[外電] First half: The best and the worst
Posted by Mark Zuckerman at 11:35 AM
Was the first half of the Nationals' season eventful? Is Ed "Too Tall" Jones
too tall?
Quite a bit has happened in NatsTown since Barack Obama threw out the first
pitch on April 5, from that Opening Day debacle against the Phillies to a
string of dramatic victories over the last week. There's plenty to rehash,
analyze and criticize, and there's plenty to look ahead to in the season's
second half.
I'll try to touch on all of that the next few days as the All-Star break
continues, but I wanted to start with a look back at the most significant
moments of the first half. Here are some of the best (and the worst) of the
last 3 1/2 months...
BEST GAME
July 3: Nats 6, Mets 5
What began as Strasmas VI, with a sellout crowd at Nationals Park (and a
national TV audience on Fox) eager to watch Stephen Strasburg take down the
Mets on Independence Eve, turned into something far more incredible.
Strasburg labored through five innings, though he kept the damage to only two
runs. When Tyler Clippard entered for the eighth and allowed three runs to
put New York up 5-2, the day looked ruined. Many fans streamed for the exits.
Not so fast, folks. The Nats rallied in stunning fashion in the bottom of the
ninth. Adam Dunn nearly clubbed a walk-off grand slam off Francisco
Rodriguez, instead settling for a controversial double off the top of the
wall that nearly led to a collision at third base between Cristian Guzman and
Willie Harris. No matter, because two batters later, Ivan Rodriguez singled
past a five-man infield to bring the winning run home in the wildest game of
the year to date. Leave it to the always-quotable Drew Storen to put this one
in perspective: "Today was a reminder of why baseball is so great."
WORST GAME
April 5: Phillies 11, Nats 1
Is there anything worse than playing your worst game of the season on Opening
Day? Well, yeah, playing your worst game of the season on Opening Day with
the President of the United States and 20,000 Phillies fans in attendance. It
was a debacle on many levels, and it offered some clues for what was to come.
John Lannan struggled the first of many poor starts that ultimately earned
him a ticket to Harrisburg. Ian Desmond committed an error on his first
chance of the season. Willie Harris, the Opening Day right fielder and No. 2
hitter, went 0-for-4. It was an embarrassing start to the season, and it left
many worried that nothing really had changed in NatsTown.
BEST OFFENSIVE PERFORMANCE
July 7: Adam Dunn
Dunn has hit 338 home runs in a career that has regularly boasted 40-homer
seasons. But the big guy had never hit three in one game. Until last week,
when he blasted the Padres for a hat trick that earned him a curtain call.
The performance also prompted fans and media members alike to scream for the
Nats to re-sign the pending free agent and not trade him away before the end
of the month. In the Nationals' brief history, only one other player has
homered three times in a game: Alfonso Soriano, who also was the subject of
trade rumors leading up to the July 31 deadline. The Nats didn't deal
Soriano, and they didn't re-sign him either. Instead, they let him walk as a
free agent and received two draft picks as compensation (Jordan Zimmermann
and Josh Smoker).
WORST OFFENSIVE PERFORMANCE
June 16: Nyjer Morgan
Full disclaimer: It's not fair to rip on one guy for one bad day at the
plate. But Morgan's performance that evening in Detroit was wretched. He was
simply no match for Tigers ace Justin Verlander. He struck out looking in the
first inning. He struck out swinging in the third inning. He again struck out
swinging in the fifth. And then, with a shot at the Golden Sombrero in the
eighth, he weakly grounded Verlander's first pitch to third base to finish
0-for-4. Not the best night for Nyjer, who had been frustrating fans for
weeks with his inability to get on base.
BEST PITCHING PERFORMANCE
June 8: Stephen Strasburg
I briefly considered giving this to Scott Olsen, who on May 6 carried a
no-hitter into the eighth inning against the Braves. It was a fabulous
performance for a guy who really did pitch well before his surgically
repaired shoulder finally caved in. But come on, how could Strasburg's debut
not be the choice? With all that hoopla and pressure surrounding him, with a
sellout crowd on hand and a media contingent that rivaled one you'd see at a
postseason series, the 21-year-old surpassed everyone's expectations with a
performance for the ages. Fourteen strikeouts, including seven in a row to
end his night. We all witnessed the birth of a phenomenon, and we may never
again see anything like it.
WORST PITCHING PERFORMANCE
April 18: Jason Marquis
It was bad enough that Marquis failed to retire any of the seven Brewers he
faced that afternoon. It was worse that all seven wound up scoring. It was
even worse that this was the right-hander's third straight ugly start to open
the season. The real kicker, though, was that a few days later, Marquis would
acknowledge there was something wrong with his elbow. An MRI revealed bone
chips, so he went under the knife to remove them and hasn't returned since.
Did we mention the Nats signed this guy last winter to a two-year, $15
million contract primarily because of his rock-solid reputation as a
workhorse who never got hurt?
BEST DEFENSIVE PERFORMANCE
June 25: Nyjer Morgan
Morgan has been criticized plenty for his misplays in center field this
season (more on that in a moment) but you'd be hard-pressed to find a better
play made all year than Nyjer's leap at the wall at Camden Yards to rob Corey
Patterson of a home run. Shoot, it even left J.D. Martin (the least-animated
guy on the roster) screaming in disbelief. Just an incredible play.
WORST DEFENSIVE PERFORMANCE
May 22: Nyjer Morgan
Boy, Nyjer sure has figured into a lot of significant events this season,
hasn't he? Shows you just how important he is to this team, both in good and
bad ways. There's no sugarcoating his gaffe against the Orioles one month
before that spectacular catch against the same team. His misplay of Adam
Jones' drive off the center field wall was bad. His subsequent reaction was
embarrassing. Morgan slammed his glove to the ground, believing the ball had
crossed the fence for a home run. The only problem: The ball was sitting
about 10 feet to his left. By the time Josh Willingham came all the way over
from left field to retrieve it, Jones had an inside-the-park home run. It was
the second inside-the-parker hit against the Nats in four days. Both involved
Morgan.
So there are just a few of the many highlights from the season's first half.
I'm curious what everyone else thinks. Do you agree with these choices, or
would you pick any other moments as the best/worst?
Plenty more first-half analysis and second-half preview to come in the next
three days...
http://natsinsider.blogspot.com/2010/07/first-half-best-and-worst.html
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