The Washington Nationals selected Merritt Island high-schooler right-handed pitcher Mason Denaburg in the 1st round with pick № 27 in the 2018 amateur Draft. Continue reading
The Washington Nationals selected Merritt Island high-schooler right-handed pitcher Mason Denaburg in the 1st round with pick № 27 in the 2018 amateur Draft. Continue reading
You’ve seen her. You no doubt already love her. Now, it’s time to get to know her. Meet Ella Kane, the adorable, excitable 8-year-old behind one of the greatest gifs of all time.
Something amazing happened over the weekend, the Washington Nationals now have the most wins in Major League Baseball from 2011 to now. That is over 7 years of baseball history. 659 wins for the #Nats and 657 wins for the #Dodgers. #OnePursuit pic.twitter.com/eGgP9HLHpV
— Talk Nats (@TalkNats) May 15, 2018
The Kane clan is 7 members strong, and is brimming with Natitude. Mom, Meaghan Kane, grew up a Chicago White Sox fan, but has converted to the local team — Washington Nationals. Dad, Patrick Kane, grew up an O’s fan, and I’m told he still harbors some feelings for those birds north of us, but we’ll give him a pass because his kids definitely bleed Nats red. Ella is the second oldest of five kids in the Kane family. Her older brother Matthew, 10, and younger brother Jimmy, 6, both play Little League. Matthew plays all over the infield, while Jimmy splits his time between 2B and behind the dish. Both boys rock the Curly W in their games, as the Nats sponsor their local Little League in Virginia. While Ella doesn’t play organized baseball, she does play with her brothers and other kids in the neighborhood (fun fact – this little slice of baseball heaven has enough kids to field two complete baseball teams if everyone decides to play on any given day). Continue reading
Photo by Gail Solomon for TalkNats trip
Last Chance to Travel with Nats Fans for June Road Games!
We had a great time last year in CitiField, with 2 luxury motor coach bus loads of crazy Nats fans cheering on the team to a win over the Mets. We were all over the MASN TV broadcast, and F.P. Santangelo and Bob Carpenter from the MASN broadcast called us out, and it was great to meet many of the folks here from TalkNats and from Half Street Irregulars. as well as other Nats fans who joined in for a great trip that cost all-inclusive less than $99. We got a real surprise when Byron Kerr from MASN came up to our section at CitiField to say hi!
This year, we hope to double the fun by traveling to see the Nats play the Yanks on June 12 and the Phils on June 30th. Since June 12 is a Tuesday night, we won’t have a bus going for the Yankees trip, but we already have a few dozen Nats fans committed to going to the game. June 30th is a Saturday and we will have a bus leaving from the Greenbelt Metro (or you can drive and meet us there). The seats for both games are very good and the prices are negotiated to be lower than list price. This is part of our goal to make these trips fun and affordable where the total cost is less than what you could do on your own with the camaraderie and safety of sitting in a group among Nats fans in a road stadium. We accomplished that last year and the feedback was well received.
We will have fun giveaways and signs and there is a rumor that we may have a special guest visit us in Philly. For more information and to purchase tickets, go to www.travelnats.com. Or you can contact me via twitter at @natsroadtrips or via the website.
Our goal is to look towards 2019 to do an overnight air trip using the same affordable model, and the only way to do that is to know we have people who are interested. Venues for next year could be Atlanta and Miami. The more people we get the better price we can negotiate for hotel rooms.
Please spread the word to your friends, and I look forward to meeting many more of you while cheering on the Nats!
Rookie Juan Soto knew who to watch!
Off-day on draft day
1) Once again, the biggest news this past week was on the injury front. Ryan Madson and Brian Goodwin returned to the Washington Nationals from the DL. Adam Eaton started a rehab assignment with the Double-A Harrisburg Senators and Matt Grace is on-deck and close to returning from his rehab assignment. Matt Adams and Jeremy Hellickson were injured and the extent of their injuries is not yet known. The biggest and most ominous news came from Hartford where the Harrisburg Senators were this weekend. Reports and videos surfaced showing a very gimpy Daniel Murphy who is scheduled to be evaluated in DC today. His bat in the middle of the order is sorely missed.
2) The biggest debate last week was about the respective value of Juan Soto’s bat vs. Michael Taylor‘s defense in CF. There were 2 camps both completely convinced in their case. The 1st camp felt that MAT’s offense is so poor that it is preferable to play an average defender like Eaton in CF to keep Soto’s bat in the lineup. The 2nd camp felt that MAT’s defense is not a luxury but a necessity and if that means sending Soto back to the minors so be it. In the meantime, MAT had a good offensive week, and Soto pretty much cemented the fact that he possesses a solid major league bat. So the situation remains unresolved and the debate will continue.
3) Brian Goodwin took a lot of unfair shots from fellow bloggers yesterday. He was playing in only his 2nd game after missing 2 months; he is in spring training mode. While I agree that Goody is not a star by any means, I don’t agree that he is a replacement level player. He put up a 0.5 WAR in his 1st full year last year which is very respectable for a 5th outfielder. Batting him 5th was probably a stretch yesterday but with our current lineup and the reasonable decision to rest Harper there aren’t many options.
