In an article for the Post (pointed out by the mysterious not jailed for storming the Capitol Twitter feed saddadbadhad) noting how Trea Turner's trade signified a shift in priorities for the Nationals, Davey Martinez had this quote
“When we traded all those guys, we made an organizational decision that
we were going to get super young and we were going to transition to
something different,”
This is a lie.
The Nats are not super young. The Nats are not young. The average MLB offensive player is 28.7 years old. The Nats are 29.7 years old. The average MLB pitcher is 29 years old.* The Nats are 28.8 years old.
In 2021 those numbers were 28.4 (28.7 Nats), 28.7 (30.1)
2020 : 28 (28.6), 28.3 (30.8)
2019 : 27.9 (28.8), 28.4 (30.8)
The Nats have gotten younger pitching wise. They were the oldest team in the league for a couple years, but their commitment to very young players is not there. They've gotten OLDER in terms of hitting.
You could claim part of this is outliers (2019 Juan Soto! 2022 Nelson Cruz!) but outliers can only do so much. Let's look at the team right now. Who is young? Well what is young? Let's say about two years plus under average is "young" and five years plus under is super young. This way "young" is basically someone that won't cross into over average until three seasons from now and about three seasons from now is as far ahead that any baseball plan should be counted on. From there we can make old 2+ and super old 5+. Setting the average numbers at 29 for each - you're welcome offensive players - that makes "average" age 28-30
2022
Super Young (23-24) : Adon, Soto, Ruiz, Gray, Mason Thompson (hurt), Francisco Perez (doing not bad in AAA), Lucius Fox (same). NOTABLY ABSENT : Luis Garcia
Young (25-27) : Robles, Adams, Thomas, Hunter Harvey (hurt), Rogers, Arano, Patrick Murphy (meh in AAA)
Average (28-30) : Fedde, Sam Clay (perfect - but lucky in AAA), Andres Machado (bad in AAA), Sanchez, Rainey, Franco, Bell, Voth, Edwards Jr, Finnegan
Old (31-33) : Ramirez, Corbin, Hernandez
Super Old (34+) : Strange-Gordon, Yadi, Doolittle (hurt), Espino, Escobar, Cishek, Cruz
This seems sort of ok. The numbers break down as 7, 7, 10, 3, 7. That's more young than old. Injury returns would add a little. Ross 29 falls into average, Strasburg 33 into old, but that would still be 7, 7, 11, 4, 7. Of course there is an immediate problem here. 7 "super old" players are a lot. Now, it's understandable in the "sign and flip sense". That is why Doolittle, Cishek, and Cruz are here. But the others are just players on this team and they are not players for the future.
This would still be ok if they were players for now. Fans deserve a decent team. Young players need mentors. If you are 34+ but cheap and contributing, even a rebuilding team can afford a few spots like that. But that's only Yadi and Espino. Strange-Gordon and Escobar are super old and bad. They are not here for the now. They are not here for the future. Why are they here?
Here is where I'll say they can get younger and better immediately by calling up Luis Garcia. Why they don't proves whatever the team is - it's not about getting "super young".
I'll also note while this is broken down into groups the distribution in those groups isn't even. There is only one 25 year old in the "Young" group (Robles) and four 27 year olds. There are no 28 year olds in the "Average" group. There are no 31 year olds in the "Old" group. This team is older than the groupings make it seem.
Worse is what it look like in AAA. Yes there is Garcia, but the guys getting ABs in MI are 24, 26, 28, 28, and 31. The OF guys are 26, 26, 27, 27, 28, and 30. First base? 28, 30. AAA Starters? 23 (Cavalli), 26, 26, 27, 27, 28, and 32. RP? 26, 26, 28, 28, 29, 29, 29 , 37** That's an old AAA Roster. They are 5th oldest in both hitting and pitching for AAA.
Lest you think that is all. They are oldest BY FAR in offensive age for AA (25.7 next oldest team being 25.2 and one after that 24.9) and are 5th-8th oldest in pitching. They are also 2nd or 3rd oldest in offense and 4th-6th oldest in pitching in High A. They are about average in age for Low A. Hooray?***
Let me summarize. Not only are the Nats not anywhere close to being "super young" in the major leagues, they are not super young at any point in their minor league system. They are one of the older organizations top to bottom in baseball. It will be hard for them to get super young at any point soon. The young talent is not there.
They are lying. And they are bad at it. Just like they are right now at baseball.
*Be a pitcher kids! If you are good they are less confident you can be replaced.
** Clippard - one of those sign and flip guys and looking a lot better recently after some minor hiccups getting back into league shape
*** Though the age distribution is much tighter when you get down to the As, so it's not as notable.