Nats drop the opener; You won’t win a game if you can’t score even one run!

Brilliance on the mound by Stephen Strasburg tonight went statistically wasted. Stras had a no-hitter going into the 6th inning with 2-outs in a 0-to-0 game, but a simple error to start the inning raised the intensity level to High Leverage in this tie game. As it turned out, unfortunately, the ball game was decided by that error combined with no Nationals scoring.

“But I guess it’s just frustrating either way if you don’t score runs,” Anthony Rendon said. “If you don’t score runs, you can’t win.”

Good teams take advantage of other team’s mistakes, and that is exactly what the Cubs did. The 6th inning began with an Anthony Rendon error followed by a sacrifice bunt by Cubs’ starting pitcher Kyle Hendricks that put Javier Baez in scoring position. Any further mistake would be costly. Strasburg got lead-off man Ben Zobrist out for the key 2nd out of the inning. The NL-reigning-MVP Kris Bryant stepped up to the plate. Strasburg had handled Bryant brilliantly striking him out twice in his only other at-bats in the game. Stras had Bryant this time in another 2 strike count then threw a pitch Bryant could handle for a run scoring single. To compound the problems, Bryce Harper had no chance to get the runner at the plate and airmailed the throw towards home (see video below) allowing Bryant to take 2nd base and that would prove costly. Anthony Rizzo‘s simple single then scored Bryant for the second run of the game.

“I was just trying to come up and throw it to the cut-off man and threw it a little bit too high,” Bryce Harper said. You can call “bull” if you want when you watch the video replay and see where the throw was in relation to cut-off man Daniel Murphy.

That 2-to-0 deficit certainly hurt as Strasburg had been pitching great and now had 2 unearned runs on his ledger. The Nationals offense was almost non-existent except for hits by Harper and Michael Taylor and some walks. The Cubs defense made some great plays when needed on balls in play plus a lead-off walk to Daniel Murphy looked promising and was quickly erased when Ryan Zimmerman bounced into a doubleplay. Kyle Hendricks bent a few times but never broke and he went toe-to-toe with Strasburg through 7 innings and in his case a run never scored and he exited the game with a 2-to-0 lead.

The Nationals seemed not have a strategy to get to Hendricks who was throwing strikes but not over-powering. Hendricks took advantage of a lot of aggressive swings and sped up the Nats bats. There was no sign of any “small ball” early on to push across a single run. Continue reading

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Game #1 NLDS; Game on; Strasburg gets the start!!!

It was confirmed a short-time ago that the Nationals ordering of their starters in this 2017 NLDS would go from Stephen Strasburg tonight to Gio Gonzalez tomorrow and Max Scherzer for game #3. Only elimination games are a “must win”, but this game #1 tonight definitely feels like a “must win” given what we know about Max Scherzer whose hamstring tweak a week ago was a little more than that and he won’t pitch now until Monday. Gio Gonzalez who has a 5.47 ERA over his last 5 starts has looked like a fading image of the once resurrected lefty who became a legitimate Cy Young candidate a month ago based on what we saw in the first 5 months of the season.  They say that the winner of the first game of a Division Series has better than 70% odds of winning the series, and it makes sense. The loser of tonight’s game will feel a pressure switch while the winner moves into the driver’s seat.

The Nationals have the best pitcher in the National League since the All-Star break pitching tonight in Stephen Strasburg. His miniscule 0.86 ERA could be even better if the defense behind him performed better according to advanced statistical analysis like his DIPS which was 1.97 to Corey Kluber‘s 2.47. It is interesting how things work out because Strasburg is the best statistical choice to start game #1 tonight for the Nationals even if Max Scherzer was healthy. A similar debate was at-hand in 2014 when Strasburg started ahead of Jordan Zimmermann who was statistically better.

The Cubs go with their hottest pitcher in Kyle Hendricks who has also had a good second half. The Vegas line if you believe in that method has the Nationals winning by 1.2 runs, and certainly we play the games and hope Strasburg can pitch to his second half ERA which is what Dusty Baker and the team needs tonight. Continue reading

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Breaking: The #Nats NLDS roster is set with many surprises!

Many of us thought that Dusty Baker would configure the team once again with a 7-man bullpen and a 6-man bench — and he has. There are a few surprises on the NLDS roster just like last year. The players who were on the bubble got phone calls in the late-afternoon with the good news and others received the disappointing news that they did not make the NLDS roster, but teams can change their roster for the NLCS so anything is possible which is why the team will carry a “taxi squad” of players who will continue to work-out and be on the ready. Continue reading

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#TGTNH! Twenty #Nats had the first hit of the game this season…

Screenshot from Santangelo’s Twitter

Listen: Nobody loves their sports broadcasters all the time. Sometimes, FP Santangelo will say something that makes us scratch our heads, or tell a groan-worthy joke.

