Craig Breslow, Neal Huntington, and Thad Levine were the final three candidates for the Red Sox in their search for a new front office boss, MassLive.com’s Sean McAdam writes. That search came to an end earlier this week when Breslow was hired as Boston’s new chief baseball officer, putting the former Cubs assistant GM and 12-year big league veteran in charge of a front office for the first time.
Huntington and Levine were known to be under consideration, though Levine initially didn’t appear to be a finalist when reports surfaced this week that the Red Sox had told him he was no longer a candidate for the job. At the time, it seemed like the Sox were moving onto a second round of interviews in their hiring process, yet it now appears as if that second round had already begun, and the Sox had made their decision about Breslow. It seemed as though Breslow sealed the deal with a strong interview with Sox principal owner John Henry during that secondary stage.
Back in September, Peter Gammons reported that the Red Sox had some interest in Breslow for a possible role as a director of pitching development. That early link between Breslow and the Sox could tie into McAdam’s breakdown of how the team didn’t initially have Breslow on the radar as a CBO candidate at first, in part due to his lack of experience as a GM or president of baseball operations. However, as the Red Sox increasingly became open to the idea of at least making Breslow the chief lieutenant of a CBO, they still had difficulty finding someone appropriate for that top job, thus making Breslow an even more attractive candidate. McAdam also notes that the Sox were concerned that the Cubs might offer Breslow a promotion to stay in Chicago if he was offered anything less than a CBO position, or that another team might come calling about Breslow in the near future about a CBO/PBO job if he was only in a secondary role in Boston.
The front office search was marked by several notable executives who declined to interview with the Red Sox, though McAdam writes that Boston had interest in a candidate that seemingly wasn’t given permission for an interview. The Sox wanted to speak with Orioles assistant GM Sig Mejdal, yet the O’s “dragged their feet on the process and never provided the Sox with the go-ahead to speak with Mejdal,” according to McAdam.
The 57-year-old Mejdal has been with Baltimore since November 2018, and was one of Mike Elias’ first hires when Elias took over the Orioles’ front office as general manager. Mejdal has been one of the key figures of baseball’s analytics movement over the last two decades, as his work with the Orioles, Astros, and Cardinals has led those clubs to tremendous results in maximizing talent and finding and developing young players. As McAdam observes, it probably isn’t surprising that the Orioles wanted to keep Mejdal in the fold, even if most organizations generally allow employees to interview for promotions on other teams. It isn’t known if Mejdal would’ve been open to an interview anyway, as there has been some past speculation that Mejdal is happy in a behind-the-scenes role rather than running a front office himself.
Returning to Breslow, it’s still too early to tell how he’ll approach the makeup of his baseball operations department, which will continue to have several longtime holdovers (assistant GMs Eddie Romero, Raquel Ferreira, Michael Groopman) who are expected to stay in the organization. Whether one of them could be elevated to a full-time general manager role to act as Breslow’s No. 2 remains to be seen, or if he might hire a GM from outside Fenway Park to provide another new voice in the mix.
As for on-field matters, WEEI.com’s Rob Bradford speculates that Giants pitching coach Andrew Bailey might be a candidate to join Boston’s staff, as Breslow and Bailey are close friends and former teammates from when they pitched together with the Athletics and Red Sox from 2009-13. The Sox fired pitching coach Dave Bush after the season, and some recent reports suggest Bailey might look to leave San Francisco for a job closer to his family on the East Coast.
YanksTomator
It’s been 5 years since the Sox won a ring. It’s about time they do their voodoo magic and win another ring. They typically win every 4-5 years.
Hemlock
>They typically win every 4-5 years.
See: 1919-2003
olmtiant
I think he meant 21st century??? Ouch…
Hemlock
> I think he meant
How do you know that YanksTomator is a he?
Wow, big brain assumptions all over the place today. It must be Friday.
The Red Sox are due another WS because they win them every 4-5 years, except when they don’t for 80+ years, and that’s a he because lol idk I can randomly conduct DNA tests on adults to affirm their gender over the internet.
Deadguy
Lol think he meant! Think he meant!
Look at the big brain on Bob lol!
Lighten up Francis, it’s only booty!
Deadguy
> See: 1919-2003
They erased that part of history don’t you remember? 9/11/2001 was a contingency act to eradicate a bi dimensional threat causing existential crisis if the truth got out…. You know… aliens? Was I the only one who saw that 1990’s version of Godzilla where helicopters shot down the twin towers? See Tom Cruise in ‘War Of The World’s’ with his Boston Red soxs hat… there that explains it
I know it’s a conspiracy theory….
