Greatest Boston Red Sox players of all time
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Boston Red Sox baseball is a religion in New England, and the faithful have been rewarded across more than a century of history with some of the most extraordinary players the sport has ever produced. From the ivy-covered corners of Fenway Park to the dirt of the World Series infield, this franchise has seen it all, and the men on this list were the ones who made it worth believing in.
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The Red Sox story is equal parts glory and heartbreak, and many of the players here lived both sides of it. Some carried Boston through the lean years on nothing but talent and stubbornness. Others were the reason the curse finally broke in 2004, ending 86 years of October agony with one of the most improbable postseason runs in baseball history. A few of them are still active conversations in the debate over the greatest baseball players who ever lived.
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This isn’t just a list of guys who posted good numbers in a Red Sox uniform. It’s a list of men who became Boston, who the city attached its identity to, who got statues and retired numbers and Fenway ovations that lasted longer than most careers. The Red Sox have had legends the way other franchises have had role players, and narrowing it down to ten is genuinely difficult. But these are the ten who stand tallest.
10. Carlton Fisk
Fournier said that one of his favorite Topps cards is this unusual horizontal orientation of catcher Carlton Fisk.Career stats (Red Sox): .284 BA | 162 HR | 568 RBI | 1972 AL Rookie of the Year
Fisk is forever tied to one of baseball’s most iconic images: his twelfth-inning walk-off home run in Game 6 of the 1975 World Series, frantically waving the ball fair down the left field line as Fenway erupted. He was the gold standard for what a catcher could be on both sides of the ball, a defensive anchor who could also hit for power and carry a lineup when the moment demanded it. His number 27 hangs retired at Fenway, and it always will.
9. David Ortiz
New York Yankees v Boston Red Sox | Omar Rawlings/GettyImagesCareer stats (Red Sox): .290 BA | 483 HR | 1,530 RBI | 3x World Series champion | 2013 World Series MVP
Big Papi is the heartbeat of modern Red Sox baseball. He arrived in Boston in 2003 as a castoff from Minnesota and became the most clutch hitter the franchise has ever produced in the postseason era. He hit .688 in the 2004 ALCS, delivered walk-off after walk-off when the Sox came back from three games down against the Yankees, and spent 14 seasons making October feel like a personal playground. He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2022, first ballot, and it wasn’t close.
8. Pedro Martinez
Career stats (Red Sox): 117-37 W-L | 2.52 ERA | 1,683 K | 2x Cy Young (1999, 2000)
There has never been a more dominant two-year stretch of pitching in the modern era than what Pedro put together in 1999 and 2000. He went 23-4 with a 2.07 ERA in 1999 and followed it with a 1.74 ERA in 2000, both seasons earning him the Cy Young Award. He was barely 5-foot-11 and looked out of place on the mound against men a foot taller, and then he proceeded to embarrass every one of them. Pedro didn’t just beat hitters. He made them look like they had no business being in the same sport.
7. Wade Boggs
Career stats (Red Sox): .338 BA | 1,513 H | 5x AL batting champion
Boggs won five consecutive batting titles from 1983 to 1988, a feat of pure contact hitting consistency that almost no player in the modern game has come close to matching. He reached 200 hits in seven straight seasons, drew walks at an elite rate, and was arguably the most disciplined hitter in the American League for an entire decade. He made his craft look scientific, and in Boston, he was as reliable as sunrise over Fenway.
6. Roger Clemens
Career stats (Red Sox): 192-111 W-L | 3.06 ERA | 2,590 K | 3x Cy Young (1986, 1987, 1991)
Whatever the legacy debates say about Clemens in the twilight of his career, what he did in Boston is undeniable. He won three Cy Young Awards in a Red Sox uniform, struck out a then-record 20 batters in a single game in 1986, and was the most feared starting pitcher in the American League for the better part of a decade. The Rocket was ferocious on the mound, relentless in his preparation, and for those years in Boston, virtually unhittable on his best nights.
