Game #99 Nats can now play the role of spoiler

Photo by Sol Tucker for TalkNats

With almost all hope of the postseason gone, the Washington Nationals are 8.0 games out of first place. The team will start re-tooling with an eye on the future. That came early this year. A bust. For the rest of the games, they will play the role of “spoiler” as they have this series against their division rival Philadelphia Phillies who are in second place and hoping to make the playoffs. Continue reading

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Game #98 Nats wrap-up Baltimore series!

Photo by Sol Tucker for TalkNats

The Washington Nationals had a must-win series set to dominate the last place Orioles this weekend, and the reverse happened. The Nats are done with Baltimore this season after this game goes final. The Nats swept the O’s in D.C. and this series in Baltimore has the Nats in an 0-2 hole with the salvage game today. Continue reading

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Game #97 Scherzer scratched; Lester in!

Photo by Sol Tucker for TalkNats

About an hour before first pitch, we learned that starting Max Scherzer was scratched due to a sore tricep in an injury he sustained he claimed during batting practice. Who knows what to think about this just six days before the trade deadline. In his place on regular rest is lefty Jon Lester. Continue reading

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Game #96 The Nats have 3 in Baltimore

The Bromo Seltzer Arts Tower and the Inner Harbor are in the background; Photo by Sol Tucker for TalkNats

This series was once known as the “Battle of the Beltways” when the Orioles were good, and that has not been often in the last 16 years. When the team from Washington, D.C. came into existence, the Washington Nationals fans were met with tough words from the O’s owner who said, “there were no real baseball fans in D.C.”. There were 28 owners who supported a team relocating in the Nation’s Capital and 1 vehemently against, Peter Angelos, from Baltimore.

From the time the Nats came into being, the Orioles owner enriched himself based on circumstance, and he pounced and took advantage like a profiteer. What has not changed in nearly ten years is that the MASN split of money still has not been resolved. It has made a tough relationship, even tougher.  Continue reading

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Nationals face Orioles in Battle of the Beltways

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Posted in Analysis, Bullpen, DaveMartinez, DL, Lerners, MASN, MikeRizzo, NewsAndNotes, Roster, Schedule, SeriesPreview | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Mike Rizzo should try a different approach to this trade deadline!

Mike Rizzo is never far from his phone, Photo by Andrew Lang for TalkNats

The best general managers are usually the ones who have World Series rings, and the Washington Nationals man in charge of the baseball side of the ledger, Mike Rizzo, has a ring that has not lost its luster. It isn’t even two years old yet. Continue reading

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Game #95 before the Nats head up north on I-95.

Photo by Sol Tucker for TalkNats

The streaky Washington Nationals are taking advantage of their schedule and will try to sweep the Marlins today before a day-off tomorrow and a weekend series against the team from Baltimore. This game will end this 6-game homestand, and a chance to really push the team closer to that .500 mark.

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In Appreciation of Ken Griffey Jr.

2021 HR Derby presented by Griffey!    Photo by Sol Tucker for TalkNats

The coolest thing about the 2021 MLB season is that it’s reminded us what it’s like when a player transcends rooting interests, and really the sport itself. It was just a few years ago that the chase for Shohei Ohtani headlined the offseason (and disappointed Washington Nationals fans and every other fan base on the East Coast). Now, however, Ohtani is arguably the best all-around player in baseball — a superstar so magnetic you can’t help but root for him (even if we were glad to see Juan Soto take him out in the Home Run Derby!). Continue reading

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Draft 21, Picks 16-20: Late Value Before Free-for-All Free Agency

Minor League baseball is a grind; Photo by Andrew Lang for TalkNats

 

This is where the draft has come to resemble the NFL late rounds. Teams have players on their board; but unlike previous years in which the draft extended up to 40 rounds, and can make selections for a variety of organizational reasons, late round picks now are less disposable. Since we have no insider line into the Nationals, and Kris Kline mumbles a narrative that is carefully engineered, these are the knowns – the Nationals drafted five players that they wanted to make sure they did not lose to another team in the competitive free agency marketplace, and players they were willing to pay up to 125K for, perhaps even more.

Very interesting to see whom these might be, especially when you consider the team draftees from 11-20 (including Alvarez in the 12th, a player whose numbers would not otherwise have set him apart). All of those players have signed except for Marc Davis, Mack Anglin and Elie Kligman. But with the Nationals not far under slot and two high school products unsigned (Brady House and Daylen Lile), one has to wonder whether they can thread the needle to get all five outstanding 1-20 picks (1, 2, 11, 13, and 20) in the fold.

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Three in a row with all Curly W’s feels great!

Photo by Sol Tucker for TalkNats

With Paolo Espino giving another great outing, he handed it over to the bullpen with a 2-0 lead in the 6th inning, In mere minutes, Austin Voth blew the save and the lead and Espino’s hard-earned potential W was gone. The good news is the Nats bats got busy again and scored three runs of their own to take back the lead, and the rest of the bullpen threw zeros in three perfect frames to seal the win. Continue reading

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