The NL East in 2020 will look different in managerial style and in the dugouts!

There is apparently no fine for littering in “Braves Country.”

The manager carousel made its usual run through the league after the season, and the NL East was no exception as the Mets and Phillies both make changes with their dugout skippers. Carlos Beltran is the Mets new manager and Joe Girardi got shutout of the Cubs job and settled for the Phillies opening. As both managers look to fill their staffs, it is possible that Nats assistant hitting coach Joe Dillon could head to Philadelphia as their hitting coach. While the Marlins chose to retain Don Mattingly reportedly at a lesser salary, they did make changes on their coaching staff. What did not change was general manager positions in the NL East. Continue reading

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A memorable trip to Cooperstown

A visit to Cooperstown

The best-laid plans, right?  Back in May, when the Nationals were 19-31 or thereabouts, Spouse and I looked at each other and said, “when October rolls around, we’re going to want to get out of town ASAP because it sure doesn’t look as if the Nationals will be demanding our attention. How about we cash in that behind-the-scenes tour of the Hall of Fame we got, oh, five years ago?”

First, Logistics (skip this p Continue reading

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Veterans Day; GM Meetings and the Rookie of the Year award

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The Nats needs for 2020 begin with starting pitching!

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The #Nats farm system and Baseball America rankings

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The Winter Meetings start in a month in San Diego! Who do the Nats need for 2020?

Tee times were booked well in advance at Torrey Pines and some other golf venues ahead of the Winter Meetings that officially kick-off on December 8th in San Diego at the Hilton San Diego Bayfront: , but many executives will slip in a few days early for this one. This will be an easy one for super agent Scott Boras who lives just up the beach in Newport outside of Los Angeles, and he will be in the zone on this one especially if Stephen Strasburg, Anthony Rendon, Gerrit Cole, and Mike Moustakas are all unsigned at that point as he is the agent to all four of them. And Boras is also the agent for Hyun-Jin RyuDallas Keuchel, and Nicholas Castellanos and others. If rumors are correct about J.D. Martinez staying with the Red Sox, then Boras only controls seven of the top ten free agents this winter. If Marcell Ozuna did not defect to a new agent, Boras might have had a monopoly on the top-12 free sans Madison Bumgarner, Zack Wheeler, Yasmani Grandal, and Josh DonaldsonContinue reading

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The Nationals have to decide who they want to be in the future!

Photo by Laura Peebles for TalkNats

In July 2016, Theo Epstein of the Cubs pulled off what can universally be accepted as one of the worst trades of all time; he obtained a rental relief pitcher, Aroldis Chapman (albeit the best in the business), for a generational talent, Gleyber Torres, who remains under Yankees team control for five more years. In a vacuum, that’s the kind of trade that gets GM’s fired, but of course there is a rub in the “Prospects are cool, parades are cooler” concept as the Chicago Cubs won the World Series in 2016, and they probably would not have done it without acquiring Aroldis Chapman. The point of this anecdote is that winning the World Series changes everything, and there is usually no such thing as a bad trade if it leads directly to a championship particularly if your team has not won one in decades. Continue reading

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The party is over….for now; The business side of baseball takes over!

Some players from the World Championship roster will not return for 2020

The “Hot Stove” fully lit up the second after Daniel Hudson struck out Michael Brantley for the final out of the World Series. Prior to that there were 28 teams that were early entries into the offseason, and now it is official. Free agents have been declared, and options are being picked up and turned down. Opt-outs have been used in a variety of ways. The exclusive period is still open for teams to negotiate with their own free agents, and then qualified offers will be issued before free agents can officially sign with other teams.  Continue reading

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Even the 94 year old Ted Lerner wasn’t around for the1924 parade!

Washington Nationals owner Ted Lerner looks on as his son Mark Lerner embraces Jayson Werth in a RIng of Honor ceremony; Photo by Marlene Koenig for TalkNats

Usually nothing good comes easy. The path of least resistance is usually that bumpy ride that leads to beautiful places. There are few Washingtonians who were alive 95 years ago when D.C. held its last World Series parade before the Great Depression. For the 94-year-old owner of the Washington Nationals, Ted Lerner was just a gleam in his father’s eye when the 1924 World Series parade was held. Lerner was born the next year and grew up in upper NW D.C. in his youth, and while he could have been a toddler at a game to watch Walter Johnson pitch, he did experience the 1933 World Series as an 8-year-old at DC’s last bit of October glory before this year. Separated by 86 years between October classics, you have to savor what has happened this week and this year and even the road to glory.

Mr. Lerner’s love of baseball inspired him to purchase the Washington Nationals in 2006 and restore that glory of his early youth. Maybe Lerner was the owner the Nats needed among the many suitors because you never know how the alternatives would have turned out. Savor the triumph and all the glory because World Series wins are rare indeed.  D.C. waited longer than the Red Sox for another parade in fact. Continue reading

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FOCO Releases New Officially Licensed 2019 World Series Champions Merchandise

FOCO is excited to introduce a new line of officially licensed products commemorating the Washington Nationals’ 2019 World Series victory over the Houston Astros. Every item in the collection of Washington Nationals championship products features the official 2019 World Series Champions logo.
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