Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Red Sox hires observant Jewish executive as new chief baseball officer

Chaim Bloom, 36, who spent 15 years with the Tampa Bay Rays, will be “responsible for all baseball operations matters” for the team.

New Red Sox chief baseball officer Chaim Bloom. Source: Screenshot.
New Red Sox chief baseball officer Chaim Bloom. Source: Screenshot.

The Boston Red Sox on Monday officially announced the hiring of the Tampa Bay Rays’ senior vice president Chaim Bloom as its new chief baseball officer.

Bloom, 36, will be “responsible for all baseball operations matters” for the team. He previously spent 15 years with the Rays.

Bloom grew up in Philadelphia and went to Jewish day school before studying Latin classics at Yale University, where he graduated in 2004.

He is an observant Jew and as such will not work on certain Jewish holidays and Shabbat, despite the demanding schedule as a baseball executive. In 2011, he missed the Rays’ final game against the New York Yankees, which would determine whether the Rays would make the playoffs, because of Rosh Hashanah.

“Leaving town that morning to go to Boston to spend Rosh Hashanah with my in-laws was one of the more difficult things we’d done in my career,” he recalled in an interview with Tablet magazine.

Bloom, his wife Aliza, and their two sons, Isaiah and Judah, lived near Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, Fla., in part so he could easily return on Friday nights to celebrate Shabbat with his family before returning to the stadium to watch the Rays play at home games.

During his time with the Rays, Bloom also had a large jar of gefilte fish on his desk, part of an ongoing bet with an employee.

“The idea that your Judaism is an impediment to your career is something that I have not experienced at all, to my knowledge,” he said, “even as I’m aware that there’s plenty of anti-Semitism in the U.S. at large. I’m fortunate. I don’t think my parents felt that growing up; I think they felt it was a strike against them.”

The shooting guard, 22, is the son of legendary Maccabi Tel Aviv basketball star Derrick Sharp.
The demonstration caused heavy traffic, including a chain accident on Highway 1 in which a pregnant woman was moderately injured.
More than 700 injured as a state of emergency is declared and international aid is rushed to the South American country.
Basil Sweid, 32, a driver in the military’s 75th Battalion, was “a virtuous man of good character,” his city council said.
Banning brit milah would prevent Jewish life from flourishing in Europe, said Katharina von Schnurbein.
“If this is false information, negotiations would end, immediately!” he said.
Benny Gantz, JNS editor-in-chief Jonathan S. Tobin, Gilad Erdan, Mosab Hassan Yousef, Nissim Black and leading voices in security, diplomacy, media, law and Jewish communal affairs headline the summit’s third day in Jerusalem.