Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Game 127: Diamondbacks at Nats

Photo by Mark Zuckerman / NATS INSIDER
The Nationals look to make it three in a row tonight against the D'backs.
And so there will be baseball tonight on South Capitol Street, albeit slightly delayed. After engineers determined Nationals Park sustained no structural damage from this afternoon's 5.9 magnitude earthquake, the club announced its game against the Diamondbacks would start at 7:25 p.m. Anyone who had tickets and decided not to attend may exchange them for seats of equal or lesser value to any future home game in 2011.

As for the actual game tonight, Jordan Zimmermann makes his penultimate start of the season, his innings count sitting at 150 2/3 at the moment. He'll be opposed by right-hander Ian Kennedy, a 15-game winner and breakout hurler for Arizona this season.

Plenty of updates to come, and check the homepage later for highlights from the press conference to introduce draft picks Anthony Rendon, Alex Meyer and Brian Goodwin...

DIAMONDBACKS at NATIONALS
Where: Nationals Park
Gametime: 7:05 p.m.
TV: MASN
Radio: WJFK (106.7 FM), WFED (1500 AM), XM 189
Weather: Mostly sunny, 78 degrees, Wind 7 mph out to LF
STARTING LINEUPS
NATIONALS (62-64)
SS Ian Desmond
CF Rick Ankiel
3B Ryan Zimmerman
1B Michael Morse
RF Jayson Werth
2B Danny Espinosa
LF Laynce Nix
C Wilson Ramos
P Jordan Zimmermann

DIAMONDBACKS (69-59)
SS Willie Bloomquist
LF Gerardo Parra
RF Justin Upton
C Miguel Montero
2B Ryan Roberts
1B Lyle Overbay
CF Chris Young
3B Sean Burroughs
P Ian Kennedy
7:26 p.m. -- We are underway, officially 21 minutes late, with a strike from Jordan Zimmermann to Wilie Bloomquist. There's barely anyone here in the stands, though there's still a good line of people walking into the park from Half Street.

7:30 p.m. -- Solid top of the first for Zimmermann. He retired the side on 13 pitches, 10 of them strikes. Struck out Gerardo Parra swinging at a high 0-2 fastball.

7:48 p.m. -- Pretty efficient stuff so far from Zimmermann, who has navigated two innings on only 31 pitches (21 strikes). He did issue a two-out walk to Lyle Overbay, but bounced back to get Chris Young to pop out and end the inning. The Nats got a leadoff single from Ian Desmond in the bottom of the first but couldn't advance him.

8:04 p.m. -- Three innings in the books, and nary a hit allowed yet by Zimmermann. He retired the side again in the third, recording his third strikeout. Looks to be pretty sharp so far tonight, having thrown 30 of 44 pitches for strikes.

8:13 p.m. -- So much for history being made tonight, at least the no-hitter kind. Gerardo Parra leads off the fourth with a groundball single up the middle and past Ian Desmond.

8:16 p.m. -- Hmm, remember that beanball war the last two times these teams met? Well, Zimmermann just drilled Justin Upton in the left elbow. And Upton was not happy. Slammed his bat to the ground and looked at Zimmermann, who just stared back. No fireworks yet, but stay tuned, this could get interesting before the end of the night.

8:26 p.m. -- And now Kennedy drills Morse in the same elbow that's been bothering him for a while. Marvin Hudson issues warnings to both benches. It appears that will be the end of this.

8:45 p.m. -- We're heading to the bottom of the fifth now, and Upton has been removed from the game (presumably because he was injured on that hit-by-pitch). That could add a little more fuel to this already-smoldering fire. We shall see. Meanwhile, the game remains scoreless, as Zimmermann and Kennedy twirl dueling gems.

