10 Monday points on the #Nats

Photo by Andrew Lang for TalkNats

After an easy dismissal of the Tampa Bay Rays, the week ends on a sour note.

1) A series between the Nats and the Giants where the Nats have Stephen Strasburg, Gio Gonzalez and Max Scherzer going against Suarez, Rodriguez and Holland should be a sweep for the Nats; 2 of 3 at worst. The whole series felt like we were swimming upstream.

2) Injuries continue to mess with the season. Just as Adam Eaton returns we lose Stras and Brandon Kintzler to injuries. Seemingly the prognosis in both cases is pretty good but it’s still a maddening pattern.

3) With Eaton’s return we are at a crossroads. We now have 4 regular outfielders for 3 positions. It will be interesting how manager Dave Martinez plays this in the long run. Michael Taylor is making this interesting by finally making offensive contributions.

4) Daniel Murphy is set to return, gimpy knee and all. We have a week to ease him back by using the DH in AL parks. It’s becoming blatantly obvious that his steady productive bat is sorely missed.

5) The catching position remains a terrible black hole offensively. Pedro Severino is pretty much an automatic out these days. At the very least Spencer Kieboom should get more playing time. He looks somewhat less of an automatic out than Severino.

6) The starting rotation is down to 3 of the opening day rotation of Scherzer, Gio and Tanner Roark and without the many off-days, we would have been in serious trouble. Wednesday looks like a reverse lock type of game, and we really should be hoping that Hellickson returns ASAP from his hamstring tweak.

7) Justin Miller has been a god-send; this year’s version of Matt Albers. He might just save us the need to trade valuable assets for relief help.

8) Playing with the DH this week in American League ballparks, the need for pinch-hitters is at a minimum this week so having a huge compliment of pitchers might well come in handy.

9) Our position in the standings is fine, and as the Phills begin to fade it’s slowly coming down to a 2 horse race, and Atlanta doesn’t look invincible either although they have an easy part of their schedule coming up.

10) The 2-game set in NY will be a solid test. The Yankees hardly ever lose and their lineup is fearsome. Couple that with the fact that we will be sending our 4th and 6th starters and one can honestly feel a bit uneasy. Yes, Tanner Roark and Erick Fedde look like the starters on Tuesday and Wednesday in Yankees Stadium.

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Nats get shutout 2-0 in an almost lifeless effort

It is like the annual letdown on the Sunday game after the Dream Foundation Gala. Whatever happens, it is year after year that the team falls flat and lack energy on the game after the Gala. Today, the Nationals got shutout 2-to-0 sticking a loss on Max Scherzer. Maybe if the Nationals were facing an ace pitcher you could understand it, but this was not a pitcher’s duel.

For Max’s part, he made one fatal pitch in his 7-innings today and it was a meatball to Brandon Crawford, but the Nationals win these types of games almost every time. In fact before today, the Nationals were 24-and-2 in games where the opposing team scored 2-runs or less.  Continue reading

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Game #64 Season finale with the SF Giants; It’s Scherz-Day

Rumor has it that Max Scherzer wanted to party-all-night with Alexander Ovechkin, but Mad Max of course thought better of it as he had to work today. Scherzer is scheduled to pitch this afternoon for the Nats in the season finale with the San Francisco Giants. This is also the rubber game of the series if the game can be played as the weather hovering near Nationals Park is dark and ominous.  Continue reading

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Brandon Kintzler dodges a bullet; MRI reveals just a Grade 1 forearm strain

Photo by Sol Tucker for TalkNats

For Brandon Kintzler, pitching is a gift after he sustained a labrum tear early in his career. For most pitchers, a labrum tear is the kiss of death for a baseball career. Kintzler paid his dues coming back from the injury while playing in independent baseball in places you have never heard of in the “Northern League”. The Rhino played so far north he was north of the border in Canada playing for the Winnipeg Goldeyes. The twice-drafted 40th-round pick exited the 8th inning yesterday with an apparent arm injury. Luckily it wasn’t the shoulder, but it looked serious as the camera showed him pointing to his elbow and forearm.  Continue reading

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Gio stumbles and the bullpen and bats pick him up!

Lead-off

The Nationals made their way through this game with a win while stressing their bullpen as Gio Gonzalez only lasted 3 1/3 innings. When Gio departed with one out, he also left behind bases loaded for Justin Miller who worked through it swiftly while holding a 5-to-4 lead for the Nationals then Miller threw a scoreless 5th inning to get the ball to his bullpen mates. The Nationals would only surrender one run over 5 2/3 innings from the bullpen in a 7-to-5 Nationals win in front of over 37,000 fans on “Stanley Cup” celebration day at Nationals Park.

