For as frustrating as the Sox’s season has been, the Mets have been worse. While it’s not exactly stealing our thunder, it’s arguably more impressive (absolute value), given that they have active legitimate superstars, one of whom, Francisco Lindor, is allegedly on the block. And if Sports Illustrated is going to suggest Boston as a destination, who am I to argue? Not that I’m saying it’s a good fit, but with that sweet, sweet SEO already in the ether, it’s time for us to pick up a slipstream.
On
the one hand, Lindor’s a 32-year-old shortstop under contract until 2032 at $32 million each year and having the worst season of his professional career by far, batting .210/.297/.355. On that same hand, the Red Sox are cheap and reticent to reach for older players and don’t seem to be in a position to win now or in the short-term future during which Lindor could theoretically turn it around.
On the other hand, Lindor has been good-t0-great every other year of his career and the Sox cannot find a shortstop to save their lives. Franky led MLB with 732 PA’s last year, which is the stability the team has been sorely lacking at the position since… Nomar, maybe? And maybe he’d be relatively cheap, which would invert the Sox’s way of doing things. He also is cool as hell, which is nice.
I don’t think it makes sense for the Sox because of how they operate, but I don’t care about the money, either. I’m team “add good players.” Though if the money issue wipes out next year, that’s one less sub-35-yr-old year you’re getting from him anyway. But enough blabber: What say you?