8:55 p.m. -- A golden opportunity squandered. Zimmermann didn't help matters by bunting into a fielder's choice, with Wilson Ramos getting gunned down at third base. Still, when Desmond singled and Ankiel drew a walk, the bases were loaded with one out for Zimmerman. What more could you ask for? Well, actually putting the ball in play would have been nice. Zim got caught looking at a nasty curveball from Kennedy, in disbelief Hudson called it a strike. Then Morse stepped to the plate and briefly tried to sell Hudson on the idea that Kennedy's inside pitch grazed his arm. Hudson had none of it, though, and replays confirmed the ball hit Morse's bat. Davey Johnson argued, to no avail. And Morse struck out on the next pitch, killing the rally. It's still scoreless through five.

9:00 p.m. -- A bunch of readers on Twitter are claiming you saw an ultra-slo-mo, zoomed-in replay that clearly showed the ball striking Morse's hand before his bat. All I can say is, whatever we were shown here in the press box only showed it hitting the bat. I'll take your word for it, though.

9:13 p.m. -- Well, you can't say the Nats haven't had their chances tonight. Unfortunately, they haven't been able to cash in on any of them. Through six innings, they're 0-for-7 with runners in scoring position, capped by Ramos' 5-4-3 double play to end the sixth just now. This game remains scoreless.

9:23 p.m. -- Zimmermann had thrown 107 pitches three times this season, never more. Well, tonight, he was given a chance to throw pitch No. 108. And it wound up in the right-field bleachers, courtesy Sean Burroughs. That incredibly was Burroughs' first big-league home run since 2005. Worse, it put the D'backs up 2-0 in the seventh. And when Kennedy tagged Zimmermann's 109th pitch for a double, his night was over. Tyler Clippard is on to face the top of the lineup, with the Nats now trailing.

9:32 p.m. -- Clippard, as he always does, gets out of the jam with two strikeouts. Meanwhile, the official diagnosis on Justin Upton is a left elbow contusion.

9:42 p.m. -- Another good relief appearance for Sean Burnett, who has begun to resemble his 2009-10 form once again. We go to the bottom of the eighth, and it's still 2-0 D'backs.

9:50 p.m. -- Reliever David Hernandez sets down the heart of the Nats order (Zimmerman, Morse, Werth) in the eighth. They're down to their final three outs, still trailing 2-0 and still regretting those earlier missed opportunities.

10:10 p.m. -- That's your ballgame. The Nats lose 2-0. It's the sixth time this season Jordan Zimmermann has been charged with a loss after allowing two earned runs or fewer. That he's going to end an otherwise fine season with double-digit losses but not double-digit wins is a crying shame.

91 comments:

natsfan1a said...

Go, Z'nn! Go, NATS!!

baseballswami said...

Way to go JZIMM! So the team goes from the largest crowd ever to tonight, in a few short days.

A DC Wonk said...

Analogous to having good Livo and bad Livo (and good MRHRod and bad HRod)-- we have great JZ and medium JZ. First inning was "great JZ"

(Note: if anyone wants to pick up on my idea, please be more creative than I!)

Anonymous said...

I am in no way convinced that Parra's waving of the bat on that last fastball could be defined as a swing.

A DC Wonk said...

Struck out Gerardo Parra swinging at a high 0-2 fastball.

Music to my ears. My main complaint about JZ earlier this year, and of Stras last year after his first couple of starts, is that they seemed to want to throw everything on the outside half of the plate. High and tight works with 95+ MPH guys (even more so if you have a big bender of a curve). Go "up the ladder" as they say -- even the best MLB players find it hard to catch up to a 95+ fastball that's high.

Waytogo!

gonatsgo said...

DCWonk - no on does the "up the ladder" better than Tyler Clippard!

Navy Nats Fan said...

Two starts, 12 innings left (Davey said he'd let him go to 162 to qualify for season leaderboards). The way he looks through 2, Zimmermann might use 9 of the 12 tonight. He's absolutely overpowered them this far. Too bad the ump squeezed him on the 2 out walk.

Soul Possession, PFB Sofa said...

