Tag: Washington Nationals

Yunel Escobar Injury: Updates on Nationals Star’s Oblique and Return

New addition Yunel Escobar is slated to be the Washington Nationals‘ starting second baseman in 2015, but the ninth-year veteran has gotten off to a less-than-ideal start with the Nats due to injury.

Continue for updates.


Escobar Out at Least One Week with Oblique Strain

Saturday, March 7

Escobar has an opportunity to be a major contributor for a potential championship team this season, and that may ultimately be the case.

For the time being, though, Escobar will be out of action, as he is expected to miss anywhere from seven to 10 days after straining his left oblique, according to the Nationals’ official Twitter account:

While the expectation is that the Cuban utility infielder will be ready for the start of the season, oblique injuries can be tricky to deal with.

Since the MLB season is such a long and arduous one, the best option for both Escobar and the Nats is to take a cautious approach in the coming days and weeks.

 

Follow @MikeChiari on Twitter.

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Washington Nationals 4 Players Who Are in Serious Danger of Being Cut or Demoted

This offseason, the Washington Nationals turned a nice roster into a World Series favorite with a handful of key acquisitions, but that’s not such good news for some borderline big leaguers, who will now have to fight tooth and nail in spring training just to avoid cuts or demotions. 

From one through 24, Washington’s Opening Day 25-man roster looks set in stone, save for a setback in Jayson Werth’s recovery from shoulder surgery that would open up another spot. 

Because of this lack of parity, the best chance anyone on this list has of earning an Opening Day spot is about 50/50. Those percentages go to Tyler Moore and Mike Carp as they duke it out for that last seat on the bench. 

But the severity of the consequences of not earning a coveted big-league roster spot also vary among these four Nationals. 

If Moore doesn’t make the major league squad, he could end up on a different team. If Dan Uggla fails to crack the roster, he could end up looking for a different profession.

The beginning of spring training is somewhat of a social event for most players—relaxed, informal—but for these four players, camp will be a grind from start to finish while they look to stay relevant in the eyes of their coaches.

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Washington Nationals’ Position-by-Position Breakdown at 2015 Spring Training

The Washington Nationals checked off all of their boxes this offseason—fortifying the infield and amplifying the rotation—and now, with spring training upon us, we get our first look at the double take-inducing product the Nats will send out this summer.

Washington has eight everyday field players and five starting pitchers who don’t have to worry about fighting for playing time. All that’s left to decide on that front is the order of the lineup and the rotation, so you’ll have to look elsewhere for compelling position battles. 

This preview is a chance to get familiar with the Nationals who will make the biggest contribution to a potential World Series run, their likely backups and fringe players who may be needed in case of emergency this season.

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Washington Nationals: 5 Potential Breakout Candidates to Watch in Spring Training

The Washington Nationals have one of the most well-equipped farm systems in baseball, and every year around February and March it churns out a crop of players who turn big league spring training invites into coming out parties. 

Washington’s collection of 40-man roster members and 20 non-roster invitees who make up the spring training guest list all have different motives to show out in Viera, Florida. 

Aaron Barrett, for example, already has an Opening Day roster spot locked up. But spring training will be his chance to show teammates and coaches he’s recovered from October’s debacle in San Francisco. 

Michael A. Taylor, on the other hand, is in the limbo stage of his career, stuck between the majors and the minors. Spring training is his chance to prove himself invaluable to Washington’s big league roster now rather than later. 

Then there are players, like Tyler Moore, just trying to stay afloat in the big leagues, meaning a poor spring training could have disastrous career consequences.  

Washington isn’t looking for a savior of the franchise. It has about five of those in the starting rotation alone. 

What the Nationals are searching for is a final piece or two that could shore up the few weaknesses they have and help turn this World Series run they’re supposed to make into a reality. 

The following are five players who could turn heads in spring training and fit that mold. 

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Complete Washington Nationals 2015 Spring Training Preview

Entering their 10th anniversary season, the Washington Nationals have completed the transformation from perennial bottom-feeders to one of the most feared units in baseball, but before the team makes its supposed march to the World Series, it will convene in Viera, Florida, for spring training. 

The 2014 season ended in bitter disappointment for the Nationals. Washington was shut down in the National League Division Series by the San Francisco Giants, and the Nats’ league-best regular-season record amounted to an unceremonious 3-1 series defeat. 

Following that postseason exit, Washington had a short but seemingly important to-do list. General manager Mike Rizzo essentially set that on fire.