Deadguy
If your not convinced
Also reference Donnie Whalberg 2 years prior in his Boston Red Sox hat in the 2003 rendition of Stephen Kings Dreamcatcher….
I Duddits!
Pedro Martinez’s Mango Tree
Then refer to 2004-2018
GASoxFan
Bloom had a shot in ’21. He was too timid and wouldnt go for it or properly supplement the roster that season. That would’ve fit your pattern more or less.
Its hard to make any prediction about a 1st time PBO without seeing action first, it’s not like hes got a history/reputation like DD brings in an organization.
That said, if we’re throwing darts at a calendar, I’d circle 2026 as a year to watch.
acell10
in fairness he traded for Schwarber which was probably the best addition any contender made that deadline.
GASoxFan
That’s like saying you bought some cool racing seats on a killer deal for your race car…. that’s got a cracked cylinder head.
Cool pick up bro, but, didn’t fix the actual problem with the machine.
acell10
your analogy is terrible. He helped them make it to ALCS. you really don’t have a leg to stand on here
GASoxFan
Not really.
It sounds like you still intend to defend the guy who was fired for his ineptitude, no matter what.
The analogy is apt because the NEEDS of the team went unfilled, which ultimately led to its failure. If you were an actual fan, you’d recall that what the team NEEDED at the deadline was pitching, and, Schwarbs was a luxury (and a surprise considering he was traded for while injured and nobody knew what to expect, a traditional buy-low) that they didn’t even know how to fit in the lineup at first and had a rotating cast just to create opportunities. Ultimately the team failed in the postseason 4-2 in the alcs because of its lack of pitching reinforcements.
The pitching problem was not a surprise, or a new development. The lack of attention to it led to the failed run.
The team made it to the ALCS in spite of bloom, not because of him.
all in the suit that you wear
GA: Bloom must have done something right at some point. I think that’s what most “defenders” point out.
GASoxFan
He did some things that turned out right. The question is, was it the law of averages catching up to things?
Pivetta trade was a win. Schwarber worked out… until bloom refused to keep him.
Renfro was good… until bloom made a poor move trying to flip him.
Probably the biggest win was Whitlock, who was a great high leverage pen piece.
But there were far far far more headscratchers over those years too.
User 3180623956
GA: that’s a spot on analogy. Sure Schwarber was great, once he got off the IL, but, like you said, they needed pitching. bloom was forced to make any move he could because the team over performed expectations. He was hoping for another first round pick…
JoeBrady
which was probably the best addition any contender made that deadline.
======================
Absolutely the best trade of the deadline. But the haters are confused. They hated the trade, and then they hated when we allowed him to leave.
And also keep in mind that Bloom also picked up Iglesias .915 OPS, Shaw’s .843, and Robles 3.60 ERA.
But mostly the haters don’t remember that we were under payroll cap restrictions. For any of y’all that don’t remember, KD complained for months (and immediately proven wrong) that the Robles trade put us over the CBT.
User 3180623956
The payroll restrictions were made up to make excuses for bloom, the idiotic move to go over in 2022 proves that.
I loved Schwarber, wrong move or not, and letting him go was dumb.
JoeBrady
So you know that Henry told Bloom to spend as much as he wants, and Bloom didn’t agree? My recollection of that time period was that everything was about the cap.
User 3180623956
Didn’t say I did, but I do know that he basically said that staying under the tax threshold was not a mandate, but that they needed to spend wisely. Something bloom had trouble with.
AL34
If he had picked up two decent relievers he would have beaten Houston. In addition Eovaldi got squeezed by that lousy umpire Laz Diaz.
Rocker49
Elias and Mejdal are the geniuses behind the Astros success and the Orioles buildup. These guys are awesome, the O’s are lucky to have them! Smartest front office in baseball, and it isn’t even close.
NewYorkSoxFan
I’d give more credit to the fact they spent almost 10 yrs with top 10 draft picks. The Astros did the same thing. Prolonging the success is the real task, the Astros have excelled there.
superunclea
and because of their 10 years of tanking MLB had to make an anti tanking rule.
Atloriolesfan
Really. 10 years with Top 10 draft picks? Try 5, but that includes 2022 and 2023, which shouldn’t count.
Do you know how many guys on their entire playoff roster were their Top 10 draft picks? TWO. Adley Rutschman and Heston Kjerstad. That’s the list.
Gunnar was picked in the 2nd round. Every other MLB team passed on him once. Three teams passed on him twice. And the Os now have one of the other guys drafted ahead of him.
JoeBrady
People hear stuff and don’t bother checking. I checked this once and was shocked by how many guys came from so many different soruces.
