There was some hope coming into this off-season that it would be an off-season like the one before 2011. Committing to a future that looked bright, that off-season the Nats signed Jayson Werth. The Nats had a definite hole to fill - a leader and an outfielder - and they filled it. This season they have a definite hole to fill - starting pitcher - and they didn't fill it.
It's disappointing and it got me thinking it was likely more like the 2010 off-season. But looking back... well let's compare
2011: Werth, Adam Laroche, Rick Ankiel, Matt Stairs, Lance Nix, Tom Gorzelanny
2010 : Pudge Rodriguez, Jason Maquis, Matt Capps, Miguel Batista
2009 : Adam Dunn, Joe Beimel, Josh Willingham, Scott Olsen
Not all of these worked out and there are some other names I could throw in, but there's definitive moves to try to make the team better. I'd say all these years are better than this one. No you have to go back to 2008 when the signings were an aged Paul LoDuca, Aaron Boone, Willie Harris, Odalis Perez, to find an offseason clearly as inconsequential to the on field product for the upcoming year.
Of course we've just had a set of pretty terrible off-seasons as well
2023 : Candelario, Trevor Williams, Dom Smith
2022: Cesar Hernandez, Maikel Franco, Carl Edwards Jr, Nelson Cruz
2021 : Brad Hand, Kyle Shwarber, Josh Bell
I think 2021 is clearly better (not in results but in what it was attempting to do). So one question is whether this is the worst of the last 3 offseasons in terms of talent acquired.
But we also must consider the circumstances. 2022 was a give up season and we knew it at the time. 2020 might have surprised everyone, but 2021 drove home the fact the team needed at least a couple seasons of re-tooling. In 2022 Strasburg officially broke for good and then Soto became expendable because there wasn't a quick way out of this hole without spending a ton. So into 2023 became another expected rebuild. But into 2024, I think we expected a bit more. Or at least I did. The rest of you at least hoped.
So in talent this off-season might be the worst in what was brought in at least since the days where the Nats weren't trying. We can quibble over if say 2005 was better (it was) or 2006 (it was) or 2007 (it was) or 2008 (maybe). In expectations of veteran talent acquired this was definitely the worst. The combination of the two make this the worst off-season the Nats fans have ever had.
And yet...
You can still hold out hope because the Nats have the largest group of close to major league ready talent than they ever have. Yes that speaks to a history of extremely shallow top-heavy minor leagues, but it's true. And if they work out this year and if the Nats commit to spend next year well then that's something.
But if regardless of what happens the Nats don't commit to spend something next year well then into 2024 will have a short reign as worst off-season ever.