Click to Read an Important Member Update Regarding Our Comment System
We recently upgraded our comment system to improve reliability, performance, and long-term control, and we’re currently running both systems during the transition. This shift moves us away from an external service to a system we run and control directly—meaning we own the content and can continue improving it over time. We’ve also reduced the comment refresh delay from about 30 seconds to 10 seconds, making it much closer to real-time.
We understand there have been frustrations and increased feedback, and we’re actively working to improve things. What we ask is simple: use the system and give it a fair shot. If you run into issues, please submit them through the support form so we can track and fix them properly. Repeated complaints without details don’t help us solve problems—we appreciate your patience as we continue refining the experience.
If you’d like a full side-by-side comparison of the platforms and the reasons behind this decision, please refer to the chart below. This change is being made with the long-term benefit of the entire community in mind.
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The Washington Nationals’ wins seem to be inexplicably tied to a decent start by their pitcher and James Wood delivering an RBI. They didn’t get either yesterday and lost 8-1. Tonight’s hopes are on starter Brad Lord continuing his dominance.
Well, that was depressing. The Nationals have struggled all year against lefties, we know that. But David Peterson just seems to be in a class completely by himself. In two starts against the Nats this year, he’s thrown 17 innings of one-run ball. Another stat I saw last night that made my head spin was that the Nationals are now 1-13 all-time when facing Peterson. That’s a different kind of dominance; that’s ownership at the highest level.
The Washington Nationals had a much needed day-off yesterday after going hard in the 13 consecutive games before that. In the past 9-games, the Nats have a 5-4 record, and finally shown some improvement. Getting Dylan Crews back certainly has put the lineup closer to what we envisioned with this younger roster.
When it was announced that Washington Nationals outfielder Dylan Crews – recently activated from his oblique injury – was set to be return on August 14th, there was a great deal of speculation as to which of their four young outfielders would have to exit to open a spot for him on the 26-man roster. Washington sent shockwaves through the MLB world that day when they announced the young outfielder in question was instead veteran first baseman Nathaniel Lowe, who had been designated for assignment and later released, ending his tenure with the team less than a year after it began.
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The Nationals’ offense put up a valiant effort, but once again, Mitchell Parker didn’t even give them a chance. As he failed to make it out of the second inning, giving up six runs (five earned) in the process, it put the bullpen in a nasty situation, and they just couldn’t keep the Phillies quiet. I’ll get all my ranting out of the way now.
A serious professional baseball team does not continue to run Mitchell Parker out there to start every fifth day; it just doesn’t happen on teams that respect their fans and their other players. Now obviously, the 2025 Washington Nationals are the complete opposite of a serious contending team, but if Parker finds a spot in the Opening Day rotation next year, our front office probably has failed us.
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The Washington Nationals are ahead 2-games-to-1 in this long four game series with the Philadelphia Phillies, ahead of a day-off tomorrow. So, interim-manager Miguel Cairo is “playing with house money” as they say because he can’t lose this series, and he has penciled in Paul DeJong at first base for the first time in his career.
How about that game!! The Washington Nationals have held this potent Philadelphia lineup to just eight runs over the first three games of this weekend series, and have now taken two of those three games. This Nats win was in front of a crowd of 36,042 in Nationals Park.
The Nats did it today behind a very minimal effort from the offense, getting a two-run double from James Wood for the only scoring. That would be all they’d need as Cade Cavalli threw 7.0 brilliant scoreless innings, and Jose A. Ferrer got the final six outs to put this game to bed with a clutch save.
We recently upgraded our comment system to improve reliability, performance, and long-term control, and we’re currently running both systems during the transition. This shift moves us away from an external service to a system we run and control directly—meaning we own the content and can continue improving it over time. We’ve also reduced the comment refresh delay from about 30 seconds to 10 seconds, making it much closer to real-time.
We understand there have been frustrations and increased feedback, and we’re actively working to improve things. What we ask is simple: use the system and give it a fair shot. If you run into issues, please submit them through the support form so we can track and fix them properly. Repeated complaints without details don’t help us solve problems—we appreciate your patience as we continue refining the experience.
If you’d like a full side-by-side comparison of the platforms and the reasons behind this decision, please refer to the chart below. This change is being made with the long-term benefit of the entire community in mind.