You may have now figured out just why Red Sox fans are so upset at Liverpool signing Wirtz. Giving the green light to a British-record, nine-figure transfer for Liverpool is one thing, but FSG have also now angered supporters of their baseball team over another contrasting saga.
At the end of last week, star designated hitter Rafael Devers, in the midst of the best hitting season of his career, was traded away to the San Francisco Giants just hours after he hit a home run against the Yankees. For this case, imagine Alexis Mac Allister scored a hat-trick against Everton and was then sold to Manchester City later that evening. It was the final chapter of a tale in Boston that saw Devers clash with the franchise behind the scenes, even though on this occasion the Red Sox did cough up and pay him what he's worth, yet this could also be construed as a money-saving exercise nevertheless.
So despite being in the midst of the NBA finals and with the Club World Cup on their doorstep, it's this baseball transaction that's getting the most attention among U.S. sports fans. Against the contrasting news of Wirtz, it's got Red Sox fans crying conspiracy. Did the team really get rid of their best player so the owners could afford someone else at their other team?
It has even seen Boston's most famous media figure, Bill Simmons, express incredulity at the Wirtz transfer, despite actually being slightly in favour of trading away someone who wasn't a team player in Devers. On his latest podcast for The Ringer, Simmons said: "Nobody trusts the owners or the franchise or whatever they've been doing the last six years. We don't trust any of it.
"Since they won the title in 2018, they've been all over the map, starting with Betts. It was a slow-motion car crash over 18 months going, 'they're not really going to trade him, are they?', and then they traded him for five cents to the dollar. I blame everybody, there are no good guys in this... I don't trust [the Red Sox] to use this money or spend it!
"I think it's something the owners don't fully understand with the Red Sox. The Yankees would never trade 'their guy', the same way the Red Sox did in the 2000s. As I get older, that's the stuff I respond to with sports, the chance to root for somebody for 20 years. With Betts, that's what hurt the most."