Tag Archives: Trevor

Jaguars Training Camp, Day 10: Observations on Trevor Lawrence, Travon Walker and More – Sports Illustrated

  1. Jaguars Training Camp, Day 10: Observations on Trevor Lawrence, Travon Walker and More Sports Illustrated
  2. News4JAGs: Intensity picks up in 10th training camp practice on Sunday News4JAX The Local Station
  3. Jaguars’ Longest Training Camp Practice to Date Sets the Stage As ‘Dog Days’ Continue | Campservations: Day 10 jaguars.com
  4. Training camp notebook: Can offense and defense take second-year leap under Doug Pederson? WJXT News4JAX
  5. Jaguars Sunday camp report: Trevor Lawrence clicks with Calvin Ridley The Florida Times-Union
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Alisa Mathewson, Florida mom, describes rescue after being held captive by estranged husband Trevor Summers: “I’d been pulled from hell” – CBS News

  1. Alisa Mathewson, Florida mom, describes rescue after being held captive by estranged husband Trevor Summers: “I’d been pulled from hell” CBS News
  2. Sick details emerge in Alisa Mathewson kidnapping after ex Trevor Summers binds her with Christmas lights… The US Sun
  3. Trevor Summers: Where is Alisa Mathewson’s Ex-Husband Now? The Cinemaholic
  4. Alisa Mathewson’s 55 hours of terror CBS News
  5. Alisa Mathewson case: Florida father Trevor Summers told 14-year-old daughter to drive her younger siblings home as he abducted their mother CBS News
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A Letter to Jacksonville by Trevor Lawrence | The Players’ Tribune – The Players’ Tribune

  1. A Letter to Jacksonville by Trevor Lawrence | The Players’ Tribune The Players’ Tribune
  2. Jaguars QB Trevor Lawrence Talks Urban Meyer, Doug Pederson & More with Rich Eisen | Full Interview The Rich Eisen Show
  3. Trevor Lawrence’s Wife Marissa Mowry Models Chanel Bag & Gucci Sneakers Ahead of the Super Bowl Footwear News
  4. Trevor Lawrence: ‘I don’t think people realize how die-hard our fans are’ Jaguars Wire
  5. Jaguars QB Trevor Lawrence on Urban Meyer & His Growth Under HC Doug Pederson | The Rich Eisen Show The Rich Eisen Show
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Jaguars QB Trevor Lawrence Talks Urban Meyer, Doug Pederson & More with Rich Eisen | Full Interview – The Rich Eisen Show

  1. Jaguars QB Trevor Lawrence Talks Urban Meyer, Doug Pederson & More with Rich Eisen | Full Interview The Rich Eisen Show
  2. Trevor Lawrence reveals his favorite Jaguars uniform combo Jaguars Wire
  3. Jacksonville Jaguars Trevor Lawrence Reveals How He Knew Wife Marissa Mowry Was The One Us Weekly
  4. Trevor Lawrence’s Wife Marissa Mowry Models Chanel Bag & Gucci Sneakers Ahead of the Super Bowl Footwear News
  5. Jaguars QB Trevor Lawrence on Urban Meyer & His Growth Under HC Doug Pederson | The Rich Eisen Show The Rich Eisen Show
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Green M&Ms. Chinese spy balloon. Adele and The Rock introduction. Trevor Noah’s Grammy monologue is a journey. – Yahoo Entertainment

  1. Green M&Ms. Chinese spy balloon. Adele and The Rock introduction. Trevor Noah’s Grammy monologue is a journey. Yahoo Entertainment
  2. TREVOR NOAH Hands BEYONCÉ Her GRAMMY Award | 2023 GRAMMYs Recording Academy / GRAMMYs
  3. Trevor Noah has kicked off the 2023 Grammys. Here’s what he said in his opening monologue AOL
  4. Host Trevor Noah kicked off the Grammys — by formally introducing Adele and the Rock? Yahoo News
  5. Trevor Noah Makes Taylor Swift, Beyoncé & Harry Styles Jokes In Grammys Monologue Access Hollywood
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Trevor Lawrence, Jaguars stun Chargers in playoffs

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – The Jaguars started on the wrong side of history and came out of it on the other.

Just like that, the storybook season continues with a playoff performance for the ages.

Trevor Lawrence erased the worst half of football in his life with one of the best, leading the Jaguars to a somehow-they-did-it and you-still-can’t-believe-it-happened 31-30 comeback over the Chargers on a chilly Saturday night at TIAA Bank Field.

