team sent Mookie Betts to the Los Angeles Dodgers before the 2020 season in a salary dump – just a year after he won the AL MVP award and led Boston to a franchise-record 108 wins and its fourth World Series title since 2004.
But the Devers deal is perhaps most reminiscent of the 2004 midseason shakeup when Boston traded disgruntled shortstop – and fan favorite – Nomar Garciaparra. The Red Sox went on to win the World Series that year, ending their 86-year championship drought.
The acquisition of Devers is the latest big move by Posey, 38. He signed Justin Verlander to a $15m, one-year contract in January and Adames to a $182m, seven-year deal in December.
Harrison, 23, is 9-9 with a 4.48 ERA and 178 strikeouts in 39 games for the Giants over three seasons. Hicks, 28, was 5-12 with a 4.83 ERA and 139 strikeouts in 42 games over two seasons. Tibbs, 22, was the 13th overall pick in last year's draft; he is hitting .246 with 12 homers and 32 RBIs in 57 games for Single-A Eugene of the Northwest League this season. Bello, 20, is 1-0 with a 2.00 ERA in eight games for the Giants' rookie league team in Scottsdale, Arizona.
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Times
18 minutes ago
- Times
Liam Delap makes instant impact — in front of 53,000 empty seats
Maybe scheduling a fixture in a new, little-known tournament for 3pm on a Monday was not the best idea. Chelsea kicked off their Club World Cup campaign with a victory over MLS outfit Los Angeles FC, led by an impressive Nicolas Jackson seeking to see off new competition from Liam Delap, although there were not many there to see it at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium, in Atlanta, Georgia. An attendance of just 22,137, inside a stadium that can hold up to 75,000, made for uncomfortable viewing for Fifa. Ticket prices had tumbled ahead of kick off, with the cheapest falling to £38 on the day of the game despite being listed for £72 at the turn of the year, with supporters handed some money back as prices fell while others were moved from the cheaper top tier, which was closed, into the more expensive lower tier. But the low attendance was eye-catching, not least as this was in a city that styles itself as the 'epicentre of soccer', and with good reason too. Atlanta United, the MLS side who play here, are one of the best-supported teams in the country, averaging a gate of about 44,000 this season. To the south, roughly a 30-minute drive away, the new $250 million training base of the United States Men's National Team, is being constructed on a 200-acre site, and will open in 2026. Last year a crowd of 38,000 turned up for a friendly between Chelsea and Club America while two years ago, Chelsea visited with Newcastle United and packed out the ground with more than 70,000 supporters. Miguel Almiron was a big pull that day but it seems the Club World Cup has passed many by. It surely must have helped, of course, that those previous games were not held during the middle of a working day. For Chelsea, 19 days had elapsed since they tasted Conference League success in Wroclaw and there was a familiar feeling to the line-up from Enzo Maresca, who opted against handing debuts to the new signings in his group, so Liam Delap, along with Andrey Santos, Dário Essugo, Mamadou Sarr and Mike Penders, all started on the bench. LAFC meanwhile fielded the same side that defeated Club America, meaning Lloris started in goal and Olivier Giroud, formerly of Chelsea, was on the bench. Unsurprisingly, Chelsea controlled much of the first period, enjoying long spells of possession to the backdrop of a small, enthusiastic pocket of LAFC supporters, numbering about 200 or so behind Lloris's goal, whose chants and drum beat echoed around the sparsely-populated arena. There was no issue with temperature here, as the roof was closed, ensuring the players escaped the worst of the 31 degree heat outside, though the game still lacked much in intensity. PAUL ELLIS / AFP Jackson, now under pressure with Delap his new in-house competition, was the standout performer, producing a spin and shot after five minutes that was saved and then creating an excellent chance for Noni Madueke, side-stepping his marker with neat footwork before finding the Chelsea winger, in on goal from an angle, but the shot was saved well by Lloris. Jackson then created the opening goal on 34 minutes, once more evading defender Aaron Long with strong hold- up play near halfway, before setting Neto free down the right. The Chelsea winger entered the box and faked to shoot, sending full back Ryan Hollingshead sliding off to Atlanta's Coca Cola world, before steadying his feet to fire left-footed past Lloris. After a delayed start to the second half, because the substitute Olivier Giroud seemed not to have a shirt, LAFC started brightly, with David Martinez going close twice. For as long as Chelsea lacked a second goal, there was risk. Jackson saw a header blocked on the line but the winger Denis Bouanga, LAFC's talisman, should have equalised when he shrugged off Neto in the box, only to see his low shot saved well by the feet of Robert Sanchez. ROBBIE JAY BARRATT/GETTY IMAGES Delap made his entry on 63 minutes, replacing Jackson and he helped to kill the game. He picked out Enzo Fernandez with a cutback, but his shot was well blocked by Long, but with 12 minutes to play Delap picked the Argentine out again, this time with a lofted cross, and Fernandez made no mistake. That rounded off a promising cameo from Delap, providing a physical presence. LAFC still threatened; Sanchez again denied Bouanga. But Chelsea held firm, and banked £1.5 million with victory. Chelsea (4-2-3-1): R Sanchez 6; R James 6 (M Gusto 46), Tosin 6, L Colwill 6, M Cucurella 6; R Lavia 6 (E Fernandez 46 7), M Caicedo 6 (D Essugo 83); P Neto 7, C Palmer 7 (C Nkunku 83), N Madueke 6 (T George 64); N Jackson 8 (L Delap 64). Booked: R James. Tosin LAFC (4-3-3): (4-3-3): H Lloris 6 — S Palencia 5, A Long 5, E Segura 5, R Hollingshead 5 — I Jesus 5 (F Amaya 81), M Delgado 6, T Tillman 7 — N Ordaz 5 (D Martínez 39, 7), J Ebobisse 6 (O Giroud 46, 6), D Bouanga 7. Booked D Martínez.


The Guardian
22 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Fans stay away as Fernández seals Chelsea win over LAFC at Club World Cup
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The Sun
34 minutes ago
- The Sun
Chelsea 2 LAFC 0: Liam Delap gets assist on Blues debut as Enzo Maresca's side make perfect start at Club World Cup
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