Just one year removed from an All-Star MVP season, left fielder Jarren Duran’s stock in Boston has plummeted. The Red Sox’s disappointing Wild Card exit against the New York Yankees exposed several weak spots, with Duran being front and center in many of them.
Considering how much the Red Sox were relying on his presence, only for him to disappear when it mattered the most, it's safe to say Duran's time in Beantown might be over.
Red Sox Must Trade Jarren Duran After Poor Playoff Performance
The 29-year-old outfielder picked the worst possible time to go cold. In 11 at-bats, Duran had one measly single and struck out four times. While his struggles at the plate were glaring, his defensive lapses were even harder to ignore.
At times, Duran looked lackluster in the field. Most notably, during Game 2 of the series, he failed to catch what seemed to be a routine fly ball (h/t @MLB) in the fifth inning and allowed the Yankees to take a 3-2 lead.
Defensive miscues did not stop there for Duran. During the second inning of the win-or-go-home Game 3, he failed to hustle after a long fly ball (h/t @TalkinYanks) from Yankees designated hitter Giancarlo Stanton, and allowed him to reach second base. Even Stanton, when interviewed after the game, called it a ‘bonehead play,' per SNY's Phillip Martinez.
The postseason collapse only highlighted a larger issue: Duran’s steady decline since his breakout 2024 campaign. In 2024, Jarren was one of the league’s best players. He finished fifth in baseball with an 8.7 WAR and was named All-Star Game MVP. That year was viewed as an outlier. This season, his WAR dipped to 4.6 — still solid, but nowhere near elite — and his inconsistency became a recurring theme.
Aside from his performance taking a dip, the Red Sox boast one of the league's deepest and youngest outfields. Former top prospect Roman Anthony, versatile center fielder Ceddanne Rafaela, and rising right fielder Wilyer Abreu are all locked up long-term, giving the team a young, affordable core to build around. With those three under control through at least 2030, there’s little reason to hang onto an aging, regressing Duran.
At his best, Duran is an electrifying athlete who can change games with his speed. But when the lights were brightest, he looked disengaged and unreliable — two traits the Red Sox can’t afford as they chase another deep playoff run.
Unless he’s willing to accept a reduced role or trade value presents itself, Jarren Duran’s days in Boston appear numbered.