But there’s something he says every game that every Nats fan is excited to hear: “There goes the no-hitter!”

FP says he picked the phrase up from his former skipper Felipe Alou, who managed the Montreal Expos during his years (1995-1998) as a utilityman for the team that would become the Washington Nationals (2005-present). What else is there to say after the first hit of the ballgame? Here at TalkNats, we’ve adopted it as tradition to post “TGTNH” in the gamethread in homage to FP or Alou or whomever coined it. Continue reading

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Operation #FlyTheCurlyW and wear red tomorrow night!

We have learned that Chicago Cubs fans attending the Nats game tomorrow plan to bring their “W” flags to the game to wave for the cameras. There has been many on-line discussions that they are actually waving the 1924 Washington Senators block W logo as worn on the sleeves of the players from that World Series winning team which is kind of ironic. The block W was the original logo of the Washington Senators and was used in different fonts until the Curly W was introduced.

What we are hoping is that Nats fans can bring Curly W flags and/or construct Curly W signs especially if you are sitting in the lower bowl of Nationals Park. With any luck you will block out obnoxious Cubs fans who want to get on camera.

Please spread the word to your Facebook “Nats” groups, Twitter friends, and get Nats Park supporting the Curly W and don’t forget to wear “red” clothes tomorrow! Go Nats!

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Tomorrow is Game #1; Yesterday was the “Haunted Pep Rally”

Nationals Park was transformed on Wednesday night into a haunted, zombie-filled ballpark, all in the name of getting fans pumped up for the postseason. And you know what? It worked.

https://twitter.com/Nationals/status/915772441045106688

People started to gather at Centerfield gates prior to the 6:30 start time, with lines stretching across N St. before we were admitted into the park. Many fans arrived in costume, embracing the haunted theme of the evening. Most of the kids were dressed up, as they undoubtedly came to enjoy some early season Trick or Treating. There were also some games set up for the kids to enjoy, and I’m told the candy was plentiful. Continue reading

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Learning from others — a lesson in baseball progression

Last night’s Wild Card game was wild. The Yankees starting pitching ace, Luis Severino, was hooked quickly after 6 batters in the first inning with one recorded out, and wisely deduced by the Yankees manager Joe Girardi because he kept the game in check at a 3-0 deficit and before it got out-of-hand.

The great news for Girardi is every move he made worked, and only one more run would be given up by his team but by that point it didn’t put his team in a deficit and the Yankees went on to win by a final score of 8-to-4.

When Severino was pulled with one out and runners on 3rd base and 2nd base, the new pitcher, Chad Green, got the strikeout on Byron Buxton for the second out of the inning and then struck out Jason Castro to keep the score at 3-to-0.  Later in the 6th inning with the Yankees leading 7-to-4, David Robertson gave up a lead-off single and a two-out walk and the tying run entered the batter’s box. Girardi went to his bullpen and summoned Tommy Kahnle to get Joe Mauer out and he did — by mere feet. Mauer hit a flyball to the opposite field where the ball was caught at the wall, and in the boxscore it is just a flyball F-7 out.

Baseball is a funny game. Some moves work out like you know what you’re doing. If Buxton hits a triple in the first inning making the score 5-0 and later scores — it is a full-blown disaster.  If Mauer’s flyball went a few feet further in the 6th inning, it’s a game tying home run.  That is baseball.

What we learned in mineralogy is pressure makes great diamonds but pressure built-up internally within the anatomical structure of a baseball player will really cause issues. Luis Severino was “jacked-up” and under extreme pressure last night to start that game and not locating his pitches. Today’s batters like Brian Dozier can barrel up 98 cheese if it is down the middle. Players are now conditioned for it. Those baby-blue squares (below) in the middle of that box and those green squares several inches outside of the box told you Severino was not locating. He couldn’t control the situation and the pressure got to him.

The game of baseball has been around for 178 years according to historians from the early beginnings of Abner Doubleday, and while the game changes ever-so-slightly over time, Joe Girardi showed the world how to manage an elimination game.

You don’t have to reinvent the wheel — just build a better mousetrap. We all saw what Buck Showalter didn’t do a year ago when he lost a wild-card game and didn’t use his best reliever Zach Britton and Girardi did not make the same mistakes last night  and went to his best reliever — David Robertson. Maybe Girardi leaned too hard on David Robertson as he soared past the danger zone of 40-pitches for a one-inning guy. That will be another chapter for a different day. On this day, everything Girardi did worked like a charm from the point he yanked Luis Severino. Continue reading

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94.7 Fresh FM’s Kelly Collis talks more on-air about the Nats than most sports radio shows!