Conventional wisdom urged the Nationals to work out contract extensions—or even trades—for some combination of Jordan Zimmermann, Doug Fister and Ian Desmond before they all hit free agency after the coming season. 

Instead, Washington pushed all its chips to the center of the table for 2015 by keeping those three expiring contracts on the payroll without resolution.

And if it that didn’t make it clear the Nationals were all-in this season, they eliminated any doubt when they gave free-agent starter Max Scherzer $210 million

The 2015 Nationals aren’t all that different from the 2014 installment in terms of personnel. Spring training will be our first chance to see the group that’s now billed as a superteam following those calculated offseason dealings.

Washington’s pitchers and catchers report Feb. 19, followed by position players on Feb. 24. 

This preview contains the updates and storylines you need to know as those dates arrive and we inch closer and closer to Opening Day 2015. 

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Anthony Rendon Will Replace Bryce Harper as Face of Franchise’s Future in 2015

With all the attention being heaped on the Washington Nationals‘ new super-rotation, it’s easy to forget there’s a young Nats position player with “future superstar” written all over him.

No, not Bryce Harper, though the brash, big-swinging former No. 1 pick remains an indelible part of the picture in the nation’s capital.

We’re talking about Anthony Rendon, who quietly put together a breakout 2014 campaign and looks poised to claim the franchise-player mantle.

If he does, expect humility. “He’s not walking around with his chest puffed out, he’s doing things the right way,” shortstop Ian Desmond said of his young teammate in 2012, the year after Rendon was drafted, per The Washington Times‘ Amanda Comak

Rendon may not possess Harper’s notorious swagger, but last season’s stats demand notice: a .287/.351/.473 slash line, 21 home runs, 17 stolen bases and a National League-leading 111 runs scored.

If you like WAR, Rendon‘s 6.4 was the second-best mark among NL infielders, per Baseball-Reference. Not coincidentally, he finished fifth in MVP voting.

Oh, and he’s still four months shy of his 25th birthday. 

Here’s how Philadelphia Phillies ace Cole Hamels, who has tangled plenty with Rendon in the NL East, breaks it down, per Adam Kilgore of the Washington Post:

He’s a very, very impressive player. I put him up with the [Troy] Tulowitzkis and the David Wrights when they first came up, those impact players you don’t normally see at such a young age. You know they’re only going to get better, and you’re like, ‘Great.’ He’s that type of guy—one of those superstars that’s going to be around forever.

What about Ryan Zimmerman, who Rendon replaced at third base last season when the 30-year-old former All-Star went down with a broken thumb?

No worries; Zimmerman is ready to pass the baton and slide across the diamond to first, plugging the hole left by departed free-agent Adam LaRoche

“You got a guy, moving forward, that’s going to play third,” Zimmerman told Kilgore of his heir apparent.

Last season was Rendon‘s first full year in the big leagues. As good as he was, it’s worth wondering if a semi-sophomore slump is in the offing. MLB pitchers tend to adjust.

Here’s Kilgore, addressing that very point:

Rendon‘s quick bat has led opponents on an impossible search. They have tried to pitch him in every way since he debuted early in 2013, and every approach has failed. He can rifle inside fastballs down the left field line. He can be fooled by off-speed pitches and still hook them over the fence. He can shoot outside pitches into the right-center field gap.

A flawless hitter? Of course not. Just because no one has found a weakness yet doesn’t mean they’ll stop trying. 

But these sorts of accolades—from teammates and opponents alike—aren’t tossed around lightly. They have to be earned. 

None of this is to discount Harper. Yes, the left-handed swinging outfielder had his struggles in 2014, finishing with career-lows in home runs (13), RBI (32) and OPS (.768) as he battled a thumb injury.

Don’t forget, though: At the tender age of 22, Harper already has a pair of All-Star appearances and a Rookie of the Year Award under his belt.

If anything, Rendon‘s ascent speaks to how loaded the Nationals are as they charge into 2015 with the best rotation in baseball and a balanced lineup populated by a mix of rising stars and seasoned vets.

This is a club with legitimate championship aspirations that transcend any one player. 

Until recently, though, if you asked your average baseball fan (or analyst) to name the face of the Nationals, they’d have conjured Harper’s hirsute mug before Rendon‘s.

Some still might; Rendon isn’t shouting for attention. His play, on the other hand, speaks volumes.

 

All statistics courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com.

