On paper, it does seem like Boston Red Sox infielder Vaughn Grissom should be getting an opportunity in the big leagues. He currently sports an .809 OPS down at Triple-A Worcester and he has been particularly good lately.
As a result, it definitely raised some eyebrows when the decision came down that the Red Sox were calling up David Hamilton instead of Grissom a few days ago. As it turns out, it may have surprised and irked Grissom as well.
Down at Triple-A, Grissom was asked about the roster move and how he felt about it. Instead of giving the usual canned answer about how Hamilton is a great teammate or that he is just focused on playing, Grissom vented his frustration about the lack of opportunities with the Red Sox and that he didn't expect more to be coming.
Vaughn Grissom today: “I don’t really expect much more opportunity here just because decisions that were made were made, and it kind of didn’t involve me. I mean, all those decisions, they make sense in a way, but I guess it sucks a little bit."https://t.co/YpsL9vaF8o
— Katie Morrison-O'Day (@KatieMo61) July 29, 2025
Vaughn Grissom didn't hold back much when asked about his lack of opportunities with the Red Sox
Well, that escalated quickly. It isn't uncommon for a player to get impatient or frustrated when they have been playing well and seemingly going unnoticed. However, most sane people would take those frustrations to their agent(s) or to team officials privately. There was at least some hope that Grissom could get traded at the deadline, so playing nice right now would make a lot of sense.
Grissom may have done that, but he also made sure to blast the organization publicly as well. Pretty hard to explain away this quote as anything less than an attempted public call-out of the Boston front office and their decision-making:
“I don’t really expect much more opportunity here just because decisions that were made were made, and it kind of didn’t involve me. I mean, all those decisions, they make sense in a way, but I guess it sucks a little bit."
Between Grissom raking down in the minors and still not even getting a hint of playing and all of the interpersonal failures that surrounded the Rafael Devers catastrophe, there is clearly something wrong with the Red Sox as an organization especially when it comes to clear lines of communication. If this keeps up, heads are going to start rolling to get the team back on track, and it may start at the top.