Jun. 13, Red Sox vs Yankees
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While not the best of buddies prior to uniting on the Yankees, the two knew each other through a mutual friend, Lucas Giolito. The Red Sox starter played high school ball with Fried at Harvard-Westlake in Los Angeles and shared a White Sox clubhouse with Rodón from 2016-2021.
After his impressive 2021 and 2022 seasons with the Chicago White Sox and San Francisco Giants, respectively, the Yankees decided to sign him to a six-year, $162 million contract in free agency.
Rodon’s performance this season makes a strong case. He owns a 2.87 ERA, a 3.27 FIP, and a 10.9 K/9 rate, all his best marks since arriving in the Bronx. More importantly, he’s been dominant when the Yankees have needed him most.
Carlos Rodón was cruising. Through 4.2 innings on Sunday night, the Yankees left-hander had held the Boston Red Sox scoreless and limited them to only two baserunners. Rodón, in the midst of an
Facing Yankees reliever Jonathan Loáisiga in the eighth, Boston started the inning with back-to-back solo home runs from third baseman Abraham Toro and shortstop Trevor Story. Suddenly, it was a four-run lead for the Red Sox again.
Carlos Rodon reflects on his difficult first year with the New York Yankees and how fatherhood and mental resilience helped fuel his 2024 resurgence on the mound. Now a key piece in the rotation, Rodon is thriving as the Yankees push toward October.
Carlos Rodon reflects on his first season with the Yankees which is a far cry compared to his current production.
The elbow injury suffered by Gerrit Cole continues to make noise and generate regrets in the Yankees environment. The team was left without one of its most important players and ha
After demolishing Triple-A left-handers all spring, the Red Sox are hoping Roman Anthony can do the same to Yankees southpaw Ryan Yarbrough on Friday night.