Citizens of Natstown - A Washington Nationals Blog

A Washington Nationals Blog

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Game #48: Nats Bats Wake Up

The Nationals returned home from their West Coast swing and saw their offense come alive against their division rival, the Philadelphia Phillies, winning 5-2.

Jordan Zimmermann took the mound for the Nats and did what he's done all season, mowing through opposing line-ups deep into the game. While the offense took care of the rest.

The Phillies struck first against Zimmermann when Domonic Brown singled to score Ryan Howard in the top of the second inning. But then it was all Nationals.

The Nats first run came in the third inning. Bryce Harper, Ryan Zimmerman and Adam LaRoche all walked against Phillies starter Kyle Kendrick, loading the bases for Ian Desmond. Desmond hit a sac fly to right field, scoring Harper and advancing Zimmerman to third where he was stranded.

The Phillies briefly took the lead again in the fifth when Zimmermann struggled a bit. Singles by Brown and Freddy Galvis along with a rare wild pitch set up Erik Kratz's sac fly to make it 2-1. Two more singles by Kendrick and Jimmy Rollins loaded the bases with one out, but Zimmermann got Ben Revere to ground into a double play to end the threat.

The Phillies lead was brief though, as the Nationals got that run back and more in the bottom of the fifth. Bryce Harper led off the inning with a single and Ryan Zimmerman hit into a fielder's choice, putting him on first instead. Adam LaRoche then drove a ball deep into center that Revere misplayed into a rare triple for the slow footed first baseman, tying the game.

Ian Desmond struck out on a borderline pitch to make it two outs, but then the wheels fell off for Kendrick. Kurt Suzuki singled in LaRoche to make it 3-2 and Tyler Moore followed that with a swinging bunt single of his own to put runners on first and second.  Then Steve Lombardozzi plugged the gap in right-center for a two-run double making it 5-2 Nationals.

The remaining innings went by with little fanfare. Zimmermann finished his night after seven innings and 92 pitches. He allowed just the two runs on six hits, while striking out one and walking none.

Tyler Clippard pitched a perfect eighth with a strikeout to set-up Rafael Soriano for the save. And Soriano too pitched a perfect inning with a strikeout to seal the win for the Nats.

After the game manager Davey Johnson said that Zimmermann was pitching with a stiff neck, but that didn't seem to have any effect on his performance. The Nationals also designated pitcher Yunesky Maya for assignment, calling up infielder Jeff Kobernus from AAA Syracuse.

The Nationals will look to take the series tomorrow with Dan Haren on the mound facing Phillies rookie Jonathan Pettibone.

Exploring the Nationals' Depth

​I've recently complained that the Nationals' lack of organizational depth is a major reason for their mediocre start to the season. ​Key contributors C Wilson Ramos (twice), 3B Ryan Zimmerman, RF Jayson Werth and RHP Ryan Mattheus have all gone on the disabled list while LHP Ross Detwiler and LF Bryce Harper have narrowly avoided their own stints. None of that is even to mention 2B Danny Espinosa, who is playing with a torn rotator cuff. 

​Kurt Suzuki has filled in admirably for the injured Ramos, but out of that bunch, that's pretty much the only bright spot. Anthony Rendon and Chad Tracy struggled at 3B filling in for Zimmerman while Roger Bernadina and Tyler Moore have been downright awful in the corner OF spots. Super-sub Steve Lombardozzi has limped along to a -0.3 WAR, almost as bad as Espinosa's -0.4. 

Finding quality depth for contenders can be quite a conundrum. For every aging veteran looking for a World Series ring there are plenty of younger guys that end up with lousy teams because they have a clearer path to playing time. I hate to think of disaster scenarios, but here is a look at the players who could become key replacements if injuries happen throughout the season. Please keep in mind - I am not considering any current injuries to the minor league guys unless they're season-long issues.

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Nats Need to Find a Way to Win the Close Ones

The Nats overall are 8-4 in one run games and that might lead people to believe that they have done a good job of winning the close ones, and while they did end up winning yesterday, the way they went about it is not the path to success. Against Matt Cain and Madison Bumgarner the Nationals scored a combined three runs. That by itself may not sound good and no one is denying that the Nats offense has been scuffling, but Matt Cain holds a career 3.35 ERA and is one of the best pitchers in the NL. Madison Bumgarner is a rising star and has been the Giants best starter this season and his career 3.17 ERA isn't too shabby either, and while they Nats struggled to score runs against Cain and Bumgarner the Giants scored a combined one run against Stephen Strasburg and Gio Gonzalez. In other words, the Nats starters were just that much better.​

