


“This is a team that has finished last, three of the last four years,” reporter Sean McAdam says of the Boston Red in The Clubhouse: A Year with the Red Sox. “But you do wonder what they’re really like inside. If you’re not cut out for it, you’re in for a different experience in Boston.”
The contrast between the team's recent struggles and its storied history sets the stage for an unprecedented look behind the scenes. The Red Sox are one of the most iconic franchises in baseball, a team that’s experienced some of the sport’s highest highs and lowest lows. And now, for the first time ever, Major League Baseball invited cameras to follow the action over the course of the full 2024 season.




Available on Netflix now, The Clubhouse: A Year with the Red Sox is directed by four-time Emmy winner Greg Whiteley (Cheer, America’s Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders, Last Chance U). The immersive series offers an unprecedented look into the personal and professional lives of the Boston Red Sox during the 2024 season, providing a never-before-seen glimpse into the extreme demands of a grueling 162-game schedule.
“Of all the sports shows we’ve produced, the sport itself has served as merely a backdrop to tell highly personal stories,” Whiteley said. “While shooting the Red Sox 2024 season, we were astounded to discover that baseball is the exception — it’s so all-consuming that it leaves virtually no room for a personal life away from the ballpark.”

The eight episodes come after the 2024 release of The Comeback. Directed by Colin Barnicle, The Comeback celebrates the 20th anniversary of the team’s 2004 postseason run, when the Red Sox came back from 3–0 in the playoffs against the Yankees before sweeping the St. Louis Cardinals in the World Series to end an 86-year championship drought. Since then, the Red Sox have won the World Series three more times, making them the team with the most titles since the turn of the millennium.




While The Comeback revels in the successes of the past, The Clubhouse offers an unfiltered, sometimes uncomfortable look at the realities of playing professional baseball today, looking at the ups and downs of the 81-81 season played out in real time under intense public scrutiny. As always, Whiteley’s series goes beyond the surface, creating space for players to speak to the challenges that unfold, stretching from the field to private conversations in their homes.
Whiteley says that while the sport is grueling, what players have to deal with internally can overshadow the demands of the game. “The most intense battles we witnessed occurred inside a player’s mind,” he said. “All sports are mentally demanding, but the frequency of failure (and the sheer length of the 162-game baseball season) requires a remarkable kind of fortitude.”

The series follows the 2024 team, including first baseman Triston Casas, pitcher Brayan Bello, center fielder Jarren Duran, right fielder Wilyer Abreu, designated hitter Masataka Yoshida, and others.































