Continue reading

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Game #63 Nationals officially celebrate the Stanley Cup champs at Nats Park

One thing you can say about the Washington Nationals is that they have been very supportive of their local hockey team for years. This year, manager Dave Martinez took the fandom to a whole new level wearing Capitals apparel pre-game and post-game once the long hockey post-season started and through all four rounds to the Stanley Cup victory. In early May, Bryce Harper tweeted his hopes for a Vegas and Caps finals and he got his wish. Nationals players regularly have gone to Caps games over the winter, and with the off-days Max Scherzer and Ryan Zimmerman got to attend Game #4 of the Stanley Cup finals game. Today, the Washington Nationals welcome the champion Capitals to Nationals Park with the Stanley Cup, and Caps superstar Alexander Ovechkin will throw out the ceremonial first pitch.  Continue reading

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The comeback falls short as Strasburg exits after 2 innings with shoulder discomfort

On the eight-year anniversary of Stephen Strasburg‘s debut, he exited after 2-innings with some discomfort in his shoulder which manager Dave Martinez has called inflammation and Strasburg will get an MRI tomorrow. Nationals Park was rocking with a sold-out crowd of over 41,000, and the Nationals fell behind early behind Strasburg 3-0. Wander Suero gave up 3 more runs. The Nationals clawed back and got the game to a 6-5 deficit, but then Brandon Kintzler struggled followed by Matt Grace who let 2 of Kintzler’s runners to score pushing the score to 9-to-5 and out of reach. Continue reading

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Game #62 Nationals face a different Giants team with Strasburg pitching on his Anniversary

Photo by LEGNats for TalkNats

It was 8-years ago today that Stephen Strasburg electrified the baseball world with an incredible debut at Nationals Park. Stras struck out 14 batters in one for the ages. Tonight he takes the mound in hopes of bettering what he produced on that night.

The Giants are the team the Nationals face tonight in Nationals Park. They have Madison Bumgarner back from the DL, but they lost their best offensive weapon, Brandon Belt, to the DL due to an appendectomy. They only have 3 regulars on the DL which include Cueto and Samadrdzija. Lucky for the Giants that Brandon Crawford is the hottest hitter in baseball, he is batting .434 for the last month.

Rookie Andrew Suarez pitches tonight for the Giants, and if his name sounds familiar, it should be since the Washington Nationals drafted him in the 2nd round of the 2014 Draft from the University of Miami. Suarez did not sign with the Nats reportedly because he wanted above slot money and did not sign. Funny as it worked out he did not move up in the 2015 Draft to the 1st round and had to settle for full-slot money with the Giant at $1,010,100 per this tweet from MLB.com’s Jonathan Mayo. Suarez went from the 57th overall pick in 2014 by the Nationals to the 61st pick overall in 2015 with the Giants. Continue reading

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Seth Romero makes his 2018 debut in the Minor Leagues

Catcher Alejandro Flores chats with Seth Romero (left) before his first Hagerstown Suns appearance. (TalkNats photo)

The collegiate and Spring Training indiscretions by Seth Romero have been discussed before to overkill, and those issues have overshadowed his pitching prowess that he put on display last night in Hagerstown, Maryland’s Municipal Stadium in front of 1,736 fans which was attended by several scouts and a group of Nationals front office personnel including Nationals V.P. Bob Boone and the well-traveled Washington Nationals Director of Player Development Mark Scialabba. Lets suffice it to say, Seth Romero’s 2018 debut was electric. He smashed through the Phillies Low-A affiliate Lakewood Blueclaws like a 6’3″ 240 big man with an over-sized crab mallet. He had a preset pitch count of 60 pitches so his evening was short but full of strikeouts. Of the 8-batters that Romero recorded for outs — 6 were via strikeouts. That’s a 20.30 K/9 rate! Continue reading

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The 2018 #Nats MLB draft is in the books; TalkNats covers Seth Romero’s first Suns start!

The Washington Nationals followed a pitching-heavy draft last year by once again drafting mostly pitchers in the 2018 Major League Baseball draft this week.

The group of 23 pitchers drafted by the Nats is headlined by right-hander Mason Denaburg (first-round pick, #27 overall selection) and left-hander Tim Cate (second-round pick, #65 overall selection). Denaburg is a prep pitcher who turned heads as a starter for Merritt Island High School in Florida, the alma mater of former Nats pitcher Taylor Jordan, while Cate comes from a less traditional region for top-flight baseball talent as the ace of the University of Connecticut Huskies.

Here’s a pick-by-pick analysis of the first 10 rounds of the Nats’ draft class, plus a few assorted notes. Continue reading

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