Let me introduce you to my new favorite Nationals fan, and I’ll tell you why she should be one of your favorites, too.

Kelly’s family at Nats Park

Kelly Collis from the Tommy Show on 94.7 on your radio dial is one of the biggest Nats fans you’ll find. She grew up in the DC area and spent her childhood going to Orioles games at Camden Yards with her dad and brother. She also enjoyed Red Sox games during college in New England, where she lived close to Fenway Park for two summers.

“I always enjoyed the outing of going to baseball,” Kelly told me. “I had just given birth to my first child when I heard the Nats were coming to town, and I just had this vision of going to ballgames with my first-born and really, that triggered the whole thing. I wanted him to have the same experience I did as a kid. He started going to games when he was 2 years old. I really have some of the fondest memories of going to games with him. My daughter, who was not as into it at first and was sort of the stereotypical girl, she’s now 11 years old and is just as much into it – she probably knows more about baseball than I do. And that’s really how I became a fan.”

In addition to being a great family experience with her children, the Nationals were how she bonded with her new husband.

“My husband and I first met in 2012 during the playoffs, and our first date was the day after the game [NLDS Game 5]. We met for coffee, and I was a mess. I was crying. Actually, we met for coffee, and it turned into drinks because I was just a mess. He just sat there and listened to me. I was like ‘this man must think I’m crazy, I’m crying about this team,’ but he was involved and our relationship blossomed out of that.”

I need a tissue… is someone cutting onions in here?? We could all use a person like Kelly’s Steadman in our lives. Kelly, who became a season ticket holder for the first time this year, has enjoyed almost 20 games with her family so far in 2017, and is looking forward to adding to her game tally with postseason excitement this weekend. Continue reading

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The final #Nats NLDS roster has not been finalized

Photo by Sol Tucker for TalkNats

As George Steinbrenner once said as the iconic owner of the Yankees, “Anybody seen Reggie Jackson? I need a Mr. October, and all I’ve got is a Mr. May — Dave Winfield. Sure, it wasn’t congenial of Steinbrenner to say, and he had said far worse about Winfield and others, but he always felt there were clutch players who stepped up their game in October. While some would say “clutch” doesn’t exist, Steinbrenner was convinced it did.

The Nationals will look for their spark — their XFactor who will be part of D.C. lore. Dusty Baker arguably has his best post-season roster he has ever been able to assemble this year from the 9 post-season rosters he has ever penciled in on his line-up card in his career. While he doesn’t have a Barry Bonds with a 1.381 OPS or a Jeff Kent — Dusty Baker has his Bryce Harper and Daniel Murphy along with Max Scherzer and Stephen Strasburg as his dynamic pitching duo and Baker has never had that equal — even last year — because Strasburg was not on Baker’s NLDS roster as he was rehabbing from an injury and not available.

The elusive World Series championship has been exactly two-dozen years in the making in Baker’s managerial career with one World Series appearance exactly 2 decades ago at the helm of the Giants. A World Series win would all but guarantee Dusty Baker’s enshrinement as a Hall-of-Fame manager in the hallowed halls of Cooperstown, and one of his former teams, the Chicago Cubs, will be step-one in his quest. Dusty Baker thinks that this particular journey is his kismet.

“I feel that this was supposed to happen,” Dusty Baker said. “I want to win. And they’re in the way.”

Dusty Baker has reached out to religious and spiritual leaders, and Jayson Werth has reached out to get Phil Jackson to burn sage. Praying should help along with some divine intervention. They say a manager will have 3 key decisions to make per game among the several they routinely make.  Continue reading

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Eireann Dolan and Sean Doolittle eloped yesterday on Sean’s day-off

Oh ho-hum, what did you do for your day-off with no baseball yesterday? There is no way it tops the day that Eireann Dolan and Sean Doolittle had. They eloped and got married, and we are so happy for them. When the Nationals traded for Sean Doolittle and Ryan Madson in July, Eireann came along as a bonus prize. Nats fans quickly embraced her, and count us as a fan.

We feel like People Magazine here as we were able to get some details directly from the bride! Eireann shared with us that their special nuptials and elopement happened just a few miles from Nationals Park at the incomparable Signer’s Island at Constitution Gardens in Washington, D.C.

Signer’s Island was named for the original 56 Signers of the Declaration of Independence and is now a standing Memorial to those 56 — the island is accessible by a footbridge on the north side of the pond, and on a beautiful autumnal day in Washington D.C. gives a picturesque view that could only be created by the National Park Service who has jurisdiction over the gardens. Continue reading

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