Theo Epstein Is A Robot And Will Eventually Enslave Us All
In another chapter in our repeated quest to understand the quixotic planet of Red Sox Nation, we delve down the rabbit hole of the saga of Clay Buchholz.
As you know by now, the Red Sox do not plan on starting Buchholz again this season, even though he threw a no-hitter in his last start. (We know they claimed they would take him out the minute he hit his 120th pitch, even if he still had a no-hitter. We still refuse to believe this.) This kind of blows our mind a little bit. We understand he is a young pitcher, and you have to protect him. We do remember Bud Smith, after all.
But here's a question: When Buchholz throws in the bullpen, he'll surely give up a hit or two. But what if he throws a no-hitter in his next start, presumably next season? Does that tie him with Johnny Vander Meer's no-hit record? Does it still count? It's an odd question to even consider asking; we never thought we'd face it before.
The major point, though, is that Theo Epstein is as disciplined a human being as we have ever encountered. The guy has a plan and will not diverge from it. We suspect this is only good for the Red Sox, even if it does prove him bionic.
The Buchholz Dilemma [Vegas Watch]
NBA Free Agency Just Got Much Tougher After the Draft
College Football Championship Odds: Four Value Bets for 2026
Paul Skenes Headlines Friday June 26th's Best MLB Bets
Three MLB Bets Worth Targeting on Thursday June 25 Slate
Three Teams That Crushed the NBA Draft First Round
- MLB Picks Today: Backing the Yankees and Phillies-Nationals Over
- Tuesday MLB Best Bets: Two Pitching Props Worth Playing
- Prediction Markets Reveal Interesting NBA Draft Longshots
- UFC Vegas 119 Predictions: Best Bets for Kape vs. Horiguchi Fight Night
- MLB Best Bets Today: Brewers and Mariners Lead Friday Card
- MLB Best Bets Today: Three Picks for Thursday's Nine-Game Slate
- Best Super Bowl Bets to Make Before NFL Training Camps Begin

