The Red Sox have fired Chaim Bloom

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Petagine in a Bottle

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This is indicative of how Henry and co operate. They get the guy to rebuild the farm and then bring in someone else for the championship push.
If the real plan is to add two high priced pitchers this off-season, I feel confident that we will be doing this again in four years when the bloated payroll causes problems.
 

chawson

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Saying "the cycle" of hire a farm GM, fire him, hire a go-for-it GM, fire him, and back again might be ruthless in efficiency but it can't be good for your reputation as an organization, surely?
Unless you're 74 and planning to sell in a few years?
 

voidfunkt

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Welp, can only surmise they believe now they have young contributors, a restocked farm and some room to maneuver in the market but don't have trust in Bloom as the guy that can put together a contender.
I buy this.

ust feels like they really don't know what kind of club they want to have
I completely and 100% agree with this.

2) They saw 3 last place finishes in 4 years, ownership becoming very unpopular (they did that themselves with mookie and Orsillo) and said "we need a fall guy, screw the 5 year plan"
No need to rehash Mookie, but I totally agree that the Red Sox ownership has blown their own foot off with several bad decisions over the last couple years. If they were winning shit loads of games then great, but a mediocre and boring product and a losing team is a recipe for disinterest.
 

Shaky Walton

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I'm not surprised in the least. You are what your record says you are. We'll never know whether Bloom was doing Henry's bidding and this is totally unfair or if Henry agreed with the direction overall and was being deferential to Bloom.

I saw a guy who was often indecisive and inconsistent, and who made many decisions that I disagreed with. I'm glad the farm system seems to be in better shape and am even more glad that someone else will take the reigns.

This is the best Red Sox news I've heard in a very long time.
 

trekfan55

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If they think they can find someone to execute the same game plan more effectively, then okay. If this is yet another zig-zag, it's a disastrous mistake.
Yeah, please don't hire a win now/trade the farn Dombrowski type,

They have a core of young players coming up and money to spend.

Like I said in the other thread, this was coming. He rebuilt the farm, but the team is ready to take the next step of acquiring impact talent from outside the org and they must not think Chaim is the guy to do it.
Agreed. But at least get someone who knows and understands the value of the far system. Not someone who will pick up the phone and trade Mayer for someone in order to shoot for the WS in 2024.

BTW, this team almost went to the WS in 2021 and lookes like a playoff team for significant parts of the season with some duck tape.
 

Auger34

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Surprised but not shocked.

I always thought it was incredibly stupid and head in the clouds for posters here to legitimately think that Henry was ok with last place finishes and mediocrity at the big league level

I think he did an ok job. Personally, I would have let him have another year. But I also think that he’s nowhere near as good as a lot of the people on this board
 

mikcou

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I figured he would get 2024, but I'm surprised that people are surprised. You dont get mulligans on putting together competitive teams over and over again.

He did improve the minor league system, but four years in and realistically its still really hard to see the path to winning 90+ games a year absent massive spending this offseason. Pretty fair to question whether hes the correct guy to execute on that.
 

nattysez

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I am very, very down on Bloom, but this makes no sense. To the extent he had a plan, next year was when it was going to come to fruition -- the young bucks were going to start rounding into form. Ownership saddled Bloom with the Sale contract and trading Mookie, then dispatched him just when his work was going to bear fruit. I don't get it.
 

The Gray Eagle

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Shocking that they are replacing Bloom with Dante from Clerks. (Jason Mewes would have been a more media-friendly choice.)

The whole pitching coordination philosophy and strategies throughout the entire organization need a long hard look. Hard to believe an internal hire will do that though.
What I wouldn't give for the Red Sox to find a way to bring in Kyle Snyder to take over the pitching.

I wonder if this means Cora is staying, since O'Halloran has been here a long time?
Theo coming back would be fantastic, but as was noted above, seems like a longshot.
Looks like Chaim is the fall guy for dropping TV ratings, attendance, and fan interest. Which of course is significant, but should have been expected when you try to build the farm for the future.
The Whiner Line group got their way, which is almost never a good thing.
I think Bloom is going to look a whole lot better in a few years when a lot of the AA guys are in the majors.
Especially if they start doing go-for-it-now moves that don't pay off.
 
