There are a few ways former ace Chris Sale could look back on his time in Boston. One would be to focus on the good that came out of it. He was acquired by the Red Sox in 2016 for four players to be the pitcher who could put them over the top for a World Series run, and sure enough, he did just that in 2018, when he was an All-Star and went 12-4 with a 2.11 ERA before helping Boston to a championship. Red Sox Or Sale could look at his time for that which he did not accomplish. He signed a
five-year, $145 million extension after that World Series, and from there, simply could not stay healthy enough to pitch. He made just 31 appearances from 2020-23, going 11-7 with a 3.93 ERA in that stretch. The Red Sox finally offloaded Sale this winter in a trade to the , for second baseman Vaughn Grissom. BravesIn an extensive conversation with ESPN’s Jeff Passan, Sale talked about the difficulty of looking back on what happened with the Red Sox. It chewed him up, he said.
“It consumes you at the time. When everything’s good, everything’s great, right? And when everything’s bad, it’s never going to be good. Now I know … you have to do the same things whether you’re successful or not successful. And I think sometimes I can get lost,” Sale said. Red Sox Career Torpedoed by Injuries, Bad LuckThe concerns about Sale stretched back to his high point in Boston, when the Red Sox beat the
for the 2018 World Series title. Even during that season, he was slowed by a shoulder problem which probably cost him a Cy Young award.
In 2019, things spiraled. Sale posted a
6-11 record and had an ERA of 4.40 Dodgers , and was pulled from the rotation with
elbow inflammation . In 2020, it was an entire season missed for Tommy John surgery, and most of 2021, too.For Sale, 2022 was truly cursed, as he started the year on the IR because of a rib injury, came back and took a hard hit ball that broke his his finger. He later broke his wrist in a biking accident. Thinking about his time with the Red Sox, then, is not exactly pleasant for Sale.“It’s a double-edged sword for me,” Sale says. “The whole reason I got traded [to Boston] was to help them win a World Series. And I feel satisfied in doing that. It’s just obviously what happened after that. That’s just one of the bigger regrets in my life. It’ll always be. They made a commitment to me, and I didn’t live up for that. We made a deal: ‘We’re going to give you this because you’ve done this and you’re going to continue to do that.’ Well, I didn’t hold up my end.”
Chris Sale Could Find Redemption With Braves
But, as always, sports offers a chance at redemption, and Sale will, at least, get a shot to make good as his career nears its end. In Atlanta, which has arguably the strongest starting rotation in baseball, Sale will be a No. 4 starter, not expected to carry the load as an ace.
The Braves should be one of the best teams in baseball, coming off a year in which they won 104 games and then were ousted by the Phillies in the NLDS. Sale’s mission is to do what he can to help Atlanta replicate his Red Sox achievement—win the World Series. He even volunteered to come out of the bullpen if it was determined that is what Atlanta needed to win.
Sale said he got a win in the AL and now wants to get a win in the NL.
Chris Sale, who used to be the ace pitcher for the Red Sox, has been traded to Atlanta, but he is still struggling with how things ended in Boston.
The Braves should be one of the best teams in baseball, coming off a year in which they won 104 games and then were ousted by the Phillies in the NLDS. Sale’s mission is to do what he can to help Atlanta replicate his Red Sox achievement—win the World Series. He even volunteered to come out of the bullpen if it was determined that is what Atlanta needed to win.
“I got one in the AL,” Sale said. “Let’s get one in the NL.”