Kind of a rough year for Harris. Some criticism is deserved for some of his moves, but it's not his fault that some things just didn't work out as most people would have expected.
Acquiring Charlie Morton, who had been pitching ok, and Morton completely imploding. (At least the relief pitching prospect we gave up for Morton, lefty Micah Ashman, isn't that good of a prospect).
Signing John Brebbia (who didn't have a great track record to begin with) for bullpen help and Brebbia doing nothing.
Signing "Creaky Hips" Cobb as a FA and getting nothing from him...woof!
Trading arguably our best catching prospect (Jimenez) for Paddack ...woof!
Not bringing up Andrew Chafin before he had the right to leave and sign elsewhere.
Not giving Matt Gage a longer look or giving PJ Poulin a chance.
Can't blame Harris for Flaherty's consistency issues. I liked re-signing Flaherty because he was very good for us last year before he was traded.
The Torres signing was a good 1-year stopgap move (pretty sure Torres will be signing elsewhere). Torres was deservedly an All-Star and was our most consistent hitting threat for a while, although he's tanked in the 2nd half like many of his teammates
(.684 OPS since the AS Break).
Getting Finnegan at the deadline for not much was a good pickup. Finnegan was great until he got hurt (he came back without a rehab assignment and probably needed one). Not Harris's fault that Finnegan got hurt.
Can't blame Harris for trying to sign Bregman. He tried. But with our luck, Bregman would have gotten hurt and turned into Jonathan Schoop. Actually Bregman has missed 40+ games with Boston this year with injury. In retrospect, if we had given Bregman a
long-term deal we might have regretted it. He's in his 30s and now getting injured. That's not a good sign for an infielder.
We don't know what other teams were asking for at the deadline for the more "big name" pitchers or hitters.
If they were asking for McGonigle, Clark, Briceno, etc. then I'm glad Harris didn't trade them. I wouldn't have traded any of those guys for, say, Merrill Kelly or Jhoan Duran. The only pitcher worth trading any of those guys for was Paul Skenes, but Skenes
wasn't on the market.
I wouldn't have traded any of those guys for Eugenio Suarez as much as I would have liked to have Suarez (although he's been pretty bad with Seattle). There actually were few star hitters available at the deadline for trade.
Peter