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nvalvo

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Genuinely shocked.

If there's a pattern, it could be that JWH likes different GMs for rebuilds and contention windows. Cherington~Bloom | Dombrowski~???

Unlike his predecessors (Sandoval, Castillo, Sale, I genuinely can't point to a big mistake in the Bloom era. Story? I think it's too soon to say.
I hate this move for precisely this reason.
 

Petagine in a Bottle

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It's funny seeing the reaction on Reddit from other fanbases being "wtf are the Red Sox doing firing this guy" and the reaction here being "but he didn't turn the pile of crap he was left with into a World Series contender when he was told to trade away his best player". We are truly a spoiled fanbase.
Pile of crap seems a bit much. Devers, Betts, Bogaerts, Sale, Eovaldi, Eduardo Rodriguez, Benintendi, Vazquez were decent players.

At least Bloom brought us the current core- guys like Casas, Bello, Houck, Duran, and Rafaela.

oh wait…..
 

brandonchristensen

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I am very, very down on Bloom, but this makes no sense. To the extent he had a plan, next year was when it was going to come to fruition -- the young bucks were going to start rounding into form. Ownership saddled Bloom with the Sale contract and trading Mookie, then dispatched him just when his work was going to bear fruit. I don't get it.
Horrendous.
They make it incredibly hard to root for this team.
 

InsideTheParker

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I just hope whoever comes in has "fix the fucking pitching pipeline" as a mandate.
I reckon the Sox thought by hiring Bloom they could get in on the pitching development that has worked so well for the Rays. Whereas, he just brought in some broken pitchers to add to the broken Sale. Pitching is the Sox bete noir, no matter how well they may have pitched well on any occasion.
 

Eddie Jurak

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In the end I feel Chaim was an example of the Peter Principle in action. He could identify prospects and help with a farm system, but he struggled with identifying and scouting major league talent and could not do the most important job of a GM: put a winner on the field.
I don't think Bloom was dealt a great hand when he got here, and he has done some good things. But at the end of the day I think you are right about the Peter Principle.

His bad hand:
  • He took over a farm system that was an absolute embarassmant.
  • I think Covid and the restructring of MiLB had a negative impact on his ability to rebuild.
  • Management wanted to slash payroll by trading stars (Betts) or letting them walk (Bogaerts)
That's a lot. Almost enough for me to say "Peter Principle" isn;t fait. ut not quite. Where he compounded the problem was poor trading. He got pennies on the dollar for Mookie Betts and others. He seemed genuinely interested in retaining Bogaerts while not offering a competitive contract. He traded away some lesser assets (e.g., Benintendi, Reddick) without getting value in return. For this year he built the worst defensive team the Red Sox have had in decades, with below average players at almost every spot on the field for much of the year.

On the other hand, the farm system seems finally to be rebuilt and players drafted under Bloom are getting close to the majors.
 

chawson

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Put together three last-place teams that all have the same fundamental problems and it's no surprise that Bloom is out of a job. The only part of the gig he did well was build a farm system, and the jury is still mostly out on the results from the bulk of the players he's drafted or acquired. I think it's pretty clear that free agency and managing a major league roster are significant weak points for him. Seems like he's just not cut out to be The Guy at the top of an org chart.
Yes, let's blame the 2020 Red Sox on Chaim Bloom.
 

mauidano

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So Alex Cora is obviously next. The two positions usually go hand in hand.
 

RedOctober3829

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If they go out and hire another Ivy League unproven assistant GM-type, why make this move? They had better bring in a proven leader who can elevate the major league team while continuing to develop the minor leagues even further.
 

PedroKsBambino

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I wonder if the discussions between Bloom and ownership the last two trade deadlines are a piece of this—because they made a bad call each time. Whether that bad call is ownership saying “go for it” and Bloom resisting or the opposite will be interesting to see if we get insight into.

I was generally supportive of Bloom and also do wonder if he’s really a “B” exec rather than an “A” level guy. If that’s Henry’s assessment I’m all for going for an “A” to finish the job. I have not been impressed with the roster-building at MLB level and that matters a lot
 

Red Averages

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My guess:

Chaim was hired with a tough task of:
- Cut payroll to avoid penalties.
- Rebuild a farm that has been completely gutted
- Get the team to be a marginal contender that keeps fans interested by making value acquisitions.

