Roark was good after he was bad; Mets tried to let the Nationals win!

A different type of walk off; Photo by Marlene Koenig for TalkNats

This game did not start off well for the Washington Nationals. They were behind 4-to-0 at the end of the second inning as Tanner Roark‘s changeup was getting smashed. He then started to throw his curveball and the Mets couldn’t hit it. The Nationals had so many chances to get back into the game but once again did not take advantage of runners on 2nd base and no outs. The Nationals finished at 1-for-12 in RISP situations and that will not win you games. Continue reading

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Game #94 Roark against Syndergaard in NY

Photo by LEGnats for Talknats

Tanner Roark has been the facial hair chameleon for weeks now as he seemingly has gone from the 1960’s ZZ-Top look to an in-between Ken with a 1970’s throwback to the most recent CC Sabathia hairless look after his last 3 starts. Let’s hope Roark doesn’t shave his legs next. The Nationals are now 5-14 in Roark appearances this season going into tonight’s game. Roark has certainly put his team in a position to win 11 of the 25 games he has pitched in, but lately, like the July 3rd disaster where he gave up 9-earned runs and then lasted only 4-innings in his 4-run inefficient 102-pitch start 5-days ago, these are not MLB quality. After the last few starts, Roark each time has told the post-game media that he “felt great” while the paying fans were left “feeling sick”.  Continue reading

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The Nats 5-runs stands up on this night in a 5-4 win!

Two of the three Nats All-Stars came up big and a worthy All-Star snub named Anthony Rendon was most of the offense with two home runs and three RBIs. All-Star Max Scherzer went 7 innings giving up 3-runs and the only Nats positional player who is an All-Star, Bryce Harper, hit a 2-run home run for the much needed game winning RBI in this game. With All-Star closer Sean Doolittle on the DL, it was Ryan Madson who earned the save tonight with all three outs turned by Trea Turner on slick plays in the 9th inning. In this one-run game, it was the Nats who came up with the win. With all the great seasons Ryan Madson had in his career — he was never an All-Star.  Continue reading

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Game #93 Four-game series in New York

The Nationals are in Queens, New York for a 4-game series with the New York Mets. Normally a Mets and Nationals series has some great pitching matchups, but with both teams struggling, these matchups aren’t going to to get marquees lit up. Tonight is Max Scherzer and lefty Steven Matz, Friday is Tanner Roark and Noah Syndergaard, Saturday is TBD (Voth) and Zack Wheeler, and the final game before the All-Star break is Jeremy Hellickson and Corey Oswalt. Continue reading

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The inconsistent offense has been a problem for over a month!

Kevin Long with Daniel Murphy. Photo by Lee Heiman for TalkNats

In the continuing search for the elusive answer of ‘what is wrong with the Nats’ I tried to look at the players and see how they compare to their normal performances and really try to answer if they are playing up to their expected levels. If you focus on the regular lineup and you take away all those who were/are injured and Bryce Harper, and you are left with Anthony Rendon and Trea Turner. Continue reading

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Game #92 It’s a Facebook game as Gio Gonzalez takes the mound!

Gio Gonzalez likes Facebook, but how many people want to watch a baseball game on their device? Well, unless you are at PNC Park or able to project Facebook on your TV — you will have to get creative to watch the game on your connected device which is sure to make today a nightmare for many people who don’t even subscribe to Facebook. Unless you have 2 devices — good luck watching the game and “live commenting” with your virtual friends on TalkNats. Continue reading

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It was a 0-0 pitcher’s duel for 4 innings; Nats win 5-1

Jeremy Hellickson pitched a 5-inning shutout with a 2-run lead he received from an Anthony Rendon home run. Hellickson pitched well and could have gone deeper in the game. In the top of the 6th inning with bases loaded, manager Dave Martinez pulled Hellickson to add-on runs and sent in pinch-hitter Mark Reynolds who walked. The Nationals scored 3-runs in that 6th inning which proved enough for the Nationals to get this win and move to within 4 ½ games of the Atlanta Braves and 5½ games of the Phillies. Continue reading

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Game #91 Jeremy Hellickson tries to do what Roark and JRod could not do!