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Washington Nationals’ 5 Most Important Players for 2015 Success

Contrary to popular belief, the Washington Nationals have not been crowned 2015 World Series champions just yet, and there are a number of players on the roster who must perform up to or beyond their potential for the team to reach its lofty goals. 

In 2014, the Nationals’ Achilles’ heel was a lack of offense when they needed it most.

Washington’s pitching staff mowed down opponents all season, earning the best ERA in baseball. And the addition of Max Scherzer without the subtraction of any starters from a year ago should equal continued dominance from the mound. 

With the disclaimer that Washington only played one postseason series, the team had the second-lowest batting average of the 10-team playoff field. That could be Madison Bumgarner and the San Francisco Giants‘ fault, but the Nats’ .253 regular-season average wasn’t all that impressive either. 

The sheer depth of Washington’s starting rotation—including Tanner Roark’s ability to step in if someone in the rotation suffers an injury—disqualifies any one starter from a spot on this list.

Instead, the criteria for inclusion are the consequences of a lackluster season from a particular player and the high stakes behind a transition into a new role.

If someone like closer Drew Storen or newly minted first baseman Ryan Zimmerman fall apart or sees extended time on the disabled list in 2015, the Nationals will face some scary on-the-fly decisions during the season.

That said, here are the five most important individual players on a 2015 Washington team that will be viewed as an abject failure without a deep postseason run.

 

 

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Projecting the Washington Nationals’ 2015 Opening Day Roster

Reigning NL Manager of the Year Matt Williams is a powerful man because he’s the one who gets to hand over the Washington Nationals‘ lineup card on Opening Day 2015. 

From top to bottom, bullpen to backstop, Washington’s roster is built to win right now.

Through several smaller, calculated moves—and one very big play—general manager Mike Rizzo has put together one of the most complete squads in baseball—a unit that is now the favorite to win the World Series, according to Odds Shark.

But the beauty of the Nationals’ impressive roster is its resemblance to last year’s group. Aside from the very necessary trade that shored up second base with Yunel Escobar and the gargantuan pile of money that brought in Max Scherzer, Washington’s nucleus from a season ago features largely the same names. 

But nothing is set in stone. 

With Scherzer‘s arrival in D.C., Stephen Strasburg or Jordan Zimmermann could be more valuable as trade bait than a member of the Nats‘ terrifying rotation. Either way, the team is reportedly listening to offers. 

Ian Desmond has also reportedly been shopped around as he enters the final year of his contract with no sign of an extension in sight, according to Fox Sports’ Ken Rosenthal

But this Opening Day projection comes from the school of thought that Washington is content to close up shop for the winter and keep its stars in town for 2015. 

This 25-man roster is a finely tuned machine that could propel the Nationals to a second consecutive National League East title, with designs on much more than that. 

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Introducing Lucas Giolito, the Pitching Phenom Making Strasburg Expendable

The signing of free agent Max Scherzer to a seven-year, $210 million contract improved the Washington Nationals’ starting rotation from arguably the best to undoubtedly the best in baseball.

The Nats will enter the 2015 season with three No. 1 starters in Scherzer, Jordan Zimmermann and Stephen Strasburg, with Gio Gonzalez, Doug Fister and Tanner Roark “filling out” the staff. However, the Scherzer signing also led to speculation that the Nats now might be more inclined to trade from their pitching depth.

Jon Morosi of Fox Sports tweeted that Washington would be willing to deal either Zimmermann or Strasburg if they landed Scherzer, which makes sense, as Zimmermann is set to become a free agent after the 2015 season and likely to command a monster free-agent contract, while Strasburg is set to follow in his footsteps the following year.

But there’s one other major reason the Nationals seemingly are willing to consider dealing young talents such as Zimmermann and Strasburg: They have baseball’s top pitching prospect in 20-year-old right-hander Lucas Giolito.

Giolito was viewed as a candidate to go No. 1 overall in the 2012 draft after the right-hander lit up radar guns with his fastball and dropped jaws with his curveball early in the spring for Harvard-Westlake High School (California).

Unfortunately, Giolito suffered a strained ligament in his right elbow roughly two months into the season and was shut down indefinitely. He avoided surgery, but the injury ultimately cost Giolito the remainder of his high school campaign and the chance to be the first prep right-hander drafted No. 1 overall.

Yet even though Giolito missed most of the spring, the Washington Nationals still selected the right-hander with the No. 16 overall selection in the 2012 draft and offered him a $2.925 million signing bonus.