Just a followup on Scooter's suggestion in a previous thread, to repeat the updates down here in the comments thread. I, too, find it harder to follow two parts of the page, so I keep Mark in a different browser tab. It wouldn't take a whole repeat, though--a link to it would alert us when there is an update, and let us go back and forth.

Just a thought.

A DC Wonk said...

gonatsgo said...

DCWonk - no on does the "up the ladder" better than Tyler Clippard!


You're so right! JZ and Stras should be learning from him on that!

Anonymous said...

Watching Michael Morse during the national anthem was hillarious.

ehay2k said...

@Navy Nats Fan

I'm bringing my Dmitri Young Bobblehead tomorrow. Meet outside Ticket Services just outside of CF gate, next to the garage?

What time? I will be wearing a red Nat's T-shirt and holding Da Meat Hook in a box. :)

NatinBeantown said...

Can anyone (Mark included) tell me why Espinosa's at bat music is so insanely loud on the radio broadcast? It's way louder than any others. Enough tha C&D have to pause their play by play. Ia it that much louder in person, or is someone on the production team having a private joke or something?

Nats Outsider said...

Sec 3, I respectfully disagree. I think the updates should remain where Mark has them.

If you are not following along for the whole game, it is very helpful to have Mark's updates all together. It makes it much easier for me to catch up with a game in progress. Also, we often get off in tangents rather than discussing the action in the game. Readers should not have to hunt among 200 or even 300 posts to find what's going on in the game. Besides, I think it may make Mark's job easier this way. He doesn't have to get into the discussion while he's working, unless he wants to chime in. Personally, I am in awe of Mark's willingness to post in-game updates at all. (Do you know any other professional sportswriters who will do that??) I do not want to add even a tiny bit to his workload.

Navy Nats Fan said...

Ehay2k -6:45 okay? Roger ticket services window by CF gate, to the left as you face the park. I don't know what I'll be wearing - if I come from work, it will be khaki pants, khaki belt, khaki shirt, khaki hat, oh and black shoes just to spice things up.

Natinbeantown, their engineer (the Jack of all things) did that for Will Nieves' music too. Maybe he's trying to get C&D to dance to it!

Anonymous said...

Here we go again. I know JZ didn't do that on purpose but I have a feeling that somebody on the Nats is gonna get nailed next inning.

ehay2k said...

Navy Nats Fan - that works for me. See you at 6:45 tomorrow

Nats Outsider said...

Anon at 8:17 said, " I have a feeling that somebody on the Nats is gonna get nailed next inning."

Big mistake if they do that. The umps are surely watching for anything that looks like a deliberate HBP. It would be too "coincidental" if a Nat gets hit next inning.

MicheleS said...

I love RZ.. pay the man!!!

baseballswami said...

I would think by now the league would be aware of teams that retaliate and teams that do not. The Cardinals retaliate if you look at them funny, the Nats just don't do that. Reputations should be known around mlb.But if they want to give us a base runner that would be fine, we'll have a hard enough time getting on base with Kennedy pitching.

MIcheleS said...

That hit Morse's Hand! Good Grief!

Soul Possession, PFB Sofa said...

Outsider, I'm not suggesting they not be at the top--just something to let us know when they hit.

sunderland said...

Upton's over-reaction to getting hit forced Ian Kennedy to retaliate. If he just dropped the bat and jogged to first, I bet Morse would not have been hit.

sunderland said...

Swami, you are naive to think the Nats do not retaliate.

Soul Possession, PFB Sofa said...

I don't ever rant about Carpenter, but in this case, I think I'll make an exception. The umps do not have to be mind-readers when Justin Upton gets drilled--UH-gain--and then Morse gets hit. Who was surprised by that? Not Kirk Gibson.

Nats Outsider said...

Well, picking Morse to be hit was probably a smart move. It pushes Zim to second, but it keeps Morse from going into Beast Mode.

Nats Outsider said...

It sure would be nice if the Nats would get some runs before Zimmermann leaves the game. It'd allow him to get a win and give me some more confidence about turning it over to the bullpen.