Photo by Lee Heiman for Talknats

Every game is crucial for the Nationals as there is less than 45% of the season remaining, and the Nationals could really use a win tonight and for starter Jeremy Hellickson to go deep into the game. With that said, it is too soon to talk about the team going into “sell” mode when they are only 5 ½ games out of first place, but it does not stop the salacious rumors of trading Bryce Harper and others. Trade talks involving Harper get more newspapers sold, extra TV viewership, and give websites a boost of traffic and views and clicks. Those tantalizing tidbits when you see those headlines you hate — usually get you to click. It’s human nature that people want to talk about it.  Continue reading

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Game #90 Nats have 3 games in Pittsburgh

It’s great to have All-Star players on your team like Scherzer, Doolittle and Harper, and the Washington Nationals have other star players like Trea Turner, Anthony Rendon, and Juan Soto who are near the tops of baseball in analytics. This week, Mark Reynolds took home the hardware of Player of the Week and beat out his teammate Trea Turner who also had a spectacular week with the bat and glove.  With all of this star power that the Nationals possess, wins just don’t come easy for a team that used to be built on starting pitching. Continue reading

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Thoughts from the weekend on the #Nats

Mike Rizzo is never far from his phone.

* One week to go until the all-star break and it won’t be easy to get to that point.

* The lack of depth in our starting pitching which many of us decried in the off-season has come back to haunt us in a big way.

* The total collapse of Gio Gonzalez and Tanner Roark at the same time as Stephen Strasburg is out with an injury might not have been anticipated but it’s a well-known truth, and all teams know that you need much more than 5 starters to get through a baseball season. This was not a good job by general manager Mike Rizzo.

* The collapse of the starting rotation has had a chain reaction effect on the bullpen which has been mostly very effective. With Justin Miller pitching 6 days out of 8, Brandon Kintzler and Kelvin Herrera 4 days out of 5, etc., we finally saw a meltdown on Sunday where Miller and Ryan Madson (who hasn’t been right since early season overuse) had trouble retiring anyone.

* The fact that manager Dave Martinez used his “A” bullpen and even warmed up Kelvin Herrera in a blow out begs the question: ‘what is the manager thinking?’

* The deployment of Jefry Rodriguez was completely baffling and we are not sure if that was strictly on Martinez or if this was cooked up by the entire brain trust. With an entire pitching staff on fumes, how can you have a non-usable asset for 4 days?

* The case of Austin Voth is also completely confusing. He was taken out of the Syracuse rotation seemingly to act as a safety net for the big club but like in the past the organization seems completely unwilling to actually deploy him even as they use a Double-A pitcher with less experience. If the organization is so negative in it’s evaluation of Voth, why is he holding a roster spot. He has been called up twice by the Nationals this season and was not used.

* Acquisition of a pitcher has been discussed throughout and it’s also true for several other teams who need help in that area. The problem is that there is more demand than supply and in many cases the quality available is dubious.

* A recent addition to the TalkNats rumor mill is Nathan Eovaldi a 2-time TJ patient who has been effective lately and still throws high 90’s. Given the recent news that both teams have been scouting each other it might be that there is some interest there.

* Matt Wieters is about to return and one can hope that his return does something for our pitchers. There is likely not much added offense one can expect from Wieters. The interesting question is which of the catchers loses his spot from the current tandem of Spencer Kieboom and Pedro Severino. Offensively Kieboom has been the pleasant surprise and all of a sudden Severino found a power stroke hitting his first two home runs of the season this week.

* One has to admit that the return of Daniel Murphy and Adam Eaton has not produced the magic we had all hoped for. One can easily make the case that Murphy has not been an overall upgrade over Difo offensively, but Eaton has not been an upgrade over Michael Taylor. The Murphy situation is further complicated by well below average defense at 2nd base (and Murphy doesn’t add any value over Adams at 1st base).

* The inclusion of Murphy and Eaton in many starting lineups indicates a hope that they will recapture their form of previous years and it’s not an unreasonable expectation especially if you feel that Difo and Taylor are simply not good enough to win with.

* Our position in the standings has improved quite significantly in the last few days and the opposition has certainly shown that they aren’t invincible. The risk that things could still go south this week given the pitching mess is certainly there. If we get to the All-Star break in the same position where we are now and we get an effective Strasburg back for the 2nd half it wouldn’t be a bad outcome considering our pitching woes.

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