September 5, 2008

Nats Roundup: Add it Up

teddy.jpgIt is now official. Nationals Park will not be hosting a playoff series this year. What is surprising is that the Nats were not the first team to be mathematically eliminated from the post season. What is shocking is that the team is 8-2 in their last 10 games. The Nats have 21 games left in the season, and they have to win 9 in order to avoid 100 losses. A week ago, it seemed certain that they would fall short of 63 wins, and now they have a decent shot. They don't even possess the worst record in baseball anymore. Alas, it would have been nice to draft, and then fail to sign, Stephen Strasburg.

Ticket Prices
The Nationals this week released their season ticket plans for next year, and they are lowering the prices for 7,500 seats in the ballpark. Most of the seats affected are in the outfield, including the right field section that is always eerily empty. In addition, they are not raising the prices on any of the other seats for season ticket holders who renew their subscriptions.

The trend is for ticket prices to increase each year, so this move is the Lerners's first public admission that this season has not gone well. The Nationals are currently averaging 29,486 fans per game, which puts them at 18th in the league. The expectation for a team in a new stadium is higher, and the quality of the product on the field clearly affected sales. In fact, given how few people are watching on TV and listening on the radio, it is amazing that 29,000+ are coming to see the team in person. While low ticket prices can help boost attendance, a decent baseball team would probably have more of an impact. A left-handed power hitter, preferably at first base, would probably do more for attendance than anything else at this point.

Jesus Flores
In the 3rd inning on Tuesday, Phillie Chase Utley tried to steal home and barreled over catcher Jesus Flores. Utley was out, but Flores was left writhing on the ground. He left the field on a stretcher. An MRI revealed an ankle sprain, and Flores is expected to return this year.

The question is, was Utley's play legitimate or not? Most people seem to think it was just good hard baseball, and while one wouldn't want to imply that anyone from Philadelphia could do anything dirty, but consider this. Last year in John Lannan's MLB debut, he hit Chase Utley and broke his hand, causing the second baseman to miss a month of the season. John Lannan was also pitching when Utley knocked down Flores. Coincidence?

Photo by Scott Ableman.

Jason Bergman
In the bottom of the fourth inning on Saturday, August 30, Jason Bergman managed to get a sacrifice hit off of Jo-Jo Reyes, advancing Elijah Dukes to third and Ryan Langerhans to second. This was Bergman's first sacrifice of the year. With it, he avoids the worst offensive year ever. Sure, he is still 0 for 39, but at least he now has a productive out to his credit.

Game Series of the Week
The Nationals are in the middle of a four game series with the Braves. The dreadful play of the Nationals has obscured the fact that the Braves are a very bad team as well. They have managed to skate by, letting the Nats take all of the "worst team in baseball" glory. If the Nationals win this series, they have a good chance of not finishing last in the National League East.

Briefly Noted: The Potomac Nationals won the first game in the Carolina League playoffs in 15 innings, and the second in 10... Is Jim Bowden the worst GM of all time?... Pitcher Joel Hanrahan won the Nationals' Roberto Clemente award... Catcher Luke Montz had a long trip to Washington.

Meaningless Statistic of the Week: Shortstop Cristian Guzman is last in the National League in Secondary Average [(TB-H+BB+BB=CS)/AB] by a switch hitting shortstop with .156.

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Comments (7) [rss]

I think more people would attend a game if they saw Teddy beat the living daylights out of Lincoln, Jefferson and Washington. By beat, I don't mean in the foot race, I mean taking one of the bats and whacking their kneecaps since Teddy really should win for once. That would be a game I wouldn't want to miss.

 

Agreed, KrazyKat. Agreed.

 

I resent the connotations in that picture that Teddy Roosevelt was a macrocephalic wetbrain. His struggle with hydrocephaly has been well documented in his stirring memoir, "Big Sticks, Bull Moose, and Dead Yaks."

There's the liberal press for you. Never let a chance pass to make the GOP look bad. Maybe!

 

Ownership should still be focused on building a fan base by lowering all the ticket prices so the average DC fan can attend the games. Prices are still out of reach. They should expand the $10 seats by 7,500 and more people will come. This will pay off in the future with a more devoted fan base.

As for the average attendance, of the 29,000, at least 10,000 are the season tickets owned by law firms, lobbyists, and others who have the money to pay for tix but don't come to the games.

 

Imagine the outrage coming from Philadelphia if Elijah Dukes had done the same thing to Carlos Ruiz or Chris Coste. There would be Facebook groups dedicated to hating on Dukes, calling him a thug and demanding he be suspended.

I don't know that the price adjustments are so much an admission that this season went poorly as an admission they grossly overestimated what people would pay for outfield seats. The $5 and $10 seats in the upper deck are generally among the most densely populated at any given game.

 

Carlos

The line that Kasten is giving is that this is just an adjustment to the market. That the team didn't know what the market was or what the patterns would be, so they didn't know what to charge, which is similar to what you are saying.

I think that if they had had a successful season, then the prices would rise.

As for the Phillies fans, you don't have to imagine when you can just go read this.

 

Maybe people would be more interested in going if they had different past presidential races. You could have the Progressive area race. Democrats v. Republicans. Died while in office. Cold war races. War time president races. I think the funniest would be between Reagan (who would just wander aimlessly around the field not knowing where he was), William Henry Harrison (who would be dead before he got a foot off the starting line), Taft (he would have to be rolled since he was big) and Ford (he would trip over his own feet before the race started and couldn't get up).

 
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