Red Sox Vs Yankees Predictions

The Boston Red Sox will host the New York Yankees on Tuesday in the American League Wild Card Game.

It will be the fifth time in MLB history that these two rivals will meet in a sudden death game (regular season and playoffs). The last time was during Game 7 of the 2004 ALCS, where the Red Sox completed an epic 3-0 comeback to eventually win the World Series.

Red Sox and Yankees have met in four previous postseason series overall. The ‘Bombers won the first two (1999 ALCS and 2003 ALCS), while Boston the last two (2004 ALCS and 2018 ALDS).

The reason Tuesday’s game is at Fenway Park and not Yankee Stadium is because the Red Sox won the season series.

Gerrit Cole will take the mound for the Yankees and, for Boston, Nathan Eovaldi.

Our experts give their predictions and answer the hottest questions on the eve of another new chapter in baseball’s greatest rivalry.

Which team is more prepared to win this game: Boston or NY?

The Yankees are better prepared to win the Wild Card round and advance to the Divisional Series. True, they come in with three losses in their last five games. But that includes a shutout against tougher teams than Boston (Blue Jays and Rays) and after winning seven in a row and three in a row against the Red Sox.

They have more talent and depth. Hitters like Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton were possessed before closing against Tampa Bay. But a good portion of hitters in the majors suffer against the Rays.

New York was favored to win the East Division and even advance to the World Series since spring training kicked off, while the Red Sox had such low expectations that they predicted they could fall below .500.
The Yankees have a more complete team and have megastar Gerrit Cole on the mound. Even if they are visitors, they look like favorites. The Red Sox’ mission is to continue to break the odds.

Yankees. For them the qualification came from less to more. Their problems and inconsistencies were overcome more than three weeks ago and they finished the season with a very good taste. Boston arrives with doubts in the bullpen and injuries. On paper, the 27 outs and with Gerrit Cole on the mound, I say that the balance is in favor of New York.

What keeps Alex Cora awake at night thinking about the Yankees?

Stopping Giancarlo Stanton, who in his most recent series, in Boston, hit like he was supposed to on a regular basis since coming to the Yankees: Seven hits in 12 at-bats, including three homers, and 10 runs produced in three games, with an OBP of .357 and an OPS of .871.

But really, if Stanton’s numbers don’t keep him awake at night, he’s probably not awake at all, not even that his Red Sox had a losing record against postseason teams (26-30), even though they barely won the annual series against the Yankees (10-9).

The last time the Yankees were at Fenway Park, the duo of outfielders Giancarlo Stanton (3 home runs and 10 RBIs) and Aaron Judge (4 runs scored and 3 RBIs) combined to participate in nearly all of the 19 runs the pinstripes scored against Boston.

Of course, Stanton and Judge should get special attention from the Red Sox manager.

Aaron Judge. He’s the hot bat, the most dangerous man. He saw just a week ago what a small mistake of letting the game flow in their last game meant and as Judge in this second half sneaks in e bigger than he is, assuming that leadership on the field that is his to take already and setting himself up as the new captain. A bat of contact and power adapted to the game situation it is hard not to be afraid of him.

And Aaron Boone on the Red Sox?
For starters, manager Aaron Boone must already have nightmares knowing that his slugger/glove DJ Lemahieu will be out for the entire series.

And to top it off, the direct elimination game will be played in Boston, where the Yankees lost six of 10 games this year and where the fans will be more aggressive than ever against them and that at Fenway Park the Red Sox have been unbeatable.

At home, the Red Sox lead the Majors in runs per game, batting average, OBP and OPS. Their home winning average (.605) is sixth best in the Majors, and they are .650 in their last 60 games.

If Boone had a chance to watch the recap of Sunday’s Red Sox-Washington Nationals game, then he got an unpleasant reminder of what Dominican shortstop Rafael Devers, who hit two home runs and drove in four key runs to get Boston into the playoffs, is capable of.