I probably say this every March but March is my busiest month of the year for various work and personal reasons. All I ever want to do is drive down the Florida and spend a couple lazy days watching some bad Spring baseball and guys I've never heard of and I've gotten to do that one time in like 25 years. So it goes.
A lot happened in Nats world in the past week or so
Josiah Gray got hurt again - a flexor strain that will cause him to miss at least the first couple months. He hadn't pitched for a while but you never know what's exactly suspicious in Spring, unless it's not seeing Ryan Zimmerman then having a reporter yell at you on social media that the team said he was on the back fields playing, which of course was nonsense. Memories. Gray is under team control through the end of next year and his injury issues and relatively crappy pitching has kept his salary down, so I'm not writing off seeing him pitch again for the Nats, but I'm done thinking he could be any part of the future.
We've gone over the Max/Trea trade a number of times but the zero they would end up with from that (Ruiz just packed it in after signing his contract. Gerardo Carillo and Donovan Casey never weres) might be the biggest single reason the Nats are where they are right now - rebuilding after a rebuild.
Dylan Crews got sent down to AAA. He admittedly looked awful in Spring (3-29, 11 Ks in 34 PAs) but it's also Spring and we've learned that doesn't really matter. What does matter though is the mediocre improvement he made over the course of last year with his last best month being a .225/.279/.375 line. As 2025 went on the "the fancy stats say he's good" narrative sort of went away as those drifted down to match his production. Something here is not right and his college numbers were too good for this to be his ceiling. Hopefully the new org can fix it.
These two moves meant the Opening Day Roster was a bit of a mess. Gray's injury opened the door for Andre Granillo a mostly middling AAAA reliever that has shown a couple flashes in the past two years, while Crews in AAA means Joey Weimer a 27 yo vagabond (the Nats are his 5th franchise) former mild prospect, starts in the majors. Both of these guys are Rochester but this team isn't deep.
Nothing happened good with the catchers so we start with Ruiz and Millas. I hope Millas is the 1 but I'd expect a time share unless someone busts out.
The Nats traded for Jorbit Vivas and he fills the last spot in the IF (with Garcia, House, Abrams, Nunez, Tena and Andres Chaparro). Jorbit is mostly just a guy, but has some minor league moments of interest and is still young. Expect House and Abrams and Garcia to play everyday. Garica might shift around 1B/DH/2B but those hoping to see Abrams off SS should be disappointed. I'm not sure he played anything but that in Spring.
This leaves the OF to Lile, Wood and Young. This is putting a lot on Young's shoulders defensively but Wood is your star and Lile forced his way into every day play last year. I thought they might try to DH one of those two but committing Crews to AAA ends that idea for now.
The staff is Cavalli, Mikolas, Irvin, then you have to think Foster Griffin and Zack Littell leaving Brad Lord on the outside looking in. It's a weird thing to take a surprise gift starting pitching surprise and toss it back in the pen for guys like Griffin and Littell. But in general people were always pretty cautious on the idea of Lord the starter. If he can replicate his success in the pen then the back end of Beeter, Henry, and him has a chance to be pretty solid. The rest PJ Poulin, Gus Varland, Ken Waldichuk are guys who are also in the pen right now and likely mean the front end of the pen won't have much of a chance. Better hope that rotation is better than it seems and gives a lot of 5+ inning games.
The Nats were trash last year and could be worse but likely won't be just because it would be tough to. The hitting is more likely to be as bad, but leaving it in the hands of a bunch of kids means you can't definitively say that. Is Lile real? Can House click? Will Wood take a step to superstar? All things that can happen that would make the offense a bit better. Still bad but middling not offensive. And the dream of every team every year - maybe it all clicks? There's a decent ceiling here.
The pitching doesn't have the ceiling of the batting but also was remade to fix the floor. Mikolas and Littell provide more security for usable innings above what they got from their starters last year. If Cavalli is ok then the pitching should be better even if Irvin is just a 5th starter innings eater and Griffin flops in his return. And as I said above, Lord, Beeter, and Henry should all be solid meaning at least part of the pen performs. Still it is a should.
With the floor of the pitching raised a bit, it's unlikely they hit 60/61 wins which is what their advanced standings (trying to pull as much luck out of the win totals as possible) had them at last year. I can see them at an earned win total in the high 60s. But that just puts them around where they were last year.
Unless the Nats get lucky in development or the performance of their kids this will be a dull long slog toward irrelevancy, with the goal of the season being the new organization identifying and shedding dead weight. See you in 2027?
Prediction : 67-95
This has got to be the least exciting opening day I can remember. They're gonna lose 100 games again, no baseball in 2027 (will they have a draft? minors?) I live in NC - at least there are a lot of minor league teams here to watch.
ReplyDeleteYeah, it's pretty bleak.
ReplyDeleteOne thing I've been wondering is - are they going to rescind Gray's option now that he's hurt? His public comments from that time certainly seem to indicate health, but it's pretty bad run of luck to have that kind of injury occur days after you're sent to the minors. Not sure who'd win a grievance, but usually teams don't push on that too hard.
