More than just bragging rights are on the line for the Red Sox-Yankees series, as chilling off-field threats have sparked a war of words.

Watch What’s Trending Now!

“Only insecure keyboard warriors and mom’s basement dwellers attack the family. Come at the player all you want, but family is off limits,” Jonathan Lucroy shared on X.

Just two days ago, the New York Yankees’ pitcher, Cam Schlittler, revealed that a subset of diehard Red Sox fans harassed him and his family on social media. The starter even received death threats. Several analysts and former players condemned the incident. 

ADVERTISEMENT

“It should not be like this at all. You should not. If you go after somebody on social media, I’m sorry, you s—,” A.J. Pierzynski said in a Foul Territory interview. 

Schlittler, 25, made his major league debut in July 2025 for the Yankees.

He had a stellar season, recording a 2.96 ERA and 84Ks over 14 starts during the regular season. Cam was phenomenal against the Red Sox in the AL Wild Card Series. The Yankees ace pitched 8.0 scoreless innings, allowing 0 walks and securing 12 strikeouts.

ADVERTISEMENT

This is probably what drew ire from a few Red Sox fans.

Only insecure keyboard warriors and mom’s basement dwellers attack the family. Come at the player all you want, but family is off limits. MLB Security will handle, those guys don’t play around. Unfortunately, it’s most likely because they are betting money and are trying to Show more

Foul Territory
Foul Territory
@FoulTerritoryTV

No class shown by the fans who continue to harass Cam Schlittler and his family on social media. 🙄 "If you go after somebody on social media, I'm sorry, but you suck," says @AJPierzynski12.

120
Reply

The harassment was a bit of a shock to Schlittler, too, especially because he is from Walpole, Massachusetts, a town about 15 miles from Boston. However, he tried to come up with a justification of his own.

ADVERTISEMENT

“It’s just those diehards that just have nothing else in their lives other than baseball or sports that really care about this, and the fact that I play for the Yankees makes it worse for them.” 

But Red Sox veteran Lucroy couldn’t take it so lightly.

ADVERTISEMENT

He firmly stated that the MLB security will handle such abuse from fans. But he also pointed out a darker reason behind the trolling.

“Unfortunately, it’s most likely because they are betting money and are trying to rattle him,” Jonathan stated.

Betting is both common and legal in baseball games. But trying to get into the head of a player by attacking his family online to influence his performance against your favored team is pushing the ethical boundaries.

ADVERTISEMENT

Lucroy was part of the Red Sox for a single season and played one game before getting DFA’d. But he understands the fan culture and knows better than to mind the social media bullying.

That’s why he suggested Cam Schlittler should “Ignore and continue.”

But the hardening stance from these individuals stems from a growing pattern in MLB.

ADVERTISEMENT

Online abuse didn’t start with Cam Schlittler

“Every player deals with some of this stuff. Everybody deals with something. Everybody, I mean, announcers deal with it,” Pierzynski was heard saying in the interview shared by Lucroy.

But he isn’t normalizing it. Rather, he is pointing out a pattern that has long been there and mostly been ignored. 

ADVERTISEMENT

Liam Hendriks, one of the Red Sox’s own, received death threats for himself and his wife in 2025. The Astros’ Lance McCullers Jr. suffered the same after a poor performance last year. His family went through a difficult phase.

McCullers’ 5-year-old daughter was petrified by the threats and asked him why people wanted to hurt them. The situation was so severe that Jim Crane, the Astros owner, hired 24-hour security for the family.

Curt Schilling was another example of online bullying in 2015.

ADVERTISEMENT

His congratulatory tweet for his daughter attracted a barrage of sexually explicit and violent threats. Even Trey Yesavage and his family received some unprompted hate from some Yankees fans after the Blue Jays pitcher helped eliminate New York in the 2025 ALDS.

There isn’t really a specific reason for a group of fans to turn on a player’s family. But there have been too many instances to ignore. Luckily, the veterans are calling the bullies out, and we can expect the authorities to do their part.

But as of now, while Cam Schlittler awaits his first MLB start on Thursday, he is confident about the Red Sox Nation doing a good job in the first archnemesis game of 2026.

“The fans really get into it, especially between innings. It’s very similar to New York. They do a good job of keeping the game entertaining and having the fans be interactive,” shared Schlittler ahead of Tuesday’s game.

And it seems like the Yankees did feed off the rivalry, just like Cam enjoys, and grabbed the first win at Fenway Park, 4-0.

ADVERTISEMENT

Share this with a friend:

Link Copied!

Written by

author-image

Ritabrata Chakrabarti

138 Articles

Ritabrata Chakrabarti is an MLB journalist at EssentiallySports, covering Major League Baseball from the MLB GameDay Desk. With an engineering background that sharpens his analytical lens, he focuses on game development, strategic breakdowns, and league-wide trends that shape the season on a daily basis. With over three years of experience in digital content, Ritabrata has worked across editorial leadership and quality control roles, developing a strong command over accuracy, structure, and storytelling under fast-paced publishing cycles. His MLB reporting goes beyond surface-level analysis, offering fan-oriented explanations of individual and team performances, in-game decisions, and roster moves. Ritabrata closely tracks daily storylines by connecting on-field performances with broader seasonal arcs and offseason activity, helping readers make sense of both the immediate moment and the long view.

Know more

Edited by

editor-image

Arunaditya Aima