Riley Patterson’s 36-yard field as time ran off the clock set off an electric celebration that put a series of exclamation points on a comeback from a 27-0 deficit.

Yes, 27-0! The Jaguars had five turnovers and were dead in the water in the opening half. They roared back and delivered Doug Pederson one of the most stunning victories of his career.

“I mean, it’s everything. That’s just what I told them at halftime, it’s kind of like our season,” Pederson said. “We’ve put ourselves in a hole at times, and we’ve worked ourselves out of it at times. Just to have the resiliency and the fight and the desire and the ability to continue to play, because it could have easily gone the other way, and that’s what I’m so proud of these guys for. Everything is on the line, and they go out and get the job done.”

Lawrence tossed four interceptions in the first half and countered that with four touchdowns and a clutch two-point conversion vault after that with 5 minutes, 30 seconds to play to get Jacksonville in position for a comeback that didn’t seem realistic. The defense forced a punt and Lawrence engineered a classic drive from his own 21 to set Patterson up for the dagger to win it.

It was the third-largest comeback in playoff history and sends the Jaguars into the divisional playoffs next week. Their opponent will be finalized Sunday but will likely be either the top-seeded Chiefs or the No. 2-seed Bills, barring major upsets.

“Typical us,” said receiver Marvin Jones. “We know how to throw a good party.”

Added receiver Christian Kirk: “I told them we’re never doing that again.”

That the Jaguars were even sniffing the divisional round was unthinkable when the game was in the first half.

Lawrence threw four interceptions in the first two quarters — half of what he threw in the previous 17 games combined — that silenced the crowd of 70,250 just about immediately. That start was historically bad, but Lawrence’s finish managed to make that a footnote.

From a 27-0 deficit in the second quarter, Lawrence threw second-half touchdown passes to Zay Jones, Christian Kirk and to Marvin Jones, then added a two-point conversion leap over the pile to make it 30-28 with 5:30 to go. Lawrence, sensing that the impossible was within reach, spiked the ball down as hard as he’s ever done after a scoring play and the crowd went ballistic.

The Jaguars defense came up huge after that. Roy Robertson-Harris sacked Justin Herbert for a loss of 8. And Foye Oluokun stopped Joshua Kelly short on third down to force a punt. Lawrence got it back with 3:09 left at his own 21.

“I mean, the odds, I told the boys, I don’t like my odds but I love my chances,” Oluokun said. “As long as there’s a little probability of winning at all, we’re going to keep fighting. We saw the tables start turning, we had momentum, we kept that, we keep getting the ball back to the offense and they started rolling.”

Down the field Lawrence moved the Jaguars, hitting Kirk, Marvin Jones and Zay Jones with four passes, although a third-and-1 target to Kirk was off. That set up a play for the game. Fourth-and-1 at the Chargers 41 and too far for Patterson, Pederson called on Travis Etienne.

Instead of going up the middle, Etienne broke around the right side and had an open field to work with. He was tackled after a gain of 20 and that set Patterson up for a makeable shot which he nailed.

Ballgame.

Lawrence’s three first-quarter interceptions marked the first time in NFL playoff history that a quarterback was picked off three times in the first quarter, according to the Boston Globe.

His four first-half interceptions are a dubious feat accomplished just one other time in playoff history, in the 1978 Super Bowl by Denver’s Craig Morton against the Cowboys. Lawrence finished 28 of 47 for 288 yards, four touchdowns and four interceptions.

“For myself, obviously yeah, definitely the worst half of my football life, of a lot of people’s football life, too,” Lawrence said. “Some type of history probably in that stat.”

He found a rhythm after that disastrous start, bringing Jacksonville to within 30-20 on a 39-yard touchdown to Zay Jones late in the third quarter.

Lawrence turned in the worst game he’s had at any level of football, throwing an interception on the second play of the game, another on Jacksonville’s next drive and another late in the opening quarter. Those led to 17 quick points for the Chargers and a lead that was nearly too steep to overcome.

“I played with one of the greatest quarterbacks ever in Brett Favre and there were times he didn’t have a great first half and came back in the second half and could light it up,” Pederson said.

“That’s what I love about Trevor and his demeanor and his aggressiveness and the ability to just forget and move on. But he’ll be the first one to tell you that it’s not about him, it’s the guys around him, too. [They] made plays, the protection was good, receivers were doing a nice job being where they needed to be. But from an individual standpoint, this is really a great performance by our quarterback.”

