


The highly anticipated Netflix documentary series covering the Red Sox’s 2024 season officially has a release date.
“The Clubhouse: A Year with the Red Sox” will premier on April 8, Major League Baseball and Netflix announced on Wednesday. The release date comes roughly a week into the regular season and coincides with the Red Sox first homestand of the season.
Filmed throughout the 2024 season, the series will provide viewers with an unprecedented look into life as a big leaguer. Directed by Emmy-award winner Greg Whiteley, the series is expected to be eight episodes long and will cover everything from spring training through the end of the club’s 81-81 campaign.
The release date announcement included a trailer featuring Triston Casas, who speaks about how baseball is the kind of sport where you can do everything right and still get a bad result. To drive the point home, Casas is then shown launching into a profanity-laced tirade after grounding out to end an inning.
Fans were also provided a sneak preview of the series in January at Fenway Fest, including the majority of what is expected to be the show’s first episode. The series is expected to open with an emotional moment on July 26 when Wilyer Abreu hit a game-tying pinch hit double against the Yankees, knowing that back home his grandmother was on her deathbed.
Red Sox revisit highs and lows of ’24 season in first previews of upcoming Netflix series
There was also a scene showing a team dinner celebrating Brayan Bello's new contract extension, Casas and pitcher Kutter Crawford calling Tyler O'Neill's Opening Day home run over breakfast in Seattle, and a montage of the club's 7-3 season-opening road trip, which ends with Trevor Story's devastating shoulder injury at Angel Stadium.
“There’s a lot of stuff that goes on that’s very raw and not pleasing,” Story said at Fenway Fest. “It’s real, it’s competition at the highest level, so with that comes intensity, comes bad language, comes a lot of stuff that you don’t necessarily want people to see, but I thought it was a cool opportunity where we can kind of tell our story.”
“The grinding, all the meetings, all the work, all the cage, everything,” he continued. “That’s what I was excited to share with the fans. And I think you guys will appreciate how much we care about it.”