If he is on the major league IL, then I'm 100% with Harper on his long term value to the Nats being basically epsilon.
he was recalled and put on the major league injured list
DeleteNats win with double digits on Opening Day! Might not be much of a season, but fun start to it
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely abysmal outlook but hey they beat the Cubs today even though Cavalli was bad. The hitting as shockingly good. One game... I guess that's what we will live for in 202..6...7...?
ReplyDeleteI didn't think that Cavalli was bad, at least at pitching. He got hurt by an excuse me check swing double down the LF line by a LH pull hitter who got beat by a pitch but managed to find a hole in the defense. It's baseball; that happens. He also gave away a run by throwing away a pickoff attempt. But his stuff looked really sharp to me.
DeleteI really hope new management figures out player development. I've lost count of the number promising picks who bust in the majors, then get dealt to other teams and become decent.
ReplyDeleteThings may not be bleak . Young underdogs are always more exciting.
ReplyDeleteThe new leadership's "sabermetric focus" was successfully deployed on opening day. The lineup was constructed based on match-ups -- and both Chaparro and Wiemer delivered -- even if the former was miserable in the field. Same with the use of the bullpen. Butera didn't leave Cavalli in for the W -- he pulled him to let Lord eat innings. And then matched up the other relievers.
That's fair enough, but let's say all those machinations pay off and that there are a bunch of developmental steps forward and we pull off something crazy like 85 wins. In that future, I'm going to be absolutely furious that we traded Gore and didn't sign Murakami and wasted a year of potential connection.
DeleteAs far as I'm concerned, we're in a double bind and there's no plausible path for the season that will actually be enjoyable.
IF your optimum scenario comes through, then most of us would be delighted. We would finally know where the money needs to be spent in FA and we could start locking some players up because they start seeing a future here.
DeleteWe can replace Gore in free agency. Murakami would have been nice, but realistically the new management team had its hands full without having to build the infrastructure to support a Japanese star. It's transitional....next winter we could be ready. Never forget: the problems created by success are so much easier to address than the problems created by failure.
Thinking about this a bit more, I think this is what needs to happen for me to experience the team with uncomplicated joy despite their active roster salary being I think the lowest of any team in years:
Delete1. Make the playoffs.
2. By the end of the season, have 2 starting pitchers develop well enough that Gore would have been arguably our SP3 or worse.
3. Get at least 2 WAR from each of the five positions in the OF/1B/DH mix.
If that all happens, then mea culpa. I'll forgive the misers in charge and happily pretend that it was all part of a strategic plan. But I'm going to experience any success that falls short of that as double edged..
(Also, all of this is ridiculous on the heels of a single win. Don't forget that we are more likely to lose 100 games this year than break .500. And that will be true even if we start 20-10.)
A win is a win, so I'll take as many happy days as I can get with this team.
ReplyDeleteIf you were to view yesterday's W as a microcosm of the 161 remaining (ill-advised), I think we'd see exactly how this team gets to 60 wins at year end. Joey Wiemer (journeyman nobody) had a career day, Chaparro (journeyman AAAA player was great), James Wood (our star) struggled to make contact of any kind, Cavalli (our ace) was very underwhelming, Nunez (a fringe bench guy) played well. I mean JY went yard for crying out loud lol.
This team will be terrible. Any step forward doesn't start with development at large. It starts with James Wood being a monster. I have serious doubts about that materializing this year. He looks absolutely lost in the batters box.
Sadly, does ANY of this matter if ownership doesn't spend? Willits, Wood, Crews comeback... do we really think we're running the table in October with 26 homegrown prospects on the active roster?
The real question I keep asking myself is who to blame for the lack of spending? Lerner being frugal? Or Lerner refusing to invest in Rizzo's plan for the future (which we now know was an outdated view of the baseball universe). It does appear that Lerner has invested in the tools and infrastructure and the players seem to love it. Perhaps the plan is for Lerner to say "here, Toboni... I'll pay for your fancy tools. Now show me that you and the coaching staff can use it to make a difference. If it starts to show out on the field, THEN I will open the wallet in free agency." Who knows?
Those trackjets have already paid themselves twice over in earned media alone. 100 articles about "new tech" instead of "cheap owners", all for less than it cost to sign Mikolas.
DeleteI mean, maybe their stinginess is in fact temporary. Maybe they've really been told to keep their powder dry (though that whole framing is a fallacy). Maybe they are still waiting on something to resolve with Ted's estate. And maybe, like you suggest, they are waiting to see the new dev processes work before investing any money they don't have to.
But they've cut payroll incredibly aggressively. The combined salaries of the 26 man OD roster is $51M. The next lowest are TBR and Miami at around $70M. I refuse to carry water for the Lerners, and will believe in their spending when I see it.
No matter how bad it gets...we will always have March 26 to remember!
ReplyDeleteWe won our first series.
ReplyDelete