SEATTLE – Boston Red Sox General Manager Ben Cherington admits his current team “is hard to watch.”

Cherington offered the assessment before Boston fell to Seattle 4-1 on Monday. The Red Sox have lost a season-worst seven in a row — all on the road — while being outscored 58-16.

Boston has lost eight of 10 since sending stars Adrian Gonzalez, Josh Beckett and Carl Crawford to the Los Angeles Dodgers in a nine-player trade. The Red Sox are 62-74, a year after being one of baseball’s best clubs for most of the season until its historic September collapse.

Cherington called the team’s sad state “a reflection on all of us.”

“When we made the trade we knew we were not helping our team the rest of this year,” he said. “That said, it’s still hard to watch. There are things we need to accomplish the rest of the year.”

“It’s harder to do that when you’re staring at a loss at the end of the day. It’s hard for everyone to get the work done that needs to be done,” he said.

Advertisement

The fact that the Cherington and principal owner John W. Henry made the trip to Seattle should not be seen as “death watch,” according to Cherington. He said this trip was planned a month ago, and that Henry was on the West Coast already and decided to join the team.

Cherington was asked several times if Manager Bobby Valentine’s job is in jeopardy. He said their are factors beyond wins and losses to evaluate a manager.

“How well the team is prepared, the evaluation of players on the roster, how well he’s utilizing players on roster,” Cherington said. “Those are things that Bobby does well.”

“Then certain things are more subtle. Things happen during the course of the day, the course of the season, with players both on the field and off the field that are part of creating that team dynamic that you want,” he said.

Cherington knows Red Sox fans aren’t happy.

“We are aware that we need to deliver more for the fans,” Cherington said. “If talk around the team is a reflection how much the fans care, that’s certainly important, but we have to try to protect the decision-making process and do things for the right reasons and not react to the loudest of public sentiment.”

Cherington said the big trade with the Dodgers was not a message to the remaining players that it’s time to give up.

“There are reasons for players on an individual level to do the best they can. I don’t expect that we’re not going to have the effort,” he said. “I don’t think there’s any conscious lack of effort.”

 


Only subscribers are eligible to post comments. Please subscribe or login first for digital access. Here’s why.

Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.