Making his first professional start later that summer, Giolito made it just two innings in the game before his elbow flared up once again. This time, however, there would be no rest and rehab, as he was forced to undergo season-ending Tommy John surgery.

After 10 months on the shelf, Giolito returned to the mound late in the 2013 season to post a 1.96 ERA with 39 strikeouts in 36.2 innings between the Gulf Coast and New York-Penn Leagues.

Suffice it to say, expectations were high for Giolito headed into 2014. Amazingly, the 20-year-old did not disappoint.

In his first full season back from surgery, not to mention his first full season as a professional, Giolito led the Low-A South Atlantic League (among pitchers with 90 innings) in ERA (2.20), strikeout percentage (28.5 percent) and opponents’ batting average (.196), per FanGraphs. The Nationals shut down the right-hander after 98 innings due to the organization’s protocol with young pitchers rehabbing from Tommy John surgery, according to Adam Kilgore of The Washington Post.

“Getting that first year out of the way, it was kind of a special situation for me,” Giolito said via Byron Kerr of MASNSports.com. “Because it was my first full year of pro ball and it was my first year back from Tommy John. Now I’m fully healthy and the surgery is well behind me. And I’m a little bit more experienced. I have been a pro for about three years now. I have a full year under my belt. I feel prepared for what’s next to come.”

When I saw Giolito make his second start of the 2014 season for Low-A Hagerstown, the 20-year-old fired five shutout innings against Low-A Lakewood, allowing one hit and one walk with six strikeouts.

He never threw more than 17 pitches in an inning and needed only 61 to complete the outing. The lone hit he surrendered was a two-out double to Samuel Hiciano in the third inning. Besides that, it was mostly strikeouts and weak contact (six groundouts, one flyout).

Giolito throws both a two- and four-seam fastball, with the latter consistently registering in the 94 to 96 mph range and the two-seamer at 91 to 93. Based on velocity alone, the pitch grades as a 65 or 70 (on the 20-80 scouting scale), but everything about Giolito—his size, mechanics, arm action, prior workload—suggests that more velocity will come with development. It doesn’t take much to envision him sitting in the upper 90s by the time he reaches the major leagues.

In terms of usage, Giolito throws more four-seamers to left-handed batters, and he does a nice job changing hitters’ eye levels vertically so as to set up both secondary offerings. He’ll overthrow a few of them over the course of a game, ripping open with his glove side and falling off toward first base, but he’s cognizant of his mechanics and therefore is quick to make adjustments during subsequent pitches.

Giolito’s curveball is possibly the best I’ve personally scouted in the last four years—a future 75 offering. Working from the same over-the-top arm angle as his fastball, he throws the pitch in the 76 to 83 mph range with legitimate 12-to-6 break and sharp, downer bite.

He shows the ability to add and subtract with the pitch depending on the batter and count, consistently throwing it 78 to 81 mph for a called strike and then throwing a harder-biting version at 82 to 83 mph when vying for a whiff.

Meanwhile, the consistency and effectiveness of Giolito’s changeup was a pleasant surprise last season. The right-hander threw the pitch only three times when I saw him in April, but each time, he delivered it with a deceptive arm action and good speed differential in the low 80s. Giolito’s changeup grades as at least a future grade-60 offering, giving him three pitches which project as above average or better at maturity.

Giolito spoke in depth with Kerr about the pitch:

The changeup, when I was throwing it in high school, it wasn’t really a pitch I went to. I didn’t really have a good feel for it. After surgery, it kind of just came to me. I came back from my throwing program and my changeup was already in the workings of being there. I could throw it consistently for a strike.

Since then, I have been hammering it out. I really feel that it’s one of my stronger pitches. It’s a go to pitch in any count. I threw it 3-1 and 2-0 a lot last year. I feel that when you throw (it) in those kind of situations, you have a lot of success.

A lot can happen to any 20-year-old pitcher between A-ball and the time he reaches the major leagues. In Giolito’s case, the right-hander should have the chance to be a legitimate No. 1 starter at maturity so long as he stays healthy and continues down his current developmental path.

Both Giolito and the Nationals say that the right-hander is 100 percent healthy heading into 2015. However, that doesn’t mean he’ll be rushed up the ladder to the major leagues—not even if the team ultimately decides to trade Zimmermann or Strasburg.