Lawrence got out of his funk before halftime, throwing a 9-yard touchdown to Evan Engram. He added that 39-yard strike to Jones and a 6-yard pass to Marvin Jones in the third quarter that whittled the deficit to 30-20.

That started the thought process. Maybe, just maybe?

“Hopefully we play a little bit better next week. The defense, hopefully they play just like they did tonight. They did a great job. But offensively you can’t turn the ball over that many times and expect to win. We found a way tonight, but it’s probably not a good formula moving forward,” Lawrence said. “So, I know for me personally, it shouldn’t take that type of second half to go win the game. If you just play better in the first half and take care of the ball.”

The start drained the electricity from the stadium in the blink of an eye. After picks on Jacksonville’s first two drives and a punt after that, Lawrence was picked for a third time in the first quarter, and the second by Asante Samuel, that set up a 6-yard touchdown run by Austin Ekeler. By the time the opening quarter ended in a 17-0 deficit, Lawrence had completed four passes to his teammates and three to the Chargers.

No one expected the Jaguars to be in this position. Cleaning up the mess of Urban Meyer and years of struggles before that, it would have been ambitious to Jacksonville turning the corner in 2022.

But the Jaguars escaped a 2-6 start and won their final five games of the season to snatch an unexpected AFC South title.

That’s house money. And the Jaguars are still spending it.

Copyright 2023 by WJXT News4JAX – All rights reserved.

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NFL playoffs: Trevor Lawrence levels up

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — During training camp, new Jaguars head coach Doug Pederson introduced the team to a philosophy endorsed by motivational speaker and former Navy SEAL Jocko Willink, a worldview in a single word: “Good.”

“When things are going bad, don’t get all bummed out,” Willink has said. “Don’t get frustrated. No, just look at the issue and say: ‘Good.’”

It’s a philosophy that turns challenge into opportunity, that locates a spark of positivity at the core of desolation. It’s supposed to fire up hope in even the most dire of circumstances — like, say, being down 27 points in a win-or-go-home playoff game.

Trevor Lawrence was pretty much as low as a man can get on a football field, having thrown four interceptions that helped contribute to that four-possession deficit. He was projecting an image of calm, but inside, he was at war with himself. Lawrence — who once went 41 games in high school without losing, and then another 29 in college — knew his team needed him to come through, but he could not stop throwing the ball into the Chargers’ hands.

So when a lineman came up to Lawrence and said, simply, “Good,” Lawrence’s first instinct was to brush it off, thinking, Not the time.

But as it turned out, Lawrence would spend the rest of the game being very good indeed.

The Jaguars’ Trevor Lawrence dives in for a 2-point conversion which cut a deficit that was as high as 27 points to 2 in the fourth quarter of Saturday’s AFC wild-card game against the Chargers. (Photo by Don Juan Moore/Getty Images)

Trevor Lawrence: ‘There’s no 27-point plays’

For most of the first half, the only happy Jaguars fan in all of TIAA Bank Field was the heavily tattooed gentleman bobbing merrily — and very much alone — in one of the pools high above the stadium’s end zone. Yes, he had watched Lawrence throw four — four! — first-half interceptions, but at least he was in a heated pool while the rest of the stadium shivered in sub-40-degree temperatures.

Lawrence’s woes began early, like first playoff pass of his career early. The Chargers’ Joey Bosa tipped the pass at the line, and Drue Tranquill snared it out of the air. Two plays later, Justin Herbert led the Chargers into the end zone. Less than 90 seconds into the game, Los Angeles was ahead 7-0.

It got worse, so much worse. Another errant Lawrence pass, another interception — then another, and another. The Jaguars’ first six possessions were NSFW: interception, interception, punt, interception, punt, interception, and then a muffed punt. That’s five turnovers that the Chargers built into a 27-0 lead with 4:25 remaining in the first half.

Jacksonville might be the only stadium that still proudly plays Limp Bizkit and gets a welcome response; down four possessions, Jaguars fans had to cheer for what they could. Lawrence began Jacksonville’s eighth possession of the half at midfield, and by then Jaguars fans were watching through their fingers and the rest of the NFL world was wondering how bad this was going to get. Would Lawrence top Brett Favre’s Super Bowl-era playoff record of six interceptions? Would the Jaguars realize they’d made a mistake in firing Urban Meyer? Would the franchise just bolt for London once and for all at halftime? For heaven’s sake, the Jaguars weren’t going to let Lawrence throw any more, would they?