In both games the Nats entered the late innings with a one run lead and handed the ball to a bullpen that was believed to be one of the best in the NL and in both games the Nats bullpen blew it and forced the game into extra innings. The Nats ended up splitting these two games, but they should have won both of them. These games represent what playoff baseball is like. Whether it is Strasburg vs. Cain, Gio vs. Bumgarner or Strasburg vs. Cueto, Gio vs. Latos or Strasburg vs. Wainwright, Gio vs. Miller; if the Nats starters out-duel the other team’s top pitchers they have to win the game. This is how the Nats are ultimately going to win a World Series. While the lack of offense and ability to score runs is very alarming the more alarming aspect of these last two games was the Nats inability to close out games, and this isn't the first time it has happened this season.

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Game #46 Recap: Nats Lose in Extras

The Nationals wasted a great start by Stephen Strasburg and lost 4-2 in ten innings to the San Francisco Giants on a Pablo Sandoval walk-off home run.​

The Nationals got off to a good start, scoring two runs in the first inning. A Denard Span single, Bryce Harper sac fly and doubles from Ryan Zimmerman and Ian Desmond, the latter breaking an 0-20 streak, did the damage. ​

Those were the only runs the Nationals scored all night though. They threatened in the fourth inning when they loaded the bases with one out but a ground out by Kurt Suzuki and strikeout by Stephen Strasburg let Giants starter Matt Cain off the hook.​

Strasburg had a rough going in the first inning, walking two and giving up two singles. But a slick double play turned by Zimmerman, Danny Espinosa and Adam LaRoche helped him get out of trouble and he finished a scoreless first, albeit in 31 pitches.​

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An Organizational Slump

From top to bottom the Washington Nationals organization is slumping. The offense is OPSing a collective .656 better than only the Marlins, the manager continues to put useless offensive player after useless offensive player in the two-hole, one of the most important parts of the line-up, and the general manager is now calling up useless relievers just in case Stephen Strasburg fails to go four innings. That last one is the most puzzling. The general manager of the Nationals is betting against his Ace starting pitcher.  ​

The move to bring up Maya as the eighth reliever makes some sense with every other reliever except the recently called-up Abad, Storen, Clippard, and Soriano available if a lesser pitcher known to struggle for five innings were on the mound, but they aren't. Stephen Strasburg is pitching tonight and so far this season he has averaged 6.33 innings a start and has failed to get through the fifth innings twice. Now if he goes six and the Nats use Clippard, Storen, and Soriano to finish out the game they then have Gio Gonzalez on the mound tomorrow. Both Strasburg and Gio are fully capable of giving the Nationals seven strong innings and good major league relievers, like Storen, Clippard, and Soriano are, should be able to pitch two days in a row. Thursday is then an off day followed by Jordan Zimmermann who is averaging over seven innings a start. If the Nats want to rest the bullpen then let Strasburg and Gio pitch, followed by an off-day, and then have Jordan Zimmermann go on Friday. Read More

Game #45 Recap: A Forgettable Evening

The Nationals continued the slump they started in San Diego, getting blown out by the San Francisco Giants, 8-0, in game one of a three game set in San Francisco.

The Nationals bats were especially cold tonight, amassing only three hits all game. That combined with the pitching styles of spot starter Zach Duke and fellow long men Craig Stammen and Henry Rodriguez and the Nats did not have much of a chance all night.​

Giants starter Ryan Vogelsong entered the game with an 8.06 ERA and 1.839 WHIP, struggling mightily to find the form that made him one of the best comeback stories in Major League Baseball in 2011 and 2012. ​

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Series #15 Preview: Nats at Giants

​At this point in the West Coast trip the Nats are not doing as well as they would want to. They only won one game against the Dodgers and split the series with the Padres, of which they should have taken at least three. Now they head to San Francisco to take on the defending World Series Champions, the Giants.

Sadly, Ross Detwiler will miss his start in the series with a slight oblique strain. General Manager Mike Rizzo said that they do not plan to put him on the disabled list. Zack Duke will be taking Detwiler’s start to begin the series with the Giants. Detwiler’s next scheduled start is on Sunday against the Phillies at Nationals Park. The hope is that he will be ready to go by then, but if his spasms and soreness keeps up Stephen Strasburg could start for him on normal rest. “In essence, we’ll have 10 or 11 days until that spot needs to pitch again,” Rizzo said. “We think Ross will be okay by then.”

