The Red Sox season changed dramatically back on April 25th when the team fired Alex Cora and appointed Chad Tracy as interim manager. However, their initial trajectory did not. Starting seven games under .500 when Tracy took over, the team fell another seven games under .500 over the next eight weeks. (It certainly hasn’t helped matters that Garrett Crochet and Roman Anthony have each been absent for over two months.)
But now? They’ve won 14 of their last 16 games and rocketed back into the race. And oddly enough, it’s not the first time something like this has happened in the Tracy family. Back in 2009, Chad’s father Jim took over the Colorado Rockies when they got off to a horrible start under Clint Hurdle. That group bottomed out at 12 games under .500 at 20-32 before ripping off 17 of 18 slightly earlier in the calendar than this Red Sox team.
Advertisement
Still, the resemblance is remarkable. Check out this graph from the wonderful folks at pennant-race.com comparing the 2009 Rockies (who went on to make the playoffs with 92 wins) and the 2026 Red Sox:
So now the question is, can it continue? They 2026 Red Sox have less time left on the calendar than the 2009 Rockies when they approached .500, but they also don’t need to climb nearly as high given the additional Wild Card spots and the historically weak American League.
Either way, if Chad Tracy ends up leading this team to the playoffs from 14 games under .500 after taking over partway through the season 17 years after his father Jim led a Rockies team to the playoffs from 12 games under .500 after taking over partway through the season, it will be an amazing family accomplishment.
Talk about this and whatever else you’d like as we wait through one last day of All-Star break doldrums, and as always, be good to one another.
Read the full article here

