Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Game 26: Braves at Nats

Photo by Mark Zuckerman / NATS INSIDER
The Nationals open a six-game homestand tonight against the Braves.
The last time the Nationals played at home ...

-- The Capitals were up three games to two on the Canadiens and feeling good about their chances of advancing well past the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs.

-- The Redskins had just traded Jason Campbell to the Raiders.

-- Stephen Strasburg had made only three starts for Harrisburg.

It's only been nine days, but it sure feels like a lot has happened in that span. The club that returns home tonight for the start of a six-game homestand has Ryan Zimmerman back healthy and swinging a hot bat, Livan Hernandez and Luis Atilano practically unhittable on the mound and the whole town to itself until the Redskins open training camp in nearly three months.

Hear that sound? It's opportunity knocking at the door. Whether the Nats seize this opportunity remains to be seen. The quest begins tonight against the Braves.

Check back for updates throughout...

BRAVES AT NATIONALS
Where: Nationals Park
Gametime: 7:05 p.m.
TV: MASN2-HD
Radio: WFED-1500 AM, WWFD-820 AM
Weather: Mostly sunny, 76 degrees, Wind 10 mph out to RF
STARTING LINEUPS
NATIONALS (13-12)
CF Nyjer Morgan
2B Cristian Guzman
3B Ryan Zimmerman
1B Adam Dunn
LF Josh Willingham
C Ivan Rodriguez
RF Roger Bernadina
SS Ian Desmond
P Livan Hernandez

BRAVES (11-14)
CF Nate McLouth
2B Martin Prado
3B Chipper Jones
C Brian McCann
1B Troy Glaus
RF Jason Heyward
LF Melky Cabrera
SS Omar Infante
P Kenshin Kawakami

6:41 p.m. -- If you haven't seen the news on John Lannan's swollen elbow, check the homepage for that. In other injury news ... Jason Marquis has resumed throwing off flat ground and plans to throw off a bullpen mound tomorrow. He says his arm feels "great" since getting a cortisone shot to relieve the pain from bone chips, and he's trying to push for a quick return to the rotation. Mike Rizzo sounded less optimistic. When it was pointed out Marquis appears to be ahead of schedule in his recovery, Rizzo replied: "Jason thinks he's ahead of schedule." ... Among the guys currently rehabbing in Viera on the 60-day DL, Rizzo said Ross Detwiler is probably the closest to returning. The left-hander, though, still is several weeks away from beginning a minor-league rehab assignment. ... Detwiler may be progressing the fastest, but that means Chien-Ming Wang is lagging behind. Wang has still yet to throw live BP. ... Jordan Zimmermann has been throwing live BP and has made serious progress, but the Nats remain cautious with him and won't let him come back sooner than standard for players coming off Tommy John surgery (ie. no earlier than August).

7:09 p.m. -- And we're underway, albeit a couple minutes late. Gorgeous night for baseball.

7:29 p.m. -- Well, that could have been really ugly. Livan Hernandez needed 41 pitches to get through the top of the first. Yet somehow he only allowed one run (an unearned run, at that). Hernandez was all over the place with his pitches, but he didn't give in to anyone, either. With two on and two out, he pitched around Jason Heyward, throwing up breaking balls on both 3-1 and 3-2 to walk the young stud and instead take his chances with Melky Cabrera. So the Braves lead 1-0, but it could be much worse.

7:45 p.m. -- Much better stuff from Livo in the second inning. He needed only 13 pitches to retire the side, nine of them strikes. Three groundball outs. There are plenty of pitchers out there who would be doomed by a 41-pitch first inning. Livan isn't one of them. He could still end up going seven tonight, and no one would be surprised.

7:50 p.m. -- Josh Willingham remains the king of the solo homer. Just sent an 0-1 fastball from Kawakami into the left-field bullpen. Unfortunately, no one was on base. So it's now 1-1 in the bottom of the second.

7:58 p.m. -- And for good measure, the bottom of the Nats' lineup adds the go-ahead run. Three straight singles by Rodriguez, Bernadina and Desmond (who sent a sharp grounder up the middle to drive in Pudge) put the Nationals on top 2-1 after two.

8:08 p.m. -- OK, Roger Bernadina just made up for his earlier error. Bernadina went full extension to make a diving catch of Troy Glaus' line drive to right, then did a face plant into the turf. If that ball falls in, one run scores and Glaus ends up on third base. Instead, the Braves fail to score at all in the third, and the Nats still lead 2-1.

Photo by Mark Zuckerman / NATS INSIDER
Jason Heyward flashes his incredible strength on a fifth-inning homer.
8:34 p.m. -- OK, this Heyward kid is pretty decent. Despite hitting with his front foot sideways -- hopefully the photo I took comes out in focus -- he crushed a pitch from Livan over the center-field fence for a solo homer in the fourth. It's now 2-2 with the Nats batting in their half of the fourth.

8:46 p.m. -- For those who haven't heard yet, Hall of Fame broadcaster Ernie Harwell passed away this evening. I'm sure all of Michigan is mourning tonight, but Harwell's grace over the last few months despite knowing this was coming was further evidence of what a wonderful human being he was. One of the finest gentlemen this sport has ever known.

8:49 p.m. -- Ian Desmond has finally committed an error after 18 straight games without a gaffe. But it wasn't costly, because Hernandez pitched his way out of the fifth. And Desmond just made up for it with a blast near the Red Porch to lead off the bottom of the inning and put the Nats up 3-2. Livo, meanwhile, just hit for himself despite a pitch count at a whopping 113. There's no action in the bullpen, so it looks like he'll come back out for the sixth. Wow.