Anonymous said...

Upton is a PUNK.

Anonymous said...

"It appears that will be the end of this."
I sure hope so, but I'm not so sure... Remember that last game?

gonatsgo said...

Upton is a Brazilian Soccer player with his acting job. Morse has been getting shelled. Notice how your bad hitters never get hit? Danny got hit a lot when he was hitting well.

Anonymous said...

Let's go Zimmerman!

sunderland said...

Like in Arizona in June, when Marquis pitched an inning and a half until Upton came up, and then plunked Upton. He wasn't gonna waste the HBP on a #7 hitter.

Anonymous said...

%^#@!!!

Helluva pitching job to strike out both RZ and MM with the bases loaded.

Joe Seamhead said...

Robbed.

FS said...

please let us not get to Yankees' level of pretending to get HBP.

NatinBeantown said...

FYI, next half inning, Charlie and Dave will have Rendon on the air.

Navy Nats Fan said...

Zimmermann deserved that for failing to lay down a good bunt. He needs to drive in a run to make up for it.

Nats Outsider said...

After the Phillies beat the Mets yesterday, 10-0, they are leading 9-0 in the 7th inning today. I don't want to feel sorry for the Mets, and of course the Nats are better off for their losing, but you have to feel their embarrassment.

Joe Seamhead said...

FS, it sure looked as if it hit Michael's hand before it hit his bat.

Nats Outsider said...

I can't believe they left Zimmerman in to pitch the 7th. It seems like they may have decided to use up his innings today and forget about getting him to 162.

Mick said...

Sorry, Davey you just suck

Mick said...

No reason to keep Jordan in the game after 6. I just envision a slow start next season because of Davey's stupid moves and we will be talking about 2013 season in the sumnmer

Mick said...

What I cant stand about Davey is he never admits a mistake

Nats Outsider said...

I'm trying to be reasonable here. Maybe Davey wanted to give Zimmerman another chance to get the win. But it was a stupid move, and maybe now it will mean Zimmermann takes the loss.

jeffwx said...

KK Clippard

Mick said...

Davey just is not a good manager anymore and Rizzo should really get a hot commodity. I know the Nats job would be a top job now. Move Davey upstairs, please, I'm begging ya!!!

Wally said...

Did anyone notice what Jordan's ERA dipped to before the HR? It is at 3.10 now. It is meaningless in the scheme of things, but I admit to rooting to see him drop below 3.00 for the season. Kind of a nice optical stat to hear referenced all offseason.

baseballswami said...

Mick - agreed. The special advisor, player's buddy, crazy old uncle is a much better role. Plus - the Nats really need to do an all-out search and really find the best person for this up and coming team. I do think he was trying to keep Jordan in so that maybe he could get a win, but Jordan is in a precarious post-tommy john situation with an innings limit and has never had a full season. He is not the manager's pet play-thing. Of course, whenever Jordan pitches, he either has errors made behind him or absolutely no run support.

Anonymous said...

I'm generally not a negative guy -- in fact, in seven years of blogging about the Nationals (I had to count back to 2005 on my finger to make sure that number was right), I think I've only written a half-dozen or so critical stories.

And before I vent, let me say that in the long run, I think Davey Johnson is going to be a positive influence on this team.

But for crying out loud .....

Jordan Zimmermann just completed six wonderful innings and brought his ERA down to 2.99. At 157 innings, he should have been pulled and called it a season (no reason to start him for 3-4 innings in another start to reach that mythical/magical 160.

He would have ended the year with an ERA under 3.00 and it would have been a stellar year for Zimmermann from just about every conceivable angle.

But Davey has left his starter in one inning too long several times this season. Maybe it's because he's from a different era where pitchers were expected to go the distance every night. But pitchers today are creatures of their environment and because 6-7 innings is all that is expected of them, that's all they can produce.

So Davey trots Zimmermann out for the 7th and every thing goes haywire. Why? It was obvious that because of the lack of clutch hitting by the Nats, a single run given up would likely lose the game.

