There’s smoke swirling around Fenway, and Kevin Millar isn’t pretending it’s just the sausages. The Red Sox have looked less like a ball club and more like a reality show sponsored by frustration. Rafael Devers is simmering, Alex Cora is spinning, and Millar? Well, let’s just say he is not mincing his words. When a former clubhouse heart starts raising eyebrows, maybe it’s time Boston stops blaming the roster and starts checking the culture.
The Boston Red Sox are falling apart from the inside, and the front office appears to be just sitting and watching. Their season is in absolute shambles, and even the manager is at risk of being sacked. With all this going on in the organization, Millar chose to speak the truth instead of beating around the bush.
In a recent interview with the Play Tessie channel, he talked about the atmosphere in the dressing room and the mismanagement that is taking place. He said, “By the way, Alex Cora getting heat is ridiculous. He’s a dude… So players gotta step up. Players gotta be better… It drives me crazy when you just hear like, ‘Oh, Alex Cora’s not doing—’ what’s Alex Cora not doing?”
Cora is not the problem—he’s the anchor in a storm of shifting rosters and egos. Millar defended him without flinching, calling the heat on Cora “ridiculous.” The Red Sox manager doesn’t pitch, hit, or drop routine plays—he simply steers the ship. It’s the players who have to row harder when the waters get rough.
When Devers refused or wasn’t asked to try first base, it sent mixed signals through the clubhouse. Instead of saying, “Put me wherever, I’ll help,” silence filled the gap, and tension grew. Masataka Yoshida can’t throw, but can still hit—someone needs to step up. If not Devers, then who?
At this moment, Cora doesn’t need scapegoating; he needs soldiers who buy into team-first baseball. Firing him would punish the wrong man and signal chaos from the top. Good teams police themselves—Cora can’t carry 26 grown men on his back. Keep him, back him, and challenge the roster to match his leadership.
So if Devers won’t move and the whispers keep swirling, maybe the real error isn’t on the field. Before the front office grabs a torch for Cora, they might want to look in the mirror or at the dugout. Sacking the skipper won’t cure a roster that needs guts more than guidance. This isn’t a manager problem; it’s a man-up problem. Fire Cora now, and you might as well hand the AL East your resignation letter on Red Sox stationery.
Fans started to lose hope in Alex Cora, and now the front office, too?
While fans have been side-eyeing Cora for weeks, the front office isn’t exactly handing out life jackets either. In Boston, patience wears thinner than Fenway’s bullpen depth. Under Cora, the Red Sox have turned inconsistency into an art form this season. Despite offseason splashes like Alex Bregman and Garrett Crochet, the team leads MLB in errors with 53. Add in 588 strikeouts and 17 one-run losses, and you’ve got a masterclass in self-destruction. Mental mistakes aren’t just slipping through the cracks—they’re crashing through the clubhouse ceiling.
Cora’s critics are growing louder, and not all of them sit in the bleachers. Craig Breslow, Boston’s chief baseball officer, publicly backed Cora but didn’t exactly throw a parade. He emphasized shared responsibility and the urgency to “figure this out.” The tone was supportive, but not blindly so. If Cora is shown the door, the ripple effect could gut the locker room. He’s won in Boston, as a player and a manager—his presence isn’t easily replaced. But if the team continues tripping over itself, sentiment won’t save him. In Boston, nostalgia doesn’t win ballgames—results do.
So, is Cora the problem, or just the most convenient lightning rod in a storm of mediocrity? Boston’s flaws run deeper than a lineup card, but the manager’s seat is undeniably warming. At some point, even loyalty becomes a luxury a losing team can’t afford. If the Red Sox want wins, not warm memories, tough calls are coming. And Cora might just be the first name on that list.
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