4) With all due respect to Wilmer Difo who I think can be a decent Zobrist like roving player he is not a replacement bat for Daniel Murphy, with other holes in the lineup this might become a priority need for Mike Rizzo. If Murphy is out for most of the year I think I’d find out what the cost of Scooter Gennett is.
5) Our catching tandem is not major league level. Pedro Severino is a fine defensive catcher whose athleticism is a fun contrast to the lumbering slogs we have become used to, but his bat is what we thought it was.
6) With all the attention on injuries and lineup holes what really killed us in Atlanta was the combined slump of 1 through 4. Yes, Trea Turner got a big home run and Anthony Rendon a couple of hits but the overall inability to put anything together consistently was glaring. Bryce Harper was a combined 2-14 in the Atlanta series with no RBIs or runs scored in the entire series. Even worse was the combination of Mark Reynolds and Matt Adams who have carried the offense the last two weeks until the Atlanta series where the 1st base duo went the big 0-fer in an 0-17.
7) The bullpen minus one glaring moment with Shawn Kelley was nails. Justin Miller is a breath of fresh air, Jefry Rodriguez saved manager Dave Martinez from having to completely abuse the pen. In a strange way, Tim Collins paternity was a blessing in disguise for the bullpen.
8) I would have used Wander Suero in the 9th yesterday and let him pitch 3 innings if necessary. In fact, losing the game was less harmful than having it go many more innings. I hated using Tanner Roark regardless of the outcome.
9) Stephen Strasburg pitched great on Friday, but he has to stop giving up home runs every time out.
10) I found the idea Draz put out about a 3-way trade between us Miami and Cleveland interesting. In that scenario Harper goes to Cleveland, JTR to us and Miami gets a couple of top prospects headlined by Mejia and perhaps Carter Kieboom. We also get salary relief under that scenario, a big bat for the lineup and get under the luxury tax threshold.
“The Firm” by Marlene Koenig for TalkNats
The metrics to judge bullpens is multi-faceted. You have final inning saves, blown saves, WHIP, and runs given up. In April, there were issues with the bullpen in defining roles and acclimation with manager Dave Martinez and pitching coach Derek Lilliquist. It took a while using trial and error, and slowly we have seen improvement with this evolving bullpen that is now looking like a strength with the promotion of Justin Miller and the return of Ryan Madson from the disabled list. Continue reading
From yesterday’s great come from behind 14-inning win, to a 7th inning blown save by Shawn Kelley who came in to start the 7th inning guarding a 2-to-1 lead. The game stayed tied until the 9th inning and manager Dave Martinez called in Tanner Roark for the 9th inning to help out the depleted bullpen. He gave up a double quickly that should have been a single and pinch-hitter Charlie Culberson hit a no-doubter home run left over the middle of the plate inside for the walk-off loss. If you missed the game, Nats starter Jeremy Hellickson tweaked his hamstring on an errant throw to 1st base as Hellickson was covering on a ground ball. Continue reading
Photo from Nationals official Instagram
These four-game series give a team a chance to split a series that mathematically they cannot do in the traditional three-game series. In those three-game series, there’s always a series winner and a a series loser, and luckily for the Nationals, this four-game series won’t be decided until the 27th out. Continue reading
Rookie Juan Soto knew who to watch!
With two outs in an inning, you are taught as a baserunner to run on contact. Max Scherzer is a complete baseball player, and he knew about running on contact with two outs. When Wilmer Difo connected in the 14th inning, the runner on 1st base was Max Scherzer who entered the game as a pinch-hitter and singled raising his season batting average to .310. Scherzer ran on contact the near 270 feet from 1st to homeplate in 10.89 seconds with a sprint speed of 26.89 ft/sec according to Statcast™ when Difo connected for the key extra base hit in the right-field gap.
Max Scherzer’s positional value according to Fangraphs rose to an impressive +0.5. That statistic includes all non-pitching facets of the game from baserunning to fielding your position to batting value. Scherzer’s positional value is higher than a dozen 2018 positional teammates. We won’t name names of who Scherzer has surpassed in positional value, but suffice it to say two of them are former All-Stars. Overall Scherzer is worth +3.7 according to Fangraphs of which +3.2 is from pitching. Continue reading
This was a Disney type of ending to this 14-inning game that was won by the Nationals as Max Scherzer got a pinch-hit single and scored from 1st base on a Wilmer Difo triple. They don’t get much bigger than this in the month of June. This was a signature win, and possibly a game you look back on later in the season as to the significance on the whole season. Continue reading
This season is still young with over 100 games remaining — but it would be real nice for the Nationals to win a game today to have a chance at splitting this four-game series tomorrow. For today’s Nationals starter, Gio Gonzalez, he is making a case for being named an All-Star (again). Yes, All-Star ballots are open — however the pitchers are not voted in by the fans, rather they are voted in by the players and the manager. Last year Gio was not chosen and was certainly worthy. The All-Star game was in Gio’s hometown Miami and he said it would have meant a lot to him to be chosen. This year ESPN is already projecting Gio to be an All-Star in his home stadium at Nationals Park. Gio will have today’s start and another 6 to 7 starts to show he is an All-Star. To that we say “GO GIO”. Continue reading
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