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Boston Fires Alex Cora, but the Frustration Starts Higher Up

Hunter Tierney 's profile
By Hunter Tierney
April 29, 2026
Boston Fires Alex Cora, but the Frustration Starts Higher Up

The strangest part of the Red Sox firing Alex Cora isn’t even that they did it in April.

That’s wild enough on its own. You don’t usually see a World Series-winning manager, one who signed a three-year extension less than two years ago, get dumped just 33 days into the season. You definitely don’t see it happen after a 17-1 win, which only made the whole thing feel like a punchline that somehow got written into a press release.

But the real issue here goes deeper than timing.

They Cleared More Than One Desk

The Red Sox didn’t just fire Cora after a 10-17 start. They went way beyond that. They cleared out a big chunk of his staff too — hitting coach Peter Fatse, bench coach Ramón Vázquez, third-base coach Kyle Hudson, assistant hitting coach Dillon Lawson and major-league hitting strategy coach Joe Cronin all gone. Jason Varitek, who feels about as tied to this franchise as anyone can be, was reassigned.

That’s not a small adjustment. That’s walking into the room and deciding to flip the whole table over.

Maybe it lands differently if this looked like an organization with a clear plan, a steady hand, and enough wins in recent years to earn some trust. But that’s not where Boston is right now. Instead, this felt like another Red Sox decision where the people at the top get to stand back while someone closer to the dugout takes the hit.

That’s where John Henry has to be part of the conversation. Craig Breslow is the baseball boss in front of the cameras now, and Sam Kennedy made it clear this was Breslow’s call. But this pattern didn’t start with Breslow. It’s been building for years.

Mookie Betts gets traded. Xander Bogaerts walks. Chaim Bloom gets fired. Rafael Devers gets moved. The message seems to change every year. The faces change every year. Yet somehow the Red Sox always manage to find a new person to blame before the conversation turns to ownership.

Now, to be fair, Cora wasn’t perfect. No manager is when a team starts 10-17 and looks lifeless at the plate. Boston was near the bottom of baseball in home runs, OPS, batting average, and just about every other important offensive category. They didn’t look anything like the postseason-bound team the organization apparently believed they had built.

But if the roster was supposed to be better, who put it together? If the staff didn’t get enough out of the group, who decided this was the group worth betting on in the first place? If the Red Sox truly believe the season is still there to save with 135 games left, why did they need to throw Cora and half the coaching staff overboard this early?

That’s why this doesn’t feel like accountability. It feels like panic dressed up in a suit and tie.

The Explanation Only Brought More Questions

Dec 9, 2024; Dallas, TX, USA; Boston Red Sox chief baseball officer Craig Breslow speaks with the media 
at the Hilton Anatole during the 2024 MLB Winter Meetings.
Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

Breslow and Kennedy tried to frame the move as a fresh start. That’s the clean, polished, corporate version of it. Breslow said it came down to “the belief that we have in the players” when he addressed the changes publicly.

It really comes down to the belief that we have in the players and the belief that we have in the group to accomplish what we set out to accomplish. And by acting today, it gives us 135 games ahead of us. So we've got almost a full season's worth of run to take advantage of this fresh start and ultimately to compete for a division and a deep postseason run in the way that we talked about it and envisioned and believed heading into Spring Training.

And look, on the surface, that sounds fine. If you believe the roster is better than the record, then sure, make a move early and try to spark something. That’s a real sports argument.

But it also raises the obvious question: how are you so sure the manager was the cause of those issues after just 27 games?

Kennedy called it painful, but necessary. He said the Red Sox had “full confidence” in the players and still wanted to get back to October baseball.

Breslow did say responsibility for the major-league performance falls on him as the leader of baseball operations. He should say that. He has to say that. But saying it and actually wearing it are two different things.

Because if the responsibility is truly yours, the first answer can’t always be to blame somebody else.