He did #1. He did #2. In 2021 he got them to the Al Championship Series. Since then they have been terrible in 2022 and 2023.

The new objective is:
- We've cut payroll and can spend again
- The farm has been rebuilt and is an asset.
- Get the team to be a real contender, by spending money and trading for star quality assets with the farm surplus.

I can see why management would be happy with what he did, but not necessarily think he's the guy for the new objective.
 

Harry Hooper

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Back in the preseason poll I voted he'd be fired by Labor Day, so not quite right.

https://sonsofsamhorn.net/index.php?threads/how-long-will-chaim-last.38359/




Looks like the $59 4 tickets/4 drinks/4 hot dogs packages this month were the exclamation point on top of the cratered NESN ad revenues and greatly diminished fandom mindshare for the club. The prospect of well under 20,000 fans showing up this afternoon put everything in high relief. The Bearclaw game probably was deeply disturbing for the ownership as well.
 
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TheYellowDart5

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I figured he would get 2024, but I'm surprised that people are surprised. You dont get mulligans on putting together competitive teams over and over again.

He did improve the minor league system, but four years in and realistically its still really hard to see the path to winning 90+ games a year absent massive spending this offseason. Pretty fair to question whether hes the correct guy to execute on that.
If anything all the various 2024 roster/core posts around here have made clear, it's that the vaunted young depth that Bloom has been building since he took over still isn't ready to play a significant role. Four years of cycling through pitchers has resulted in one above-average starter in Bello and a bunch of guys who look like relievers or swingmen. Where is the Rays-esque pitching development that was part and parcel of hiring Bloom? The blame goes beyond him, but he simply wasn't delivering at the major league level, and I don't think there was much reason to expect better in 2024. Granted, that'll be a problem for the next guy, too, and this is where I hope that the plan isn't simply to hand the reigns off to O'Halloran and keep things status quo.
 

caminante11

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Maybe they were hoping Chaim would bring some Tampa Bay magic where they take a retread like Diekman and turn them into a good pitcher. That hasn't happened for the most part. Hope the new guy does better at this. Some organizations have reputations of being good at this.
 

Kenny F'ing Powers

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It's funny seeing the reaction on Reddit from other fanbases being "wtf are the Red Sox doing firing this guy" and the reaction here being "but he didn't turn the pile of crap he was left with into a World Series contender when he was told to trade away his best player". We are truly a spoiled fanbase.
Screenshot_20230914_124747_Chrome.jpg

When you're a GM for 4 seasons with one of the largest payrolls in baseball, finishing the season 16 games back on average isn't super awesome. Was he handed shit? Maybe. But someone has to be held accountable.
 

santadevil

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So what are the realistic options out there?
Ladies and Gentlemen, the Red Sox are pleased to announce their next Presdient of Baseball Operations...Mr. Brian Cashman


I don't love moving on from Bloom right now. Like others here, I figured he had one more year to prove it, before they moved on
 

JCizzle

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I personally felt he didn't live up to the expectations I had for him based on how the Rays have performed. However, I'm still somewhat surprised it happened right now. Very interested to see what type of person they pick next.
 

sodenj5

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A bit of a joke from ownership. They brought Chaim in and made him the public punching bag and do all of the dirty work.
 

Auger34

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I wonder if the discussions between Bloom and ownership the last two trade deadlines are a piece of this—because they made a bad call each time. Whether that bad call is ownership saying “go for it” and Bloom resisting or the opposite will be interesting to see if we get insight into.

I was generally supportive of Bloom and also do wonder if he’s really an “A” exec rather than a “B”. If that’s Henry’s assessment I’m all for going for an “A” ti finish the job.
This is a great post and this is what I am thinking (both paragraphs). I also buy into the idea that Bloom was too deliberate..to the point that nothing ended up being done
 

The Filthy One

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Does anybody think Alex Cora can actually run a baseball front office? Are there other recent examples of managers being able to make that jump? That seems like an offhand tweet and nothing more. I don't get this move at all, but I assume it had something to do with how the upcoming offseason was going to play out. Maybe a difference of opinion on direction there.
 
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