9:04 p.m. -- Well, Livo only made it two batters into the sixth. He got a groundout and then walked pinch-hitter Brooks Conrad before Jim Riggleman came out to take the ball and hand it to Sean Burnett.

9:13 p.m. -- The fans here in the ballpark don't know it, but it's now 4-2 Nats after Adam Dunn homered to lead off the bottom of the sixth. Unfortunately, the scoreboards have all been out for the last inning, so there's no visual proof of what's going on. Unless everyone can keep track in their own heads.

9:25 p.m. -- Tonight's paid attendance: 17,098.

9:31 p.m. -- Tyler Clippard got into a little trouble there in the seventh, allowing a single to Heyward (who has reached base all four times he's come up tonight, by the way) to put two on with two out. But "Clip" caught Cabrera looking at a fastball for strike three to get out of that jam, so the Nats preserve a 4-2 lead heading to the seventh-inning stretch. Oh, and the scoreboard just came back on! Crisis averted.

9:46 p.m. -- I stand corrected. The scoreboard just went kaput again, right after Clippard retired the side in the eighth. It's now 5-2 Nats in the bottom of the eighth. Will fans know when to stand and applaud with two outs in the ninth?

9:57 p.m. -- Since the Nats just expanded the lead to 6-2 on a bonehead play by Troy Glaus -- just jog over and touch first base yourself, dude! -- there will be no Final Countdown or "Clip 'n' Save" (TM Steve Repsher) tonight. Matt Capps takes a seat in the bullpen, and Miguel Batista prepares to pitch the ninth.

10:11 p.m. -- So much for making this one easy. Batista's out after allowing an RBI single, so here comes Capps to try to get his 11th save in 14 Nats victories.

10:16 p.m. -- At last, it's over. Nats win 6-3. Livo gets the win. Capps gets the save after all. At 14-12, they remain in third place in the NL East, one game back.

21 comments:

Nats fan in NJ said...

"The Capitals were up three games to two on the Canadiens and feeling good about their chances of advancing well past the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs"

Mark - Really?? You had to bring that up? Did my psychiatrist ask you to inhibit my recovery??

All kidding aside, the Nats could really build on something between now and July 31st. A strong season, some break-outs and new stars coming up from the horizon - this could be a key turning point for this franchise in winning over the fans.

Of course, it all comes down to winning.

Moe Greene said...

I was thinking the same thing. Mark, please don't mention the Caps again until September.

court said...

Caps? You mean Matt Capps right?

natsfan1a said...

Caps, schmaps. Play (base)ball! :-)

Ephesius Remsen Hammersley said...

I hope Livo can keep the heart of the Braves order quiet. I'll bet Heyward has never seen a Bugs Bunny curve before!!! :)

NatsNut said...

Had to share this here:

my Braves fan brother before getting off the phone with me: "I'm very sorry your team is going to lose their next three games."

me: "yea, your team needs a good series to get all the way up to 4th place"

http://www.instantrimshot.com/

NatinBeantown said...

Mark (and others)... it's prediction time: What will be the average attendance through the next six games?

Factors: lousy weather and attention on Caps no longer a factor, the positive attention from the better-than-expected start, the Heyward factor, etc.

What say you?

Tcostant said...

NatsNut said... guess "the average attendance through the next six games".

Me: 17,333, boasted only by Saturday's "Pups at the Park" promotion where dogs are allowed in LF.
(Math = 15K/each for the three weekday nights, 18K for Friday, 22K Saturday and 19K on Sunday)

natsfan1a said...

You tell 'em, NatsNut. :-)

Tcostant, I think it was NatinBeantown who asked about attendance. But I'm not into prognosticating so I'll take a pass.

Tcostant said...

Opps - sorry about that!

K.D. said...

Livan being showcased on MLB Tonight right now.

Mark Zuckerman said...

NatinBeantown: Sorry it took me so long to respond to your attendance question, but I'll say they average 18,000 on this homestand. It takes a while for fans to catch onto a competitive team, and the Marlins never draw well, even on a weekend. I figure it'll be about 15,000 a night for the Braves series and then 21,000 average against the Marlins.

Dryw Loves the Nats said...

Two errors before the end of the fifth inning? This feels way too familiar, and not in a good way.

bobn said...

tell me about the gold speck on the number 6 for Nat players.

K.D. said...

Ernie may be gone, he won't be forgotten.

Positively Half St. said...

As far as attendance, I had hoped to go Saturday with my son, but my wife reminded me of his First Communion being that day. Having 3 kids with schedules makes for difficulties getting to add to Kasten's total. I would love to see Zim, Capps, Live, Tyler "The Barber" Clippard and the gang, but it will be difficult for a while.

Good wishes to spent prospect Colton Willems, who retired today. Please join us in being a Nats fan. We were always pulling for you.

Positively Half St. said...

Heh. I didn't mean "Live", but "Livo".

Please don't make this interesting, Batista. Capps doesn't need another save.

natsfan1a said...

Atta boy, Livo, you silver-haired devil. :-)

natsfan1a said...

And R.I.P Ernie Harwell.

greg said...

saturday will have at least a few hundred seats purchased that might not normally get purchased. it's pups in the park day (and those sections are sold out already). i'll be there with my 135# mastiff/bloodhound mix.

speaking of pups in the park... mark, do you know whether they count the dog tickets purchased as attendees? i would think so, just sounds funny to say it.

for those who didn't know it was coming, there's a second pups in the park day scheduled for late august. buy your tix now if you want to go, it *will* sell out again. people seats: $20; dog seats: $5 (donated to a shelter or ASPCA or something like that).

Dryw Loves the Nats said...

...and it is SO not last year!

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