In that clubhouse, and around the sport, Cora wasn't viewed as some problem that needed to be removed before this team could flourish. He was still viewed as one of the better managers in baseball. A respected one. A connected one. A guy players wanted to play for.

The Clubhouse Wasn’t Buying It

The most damaging part of this whole thing wasn’t even the firing itself. It was what came out of the clubhouse the next day.

That’s usually where teams try to smooth things over. You get the standard lines, a few careful answers, everybody says they have to move forward, and the team moves on.

That’s not what happened here.

Trevor Story, one of the veteran voices in that room, didn’t dance around it:

There just has to be more conversations. It’s kind of up in the air what the true direction [of the franchise is]... It's just tough for the guys that were let go, because they’re some of the best coaches in the world, and they care more than anybody, and just felt like they didn’t get a fair shot.

That’s not a player tossing out some emotional quote in the heat of the moment. That’s a veteran openly questioning where the organization is headed. In April.

When a veteran says that out loud this early in the season, that’s not just frustration. That’s a warning sign.

He went even further when talking about Cora personally, saying Cora had the players’ backs every day, was truthful with them and “took bullets” for the group. That’s the kind of manager players remember.

Garrett Whitlock’s reaction was even more revealing in some ways, because it gave a real look into how the message landed inside the clubhouse. Whitlock said that in the meeting the organization had, Breslow spoke for around two minutes, Chad Tracy spoke for around three to five, and players weren't given a chance to ask questions. John Henry and Kennedy were reportedly in the room, but they didn't speak.

Just picture that setup for a second. A room full of players trying to process a major shakeup, ownership in the back, leadership at the front, and no real dialogue.

Whitlock summed up the messaging:

They made it very clear that we get paid to play baseball and we need to just focus on playing baseball.

Maybe that’s true in the coldest possible business sense. Players are paid to play. Executives are paid to make decisions. But that’s also the kind of line that can make a clubhouse feel like they're just part of a spreadsheet instead of actual human beings.

These guys had just lost a manager many of them respected, several coaches they worked with every day, and in Varitek’s case, one of the most familiar Red Sox figures of the last 30 years. To walk into that room, offer a quick explanation, stand against the wall and not open the floor for questions isn’t exactly how trust gets built.

Roman Anthony handled it about as professionally as a young player could. He said it was shocking, that he didn’t expect it, and that the players still have to “adapt and overcome.” He also took ownership, saying it is not Cora’s job to go out and make plays for them.

That’s mature stuff from a young player. And he’s right. Players own their share of a 10-17 start too.

Garrett Crochet — who has a 6.30 ERA in six starts — backed him on that, saying:

We’ve been playing terrible, and it kind of feels like those guys paid the cost of our own crime. So that’s kind of the tough part that you have to battle internally, I suppose. It’s caused a lot of us to be introspective. And really, you understand that it’s a business, but when it’s a move that big, it really opens your eyes.

Honestly, that may have been the most honest quote of the bunch.

The players know they haven’t been good enough. They know managers don’t hit or pitch. They know baseball is a business.

But knowing all of that doesn’t mean they have to believe this was the right answer.

Around The League, Cora Still Has A Lot Of Respect

Feb 28, 2025; Clearwater, Florida, USA; Boston Red Sox manager Alex Cora (13) looks on during the first inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at BayCare Ballpark.
Credit: Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images

The league's reaction only made this look worse for Boston. Usually, when a manager gets fired after a bad start, the outside response is pretty standard. A few respectful comments, some version of “that’s the business,” and everyone moves on.

That wasn’t the tone here.

Blue Jays manager John Schneider, who was preparing to host the Red Sox right after the move, said he was “surprised” and added, “I’ve got a lot of respect for AC. I think everyone does around the league for what he’s accomplished.”

Aaron Boone, who knows Cora well from their ESPN days and just saw him in Boston the week before, sounded like someone who expects Cora to be more than fine.

