Former Red Sox star Dustin Pedroia will have his name featured on the Hall of Fame ballot for the first time next season.
As we sit on our hands (just like the Red Sox) and wait for our favorite baseball team to bring in or develop the the stars of tomorrow (Yoshinobu Yamamoto, anybody?
The Boston Red Sox announced Monday that Dustin Pedroia, Jonathan Papelbon and Trot Nixon will make up the club's 2024 hall of fame class. The Red Sox Hall of Fame was instituted in 1995 and has recognized the team's most influential and successful players, managers, executives and moments ever since.
Through five weeks of play in the Arizona Fall League, one Chicago Cubs prospect has separated himself from the rest. Through 21 games, infielder James Triantos has been on a tear offensively.
Houston Astros second baseman Jose Altuve just had a very impressive ALCS, during which he hit .313/.353/.688, with three homers and nine runs scored in seven games.
In this day and age in sports, it's become more and more rare for players to stay with one franchise for the duration of their career. Free agency changed the game as much as anything that's ever been implemented, and has given players much more control over their own futures.
The 2011 MVP race in both leagues represented a decided departure from tradition, and created a dichotomy that, really, exists to this very day. To be more specific, one league saw a pitcher take home the crown.
Boston Red Sox legend Dustin Pedroia is passing the "Lasor Show" torch to one of the most dynamic players on the current roster. The infamous second baseman
Something very exciting could happen this year The Boston Red Sox haven’t had a Rookie of the Year winner since Dustin Pedroia in 2007. Before that, there wasn’t one since Nomar Garciaparra in 1997.
Pedroia won three World Series with the Red Sox.
More than five months after he retired, Dustin Pedroia will finally be honored by the Red Sox during pregame ceremonies leading up to the opening game of a three-game weekend series against the Yankees at Fenway Park on Friday, June 25.
Earlier this week, Dustin Pedroia retired from baseball after 17 years with the Red Sox organization. The 37-year-old infielder took approximately 37 minutes to field questions from reporters during a Zoom press conference on Monday.
In total, Pedroia ends his historic career with three World Series titles, four Gold Gloves, four All-Star appearances, one Silver Slugger award, one MVP award and a Wilson Defensive Player of the Year award.
No official announcement is planned, Pedroia could make a final decision about the potential end of his playing days soon.
As we come down the stretch of the 2019 season, it's inevitable that some players in MLB are reaching their final days in baseball. These 10 players could be wrapping up their careers this fall.
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