
USA Today via Reuters
Aug 3, 2024; Arlington, Texas, USA; Boston Red Sox left fielder Jarren Duran (16) removes his batting gloves after he strikes out to end the inning against the Texas Rangers during the eighth inning at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-USA TODAY Sports

USA Today via Reuters
Aug 3, 2024; Arlington, Texas, USA; Boston Red Sox left fielder Jarren Duran (16) removes his batting gloves after he strikes out to end the inning against the Texas Rangers during the eighth inning at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-USA TODAY Sports
The Boston Red Sox have mastered one thing this season: turning teachable moments into public spectacles. And once again, Jarren Duran is at the center of the curriculum. While the Nationals calmly cashed in on the chaos, Red Sox fans were left watching a familiar rerun—complete with sighs, facepalms, and a growing sense that patience is no longer part of the plan. Accountability isn’t optional in Boston. Just ask Duran.
The Boston Red Sox season could not get any more painful. I mean, they could, but let’s hope this is the limit. Sitting in 4th in the division with 6.5 games behind, the Red Sox should be looking at some wins, and all their players should be bringing their A game, but unfortunately, Jarren Duran has missed out on that baggage. And his recent mishap proves it.
In their recent game with the Washington Nationals, the Red Sox star had a ball hit by Paul De Jong straight at him. It was a simple routine fly out but it wasn’t as routine as we thought. Durran completely misjudged the ball, and it went over him, which led to the Nationals scoring their first runs of the game. The Boston Strong X handle came out and posted, “This is unacceptable from Jarren Duran.”
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Duran’s bat is doing its job but his gloves are not so much. Jarren Duran’s bat has been one of the few steady sparks in Boston’s lineup. With 95 hits, 22 doubles, and a league-leading 10 triples, he’s been electric. His .255 average and .728 OPS prove he’s not just speed—he’s clutch, too. Whether it’s flipping games with hustle or driving in 44 RBIs, he’s delivered consistently.
This is unacceptable from Jarren Duran. pic.twitter.com/0G79krWYRw
— Boston Strong (@BostonStrong_34) July 6, 2025
But while the bat’s been hot, the glove has been shaky—and fans aren’t ignoring it. Duran’s .963 fielding percentage and six errors paint a troubling defensive picture. He’s misjudged balls before—just ask Yankees fans in 2022, or Nationals fans this week. Even with a +1.8 DRS, the eye test tells a different story entirely.
One slip in the outfield might be forgiven, but repeated misreads become a pattern. A mistimed sprint here, a ball flying past there—it keeps haunting Boston. His –0.1 range WAR hints he’s covering the ground, just not always the right ground. For a team chasing consistency, his glove remains the unsolved riddle.
So while Boston waits for October magic, they’re stuck with July misfires in center field. Jarren Duran may light up the stat sheet with his bat, but that won’t shield him from the spotlight he keeps stumbling into. The Red Sox don’t need fireworks—they need fundamentals. And if Duran’s glove keeps writing checks his routes can’t cash, Boston might start grading on a curve no one survives.
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Jarren Duran's bat is hot, but is his glove costing the Red Sox crucial games?
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Red Sox fans want action on Duran after missing a simple fly ball
The Boston Red Sox aren’t just battling the AL East—they’re battling their own blooper reel. And once again, Jarren Duran has earned a starring role. While the Nationals jogged around the bases like it was a practice drill, Red Sox fans were left staring at the sky, wondering what exactly had just happened. In Boston, forgiveness wears thin—and Duran just keeps testing the thread count.
Trade him asap!!!
— wally 🇩🇴🇭🇹 (@wallywonkaa) July 6, 2025
“Trade him asap!!!” wasn’t just a comment—it was a pulse check from frustrated fans. It echoed louder than the crack of DeJong’s bat and Duran’s disappearing confidence. In a city that forgives slow bats but not slow reads, that sentiment hits hard. When defense becomes déjà vu, fans don’t write essays—they write trades in all caps.
One fan summed it up best: “His fielding has been pretty rough all year…”—and stats agree. With six errors and a .963 fielding percentage, Jarren Duran’s glove hasn’t inspired much confidence. The comment points out he struggles more in LF, where tracking off the bat seems tougher. For someone with elite speed, his reads often look delayed, like instincts are buffering mid-play
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One fan offered a reality check, saying, “ppl are being too aggressive about this one. That’s a tough ball to judge.” And they’re not wrong—outfielders misread tricky liners more often than highlight reels would admit. Yes, Duran’s fielding hasn’t been perfect this season, but this wasn’t exactly a routine can of corn. In a long 162-game grind, even the best defenders get humbled by a weird bounce
One fan brought some empathy to the firestorm: “I can’t say much.. I’ve done the same! Lol, those outfield line drives are tough… Unacceptable is crazy tho.. It’s a tough play.” It’s a rare pause in the outrage, reminding us that not every mistake deserves a pitchfork. Duran’s reads haven’t been elite this season, but this wasn’t some lazy, loafing misplay either. Sometimes, a tough ball just wins, and Boston fans forget that even pros get humbled by spin.
One fan didn’t hold back, saying, “Hope he learns to speak San Diegan, pal.”—translation: pack fast. It’s the kind of sarcasm only Boston delivers when a misplay feels like déjà vu. Jarren Duran’s glove hasn’t inspired trust this season, and fans now see trades as a fielding solution. If routes keep unraveling like this, he may be learning more than a new position soon.
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Duran might be sprinting on the basepaths, but he’s jogging into fan frustration at full speed. The outfield isn’t just a place—it’s become a referendum on trust, timing, and Twitter takes. Boston doesn’t do patience, especially not when winnable games slip through outstretched gloves. If Duran can’t clean it up soon, he won’t just be changing positions—he’ll be changing area codes. And in this town, “learning on the job” comes with an expiration date.
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Jarren Duran's bat is hot, but is his glove costing the Red Sox crucial games?