Bryce Harper is expected to be back in the lineup for the beginning of the San Francisco series and Davey Johnson belies that he will continue his day-to-day responsibilities in the outfield. On the other hand, Jayson Werth saw a specialist in New York over the weekend to rehab his ailing hamstring, but in the process it flared up again. Rizzo believes that he will start ramping up baseball activities this week and should join the team when they finish their West Coast road trip.

Alright, no more doom and gloom. The middle of the lineup is finally batting, as advertised. Ryan Zimmerman will hit almost any pitch that you throw at him and Adam LaRoche is attaching the ball like it insulted him mama, so that is awesome to say the least. In several of the games on this road trip those two guys have pretty much been the team’s entire offense.

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Danny Espinosa: Inching Towards a Solution

By now everyone knows there is a problem with Danny Espinosa. Major league baseball players don't perform to a .212 wOBA unless there is something wrong, and before the season Espinosa told everyone what was wrong. Sometime last September he completely tore the rotator cuff off the bone. Instead of going for a surgery that would have held him out until June he opted to try and strengthen the muscles around it and play through it. It hasn't worked, but Danny Espinosa isn't going to admit that it is a problem with his shoulder, and there is a chance that their isn't, but when a player is pulling off of fastballs down the middle and can't ever get the barrel to the ball there are physical issues. ​

The bigger issue is the reason Espinosa is playing through this injury. He is doing it in order to keep his job, but instead he has played himself into a position to lose his job.  This situation isn't without solutions and some of them are even within the organization.

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Game #44 Recap: When It Rains, It Pours.

The Nationals aimed to take the series win in San Diego to go 3 for 4 before heading off to San Francisco.​ Unfortunately, a 13-4 loss and more shaky defense would not allow the Nationals to do so. The Nationals will leave San Diego with a series split against a team that the Nationals were hoping to win a series over.

Dan Haren came out of the gate struggling Sunday Afternoon. He immediately gave up a single to Everth Cabrera. Cabrera then stole 2nd, then went to 3rd on a wild pitch from Dan Haren. Chase Headley got on base via the walk. Carlos Quentin doubled to bring in Cabrera, then a sac fly brought in Headley. A double from Jedd Gyorko then brought in the 3rd run in the 1st inning to put the Nationals in a 3-0 hole. It would turn out to be a deficit the Nationals would never overcome.​

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Game #42 Recap: Nats Win in Extras

A good eight innings for the Nationals against the San Diego Padres became a tie game in the ninth, but the Nats pulled through, winning 6-5 in 10. 

Two players who have been scuffling lately, Chad Tracy and Drew Storen, got to play hero in the extra frame, making sure the Nationals held on to a game they had all but sewn up just an inning before.​

Tracy hit the game winning home run in the top of the tenth, his first home run of the year and the first RBI from a pinch hitter this season. While Storen came in to the tenth to notch the save. ​

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Nationals Fringy Prospect Update

Two weeks ago, I took a look at my pre-season top 15 prospects and how they performed through April. Now it's time to ​take a look at the second half of my top prospect list, mostly filled with fringe prospects and long-shots.

16) C Jhonatan Solano - With Wilson Ramos going on the DL again, Solano will get a second crack at the ML roster in 2013. He went 1/6 in three games for the Nats in April and isn't hitting much better in Syracuse - .167/.200/.208 (albeit only in 50 plate appearances). He was just reinstated from the Syracuse 7 day DL (ankle injury) yesterday, just in time to be called up.  TRENDING: DOWN

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Passing the Test

If you are in any way like me and came of age in the 90's or are younger and happen to like retro video games then you will remember games such as Castlevania, and if you haven't played it stop reading this and go do so now. Furthermore if you only have time for one Castlevania game it should be Symphony of the Night. If you are still reading I am going to assume you have played a Castlevania game and if the only one you have played was Castlevania 64 that you are a pathetic individual. Rebuilding the rails here the point is those games were built around boss fights. Every level ended with a giant boss and for Simon or Alucard or whoever the main character was each boss presented a new challenge and had to be defeated in a unique manner.

Most of the Castlevania games, and all of the good ones, came out in a time before AI and so the boss fights were essentially giant puzzles. There was a pattern to how to win and the best Castlevania games combined the platforming and action elements of the game perfectly in its best boss fights, and every boss fight got more and more difficult. Boss fights were always filled with frustration while trying to figure out the pattern and once you did they still weren't easy. There was nothing better than the sense of relief at landing the killing blow with one bar of health left. The worst thing about all these boss fights is that you always had to do them again. Near the end of the game there was always a stage that was nothing but the previous boss fights, and that is what Stephen Strasburg overcame last evening. Read More
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