In the huddle, Lawrence looked around at his teammates. “There’s no 27-point plays,” he said. “We’ve got to do this one play at a time.”

And then he did exactly that. A 12-yard pass to Travis Etienne on the right side. A 4-yard pass to Christian Kirk on the left. A 12-yard pass to Marvin Jones Jr. in the center of the field. And then a 5-yarder to Evan Engram in the end zone. Just like that, the Jaguars were on the board and running into the locker room with a touch of hope.

“I just needed to settle in. We couldn’t get any momentum going, couldn’t get any drive going,” Lawrence said. “I knew once we got the momentum back, we’ve been in that situation before.”

“Everybody rallied around him, everybody rallied around each other,” Marvin Jones Jr. said in the locker room after the game. “It was great talk on the sidelines. It was never pointing fingers, it was never, ‘Oh my gosh.’ More like, ‘I know this isn’t going to happen.’”

Undefeated in Saturday football

In the second half, much like the lone Jaguars swimmer high above the field, the Chargers found themselves in hot water, and much like the proverbial frog, they didn’t realize the danger they were in until it was far too hot to escape. Lawrence transformed from a tentative, misfiring embarrassment into the sleek, confident yardage-devouring machine he’d been over the season’s second half.

“Once we picked the tempo up, we started getting our looks and winning one-on-one matchups,” Jones said. “I feel like we could go up against anybody and have success.”

Numbers don’t always tell the story, but these do: Lawrence threw four interceptions, and then four touchdowns. His passer rating in the first half was 24.5; in the second half, 144.5. It was a miniature version of the Jaguars’ entire season: losing five of their first six, then winning their final five to storm into the playoffs on the season’s final weekend.

“It kind of epitomizes our season,” Lawrence said. “We’re never out of it. When you believe and everybody believes, it’s cool what you can accomplish.”

After this miracle 31-30 victory, the Jaguars’ future now looks as bright as the eye-searing teal that dominates their stadium. Lawrence leveled up against the Chargers, establishing himself as one of the AFC’s must-watch quarterbacks of the future. He is undefeated on Saturdays in high school, college and the pros, though none of those victories came as tough as this one. At age 23, he’s the unquestioned leader of the Jaguars’ locker room, proving it in the most definitive way possible.

“When you see him not blinking and going out there and putting it all on the line,” Kirk said, “it’s easy to get behind a guy like that.”

Raucous scene in Jacksonville

In the minutes after Riley Patterson’s game-winning field goal, as the delirious Jaguars streamed off the field and into the hallway beneath the stadium, team owner Shad Khan, wearing a sharp white sportcoat and black slacks, greeted and embraced players and coaches. Whoops and shouts filled the air, some wordless, some profane, all ecstatic. Linebacker Shaquille Quarterman carried an enormous Jaguar flag likely borrowed from a cheerleader.

“Do you believe in miracles?” someone shouted out, probably unaware that the man who’d made that classic call 43 years ago was a few floors above them, having just called their victory as well. This wasn’t a gold medal game, but it felt as good as any victory has in Jacksonville in a long time.

“Typical us, huh?” Jones laughed. “We know how to throw a good party.”

“It’s easy to say it after, but you don’t win a game like that if you don’t believe in yourself,” Lawrence said. “Proud of this group, this city. Special night for a lot of people, and I’m just thankful for everybody that played a part in it.”

The Jaguars now await the outcome of the rest of this weekend’s games. If the Ravens and Dolphins manage to overcome the loss of their starting quarterbacks and pull upsets on Sunday, Jacksonville will host Baltimore next week. Otherwise, the Jaguars will head to either Buffalo or Kansas City. For Jacksonville, every possible option is good.

Trevor Lawrence exulted in a miracle victory Saturday night. (Kevin Sabitus/Getty Images)

_____

Contact Jay Busbee at jay.busbee@yahoo.com or on Twitter at @jaybusbee.

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Jaguars vs. Chargers score: Trevor Lawrence leads 27-point comeback to down L.A. on Super Wild Card Weekend

The Jacksonville Jaguars came back from down 27-0 to defeat the Los Angeles Chargers on Super Wild Card Weekend, 31-30. After a rough start, Trevor Lawrence and the Jags embarked on a 24-3 second-half run, and completed the comeback with a 36-yard field goal from Riley Patterson as time expired. 