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5. Cy Young
Career stats (Red Sox): 192-112 W-L | 2.00 ERA | 38 shutouts
The award named after him is the most prestigious individual honor in pitching, and that alone tells you the kind of legacy Cy Young left on the game. His Red Sox tenure included some of the finest pitching of his career, including the first perfect game in modern baseball history in 1904. He posted a 2.00 ERA in Boston and threw 38 shutouts in a Red Sox uniform, numbers that belong in the realm of mythology. The man was simply in a different category.
4. Tris Speaker
Career stats (Red Sox): .336 BA | 643 H | 2x World Series champion | All-time career doubles leader
Speaker was the greatest defensive outfielder in the history of the game, playing a shallow center field that functioned almost like a fifth infielder and turning doubles into outs that no one else could have touched. He led the league in outfield putouts seven times and double plays ten times, numbers that still haven’t been replicated. At the plate, he was equally gifted, hitting .336 in Boston while putting together some of the finest all-around seasons the franchise has ever seen.
3. Carl Yastrzemski
Sep 18, 2019; Boston, MA, USA; Former Boston Red Sox player Carl Yastrzemski throws a ceremonial first pitch before a game against the San Francisco Giants at Fenway Park. Mandatory Credit: Brian Fluharty-USA TODAY SportsCareer stats (Red Sox): .285 BA | 3,419 H | 452 HR | 1,844 RBI | 1967 Triple Crown | 1967 AL MVP
Yaz spent 23 seasons entirely in a Red Sox uniform, which in itself is a statement. He won the Triple Crown in 1967, one of the last players ever to do it, and carried Boston to the pennant in what became known as the Impossible Dream season. He was the full package: a seven-time Gold Glove winner in left field, a contact hitter who also had genuine pop, and a career that spanned four decades of Fenway history. His number 8 hangs in the rafters alongside the franchise’s all-time greats.
2. Ted Williams
Mar 17, 2017; Fort Myers, FL, USA; A view of the former Boston Red Sox player Ted Williams prior to the game of the Houston Astros against the Boston Red Sox at JetBlue Park. Mandatory Credit: Aaron Doster-USA TODAY SportsCareer stats (Red Sox): .344 BA | 521 HR | 1,839 RBI | 2x AL MVP | 2x Triple Crown | .482 career OBP
The last man to hit .400 in a season, doing so in 1941 with a .406 average, Williams is the greatest pure hitter in the history of baseball, and there is very little room for argument. He missed nearly five full seasons to military service during World War II and the Korean War, and the numbers he still put up make the mind reel at what might have been. He hit .388 at age 38 and won a batting title at 39. He hit a home run in the final at-bat of his career in 1960. Every chapter of his story ends with the ball leaving the park.
1. Babe Ruth
Babe Ruth reaches home plate after hitting a home run for the Boston Braves | Transcendental Graphics/Getty ImagesCareer stats (Red Sox): .300 BA | 89 HR | 2.19 ERA as pitcher | 3x World Series champion
Yes, the greatest Yankee ever started in Boston, and his Red Sox career often gets buried under the mythology of what came after. But Ruth was already a transformational talent before he ever wore pinstripes. He was a dominant starting pitcher first, posting a 2.19 ERA and going 89-46 on the mound in Boston, before the Red Sox realized his bat was too valuable to keep out of the lineup every four days. He won three World Series titles with Boston and was the best player in the American League before owner Harry Frazee sold him to New York in 1920 for cash to fund a Broadway play, a decision that haunted the franchise for 84 years.
Fenway faithful, these names live forever
New York Yankees v Boston Red Sox | Omar Rawlings/GettyImagesThe Red Sox have retired 11 numbers and produced some of the most beloved figures in the history of American sport. What makes this franchise special isn’t just the championships or the records. It’s the way these players connected with a city that takes its baseball personally, a city that still argues about lineups over coffee, still knows every number in the rafters by heart, and still believes, every April, that this could be the year.