I’ve certainly been among those making excuses for this team, and for players on the team, for a while now. These points are true:
- They are better than their pythagorean record; by runs scored versus runs against, they should be 45-39, in 2nd place ahead of the luckier Phillies but still 5 games back of the surprising Braves.
- They’ve been incredibly unlucky in one run and extra inning games. This is a direct input to the pythag record; they’re 8-16 in one run games and 2-4 in extra innings. Both the teams ahead of them in the NL east have wildly better one-run records (13-6 and 18-7 respectively)
- They’ve been just slaughtered with injury, at various times this year leading the NL in total players on the D/L and total man-games lost.
- They’ve experienced a complete gutting of last year’s middle of the order, with Ryan Zimmerman disappearing for weeks on end with little-to-no idea when he’d come back, Daniel Murphy taking nearly half a season to recover from his surprise off-season knee injury, and Bryce Harper putting up one of his worst seasons … clearly pressing, expanding his zone and being amazingly unlucky in terms of BABIP thus far this season.
To add insult to injury, #2 starter Stephen Strasburg threw his annual arm injury into play early this year, our mid-rotation guys have struggled, and our #5 starters keep going down with injury.
What else is true? This is a team that’s kinda old; average age 29.1 (which is only 10th), but which is helped greatly by the presence of youngest-guy-in-the-league Juan Soto. And Old teams get hurt, a lot. Meanwhile young teams (like Atlanta at 5th youngest and Philly who are the absolute youngest teams) don’t get hurt a lot.
This season is starting to remind me of a couple of past seasons:
- 2012, when the Nats were significantly improved from 2011 and took the league by storm, frankly, a year before they thought they would. To me, this is the 2018 Braves. The Braves only won 72 games last year; now they’re on a pace to win 94 games. That’s a massive difference year over year and they’re doing it with almost no off-season moves; all internal.
- 2015, when the Nats themselves showed similar season-long malaise and only came to life at the end of the season when it was too late and all they managed to do was cost themselves draft position the next year.
So what now? They just finished a relatively brutal section of the schedule, playing a ton of AL East teams. AL teams are bad match-ups for any NL team thanks to the DH’s impact on roster construction … even if they’re playing a crummy AL team like Tampa or Baltimore. But to face off against the likes of Boston and New York, who are juggernauts, with a sputtering offense and missing a couple of key arms … well its no surprise to me they got swept.
The next 3 weeks will be the season. They have 3 series against poor teams where they should be able to go 8-3 or 9-2 if they’re a legit team. The should get at least one arm back in Hellickson and maybe Fedde can be replaced like for like with the surprising Jefry Rodriguez until Strasburg shows back up. Then we have to hope for a post-all star game bump and take it to Atlanta in the first season post ASG to make up some ground.
Now, what does this team have going for it?
- Harper just cannot continue to hit this badly; at some point he should have a solid month.
- This team was dominant in May; it can play .600 ball when it needs to
- Strasburg returns likely after the ASG
- The Nats have one of the easiest remaining schedules in baseball; slightly easer than Philly and significantly easier than Atlanta. The Nats have no more interleague games either.
- Furthermore, the Nats have already done all their West Coast trips; their worst remaining road trip is to Colorado the last series of the season. Both their NL East competitors still have big west coast trips to make.
So the big question is this: can this team get it together a little now, a little in August and put themselves in a position to take back the division? If they scuffle and go just .500 between now and the ASG … then no way.