More Nationals misspellings

Written by William Yoder on .

Oh Nationals. You already got in trouble for spelling your own team name wrong on your jerseys back in April…you’d think you would start spell checking a little bit harder.

This photo from DC Sports Bog, was taken of a Teddy “Rossevelt” bobblehead doll purchased at Nats Park.

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Come on guys…

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Nats give up the big inning, fall to Mets

Written by William Yoder on .

capt.7866bef74caf4ec481ee58c86d3348f3.nationals_mets_baseball_nym117A strong John Lannan start ended in a poor John Lannan finish as the Nats fell 5-2 to NL East rivals, the New York Mets.

Through five innings, Lannan had allowed only five hits and one earned run. He effectively pitched out of the jams he created, forcing three double play balls and by forcing the Mets to strand runners.

The wheels fell off in the bottom sixth as the Mets officially welcomed the Nationals to their new Citi Field. John Lannan would never record an out. A Castillo double, a Beltran walk and in a flash a Gary Sheffield homer put the Mets on top 4-1. That was it the Nats lefty.

The play didn't come without controversy however. Manny Acta and the Nats argued fan interference on Sheffield's dinger, a la Jeffrey Maier. Despite looking at replay, many Nats fans still believe they Umps got it wrong when they refused to overturn the call.

Coming in to relieve after the delay was Jesus Colome who had problems of his own. He allowed a Fernando Tatis single which drove David Wright from first to third, and a Ramon Martinez sac fly scored Wright, giving the Mets their 5th and final run.

Just like that, the Mets had struck, and the Nats were left behind.

Once again this season we saw Lannan have problems with his accuracy. This is not only evident in his four walks to zero strikeouts on the day, but also his 53 strikes out of 92 pitches. It’s plain and simple, when opposing batters know that the only pitch Lannan can throw for a strike is his sub par fastball, batters are going to wait for that pitch. It has shown this year with the increased number of poked singles off Lannan, as well as the increased numbers of bombs. He’s simply not fooling anyone. 

Are we going to have an Austin Kearns Problem?

It amazes me. Elijah Dukes loses his starting job in the spring to Austin Kearns because his numbers are slightly worse in spring training. Then when it becomes evident that Dukes is the premier hitter of the future on our team, our prize centerfielder Lastings Milledge gets sent down after less than 30 at bats.

Yet Austin Kearns, our old stand by. The Man who batted .217 last year into a mysterious season ending injury (torn pride), keeps his job even today. As of last night the mighty Austin Kearns is batting .213, getting on base at .341, slugging a whopping .389, and is serving as a big whole in the middle of the Nats line up.

In the month of May, Kearns is batting .196/.274/.286. He has 16 strikeouts to 4 walks and only four extra base hits.

What’s going on Manny? Stan? Rizzo? Anyone?

Kissing Curse

Written by William Yoder on .

 

There has been a lack of updates on The Nats Blog for this weekend series against our neighbor to the north the Baltimore Orioles. Some have speculated that as a childhood Orioles fan I couldn’t bring myself to write against the team that I grew up rooting for on those faithful October nights in the late 1990’s. Others have asked if it was a result of the inability to write about the same loss over and over, a situation many may argue the Nats are currently in.

No, as exciting and dramatic as those circumstances would be, the plain truth is that after four years of being Mono-free in college, I catch the notorious kissing curse merely a week after I graduate.  

The site will be back up soon, and I apologize. 

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What Strasburg needs to be a D.C sports star

Written by William Yoder on .

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The ping-pong balls bounced the wrong way.

Shortly following the Clippers climbing the lottery to snag the number one overall selection in June’s NBA Draft. Instead of the Wizards moving up just one spot to win the number one pick, and with it the cities second top pick in a major sport draft this summer, they slipped to fifth and likely out of relevancy. Blake Griffen doesn’t know what he’s missing.

As the ‘National elect’ with the number one overall pick this coming June, Steven Strasburg will soon find out how sweet it is to be a sports star in Washington. The District is a city built around hero’s. People from all across the country, and world, that have done one thing extraordinary in their life at some point. It’s a city that appreciates character, wit, humor, and supposed playmaking ability.

