
The Boston Red Sox beat the Baltimore Orioles 17-1 on Saturday afternoon. It was their most dominant performance of a difficult early season, a blowout that briefly felt like the beginning of a turn. Hours later, the organization made a decision that changed everything.
The decision came Saturday night. Alex Cora and six members of his coaching staff were dismissed.
What Cora did next was worth paying attention to.
Cora Responds to the News
Cora took to X with a message that caught attention.
“Happy!”
One word. One emoji. After eight seasons, a World Series title, 620 wins, and a firing that came just 27 games into the 2026 campaign. It was a surprising response.
Cora also took to Instagram. Cora posted a photo of himself and the fired coaches standing in front of a private jet, captioning it: #mypeoples. No bitterness. No finger-pointing. A group of people moving on together.
On the surface, at least. Cora is no longer following the team on Instagram. He also reposted a video of Mookie Betts on a podcast, the clip titled “Red Sox really traded Mookie Betts.” The full picture is a little more complicated than the 1-word response.
The Firing and What Led to It
The Red Sox entered Saturday at 9-17 and last place in the American League East. The offense had been the persistent problem all season, posting just 4.1 runs per game, one of the worst marks in the American League.
Boston lost six of their previous seven games heading into Saturday’s win, and the combination of a Yankees sweep and a dispiriting loss Friday night in Baltimore appeared to accelerate the decision.
Principal owner John Henry released a statement acknowledging the weight of the moment. Henry pointed to the 2018 title run as a defining moment in franchise history, praised Cora’s impact on and off the field, and made clear the decision carried genuine weight given the bond Cora had built with the organization over eight years. The respect in the statement was real. So was the finality.
Chad Tracy, who has managed Triple-A Worcester since 2022, was named interim manager. He managed several current Red Sox players in the minors, including Roman Anthony, Jarren Duran, and Marcelo Mayer.

GettyAlex Cora. (Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)
What Cora Leaves Behind
Cora finished 620-541 as Red Sox manager, third in franchise history. He arrived ahead of the 2018 campaign and delivered a championship before the year was out. He was fired in January 2020 following the Astros cheating scandal, reinstated, and brought back in November of that same year. Cora led Boston back to the postseason in 2025.
The 2026 season never found its footing under him. The offense underperformed, the losses mounted, and ownership ran out of patience 27 games in. Whether the roster or the manager deserves more of the blame is a conversation Boston will be having for a while.
He was under contract through 2027. Reports suggest the Phillies could have interest, given his relationship with their president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski, who brought Cora into the organization in 2017 and has maintained a close relationship with him since.

GettyLOS ANGELES, CA – OCTOBER 28: Manager Alex Cora #20 and Nathan Eovaldi #17 of the Boston Red Sox celebrate with the World Series trophy after their teams 5-1 win over the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game Five of the 2018 World Series at Dodger Stadium on October 28, 2018 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)
Final Word for the Red Sox
This is the first in-season managerial change at Fenway since 2001. Not everyone will agree with the timing. Some will question whether the roster, not the manager, was always the real problem. Some will point to the front office and ownership.
Cora posted “Happy!” anyway. He gathered his coaches, boarded a jet, and kept it moving.
Cora is gone. The 2018 banner will never come down. What comes next for this team is up to Tracy for now.
Alex Cora Breaks Silence With Surprising Message After Red Sox Firing