The first month of the season is in the books and Red Sox pitching stands tied with that of the Rockies for the highest ERA in baseball: 4.92 as of this morning, compared to a league average of 3.84. In all of baseball, only Blue Jays pitching has allowed more opponent runs than the 126 allowed thus far by the Red Sox.
How long before help might be on the way? Philadelphia Daily News writer David Murphy says we’re nearing “go-time” and that despite all the other teams said to be in on the action, the Red Sox are still best fit for Phillies’ Cole Hamels.

Phillies Cole Hamels / Daily News Photo
Hamels is 1-3, 4.14 ERA in 6 starts so far this season with the moribund, 8-17 Phillies, whose team OPS of .599 represents the very basement of baseball.
While it most certainly beats a losing record, the Red Sox 12-10 start in the first month of the 2015 season has been hardly overwhelming.
In this table the opponent’s AVG is shaded in green when it is either at or below the opponent average in the less tense situation. For example, if the opponent batting average is lower when men are on base than when the bases are empty, it is shaded in green. As you can see, there are no such situations currently with the Red Sox. Similarly, if the opponent batting average is lower with RISP than just when men are on base, it’s shaded in green. That’s the case for both
For sake of comparison, let’s view that against the pitching performance of the 2013 Championship season, where opponents’ batting averages were .250, .245, and .244 respectively.
As the analysis indicates, for 6 of the 14 “aces,” opponent batting averages stay the same or go down with the bases occupied, in some cases dramatically so. Take, for instance the White Sox’