This is why Washington is drawn to its sports stars, and to making them into our hero’s. What other city has three superstars already established in their city? Los Angeles has Kobe, and Vlad Guerrero, but no football team. Chicago has all the sports but who really stands out as a superstar? Not Derek Rose yet, not Derek Lee anymore, and Jay Cutler has only just arrived. D.C on the other hand boasts Gilbert Arenas, who when healthy is the epitome of a star, Clinton Portis, and Alexander Ovechkin.

This trio rules D.C as we fall in love with their individual accolades, their style on and off the court, and often their plain ridiculousness. And maybe it’s our jaded view of our towns political leaders that allow us to look past our stars flaws more than any other city that allows them to be so popular in D.C. Maybe we’ve learned to appreciate individual accolades and ignore group shortcomings. We see politicians come into this town as great representatives from other places,  and as long as there is no scandal their success is relatively ignored and their support still maintained.

Such is our view towards the Wizards, Redskins, Capitals, and Nationals. Let’s be honest, we struggle a bit when they put up last place seasons, but for the most part Washingtonians don’t start to care about a team until The Washington Post tells us to.

So this is what we have to offer you Steven Strasburg. If you chose to be sign-able, and you do come to Washington, we can give you undying love.

You can:

Be in an Eastern Motors Commercial!


Wear Costumes!

Do Whatever Gilbert Arena’s does while he hasn’t played the last 2 years!

I don’t know if Strasburg has any sense of humor or not, it doesn’t look like it, but he would be well served to gain one. Apathetic D.C fans need something to chuckle at while spiraling into last place. A pudgy Dimitri Young or a neck breaking quarterback can only go so far here.

Pitch well. Make us laugh. Don’t worry about the winning, we’ll take it when it comes. 

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Nats let one slip by, lose 2-1

Written by William Yoder on .

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I have recently come down with a bad case of Mono and I haven’t been able to watch all the Nats games in full, at least not lucidly.

So every morning when I get up I look at the box score first thing to see first; the score, and second; how many runs the Nationals let up in the 8th and 9th innings.  It’s usually pretty predictable.

It was no surprise to me this morning to see the final score to a game that when I fell asleep watching it was tied 1-1, to have the Nationals lose 1-2. Guess when that losing run crossed the plate? That’s right the ninth. On a wild pitch no less....jeesh

John Lannan pitched a beauty of a game.  His accuracy dead-on, and his breaking pitches freezing. Through seven innings pitched Lannan allowed seven hits, one earned run, struck out five, and walked two. He finally pitched like the ace we had hoped for going into 2009, dropping his season ERA to 3.63, despite not earning the victory.

Ron Villone came on to pitch a perfect inning in the eighth, setting up the potential loss perfectly for Joel Hanrahan. Hanrahan surrendered three hits, one walk, and one earned run, just enough to earn his second loss of the year, and the Nationals’ 28th.

What’s most scary about Hanrahan’s performance is that he didn’t have control problems. 23 out of his 35 pitches were strikes. This means he just plain got rocked, and that his stuff just is not very good.

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What’s wrong with David Ortiz and What it means for the Nationals

Written by William Yoder on .

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David Ortiz is a unique player who has followed a unique career path. While Big Papi broke into the majors with Minnesota at only age 21, he didn’t have his first 20 homer season until 2002 when he was 26.

That makes five years of a large first basemen in a bandbox ballpark not hitting for great power. The doubles were there, Ortiz recorded 30, twice before reaching the 20 homer plateau, but Ortiz never put it all together.

Following 2002 Ortiz was shipped to Boston where his career would really take off. From 2003-2007 he was arguably the best hitter in baseball, posting career highs of .332/54/148 in various seasons. Papi and Manny Ramirez combined for one of the best one-two punches since Ruth/Gehrig, and Redsox nation loved it.

However in 2008 the wheels started to fall off, as Ortiz’s injuries appeared to catch up to him. His power total dropped to only 23 homers, he batted only .264 and drove in less than one hundred runs for the first time he has been in Boston.

This year it has gotten out of hand. Through 161 plate appearances Ortiz has no homers, and is struggling to bat above .200.

So what’s wrong?

