The unique quirks, oddities and head-scratchers of Red Sox' 2026 schedule originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston
The National Football League likes to make a spectacle out of its schedule release date, teasing the moment as must-see TV for months and generating enough hype to actually squeeze some ratings out of the ordeal.
Major League Baseball, meanwhile, just dumps the thing on a random weekday while the current season is still taking place.
It’s a decision. We can say that all right.
In any event, considering that schedule release came on the aforementioned random weekday, it’s possible you didn’t have time to lay out the calendar and analyze everything that made an eyebrow or two rise around Boston. Fortunately, we can fix that.
Opening Day in Cincinnati
In theory, having a historic franchise like the Red Sox open the season in Cincinnati, which marked the location of the first game of the MLB season for 100 years or so, is pretty cool. In actuality? It’s tough to get excited about a Red Sox-Reds game in March.
That season opener — on March 26! — kicks off a six-game road trip to start the season, with the Red Sox heading to Houston after Cincinnati.
(A bonus to this matchup is Terry Francona managing the Reds. Yet the novelty of the Red Sox facing Francona wore off some time during his 1 million games managing Cleveland.)
No Yankees in September
Do you love a good rivalry game in September, when a chill hits the air, the sun sets early, and everybody knows the game just mean a little bit more?
Well, too bad! No soup for you.
The Red Sox and Yankees will wrap up their season series the weekend of Aug. 28-30, leaving the final month without any potential playoff-implication matchups.
The final month of the season is devoid of most AL East competition, too, with only six of 24 games coming against divisional opponents (three in Baltimore, three in Tampa). The Red Sox’ final home series against an AL East opponent will take place July 24-26 against Toronto.
That’s all good for the sake of variety, but it could theoretically make it difficult for the Red Sox to gain ground if there’s a race for the division playing out over the final two months of the season.
Season finale vs. the Cubs
Interleague play has been around for almost 30 years. With pitchers no longer batting in the NL, and with interleague series taking place at all times, it’s become a very normal part of Major League Baseball.
Still. The Red Sox close out their regular season at home against the Cubs. Which means, by necessity, the Cubs are closing out their season on the road against the Red Sox.
It’s weird.
A Red Sox-Cubs series is always a big deal, with fans of both teams dishing out big bucks to make pilgrimages to both Wrigley Field and Fenway Park. They used to be very rare, but next year will mark the fifth straight season with a Cubs-Red Sox matchup.
The oversaturation and the fact that it could be a meaningless series for both teams drains quite a bit of juice out of this one.
Home opener against the Padres
Keeping it with the interleague-is-a-little-strange theme, the Red Sox will open Fenway Park on Friday, April 3, against the … San Diego Padres.
On the one hand, Red Sox fans will (most likely) get to finally say hello to Xander Bogaerts, who’s yet to return to Boston as a vistor.
On the other … there’s something discomforting about an interleague series opening the home slate for the Red Sox, even if it happens quite often. It happened this year, with St. Louis visiting Boston and getting swept by the Red Sox. It also happened in 2017, when the Red Sox swept the Pirates (one game got postponed, but the Red Sox later won that one, too), and in 2015, when the Red Sox took two out of three from the Nationals. But the Brewers swept the Red Sox in their first home series in 2014, so the results haven’t been perfect.
Either way, given the fact that it’s happened quite often, you’d think everybody would be used to an interleague series for the home opener by now. But … we’re not.
(By the way, after the Padres leave Boston, the Brewers will head to town, and then the Red Sox will visit St. Louis. The Red Sox may be honorary National League members in April.)
On the road for the Fourth of July
If you like catching a Red Sox game as the appetizer before your evening of Boston Pops and fireworks, you’ll have to readjust. The Red Sox are in Los Angeles to play the Angels on July 4, in the early part of a nine-game road trip ahead of the All-Star break.
After a series finale against the Nationals on July 1, Fenway won’t host a baseball game again until July 17. Sounds like Concert Season.
Raffy returns
The Rafael Devers trade was a bit messy. Its full impact won’t be judged for years. Yet the early indications are that somehow, the Red Sox have been better off without him, and the Giants are worse with him. That’s an odd early result for a three-time All-Star, two-time Silver Slugger in the prime of his career.
In any event, most fans stuck with Devers even as he refused to play first or third base after getting moved to DH this year. When he comes back as a visitor, will they cheer for the 2018 champion? Or will they boo him for the ugly and abrupt ending?
We’ll all find out together when the Giants visit Fenway Park from Aug. 21-23.
Unique visitors and potential road trips
For all of the complaining about interleague play, it’s still fun to occasionally see some jerseys inside Fenway Park that you don’t see too often. Likewise, when fans plan out potential road trips, variety is always a good thing.
Teams visiting Fenway that fit that bill:
- San Diego (April 3-5)
- Milwaukee (April 6-8)
- Philadelphia (May 12-14)
- Atlanta (May 26-28)
- Washington (June 29-July 1)
- Arizona (Aug. 17-19)
- San Francisco (Aug. 21-23)
- Chicago Cubs (Sept. 25-27)
And the potential NL road trips:
- Cincinnati (March 26-29)
- St. Louis (April 10-12)
- Atlanta (May 15-17)
- Colorado (June 22-24)
- New York Mets (July 10-12)
- Los Angeles Dodgers (July 31-Aug.2)
- Pittsburgh (Aug. 14-16)
- Miami (Aug. 24-26)
Scheduled double-header
You don’t see scheduled double-headers too often, but the Red Sox have one in Seattle on June 20.
There’s a hot dog-themed video about it all
The Red Sox announced some of their home series in a video starring hot dogs.
Some of the homages and references make more sense than others.