The Boston Red Sox have been searching for reasons to believe all season. Wednesday night in Kansas City gave them another one. Jarren Duran hit a go-ahead two-run homer in the seventh inning, and the Red Sox walked away with a 4-3 win to complete a three-game sweep of the Royals.
Boston has now won four of its last five games.
The Red Sox are still 22-27, still trying to find consistency at home after going 8-14 at Fenway. But something has shifted over the past week.
Duran is one of the main reasons why.
Tracy Sends Message on Duran
The numbers from Duran’s three games in Kansas City tell the story on their own.
Across the series, he went 5-for-10 with four walks, two home runs, a double, a triple, and a stolen base. He made multiple standout defensive plays. He hit go-ahead homers in consecutive games. This was no longer just one good night. It was a pattern.
Interim manager Chad Tracy acknowledged that when Duran operates at this level, the ceiling of what the Red Sox can do changes completely.
“If he starts going, it’s no secret that’s going to help us go,” Tracy said.
The offense has been the team’s biggest limitation all season. A locked-in Duran changes the conversation. When he goes, the Red Sox go with him.
GettyBOSTON, MA – MAY 10: Manager Chad Tracy #17 of the Boston Red Sox looks on from the dugout during the sixth inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Fenway Park on May 10, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo By Winslow Townson/Getty Images)
What Duran Did Wednesday
The homer was the headline, but it was not the whole story.
In the third inning, with the game still tight, Garcia sliced a ball toward the left-field line. Duran was shaded toward left-center. He covered the distance in a full sprint, launched himself at the fence, and came down with it. That catch preserved the moment and kept Boston from losing control before the offense could answer.
The answer came in the seventh.
With the Red Sox trailing 3-2 and Carlos Narváez on first, Duran worked himself into a favorable count before driving a 99 mph fastball the other way. The two-run homer landed in the Red Sox bullpen, gave Boston a 4-3 lead, and turned another tight game into another Duran moment. It was his sixth homer of the year and his fifth with runners on base.
GettyKANSAS CITY, MISSOURI – MAY 20: Jarren Duran #16 of the Boston Red Sox celebrates his two-run home run with teammates against the Kansas City Royals in the seventh inning at Kauffman Stadium on May 20, 2026 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Ed Zurga/Getty Images)
What It Could Mean For The Red Sox
Two dominant games do not erase five weeks of offensive struggles.
The Red Sox know that. They are still below .500, and the next test comes at Fenway, where they have struggled to build any real rhythm this season. But the Duran question feels different now than it did a week ago.
He had not looked like himself for much of the opening stretch. In Kansas City, that changed. The speed was there. The power was there. The defense was loud. The at-bat quality improved. For three games, Duran looked like one of the most dynamic leadoff hitters in the American League again.
That changes the shape of the lineup.
GettyKANSAS CITY, MISSOURI – MAY 20: Jarren Duran #16 of the Boston Red Sox hits a two-run home run against the Kansas City Royals in the seventh inning at Kauffman Stadium on May 20, 2026 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Ed Zurga/Getty Images)
Final Word for the Red Sox
The sweep matters. Not because it fixes everything, but because it showed what this team looks like when the offense finally adds to what the pitching has been doing all month.
Duran was the difference in Kansas City. He gave the Red Sox power, speed, defense, and pressure from the top of the lineup.
That is the version Boston has been waiting on. The Twins are next. Fenway is waiting.
Duran is just getting started.
Like HEAVY’s content? Be sure to follow us.
This article was originally published on HEAVY
The post Red Sox Manager Drops Bold Jarren Duran Statement After Royals Game appeared first on HEAVY.