The Boston Red Sox beat Baltimore 17-1 on Saturday afternoon, and then fired manager Alex Cora and five other coaches. By the time the dust settled, six coaches were out and the team’s hotel exit was marked by a van with a sign reading COACHES4HIRE LLC.
A former player told WEEI's Rob Bradford that firing Cora was like sh----g your pants and changing your shirt, a line that fit the speed and bluntness of the move. The same account described Cora as unhappy toward the end, and said Jason Varitek, a Red Sox lifer, was also fired.
The firings land as part of a broader Red Sox upheaval around Craig Breslow and John Henry, a stretch of churn that has repeatedly tested the club’s patience with itself. Boston has lived through plenty of its own turning points before — trading Nomar, the chicken and beer fiasco, the Bobby Valentine year, trading Mookie Betts and trading Rafael Devers — but this one arrived right after a 17-1 win, which made the timing feel even harsher.
That contrast is what makes the move hard to miss. On April 24, 2026, Brayan Bello was relieved during a game against the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards in Baltimore, Md., and now the Red Sox have followed a blowout victory with a purge that leaves the organization facing the next game with a different dugout and a much shorter list of people left standing.
What comes next is simple enough to see and hard enough to manage: Boston has to keep playing while explaining why a team that won by 16 runs still chose to tear down its coaching staff the same day.