Boxscore
O’s need all the smart FO personnel they can get since their cheap owner just admitted– nope not gonna spend any money until MD makes the land around Camden Yards another revenue stream like Battery Park that the Braves got. O’s need new ownership– badly.
cgallant
Bailey should come at a discount since he gave us absolutely nothing when we traded for him.
Pedro Martinez’s Mango Tree
His injury led to Koji being named closer. Debt paid in full.
olmtiant
2013… Bailey and who else was supposed to be our closer?? Enter Koji for the GREATEST year of closer in Redsox history and possibly top ten ever….
Boxscore
Koji was money that season that’s for sure
Dorothy_Mantooth
Even though he’ll be head of baseball operations, Breslow will have a big say in the development of young pitching throughout the entire organization. If Bailey is on board with Breslow’s methodology then let’s bring him in! The Sox also need a director of pitching development for the minor leagues. I’m sure he has a few candidates in mind. If Boston could draft and develop pitching at the same proportional rate they do with position players, they’d be in really good shape right now. Breslow should be able to help balance this a little more going forward.
Trollfree
Dorothy – I think you should give more credit to the development of pitchers in the program since DD joined the organization. If you think about all the good young players who are are they?
My opinion includes:
1 – Duran
2 – Casas
3 – Bello
4 – Houck
5 – Crawford
6 – Rafaela
I think Abreu could be on the list with a bit more proof. The list is 3 SPs and 3 fielders. That’s pretty balanced. If you think about the last 10 years or since 2010 then I would agree with you but recent history has been far better than in the past.
When you think about the misses we’ve had with pitchers in recent years you also have to ask if that’s a product of bad coaching or poor development concepts.
Breslow on paper is a great solution for pitching but even more importantly he has the expertise to improve the pre-game choices regarding the individual approaches to opposing hitters. This can be implemented from ROK to the MLB level.
Bloom’s top draft picks were fielders so after DD left there may have been a pitching drop-off but hopefully Breslow can find the 1st round draftees that are quality arms.
I think Breslow needs to COMPLETELY rebuild the infrastructure of the orgainization by bringing in leaders who actually are experts in their areas not old friends of someone. The pitching, the hitting both need excellent leaders at the top and at each level of the organization. Most importantly, the organization needs a quality manager at each level. They need experienced baseball people who are qualified to be managers. The nepotism needs to stop and people who are best qualified need to be put in place to revitalize the organization.
I agree that pitching is the slightly more important side of the organization to focus on but both sides need lots of new blood. Most importantly, Cora needs to go to improve the bad taste in players mouths from the Bloom administration.
Integrity needs to be part of the new direction of the organization.
Bruin1012
Watched Abreu pretty closely the last couple of years. My assessment he’s a keeper. He has always been very passive at the plate. Yes he walked quite a bit as minor leaguer but as you go up in the chain the pitching gets better and they will realize how passive you are and simp,y throw strikes. That happened to Abreu at the beggining of the AAA season he started a little slow pitchers were getting ahead of him because of his passivity. A couple of months in an the guy started swinging and low and behold he punished the ball. He really took off he became a version of Bobby D but without the high K rate. He didn’t chase off the plate still but instead of letting strikes go by he swung and punished those pitches. My assessment of Abreu he’s a little like Casas but he has a little more swing and miss in zone then Casas. He has a natural uppercut swing he’s going to hit for power which he has a lot. I expect him to handle right field right away and turn into a mainstay as long as they trade Verdugo.
PaulyMidwest
I was hoping the cubs would hire Bailey to take Breslows old job.
Deadguy
Midwest!
SFBay314
Bailey is very good and Boston would be lucky to have him. He will be a manager shortly. Was wasted under kapler.
Trollfree
Have him replace Cora!!
HighOnPineTar
Varitek deserves it first
GASoxFan
There’s something telling going on here to anyone watching.
You go back some years, and, tek was a special advisor because he wanted some life balance and not to be on the road all the time.
Forward a few years, and, Tek was ready to suit up for a uniformed role and be with the team, but, wasn’t ready to take on the workload of manager yet.
Well guys, Tek just wanted to go and interview for a job as a manager. That’s your shot across the bow.
Promote Tek soon, or, lose him.
One thing Henry/Kennedy are bad at is riding the old hand an extra year or two too long and losing talent *just* before they decide to make a vacancy that someone could’ve, and would’ve, stepped into.
fan4life
After every qualified candidate refused to interview we reached the bottom of the barrel. That said- either management sucks or we are the confused dummy that jumps from branch to branch. With the moves we made in the past couple of years I’d say we just don’t know what we want and we’re leaving a wake of failure behind us that could only be churned up by a totally confused management group. Breslow?!? He wasn’t a decision-maker when he was playing.