If the Nats lose tonight (it's 2-0 currently), the loss, and the tarnish on Zimmermann's ERA, is clearly on Davey Johnson.

There; I feel much better.

(I had to post as anonymous because my dumb computer wouldn't accept my google account ... this is Farid @ Pocatello ID)

gonatsgo said...

The Phillies are a first place team, the Dbacks are a first place team ( despite their current cold streak). Win or lose, this game has been an epic battle. Ian Kennedy is a true ace and we have hit off him, but can't get anything across. They will know they were in a game, though. Especially Upton ;)

UnkyD said...

Cmon, man... There's tons of stuff young guns need to try and to experience... Sometime, he'll NEED to scrap his way through the 7th, because the 'pen is wasted... Good thing Davey doesn't give a rats patootie what we think. I hope he keeps challenging this team!

Mick said...

baseball swami, TY, at least I know I am not insane, lol

A DC Wonk said...

sunderland said...

Upton's over-reaction to getting hit forced Ian Kennedy to retaliate. If he just dropped the bat and jogged to first, I bet Morse would not have been hit.


I didn't see tonight's HPB -- but didn't Upton get hit *three* times during the last series? If I'm remembering right -- I'd sure be upset about getting hit yet again.

jeffwx said...

Davey does give a better post-game interview than Riggs

Wally said...

Farid - I agree with you. I like Davey and think that he is good for the team, but this seemed like a perfect time to call it a day for JZimm. There was some value to a 2.99 ERA (although I might have trotted him out for another start)

Anonymous said...

And now, Sean Burnett has a great inning, comes back out and implodes.

A DC Wonk said...

Unkyd said...

Cmon, man... There's tons of stuff young guns need to try and to experience... Sometime, he'll NEED to scrap his way through the 7th, because the 'pen is wasted... Good thing Davey doesn't give a rats patootie what we think. I hope he keeps challenging this team!


Right on, Unkyd. It's not like tonight's the 7th game of the world series. Further, JZ was due to lead off the bottom of the 7th. There's nothing wrong with trying get another inning out of him.

Anony wrote:

At 157 innings, he should have been pulled and called it a season (no reason to start him for 3-4 innings in another start to reach that mythical/magical 160.

Davey's a players manager and would like to see JZ get to 162 so he can qualify for the league leaders. One more start of 6 innings is probably what JZ and Davey would like to see.

He would have ended the year with an ERA under 3.00 and it would have been a stellar year for Zimmermann from just about every conceivable angle.

So, because of this one inning, it's _not_ a stellar year? In his first year back after TJ surgery? 2 runs in 6-1/3 to a first place team is not bad.

But Davey has left his starter in one inning too long several times this season.

He's trying to stretch them, challenge them, and also to cut down on his overused 'pen. If the Nats are going to try to really compete in the near future, the starters have to go longer than 6-1/3 or 6-2/3 every night.

Soul Possession, PFB Sofa said...

OK, that was one of the best things I've seen in the stands here since the Hopping RFK.

Some little boy in the stands, maybe 8 or 9, brought his glove, and catches a foul ball. He acts cool, glad but not excited, like he's caught plenty. He looks it over, approvingly, and then turns and hands it to his dad (I guess), and points to the "little kid" down the row, maybe 3 or 4 years old, and tells Dad to pass the ball to him.

Man, that almost makes me reconsider having kids. Better than the dad whose daughter dutifully returned the foul ball.

jeffwx said...

just for men, pnc, hoveround, Gamepaaaad

We need more diverse commercials

Anonymous said...

I agree with Unkyd. If Zimmerman is going to be an ace, he has to learn how to finish games. He needs to learn to locate his pitches even when he is tired. All the top teams have pitchers and hitters that play MAN baseball. That is what the Nats need to learn.

baseballswami said...

Jeffwx -- really? You think all that rambly bs is a good interview? Not saying that Riggs was a sparkling conversationalist, but this guy is just out there.

