>> If you've ever thought about having a wedding of any kind, we'd recommend stopping by Olsson's Courthouse store tonight to listen to The New Yorker's Rebecca Mead, whose most recent work explores the sinister workings of the $160 billion wedding industry and has been the talk of the internets of late. Tomorrow we'll dig up information on the best ways to elope for anyone who was in attendance. Mead reads from One Perfect Day:...
Results tagged “atlantabraves”
This entry was written by DCist contributor Benjamin Kabak.
Devastating? Gut-wrenching? Demoralizing? Time to dust off your thesaurus to find the most appropriate word to describe the Nationals’ _____________ (adjective of your choice) 9-7 loss to the Atlanta Braves yesterday afternoon at RFK. No matter how you say it, this one hurt. Bad. Despite overcoming a 6-0 deficit and grabbing a 7-6 lead courtesy of a furious five-run rally in the bottom of the eighth, Chad Cordero coughed up three runs in the ninth...
There are 1001 baseball clichés that can be used to describe the Nationals' recent skid and 7-11 record in July, and even though last night's loss marked the inevitable return of the Atlanta Braves to the top of the NL East heap (Nats and Braves own identical 54-41 records), maybe it's time to dust off a tried-and-true cliché that should act as a Band-Aid and a mantra for the DC baseball fan's soul: "It's a marathon, not a sprint."
After dropping three of four in Milwaukee over the weekend, the Nationals hit the reset button and return home for a seven game homestand, welcoming NL West bottom-feeder Colorado to DC for a three game series that begins tonight. The Nats lead the NL East by 1.5 games over the Atlanta Braves, who split a four game series with the NY Mets over the weekend. The good news is that the Nats have played lights-out at home (best home record in baseball). The bad news is that the Nats' offense continues to sputter. The good news is that the Rockies have lost four in a row and share the dubious distinction of owning the lowest win total in the majors (31) with the lowly Tampa Bay Devil Rays; mere percentage points separate the Rockies from the worst record in baseball. The bad news, again, is that the Nats' offense continues to sputter. In theory, the series against Colorado should be a good opportunity for the Nats to beat up on a bad team.
This DCist finally got to see a baseball game at RFK yesterday afternoon when Nationals met Atlanta for the final game of their first-ever homestand. Having lucked into six tickets -- a trio of 100-level seats just above first base and a trio of 300-level seats not far away -- this DCist and two co-workers knew what we had to do: scalp the 300-levels for beer money.
The Marlins just seem to have the Nationals' number. At least that's our conclusion after last night. Even though the Nats had won 5 straight going into Monday, no one could be much surprised when the D-Train ran them over, 9-4. But getting laid low 6-3 by pitcher Brian Moehler, who hadn't notched a major league win in two years? That's gotta hurt. Two Saturdays ago, the Nats did manage to beat the Marlins, albeit...
