Just 40-days to Opening Day; Nationals came to Spring Training ready to compete!

Four months after that photo was taken, the outfield crew looks much different even though it is the same foursome. James Wood cut off his dreadlocks, Dylan Crews cut his hair, Jacob Young added more muscle, and Alex Call rehabbed his plantar fasciitis. We are just 40-days from Opening Day, and the outfielders are in camp early. They didn’t have to arrive until next week. For months, general manager Mike Rizzo and manager Dave Martinez made it clear that Wood, Young and Crews would man their starting outfield. That didn’t stop a beat writer from asking the question on the first day of camp. Oh, there were certainly other questions that needed to be asked — and follow-up questions that begged to be asked.

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Best news so far is that CJ Abrams looks like a new man! Defense was a major focus for CJ over the winter!

Greatness is a process. CJ Abrams is embracing that on-and-off the field. Wakeup calls resonate in many different forms. Abrams answered the call. A source told us that Abrams did not go close to a casino during the offseason. His family took a more active role, and he spent most of his offseason in Georgia before heading to Spring Training early. He had a long conversation in December with manager Dave Martinez that cleared the air and set expectations. But our source told us that Abrams had already gone well beyond Martinez’s expectations with his own list. A family friend messaged us during the offseason, “He’s doing great! Ready for the season!”

As we know, Abrams stopped posting publicly on social media. His agency posted on his account on October 7, and that was the last image on Abrams’ accounts. There was work to do personally and professionally. Social media posting wasn’t going to make anything better, but it could have sent the wrong message at the time. There was also a misconception from a Winter Meetings’ quote from Martinez that some construed that Abrams might have been dodging calls from his boss. That was not the case our source assured us. Martinez had a chance to clarify that they talked after the Winter Meetings, and he had sent hitting coach Darnell Coles to Georgia to work with Abrams.

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Spring Training camp officially opens for the Nationals! Over a dozen Nats’ alumni will appear at camp!

It is official. The CACTI Park of The Palm Beaches is open for pitchers/catchers to report. While today will be about checking in and getting physicals, pitchers will start in their rotating bullpen sessions across the mounds that had those signs last year: “I Don’t Care How Fast You Throw Ball Four.” Those signs are gone — will there be new signs in camp for 2025?

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Looking at the 2024 season, the offseason, and the future for the Washington Nationals!

Unless you missed the memo, Spring Training camp opens tomorrow for the Washington Nationals. That officially ends the offseason which finished with massive turnover from the 2024 roster of players. If we look at players who provided no positive WAR on the FanGraphs RA/9 modeling, there were a total of 24-players throughout last season who fit that criteria, and 18 of those players are gone from the 40-man roster, with only a high likelihood that Keibert Ruiz and Riley Adams will make the 2025 Opening Day roster from that list of 24-players. Gone from the 2024 roster is a cumulative total of -5.6 of negative WAR using addition by subtraction based on that roster purge.

If you used last year’s pythagorean of 70-wins, the team was lucky by one win. FanGraphs is projecting four players at -0.1 WAR (-0.4 cumulative) for the 2025 roster, and they are all in the bullpen. Add back that -5.6 addition by subtraction, and the team should win 75-games this year using that logic. That does not include the WAR of any of the new acquisitions (+4.6) or the departure of the four departing players with positive WAR (+4.0 WAR), nor full seasons from James Wood and Dylan Crews. That is addition by addition. But it is not that simple, as strength of schedule has to be factored into the W/L calculation. Baseball Prospectus, in their PECOTA projections, have the Nats at 74 wins, and FanGraphs has the Nationals at 73-wins. The differences are due to how they graded the Nats against their schedule, and specifically runs scored and runs allowed. On PECOTA, they have a -65 run differential, and on FanGraphs, their differential is at -73.

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As the Super Bowl ends, baseball season begins!

While it is definitely still winter in Washington, D.C., the air feels like spring time in West Palm Beach, Florida. When Super Bowl LIX ends, the baseball season unofficially begins.

This is the final weekend before the Washington Nationals open up their Spring Training camp on Wednesday. Manager Dave Martinez said two weeks ago that he had over a dozen players already in camp.

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What is CJ Abrams’ status?

Up until September 21 of 2024, CJ Abrams was active daily on posting stories on his Instagram account. Since then, nada. His agent put up a collaboration post on Abrams’ page on October 7, and then the well went dry on Abrams’ social media. He has not been posting (on his social media), and not heard from — not even a call with his manager, Dave Martinez, who said in December, “He’s hard to get a hold of.”

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Pitching projections for the 2025 Nats

 

The Washington Nationals pitching staff went through a lot of changes when long-time pitchers like Patrick Corbin and Kyle Finnegan headed to free agency. While the starting rotation had a vacant spot with Trevor Williams departure as a free agent, general manager Mike Rizzo brought Williams back on a new 2-year deal. And Rizzo also signed two more free agent starters, a free agent reliever, and a Rule-5 reliever when he inked  RHP Michael Soroka ($9MM), LHP Shinnosuke Ogasawara ($2.1MM with posting fee), Rule-5 reliever Evan Reifert ($860K with the Rule-5 fee), and reliever Jorge Lopez ($3.0MM).

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Lineup projection for the 2025 Nats

Let’s assume for a few hours that general manager Mike Rizzo is finished adding starting position players to his Washington Nationals roster. That would give us an opportunity to project a lineup.

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NatsJack stayed positive!

Sadly, we lost a great one when Jack Tavenner passed away recently at the age of 77. Known to his baseball friends as NatsJack, he was a Washington Senators’ fan from the time he grew up in Northern Virginia. He played baseball through high school at Falls Church as a catcher at the same time as the Senators relocated to Texas. Like many of us, he had no D.C. baseball until the Expos relocated to Washington in 2005. At that time, NatsJack was living and working in Orlando, Florida — but he was instantly a Nats fan … again. Strategically, his home was less than a 45-minute drive to the team’s first Spring Training home in Viera.

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A Century of Change: From Bleachers to Ballparks

Most people forget that six years ago, there were renderings done for the remainder of the buildout of Nationals Park that was never completed for the additional 35,000 square feet of retail, services, entertainment or arts uses on the stadium premises. The concepts would have completed the original 46,000 square feet of space in the original contract. Now, the D.C. Government would like the Nationals to sign a lease extension. An architectural firm has prepared new concept renderings that go far beyond that 35,000 square feet. A complete facelift on the outer perimeter of Nationals Park.

Modern baseball stadiums are far different from the original concepts. The crack of the bat against the ball—it’s one of the most exhilarating sounds in sports. But what about the experience of attending a Major League Baseball game? A century ago, a trip to the ballpark was a vastly different affair than it is today.

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