Anonymous said...

So... Anybody know what happened to Werth?

jeffwx said...

I mean to say a more entertaining interview...I like rambling managers. Casey Stengel was the best at it.

And is Johnny Holiday a real name

Soul Possession, PFB Sofa said...

Agree, fwliw, with Wonk and Unk. And Burnett hardly "imploded" there.

Anonymous said...

dissapointing

Mick said...

When was the last time Nix got a hit, he is pathetic, it seems like he down 0-2 every at bat and he looks like an oaf out there

jeffwx said...

I see why Kennedy is now 16-4 and should be a cy young candidate

Mick said...

jeffwax:

Johnny is a great guy, no Holiday became his radio name back in 1968 with WWDC. Johnny is from Miami, FL. A wonderful person

Soul Possession, PFB Sofa said...

Johnny Holliday

NatsLady said...

Well, that's that. Sorry to be late to the party, had to clean up some mess from the earthquake when I got home from work--boy is it strange to write that.

Clippard is NOT human. (Direct quote from some blogger's headline.)

jeffwx said...

Yeah, he seems like a real nice guy as does Bob Carpenter...I think Johnny Holiday used to broadcast Terps football back in the day.

Maybe nice guys don't always finish last

Mick said...

jeffwax:

Johnny is still the voice of the Terps, he has been doing Terp football and basketball since 1980! He has been through it all at College Park and I can never envision a Terp game without him

A DC Wonk said...

NatsLady said...

Clippard is NOT human. (Direct quote from some blogger's headline.)


No kidding! How often does a reliever lead their team in WAR? (Actually, I have no idea how often . . . but it sure seems like it oughtta be fairly rare, no?)

jeffwx said...

WAR...huh, what does it stand for

NatsLady said...

Wins Above Replacement Player, or WARP, is a statistic published in Baseball Prospectus that attempts to measure the "total value" of a player over a given season.

A DC Wonk said...

Ooh, NatsLady, you fell for that one. (Good one, jeffwx).

Here's a hint: Edwin Starr.

NatsLady said...

Sorry, I have no idea what you are talking about. I was just trying to be polite. Have a nice evening.

A DC Wonk said...

NatsLady said...

Sorry, I have no idea what you are talking about. I was just trying to be polite. Have a nice evening.


Oh, of course! We know you were being polite! Jeffwx was making a psuedo-pun of sorts.

Edwin Starr had a huge hit in 1970 with a song called "War" and it's opening line, repeated many times is: "War, hunh, what is it good for? Absolutely nothin'" Find it on youtube. Edwin Starr was a great singer.

(Note to Jeff -- I take mild issue with your spelling of the second word -- I think it ought to be properly spelled "hunh" rather than "huh")

All in good fun, NatsLady!

m20832 said...

Who cares about stats.... they lost 2-0. three games under .500. Bases loaded, one out. Couldn't score a run. That, plus Johnson really doesn't know his pitching staff (really? leave a gassed JZimm out in the 7th to leave pitches in the middle of the plate?). What kind of brain fart is that?
The truth is, the Nats are a mediocre team. As long as Nix, Cora, Bixler, Ankiel are on this team, they will be mediocre. I'm hoping they get to .500 this year. It will be a successful year if they do.
I will be disappointed with every loss as I Luv a Winner. This game could have been won. Three games back of .500.
I don't care about the playoffs. I want the Nats to be winners!

GYFNG!!!

NatsLady said...

I would never have understood that "pun" in a thousand years and there is NO WAY I will go on Youtube and listen to some random pop singer from 1970. I have to listen to enough trashy singing from my students.

I will remember in future not to answer anyone's questions any more. In case there are newbies on the site, don't bother me for information.

m20832 said...

Actually, it was a pretty good song. Against the war in Vietnam.

A DC Wonk said...

NatsLady said...

I will remember in future not to answer anyone's questions any more. In case there are newbies on the site, don't bother me for information.


