The Boston Red Sox hired Frank Wren as senior vice president of baseball operations, installing the former Braves general manager above a restructured front office that now carries $725 million in payroll obligations through 2027.
Wren, 63, spent the past four seasons with Baltimore in a special assignment role after his 2014 firing in Atlanta. The Orioles added 87 wins between 2022 and 2023 while Wren rebuilt their international scouting apparatus in Latin America. His hire follows Boston's December promotion of Craig Breslow to chief baseball officer, creating a two-headed decision structure under principal owner John Henry. The Red Sox finished 78-84 in 2024, missing the playoffs for the fourth time in six seasons.
This matters because Wren's track record is bifurcated in ways that preview Boston's internal tension. In Atlanta, he inherited a contender, signed B.J. Upton to a $75.25 million contract that became an organizational anchor, and left the Braves with a 79-83 record in his final year. In Baltimore, he operated without a title, advising on international free agents while Mike Elias controlled the major-league roster. The Red Sox are betting on the Baltimore version—the scout who quietly signed three Dominican prospects now in Norfolk's rotation—not the Atlanta version who greenlit the Dan Uggla extension. Breslow, 43, has no prior general manager experience. Wren becomes the senior operator who has actually negotiated nine-figure contracts and absorbed the reputational cost when they fail.
The payroll number explains the urgency. Boston owes Rafael Devers $313.5 million through 2033, Masataka Yoshida $90 million through 2027, and Trevor Story $23.3 million annually through 2027 despite his 2024 elbow ligament surgery. Fenway Sports Group has approved roster spending near the $237 million competitive balance tax threshold, but the Red Sox ranked ninth in the American League in runs scored last season. Wren's mandate is to extract surplus value from the draft and international market while Breslow manages arbitration cases and trades. The division requires it. The Yankees added Juan Soto. The Orioles extended Adley Rutschman. The Blue Jays carry $696 million in future obligations.
Watch Wren's first international signing class, which begins July 2 when the 2025-26 window opens. Boston has $6.26 million in bonus pool space, sixth in the American League. The Red Sox also need a Triple-A manager after removing Chad Epperson in November; Wren's prior relationships in Atlanta's system may surface a candidate with organizational credibility. The team's spring training complex in Fort Myers reopens February 12, when Breslow and Wren will present their 2025 depth chart to Henry and chairman Tom Werner.
Fenway Sports Group declined to disclose Wren's salary or reporting structure, but two rival executives said his title places him functionally above assistant general manager Eddie Romero, who was promoted in December and has worked in Boston's system since 2016. The Red Sox have not won a playoff game since 2021.