The Boston Red Sox needed a response. Monday night’s series opener in Denver ended with a devastating walkoff loss to the Rockies, the kind of defeat that sticks with a clubhouse overnight. At 31-45, there is no margin for those to linger. Every game carries weight for a team that cannot afford to let winnable series slip.
Tuesday night, the Red Sox got exactly what they needed. Boston beat Colorado 5-2 behind a dominant performance from the pitcher whose name has been at the center of of trade deadline conversations.
Sonny Gray did not just pitch well. He made history.
Gray Delivers Powerful Statement
Gray struck out 11 Rockies batters across seven innings, becoming the first Red Sox pitcher to record double-digit strikeouts at Coors Field. No Boston arm had reached that mark before Tuesday. The previous best was seven, a benchmark that had stood since 2010.
He allowed just one earned run on six hits and three walks while needing only 93 pitches to get through his outing. His sweeper was devastating, producing 13 whiffs on 21 swings. It was the pitch he leaned on most, and Colorado had no answer for it.
The lone blemish was a solo home run from Willi Castro in the second inning. Beyond that, Gray controlled the game from start to finish.
After the game, Gray summed up his approach to pitching at the most hitter-friendly park in baseball with a line that captured everything about his mentality.
“I can spin the ball on the moon,” Gray said.
GettyDENVER, CO – JUNE 23: Starting pitcher Sonny Gray #54 of the Boston Red Sox delivers a pitch in the third inning against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field on June 23, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images)
What Made the Outing Different
Coors Field is where breaking balls go to die. The thin air reduces spin-induced movement, flattens curves, and turns sweepers into something far less threatening. Gray’s sweeper lost roughly four inches of horizontal movement compared to his season norms on Tuesday. The curveball flattened out in similar fashion.
None of it mattered. Gray refused to let the environment dictate his plan.
He leaned into his full repertoire and trusted the execution over the conditions. The mental side, he explained, was the whole battle. Give the altitude even a small foothold in your thinking, and it takes over.
Gray lowered his season ERA to 2.95 across 14 starts. He is 9-1 on the year, and the Red Sox have won seven of his last eight outings. Two more outs of work and he qualifies for the American League ERA leaderboard, where he would currently sit fifth.
Interim manager Chad Tracy kept his assessment of the performance to one word: “Exceptional.”
GettyDENVER, CO – JUNE 23: Starting pitcher Sonny Gray #54 of the Boston Red Sox delivers a pitch in the first inning against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field on June 23, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images)
Abreu and Eaton Sparked the Red Sox Offense
The pitching told the story, but the lineup backed Gray with timely production.
Wilyer Abreu drove in the game’s first run with a triple to right-center in the opening frame, giving Boston an immediate lead it never relinquished. In the fifth, he launched a solo home run off Rockies starter Sean Sullivan that traveled an estimated 443 feet, his 10th of the season and longest of the year.
There was a personal element to the series for Abreu. He grew up in Maracaibo, Venezuela, rooting for the Rockies because of Carlos Gonzalez, the former All-Star outfielder who came from the same city. Playing at Coors Field carried extra meaning.
Nate Eaton provided a spark at the top of the lineup, collecting three hits, drawing a walk, and driving in a pair of runs while scoring twice. Boston tallied 11 hits and six walks on the night, a different look entirely from Sunday’s five-hit showing in Seattle.
The Red Sox struck out just four times in the game. Three of those belonged to Jarren Duran, who continues to work through an extended rough stretch at the plate.
GettyDENVER, CO – JUNE 23: Wilyer Abreu #52 of the Boston Red Sox celebrates after hitting a solo home run in the fifth inning against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field on June 23, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images)
Final Word for the Red Sox
Gray walked his first batter and then shut the door for seven innings. He broke a franchise record at a ballpark that is supposed to neutralize everything he does best. His sweeper lost inches of movement and still generated 13 whiffs.
The trade deadline is weeks away. Gray is pitching like someone every contender in baseball should be calling about. His ERA sits under three, his record speaks for itself, and his mindset at Coors Field showed exactly the kind of presence that wins in October.
The Red Sox are 32-45. The conversation about what happens next with Gray is not going away. Performances like Tuesday night only make it louder.
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