You sound angry. I apologize if I am the cause of that. We like your answering of our questions. (And you're one of the tops around here with stats!).

I hope you reconsider. I thought we were all just playing (trying to amuse ourselves, since that's better than lashing out at player-x or y because the Nats lost).

m20832 said...

Actually, it was a pretty good song.


A huge hit, and Starr had a terrific voice. (Song later covered by Tom Jones, and, much later, by Bruce Springsteen). For those old enough, he had a minor hit called "25 Miles" in 1968. (Unfortunately for him, those were his only two hits).

NatsLady said...

@m20832: I agree with your comments on the game, it is frustrating that Davey left JZimm in for the 7th. Clearly if the idea is to limit JZ's innings and to shut him down at approximately 160, the reason you are doing that is to save wear and tear on his not-yet-fully-up-to-snuff arm. Well, this is toward the end of the road, so you should be pulling him SOONER, not LATER. If you want to get to 162, let him pitch a few innings in relief. (Is he going on the DL? I don't know exactly what the rules are, but I think it has to be a new injury for him to go on the DL.)

Also, I think Davey doesn't agree with the 160-inning limit on JZ. He thinks he knows better than the powers-that-be... And 160 is pretty arbitrary, no doubt.

However, after the walk, he did have a "teachable moment" [terrible term] in that JZ blew his cool in Chicago after a miscue, and he does need to keep it together when something bad happens, namely the walk on the ump's "bad" call (I didn't see it, but assume it was).

Unfortunately, this was a repeat performance, so Davey ended up pulling JZ anyway, and who knows if the lesson is learned????

Davey had a plan for the game (JZ pitching seven and Clip coming in the 8th with a lead or at the very least, a tie). But he didn't have a good plan and he didn't have a backup plan.

On the offense, no suprise. But you have to give credit to Kennedy, an excellent pitcher who got out of jams, and their bullpen. Sometimes you just lose games.

Dave said...

Sigh...on the best baseball night (weather-wise) I've had this summer, Davey leaves Jordan in too long and the Nats lose.

Second shutout in a row I've attended. My last game was Saturday vs. Philly. I have baseball bumout right now.

But our crowd in 313 is an amusing bunch, at least. Get 'em tomorrow, Nats.

GYFNG!

Drew8 said...

Good god, yall.

It was just a joke.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=01-2pNCZiNk

A DC Wonk said...

NatsLady said...

Also, I think Davey doesn't agree with the 160-inning limit on JZ. He thinks he knows better than the powers-that-be... And 160 is pretty arbitrary, no doubt.


What makes you say that? I haven't seen/heard any evidence of that.

Scooter said...

Whonky, I have no cite for this, but I recall Johnson actually saying he "might talk to" the folks upstairs about that 160-inning limit.

Again, I have nothing specific, but reading several comments by Johnson a couple-three wees back, I got the very strong feeling that he just wished the limit weren't there.

Scooter said...

Oh, and the Wikipedia page linked earlier says nothing about Johnny Holliday's birth name, but this page (linked to from what purports to be a sort-of official Holliday site) does. It's quite surprising, but not implausible.

Joe Seamhead said...

NatsLady, I appreciate your contributions on NI. I didn't get that it was a joke, either, but you get a lot of joy out of this board. please don't let a misunderstanding diminish that.
As to the game, we got beat by a very hot pitcher and a first place team. Zimmermann wanted to come back out. Davey said afterwards that he probably shouldn't have let him. Morse shouldn't have struck out. Zimmerman shouldn't have hit into a DP, etc. The team lost this game, Davey included. Now let's come back tonight and win. Go, Livo, and GYFNG!

natsfan1a said...

I enjoy what NatsLady brings, too.

btw, did you know that the original title for "War and Peace" was "War, What Is It Good For?" [rimshot]

(Sorry I'm late on that but I fell asleep in front of the tv well before the game ended and later toddled straight to bed.)

Anonymous said...

Thanks, Elaine!

natsfan1a said...

:-D

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