What’s wrong with the Boston Red Sox?

© Greg M. Cooper-USA TODAY Sports

Don’t look now, but the Boston Red Sox, who won a World Series seven months ago, are teetering close to .500 with two full months of play in the rearview mirror.

The big picture: The Red Sox sit third in the American League East. They trail both the New York Yankees and the Tampa Bay Rays. If the postseason started today — which, of course, it doesn’t — the Red Sox would be forced to play a game 163 with the Texas Rangers for a chance to play in the American League Wild Card game.

For all intents and purposes, baseball’s reigning champions are on the outside looking in. The question is: why?

About that division: The gauntlet that comes with playing in the American League East is doing the Red Sox no favors. The Sox didn’t do themselves any favors in their horrid month of April, a month of play so bad it caused home fans to “boo.”

Rotational woes: For much of the season — particularly early on — the Red Sox have been plagued by a starting rotation that has ranged from inconsistent to unbearable. Much of the unit’s struggles have been accented by injuries, too. Boston’s rotation’s ERA sits at 4.60 on the season thus far, good for just 19th in the MLB.

Closing by committee: Craig Kimbrel is now with the Chicago Cubs. He saved 42 games for the Sox last season and helped Boston clinch its first World Series title since 2013. But he wanted too much money for Boston’s liking. His replacements have been a mess.

Final thoughts: Boston’s roster is too talented to have paced to such an average record. We know that. they know that. Even MLB executives know that. But so far, that’s what they are — an average team.

Still, the season has yet to reach the midway point, and as long as the Red Sox are still meddling a few games over .500 near the All-Star break — even playing in the relentless AL East — they should have the talent, wherewithal and luck to make a postseason run this fall.

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