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Showing posts with label Washington Nationals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Washington Nationals. Show all posts

Monday, June 30, 2014

Back In The Swing Of Things

This week marks the first week I'm back playing in all three I signed in April to compete, and MY KNEES ARE KILLING ME!

My doctor gave me clearance to play two weeks before, and so far my finger, which I broke in May, is holding up well. I still have my cast in case I want to bind it to keep it safe while I sleep. The wound dries during the day, so I must moisturize it and let it heal properly. It feels like a spine of a small book is inside my finger, but in a few months things should return to normal.

Bryce Harper. Source: FederalBaseball.com
Bryce Harper also made a emphatic return to the Washington Nationals lineup after ending his stint on the disabled list with a broken thumb. His RBI single against the visiting Rockies opened the scoring midway through the night time contest which resulted in a 7-3 victory for the Nats.

A broken finger on either hand effects everything you do, therefore seek medical attention immediately should you experience discomfort, pain, or an obvious injury. The doctor said I was "fortunate" to only be away from the game for six weeks, when you consider the type of injury I had. I was quite close to losing my left index finger outright! o_O Yes, you heard me: AMPUTATION. O_O

Thank you to everyone for your thoughts, prayers, and support this past two months. It means a lot, plus I'm back to doing the things I like: Guitar, drums, keyboards, and...umm...oh yeah, video games...and baseball. Bending back my finger or bending the tip of my finger to press buttons are all but impossible, but I don't mind it. I'm just glad the worst parts are behind me. I have a follow up appointment with my doctor in August, so everything should be good as new by that time. ^_^

Question: Does Bryce Harper always take off his helmet when he's running around the bases?

Saturday, October 13, 2012

Washington Nationals: Wait, What?

Cardinals show Washington, world why they are the
"Defending world champion St. Louis Cardinals"

Davey Johnson Shuffles Deck, Deals Away NLDS to Cardinals

Apparently, I went to bed too early Friday night, along with hundreds of Washington Nationals supporters, and a few fans of the St. Louis Cardinals that gave up when the Redbirds were down to the Nats 6-0 at the end of the third inning.

The season ended like it began for the Nationals: Bizarre, improbable, and unexpected. Not even management expected the Nats to play competitive baseball in October, hence Stephen Strasburg suited up in April rather than May, and used up all 160 of his "doctor prescribed" innings pitched. Would there even be the need for a fifth game against St. Louis Cardinals if Washington believed in their ball club, and started Strasburg in May so he could pitch into the postseason?

Michael Morse's pump fist in the (ahem) third inning,
after his 2-run homerun gave the hometown Nats a 6-0 lead.
In his lone game against the St. Louis Cardinals this season, Strasburg left the mound on September 2nd after pitching six innings, striking out nine batters, surrendering only two hits, and leaving the game with the Washington Nationals leading 2-0. Reliever Sean Burnett coughed up the lead in the seventh inning, therefore Strasburg did not get the win as the Nationals fought back in the later innings to win 4-3. It was that championship fight back the Cardinals are known for, and it made another appearance last night at the worst possible moment for the Nationals.

My question is, if Tyler Clippard is the closer, then how does Clippard pitch the eighth inning ahead of Drew Storen, who pitches the penultimate final inning? Both are right-handed pitchers, so why didn't Clippard end the game as in games past; did manager Davey Johnson mess up his pitching lineup? Maybe the Cardinal batters in the eighth inning were too much of a test for Drew Storen, so Johnson installed Clippard in his place?



Clippard vs STL, 2012 regular season: Six batters faced, 0 H, 1 BB, 1 K, .000 opponent BA
Daniel Descalso and David Freese on the verge of an EPIC
comeback win for the Cardinals.
Storen vs STL, 2012 regular season: Ten batters faced, 4 H, 2 BB, 2 K, 2 stolen bases, .400 OBA

From what I can tell, Tyler Clippard pitched better against the Cardinals than Drew Storen. What the statistics don't tell you is Clippard pitched against the same batters he faced last night in the eighth inning: Daniel Descalso (Hit solo home run to bring Cardinal within a run at 6-5, as a matter of fact), Pete Kozma (pop out to shortstop), Matt Carpenter (struck out swinging), and Jon Jay (fly out to center field). In the ninth inning, the non-closer Storen pitched against perennial all-stars like Carlos Beltran, Matt Holliday, Yadier Molina, and last season's playoff MVP David Freese; there are even at least six Silver Slugger Awards between the four of them! It was no wonder that the Cardinals came back to tie, take the lead with four runs in the ninth, and go on to win the game.
NLDS Game 5 Nats starter Gio Gonzalez ponders what might have been,
after a shaky postseason, and shocking early exit after defeat to the Cardinals.

If Tyler Clippard is the closer, then he should close out the game. You can't win a baseball game in the third inning (Hi Michael Morse) or the eighth inning, so if Drew Storen dealt with the bottom of the lineup guys here, then Tyler Clippard could throw his best stuff against the best the Cardinals batters could offer in the ninth. The best versus the best, as it should be. It's all doom and gloom, according to Thomas Boswell of the Washington Post, whose article had this to say.

Yadier Molina (4) shows everybody when is the right time
to celebrate a trip to the NLCS.
The season ended as it began with a bizarre and shocking result, except the Nationals lost when it looked like they would do nothing but win. Today's moral of story: Expect the Unexpected.

Monday, October 1, 2012

Washington Time Warp

Washington Nationals mistake the club house for the shower, and
douse what they think is water on their clothes in celebration
of their city's first post-season berth since 1933.
The 2012 MLB Postseason is upon us, and what better way to return to a formal writing schedule than by writing about this year's surprising Fall Classic? ^_^

Look for loads of new content and insight as I follow the baseball playoffs leading up to the World Series ^_^ I'm excited! The Washington Nationals are quite a story; this is the first time a major league ball club out of Washington will play a postseason game since 1933, when manager Joe Cronin's Senators (AL) lost to John McGraw's New York Giants (NL) in the World Series. According to Wikipedia, lots happened in 1933, including...

  • Prohibition ends.
  • Amidst the Great Depression, Franklin Delanor Roosevelt's "New Deal" legislation kicks in.
  • The first major league "All-Star Game" takes place at Chicago's Comiskey Park.
  • Wiley Post becomes the first man to fly solo around the world; aww :(
  • The first "Krispy Kreme" doughnut shop opens in Nashville, Tennessee.
  • James Brown and Yoko Ono are born.
  • RKO releases some gorilla monster movie called King Kong. I heard it was alright.
  • In only her third picture, a young actress named Katharine Hepburn wins the Academy Award for Best Actress playing the role of Eva Lovelace in Morning Glory (RKO).
For the latest on the Washington Nationals' winning the National League East Division Championship, click here!