The Boston Red Sox may have picked up a much-needed 17-1 blowout victory over the Baltimore Orioles on Saturday afternoon, but that wasn’t enough to save manager Alex Cora from getting fired. Shortly after the huge victory, the team announced that it was cleaning house, with Cora headlining a group of six coaches that had been canned by the team.
Given all Cora has accomplished during his time with Boston, seeing the team move on from him, even with its early-season struggles, was stunning. On Sunday morning, general manager Craig Breslow finally addressed the team’s decision to fire Cora with a blunt six-word message to reporters.
Craig Breslow Sheds Light on Alex Cora Firing
Cora was hired by the Sox in 2018, and he immediately led the team to a World Series title. While he was briefly let go of by the team in 2020 due to his role in the Houston Astros sign-stealing scandal, he returned in 2021, and he’s been in town ever since then. Boston has obviously crawled out to a 10-17 record, but many folks figured Cora would be given time to right the ship.
Instead, he has found himself searching for a new job in the blink of an eye. Despite being dealt a less-than-stellar roster by Breslow and the team’s penny-pinching ownership group, Cora and several other members of the coaching staff were held at fault for the team’s slow start to the year. Cora deserves a fair share of the blame, no doubt, but it’s not too hard to see where the real issues with the Red Sox are stemming from.
For the time being, though, Cora’s head has been served on a platter to Boston’s rabid fanbase, with Worcester Red Sox manager Chad Tracy being tabbed as the big-league club’s new interim manager. A large section of folks wanted to see Breslow get fired instead of Cora, but he ended up being the one who had to explain why the team fired its manager after its most encouraging win of the season.
“We felt these changes were warranted,” Breslow simply said at his joint press conference with team president Sam Kennedy.
Why Firing Alex Cora Won’t Change Things for the Red Sox
GettyBALTIMORE, MD – AUGUST 28: Alex Cora #13 of the Boston Red Sox addresses the media before a baseball game against the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on August 28, 2025 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Mitchell Layton/Getty Images)
Firing Cora will appease fans for a while, but even then, it’s not going to accomplish what the team is hoping for. Tracy may be the best manager in the world, but the problem isn’t with who is in charge of the team. Instead, the issue is that Boston’s ownership group does not want to do what it takes to build a championship-winning team.
Cora’s firing isn’t going to change that, and even moving on from Breslow wouldn’t move the needle in that department. Until team owner John Henry has a change of heart or sells the team, Boston is going to be stuck in the sort of purgatory it has been meddling in for the past few years. The Red Sox’s struggles warranted a big move, but firing Cora isn’t going to solve any of the franchise’s real issues.
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