It was a tale of two halves for the Jaguars, and Lawrence had about as rough of a first half as one could have. On his first 16 passing attempts, the quarterback completed four to his teammates, and four to the Chargers. The former No. 1 overall pick was intercepted four times in the first half — three being recorded by Asante Samuel Jr. Lawrence became the fifth quarterback to throw three interceptions in a playoff quarter since 1991, but he was the first to do it in a first quarter. However, Lawrence came out of the halftime break rejuvenated.

Lawrence led three straight touchdown drives, and ran in a two-point conversion to trim the deficit to just two points with over five minutes remaining in the fourth quarter. After the Jaguars defense forced a three-and-out, Lawrence got a chance to write his own ending. With the game on the line, he led the offense 61 yards down the field on 10 plays, and Patterson sent the ball through the uprights as the clock hit triple zeros.

Check back soon, as this article will be turned into a takeaways piece which dives more deeply into what went down in Jacksonville on Saturday night. 

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Trevor Story has right elbow surgery

BOSTON — The Red Sox’s middle-infield picture became even more unclear Tuesday afternoon, when the club announced infielder Trevor Story underwent a successful internal bracing procedure of the ulnar collateral ligament in his right elbow on Monday. Dr. Keith Meister performed the surgery at Texas Metroplex Institute in Arlington, Texas.

In a Zoom call with reporters on Tuesday, chief baseball officer Chaim Bloom said that Story began experiencing pain in the elbow while ramping up his throwing just before Christmas.

“We’re not ready to put a timetable on it yet,” Bloom said. “I certainly would not rule out a return sometime during 2023. But it’s also not something at this stage that we want to bank on. It’ll take how long it takes. We want to make sure he’s 100 percent. But certainly with this being the internal brace procedure and not a Tommy John [surgery], it does leave the door open for a return this season.”

In the first season of his six-year contract with Boston, Story was limited to 94 games after missing time in July with a right hand contusion and then in September with a left heel contusion. Though Story’s elbow didn’t land him on the injured list in 2022, the 30-year-old did have a stint on the IL due to right elbow inflammation while with the Rockies in ’21.

In addition to his injury history, a recent drop in velocity has raised flags around Story. After his move from shortstop to second base, Story’s average velocity on throws dipped from 79.1 mph in ’21 to 76.1 mph last season.

“Obviously recognizing that his throwing has not been what it was in the past, everything when we did the physical when we signed him looked good and he felt good throughout the season,” Bloom said. “This, what he experienced in this incident, was something new.”

Despite the velocity concerns, Story was the likely candidate to take over at shortstop after Boston lost Xander Bogaerts to the Padres via free agency this offseason. Bloom said that as Story ramped up his throwing, he was doing so in preparation to become the everyday shortstop.

“Until you see how the offseason played out, it was still an open question where we hadn’t set anything in stone,” Bloom said, “but he was preparing to play shortstop. And for him, that’s something that he was vocal with us about wanting to do.

“Obviously his hope was that if Xander left, it would be an opportunity that he would get, and that’s where his head was. Understanding he was always going to do whatever we thought was best for the team and there were certain ways the roster could come out where he’d be our second baseman. But his mindset was to prepare to play shortstop.”

Now, the Red Sox are left with two gaping holes in their infield after a last-place finish in the American League East in 2022.

So with Spring Training just over a month away, what does this news mean for the roster?

“It means there’s more to do,” Bloom said. “We already wanted to strengthen the middle of the field obviously, even when Trevor was healthy that was the case. We were fortunate that we had him and Kiké [Hernández] as good options that covered us in a number of different ways. Obviously Kiké can still do that, but it’s an area that we certainly want and need to add to.”

Minus Story, the players currently on the 40-man roster have combined for 112 career starts at shortstop:

Hernández and Arroyo remain options to fill in at the position, though shifting Hernández to the infield would require Boston to make an outfield addition. And Arroyo’s history of injuries raises concern.

Should Boston go the outside-hire route, six free-agent shortstops remain on the market, including José Iglesias — who played parts of four seasons with Boston, most recently in 2021.

“I would expect we’re going to add,” Bloom said. “Frankly, that was my expectation even before this. Whether that’s through free agency or trade, I don’t know yet what that looks like, who it is.

“Obviously, it’s something we were already actively discussing even before this. And now we’re a man down so we’re going to have to fortify ourselves further. Our expectation was always that in some way, shape or form we would have outside additions joining our position player group and so that’s still the case.”

