Red Sox Legend Makes Passionate Recruiting Pitch to Yankees' Free Agent Juan Soto

In this story:
The New York Yankees have several clear competitors when it comes to signing Juan Soto to a long-term deal this offseason.
A November 21 article from the New York Post's Jon Heyman conveyed that, in addition to the Yankees, there are five realistic suitors for Soto's services at this point.
Four of these five teams are among the Yankees' biggest rivals.
One of these is the Los Angeles Dodgers; who, while not typically considered one of the Yankees' biggest foes, certainly are right now after defeating them in the World Series.
Then there are the cross-town rival Mets, who are considered a favorite to land Soto.
The final two teams (with the fifth non-rival being the Philadelphia Phillies) play in the Yankees' AL East division: the Toronto Blue Jays and the Boston Red Sox.
While Soto leaving the Bronx for any team this offseason will be a tough pill for Yankees fans to swallow, there's no question him remaining in the AL East would sting exceptionally badly.
Red Sox legend David Ortiz is doing all he can to make that scenario a reality, which is shown by a recruiting pitch he made to Soto during a November 22 episode of "The Fenway Rundown: Boston Red Sox Podcast".
When Ortiz was asked why Soto should make Boston his free agency choice, he said, "Because you're going to play for an organization that has a lot of history. You're going to play for an organization that has the greatest fans. He gonna feel like he's playing at home in the Dominican Republic, and he gonna have, in his corner, his godfather: Big Papi."
On a brand new @FenwayRundown dropping momentarily, David Ortiz tells us why he’s optimistic about Juan Soto and what elevator pitch to him would be… pic.twitter.com/LvgfJTYVoS
— Chris Cotillo (@ChrisCotillo) November 22, 2024
Yankees fans would argue that their franchise has a whole lot more history to offer than the Red Sox.

Grant Young covers the New York Yankees, the New York Mets, and Women’s Basketball for On SI. He holds an MFA degree in creative writing from the University of San Francisco, where he also played Division 1 baseball for five years. He believes Mark Teixeira should have been a first ballot MLB Hall of Fame inductee. You can follow him on X: @GrvntYoung