Red Sox fans get glimmer of hope with Scott Boras comments, Tyler O’Neill rumors

Boston Red Sox fans have spent the last five MLB offseasons begging for signings or trades from the front office — one of the wealthiest in MLB — without much change in the semi-recently-established budget plan.

But a recent report suggests Red Sox fans may be in for a surprise this offseason. Peter Abraham of The Boston Globe reported that many agents, including Scott Boras, have said the messaging in Boston’s front office has changed. They seem committed to adding top-tier talent off the free agent market.

This report is a stark change from the front office’s philosophy in at least the last two offseasons. There has been a focus on cutting payroll and staying under the luxury tax threshold. Boston’s biggest free agent signing from the 2023-24 season was Lucas Giolito and he made $18 million as one of Boston’s most expensive players.

Boras is Tyler O’Neill’s agent, and Abraham also reported that the two parties met on Nov. 5. The Sox and O’Neill expressed mutual interest in an extension shortly after the season ended, and many considered the outfielder to be Boston’s prime qualifying offer candidate after his 31 -omer performance in 2024.

Red Sox expected to be active in free agent market, have had discussions with Scott Boras about Tyler O’Neill

Several agents, Boras among them, have mentioned that the message from the Sox has been that ownership is committed to adding high-end talent and the team plans to be active in the free agent market.

We’ll see where it goes. But that what the Sox are saying.

— Pete Abraham (@PeteAbe) November 6, 2024

In his year with the Red Sox, O’Neill posted his best season since he earned MVP consideration in 2021. He slashed .241/.336/.511 with a .847 OPS over 113 games, the second-most he’s ever played in a single season.

O’Neill’s tendency toward injury may be why Boston didn’t extend him a qualifying offer. If the Sox made him a qualifying offer and he accepted, he would’ve been paid $21.05 million next season, which is a steep paycheck for a player who averages 90 games per year in his seven MLB seasons, excluding the shortened 2020 campaign.

Last season’s Red Sox team lacked right-handed pop, and O’Neill supplied it in spades with his 31 homers. His swing is perfect for Fenway Park, but only at the right price. Boston’s free agency budget has been tight since 2019, and a player with as many injury concerns as O’Neill should not take precedence over signing an ace or bullpen reinforcements.

More Red Sox reads:

manual

Related Posts

White Sox Minor League Update: August 13, 2025

Your best source for quality Chicago White Sox news, rumors, analysis, stats and scores from the fan perspective.

Michael Harris and offense explode as Braves survive Mets in victory

Michael Harris stays hot with a grand slam and Marcell Ozuna has a blast of his own as Braves even series with Mets

Red Sox reactions: Alex Cora ejected, Walker Buehler gives up 2 big homers in loss

Instant reactions from the Red Sox’ 4-1 loss to the Houston Astros at Daikin Park on Wednesday.

Yankees 1, Twins 4: Good news and bad news as Bombers lose chance to sweep and possibly their first baseman, too

The New York Yankees fell to the Twins 4-1, with Joe Ryan dominating and Paul Goldschmidt’s health raising serious concern

Cubs catcher Miguel Amaya carted off field after awkward fall at first in win over Blue Jays

Miguel Amaya had just returned from a lengthy stint on the injured list when he went down on Wednesday.

Boѕton getѕ ѕocked 4-1 by Aѕtroѕ, thаnkѕ to homerѕ from Jeremy Peñа аnd Yаіner Dіаz

Astros win the series behind home runs from Jeremy Peña and Yainer Diaz