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Trevor Story Underwent Internal Brace Surgery On Right Elbow

3:10pm: Bloom didn’t provide a specific timeline on Story for the upcoming season, noting that a return is possible “but it’s not something at this stage we want to bank on,” per Alex Speier of the Boston Globe. Bloom also said Story was preparing to play shortstop before aggravating his elbow, per Speier.

2:50: Red Sox infielder Trevor Story had internal brace surgery on his right elbow yesterday, per a release from the team. “Boston Red Sox infielder Trevor Story yesterday underwent a successful internal bracing procedure of the right ulnar collateral ligament (elbow),” the statement reads. “Dr. Keith Meister performed the surgery at Texas Metroplex Institute in Arlington, Texas.” Chris Cotillo of MassLive. reported the surgery shortly before the official announcement and adds that chief baseball officer Chaim Bloom will speak at 4pm Eastern/3pm Central.

The club has not provided a timeline on Story’s expected recovery, with that information perhaps to come when Bloom speaks. Until that information comes out, we can only speculate on the timeline, but it’s worth pointing out that the UCL is the same ligament that is replaced in Tommy John surgery. The internal brace procedure is generally considered to be less invasive and allow players to return quicker, but the recovery period still usually takes months. For one recent example, outfielder Eli White underwent the procedure while a member of the Rangers last year, with the club announcing at that time that White was expected to miss six months. Each player is unique and will have their own responses to different injuries, but it seems fair to assume that Story is slated for a significant absence of some kind.

For Story, there have been concerns swirling around his throwing arm for some time now. He made 11 throwing errors while with the Rockies in 2021, with some scouts expressing trepidation about this throws after that season. Statcast’s new arm strength leaderboard ranked Story as averaging 79.1 mph on his throws from short, a mark that placed him 52nd out of 58 shortstops to make at least 100 throws that year. That was a noticeable drop from 2020, when Story was at 82.3 mph and ranked 22nd out of 34 shortstops who made 100 throws.

Despite those concerns, the Sox signed Story to a six-year, $140MM deal going into 2022. At the time of the signing, Story was expected to play second base in deference to shortstop Xander Bogaerts, but it was also seen as a possible safety net for a Bogaerts departure. Since Bogaerts had the ability to opt out of his deal after 2022, the Sox would then have the option of sliding Story to the other side of the bag to replace him.

The position change gave Story and the Sox a year to evaluate things, with Story making shorter throws from second. He averaged 76.1 mph on his throws last year, which was another drop from the year before and placed him 61st among 70 second basemen to make 100 throws on the year. On top of that, the Sox indeed saw Bogaerts opt out of his contract and sign with the Padres this winter.

Though Story’s timeline is still to be determined, it seems like the Sox will now have to figure out how to navigate their middle infield without Bogaerts or Story, at least for a few months. If the club decides to stick with internal options, they could go with Enrique Hernández and Christian Arroyo, though Hernandez seemed ticketed to be the everyday center fielder, so they would have to figure out a solution there. Jarren Duran would be an option to take over in center, though he struggled in 2022 by hitting just .221/.283/.363. There are some other infielders on the roster such as David Hamilton and Enmanuel Valdez, though they’ve only recently been added and have no major league experience.

It’s also possible the club could look for external upgrades. The top free agent options are all off the board, assuming today’s Carlos Correa deal with the Twins is the one that finally gets across the finish line. Elvis Andrus, Josh Harrison and Andrelton Simmons are some of the middle infield options still on the board, if the Sox decide to go that route. On the trade market, there are some players who could be available, such as Isiah Kiner-Falefa of the Yankees, though an inter-division trade might be tricky. Amed Rosario of the Guardians has been mentioned as a speculative candidate, as has Nick Madrigal of the Cubs. The Sox and Marlins have reportedly discussed Joey Wendle and Miguel Rojas in trade talks, so perhaps those discussions could be revisited in light of today’s news.

However the Sox approach it, it seems fair to say that they have been dealt a blow for 2023. Despite being hurt in 2022, Story still hit 16 home runs in 94 games and slashed .238/.303/.434. One silver lining of the surgery is that there’s at least an explanation for his diminished arm strength. If the surgery is successful in repairing his ligament and he’s able to get back into form, perhaps he can take over the shortstop position later in the year. Story’s contract runs through 2027 but he has the ability to opt out after 2025, with the Sox then able to negate the opt-out by tacking on another year and keeping him through 2028.



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