I have a feeling he’ll do whatever he wants. He’s a great manager. Smart, talented person that I’m sure will have a lot of opportunities available to him.

If you're letting go of a coach that plenty of the league would love to have, are you really making the right choice?

A.J. Hinch, who has his own history with Cora from Houston, offered one of the strongest comments:

I have reached out to him. I have a close relationship with him, obviously, I have Joey [Cora] here in the family. I feel for him. I think these are really, really tough jobs to navigate and then on top of that, when something big like that happens, just want to offer him support. He’s incredible. He’s a good manager. He’s an excellent communicator. He has a deep, deep relationship with people throughout the game.

Read those words again: incredible, excellent communicator, deep relationships throughout the game. That is not how people talk about a manager whose time had simply passed him by.

Again, this doesn’t mean the Red Sox had to keep Cora forever. Managers have shelf lives. Sometimes voices get stale. Sometimes relationships with the front office deteriorate. Sometimes the room needs something different.

All of that can be true.

But when players are defending him, rival managers are surprised, respected peers are praising him, and people across the sport seem more confused than relieved, it’s fair to wonder if Boston moved too fast.

The Names Change, The Pattern Doesn’t

That’s the part fans are so tired of.

Cora’s firing comes on top of years of frustration about what the Red Sox have slowly become since 2018.

This used to feel like a franchise that knew exactly who they were and who they wanted to be. The Red Sox were aggressive. They were powerful. They acted like a giant because they're supposed to be one. Fenway Park prints money. The brand reaches everywhere. The fan base is enormous. The expectations are supposed to come with that.

Somewhere along the way, though, the Red Sox started wanting the credit that comes with being big-market while reaching for the excuses that usually belong to smaller ones.

The Mookie Betts trade is what fans will always point back to, and for good reason. You can explain payroll, timing, long-term planning, whatever you want. Fans watched a homegrown superstar, an MVP in his prime, get sent to the Dodgers — then watched him keep winning on the biggest stage.

That changes people. It changes how fans view ownership. It changes how much trust they give the next explanation. It changes how every future move gets judged.

Then Bogaerts left. Then Bloom was pushed out. Then Devers became another exhausting organizational saga. Then Breslow took over, and now Cora is out before May.

Individually, every move may have had its own logic. That’s usually how teams explain these things. But eventually, fans stop judging moves one by one and start judging the pattern. And the pattern has been a lot of noise and not enough clarity.

At some point, the issue isn’t one bad decision. It’s the lack of a steady, believable direction people can actually buy into.

That’s why Story’s quote should shake the leaders of the organization. When he questioned the “true direction” of the franchise, he basically said the quiet part out loud. Fans have been asking that same question for years.

Are the Red Sox all-in? Are they resetting? Are they building around young talent? Are they trying to win now? Are they trying to thread the needle? Are they trying to avoid the luxury tax? Are they trying to look aggressive without actually going all the way?

Every few months, the answer seems to shift. That’s exhausting for a fan base used to certainty.

And now, after all that, the latest answer is that Cora had to go. Sorry, but that feels way too easy.

The Pressure Is On Breslow Now

Worcester Red Sox players Marcelo Mayer and Roman Anthony watch fireworks following a Triple-A game on May 2, 2025 at Polar Park.
Credit: WooSox Photo/Ashley Green / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

If this team turns around, Tracy settles in, the young core takes off and the Red Sox push into the postseason race, Breslow will get to say the hard decision worked. He’ll be able to say he saw a problem early, acted decisively, and gave the season a new attitude.

That’s how this looks if Boston wins. But if this keeps going sideways, there isn’t another easy shield.

Cora is gone. Multiple coaches are gone. The reset button has already been pushed. So if they disappoint now, then the spotlight shifts exactly where it should. To the people who built it.

If Alex Cora wasn’t the answer, was he ever really the problem? Based on the reaction from the people who knew him best, it sure doesn’t feel like he was the thing that was holding them back.


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