On the cusp of 2026, the Red Sox are still stuck in indecision

Kristie Ackert

On the cusp of 2026, the Red Sox are still stuck in indecision image

Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images

Time is tightening while key decisions linger for Red Sox Chief Baseball Officer Craig Breslow.

The Boston Red Sox got back to the postseason in 2025. The winter that followed has been busier, messier, and far less settled.

With 87 days until they open the 2026 season, the Red Sox have been active without being definitive, making moves that raise the floor while leaving the ceiling very much up for debate.

Boston finished 89-73 last season and grabbed an American League Wild Card spot. The run ended quickly, with a loss to the New York Yankees in the Wild Card Series, but it still counted as progress for a club that has spent too many recent seasons chasing direction as much as wins.

Craig Breslow took that energy into the winter. 

The Red Sox's Chief Baseball Officer added a veteran stabilizer to the rotation by trading for Sonny Gray, a move designed to bring reliability and innings after a year where both felt optional. They also reshaped the lineup by acquiring Willson Contreras, adding a right-handed bat with flexibility and edge, someone who has been through October and does not blink.

Those are real upgrades. They are also not finishing touches.

The offseason pivot point came when Alex Bregman opted out of his contract. Boston would like him back, but the opt-out reopened a problem they thought they had solved. Instead of continuity, the Red Sox are now back in decision mode, weighing whether to recommit to Bregman or pivot toward another core-altering move.

That is where Bo Bichette enters the picture. His name has hovered around Boston all winter, not as a leak-heavy rumor but as a logical alternative if the club decides to reshape the infield rather than simply restore it. Either direction would matter. Waiting too long on both risks ending up with neither.

At the same time, the Red Sox have kept another card on the table. Jarren Duran’s name has circulated in trade conversations throughout the offseason, a signal that Boston is at least open to moving a controllable, high-energy piece if it helps balance the roster or unlock something bigger. That kind of chatter does not linger all winter by accident.

The problem is that all of this still feels like a setup.

The rotation behind Gray has questions. The lineup depends heavily on decisions that have not been made yet. The direction is flexible, but flexibility has a shelf life, especially in an American League East that does not wait for anyone to finish thinking.

The Red Sox are better than they were a year ago. They are also still deciding who they want to be.

At some point soon, the offseason stops being about options and starts being about consequences.

Contributing Writer