The easy answer is the removal of Manny Ramirez. Without the hitter of a generation hitting behind him, maybe Ortiz isn’t as scary? But he still does have Dustin Pedroia, Kevin Youkalis, Jason Bay, and JD Drew hitting around him….so plate protection is still there.

aagp019nick-johnson-2005-studio-plus-postersMaybe the problem is that Papi, who is now 33, is over the hill. Yes, 33 is not that old for most ball players, especially ones who didn’t start to play every day until the age of 27/28.  However, if you look at other ‘big bodied’ players like Ortiz, such as Mo Vaughn, or Cecil Fielder, both of their careers ended in their early to mid 30’s. Perhaps Big Papi is just worn out?

If the Redsox decide he is. They may look to Washington and target Nick Johnson as their new DH. He’d fit in well in the Sox line-up, as he is an on base conscious, line drive hitting professional hitter.

Johnson is also in his last year under contract with Washington, and for the first time in a long while he is healthy. The Nats should dump him for some pitching help as soon as possible, and clear the way for Morrero.

 

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Dukes to the DL, Maxwell up from AAA

Written by William Yoder on .

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I think we all knew it as soon as we saw Adam Dunn call of Elijah dukes on the fly to right-center this weekend. The grimace in the former linebacker’s face was enough for us to know, that hamstring got re-aggravated.

After the game yesterday the Nationals placed the young centerfielder on the disabled list – retroactive to May 18 – as a result the Nats recalled outfielder Justin Maxwell to fill his spot.

Maxwell will probably split time with utility man Willie Harris in centerfield. Maxwell is only batting .242 with 4 homers and 10 RBI for AAA Syracuse this season. 

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Who will the Nats take with their second pick? Grant Green

Written by William Yoder on .

 

While everybody has accepted that the Nationals will take Steven Strasburg with the number one overall pick June 9th, often overlooked has been the Nationals next pick. For failing to sign Aaron Crow in 2008, the Nats received a compensatory pick at the 10 spot in this years draft. So essentially the Nats have two ‘lottery’ picks in 2009. Over the next several days I will go over a few possibilities of who they may draft.

Today: Grant Green.

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Green is a California boy to say the least. Growing up in Anaheim Hills, CA, Green was a three-year starter for Canyon High School. The shortstop hit over .400 his entire varsity career at Canyon high, earning many accolades ranging from 2004 Century League ROY to being named to the 2005 US Junior National Team.

It was this success that landed him a scholarship and an immediate impact role on the USC Trojans baseball team. Green started every game as a freshman, batting .316 with 28 extra base hits, 24 RBI and six stolen bases en route to earning the Pac-10 Conference Co-Freshman of the Year award. He was also named to the Rivals.com and Louisville Slugger Freshman All-American second teams.

His sophomore year he came back for more, batting .390 with 29 extra base hits, 10 stolen bases and 46 RBI. This earned Green All-Pac 10 first team honors as well as third team All-American from Baseball-America. Through 50 games into his junior year he is now batting .374 with 29 extra base hits, 14 stolen bases, and 30 RBI.

 

Scouts project green to be a very solid fielder with the athleticism of Bobby Crosby, but probably the arm of Edgar Renteria (not bad just not special).  His range right now is not Major League ready, particularly to the left according to scouts who say that while he has the athleticism to improve, right now he doesn’t have MLB range.

What has scouts particularly excited about Green however aren’t his stellar college batting numbers, but the numbers he has put up in the Cape Cod wood bat league, a traditional proving field for future MLB success. In the summer of 2008 Green batted .348 with six homers and 21 RBI for the Chatham A’s, while reaching base at a .451 mark. He was also 10-13 in stolen base attempts. His success in Cape Cod earned him the Robert A. McNeece Outstanding Pro Prospect Award as the league’s top prospect.

That’s a big deal. Former winners include: Ron Darling, Robin Ventura, Billy Wagner, and Mark Teixeira.

The truth is Green could go anywhere form number two to 15 overall. His potential projects him to be a mix between Troy Tuluwitzki and Evan Longoria, but he is still not there yet. He could be a valuable pick for the Nationals who have Cristian Guzman under contract through 2010 and then rely on either Ian Desmond or the player formerly known as Esmailyn Gonzalez to fill in at shortstop. 

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