“We understand the development process for someone coming off his surgery,” said Mark Scialabba, the Nationals’ director of player development, via Chelsea Janes of The Washington Post.

“We have to understand there are still goals to reach. We are going to proceed like with our previous players who have gone through this surgery, but also understand that he’s a special, unique talent.”

The Nationals’ pitching depth, even if the team makes a trade, will allow them to develop Giolito cautiously and thoroughly. Therefore, he likely will begin 2015 at High-A Potomac in the Carolina League, and if all goes as planned with his development, the right-hander should log some time at Double-A Harrisburg, too.

The organization might play it by ear after that, but all signs point to Giolito reaching the major leagues sometime during the 2016 season.

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Is Stephen Strasburg Worth a True ‘Destroy the Farm’ Trade Package?

The question isn’t whether anyone wants Stephen Strasburg. Everyone wants a 26-year-old budding ace who just led the National League in strikeouts.

The question is whether anyone will pay what it takes to get him.

Make no mistake: it’ll take a lot

Exactly how much is unclear, but CSN Washington‘s Chase Hughes was probably understating it when he suggested “a significant haul of prospects.”

Essentially, to land one of baseball’s best young arms, any potential suitor would have to sell the farm—literally. Is he worth it?

First, let’s address the recent comments by Strasburg‘s agent, Scott Boras, who batted down rumors that his client wants out of D.C. after the Washington Nationals inked Max Scherzer (who Boras also, coincidentally, represents).

Here’s the notorious super-agent, per Hughes: “Stephen Strasburg wants to play here and wants to be with Max Scherzer and grow. … I spoke to [Nationals general manager] Mike [Rizzo] and the people when we signed Max. And they said that they have every intention of keeping this pitching staff intact.”

Two things. First, add up the number of times Scott Boras has publicly told less than the truth and…well, report back after Labor Day.

Second, everyone is for sale for the right price.

Yes, it’s entirely possible—even plausible—that Washington wants to keep its new super-rotation intact for 2015. 

But with Scherzer in the fold for the next seven years to the tune of $210 million, surely the Nationals will at least listen to offers for Strasburg, as well as Doug Fister and Jordan Zimmermann.

Fister and Zimmermann are the more obvious trade candidates since each has only one year left on his contract. If they aren’t moved this winter, expect both names to pop up again at the July trade deadline.

But that’s exactly what makes Strasburg such a valuable target. He’s under team control for three more years and will earn “only” $7.4 million next season.

OK, so assuming Strasburg could be had for a crazy, farm-depleting package, let’s return to the question: Is he worth it?

On the surface, the answer seems simple.

At the risk of repetition, the kid just led the NL in strikeouts. He’s got a crackling fastball that can touch triple digits, complemented by nasty breaking stuff and a changeup he relied on more heavily last season than at any point in his MLB career, per FanGraphs

He may be one of many studs in the Nats‘ stable, but he’d headline most rotations.

Hang on, though; there are red flags.

There’s the Tommy John surgery Strasburg underwent in 2010 and the subsequent, controversial workload limitations that sparked doubts about his durability.

Yes, he put some of those doubts to rest by eclipsing 200 innings for the first time in 2014, but here’s some context: Three-time NL Cy Young winner Clayton Kershaw is just four months older than Strasburg, while three-time World Series champion Madison Bumgarner is eleven months younger

Sure, those are rough comparisons for any pitcher. That’s the point; it puts Strasburg‘s early career in perspective.

Good as he’s been, his value is still based more on potential than results. 

On the other hand, potential may be an underrated asset in this era of instant gratification, as Neil Weinberg argued last May for Daily Gammons:

Strasburg is just another example of the prospect fatigue epidemic going around. Mike Trout ruined us. No one is allowed to grow into their potential anymore before we start deciding what will be written on their tombstones. … Strasburg was a phenomenal pitching prospect. A generational talent, to be sure. But prospect status is a reflection of who the player is going to be over the course of their career, not who they are going to be right then and there. 

Weinberg goes on to convincingly make the case that Strasburg is already an elite arm (and this was before his exemplary 2014 campaign). Soon enough, he concludes, Strasburg “might be wrestling the crown away from Kershaw.”

That’s a lofty projection. The fact that it’s not laughable speaks to Strasburg‘s ceiling.

Will he reach it? Will it be in a Nats uniform?

And most pressingly, is anyone willing to pay enough to find out?

 

All statistics courtesy of Baseball-Reference unless otherwise noted.

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