News and notes surrounding Washington's loveable cellar-dwellers: Belliard Signs Extension: Though he was widely considered the Nats most moveable commodity, he and the team agreed to a 2-year, $3.5 million extension to keep big Ron in D.C. Belliard’s versatility makes Manny Acta’s job much easier for the next few years with his ability to play multiple infield positions, his willingness to be a bench player when needed, and his veteran leadership. In the meantime, his...
Results tagged “gmjimbowden”
Well, we may have been reluctant at first due to his, um, colorful past (as were many others). We also doubted his All Star chances. Now, though, we’re now firmly aboard the Dmitri Young Chuckwagon. In the same week he was named to the NL team for next week’s All Star Game in San Francisco, Young went 3-4 yesterday. His day was highlighted by a grand slam, cementing the Nats 6-0 win in front of...
With the first half of the 2006 season in the books, it’s time to reach deep into the bag of sportswriting gimmickry and pull out some mid-season hardware for our own amusement. With the team on pace to lose 95 games, many sad moments have defined the season thus far, but there are a few bright spots in there. So without further ado, DCist proudly presents the Superfluous All-Star Break Awards of 2006: The FEMA...
The outcome was pretty much a foregone conclusion, but it's still one more step toward getting the Nationals on the right track. Today in New York, baseball's team owners unanimously approved the Lerner group's purchase of the Nats for the sticker price of $450 million, according to the Post.
This week we reported that some police officers have been wrongfully enforcing the D.C. smoking ban in restaurants, found one of the area's best burgers in an unexpected place, recognized that maybe there may be too much junk food in local food banks and commended the Post for its four Pulitzer prizes. We checked out some local bands at the Black Cat, found unintentional hilarity over at WMATA's website, pondered express service on Metro...
This entry was written by DCist contributor Jeff Beam. Just another day at the office for the 2006 Nationals. After Monday's much-needed day off, Tuesday was off to the races. By midday, the team had learned that Ryan Drese would be out four to six weeks, but would avoid season-ending surgery. By the late evening, when Gary Majewski was wrapping up a 10-3 victory in Philly, their GM was on the hot seat, and the...
The Post reports this morning on impressive growth throughout the region in the number of black-owned businesses. Census Data released yesterday detailed the strides black businesses made between 1997 and 2002; nationally black-owned firms grew 45 percent (compared to about 10 percent for all firms), but they still only account for 5 percent of all businesses. While growth took pace across the region, media focus has been on Prince George's County, which now has...
The battle over transportation in Virginia has been full of laughable moments, from Delegates noting how they don't hear taxpayers clamoring for tax increases when they return home to news stories on the lack of concern about traffic in Virginia hamlets with three-digit populations. Of course, we laugh to keep from crying, or rather, we laugh to keep from tracking down these Prince William County Delegates and punching them in their smug faces. We know their day of electoral or karmic reckoning is coming, we just don't know when.
Earlier this week, the Nationals dodged a bullet when former baseball hero Sammy Sosa opted for likely retirement rather than take Washington's admittedly measly non-guaranteed $500,000 offer. Bully for the Nats, who won't have to see wasted green on the bench and whiffs at the plate, but still, it's a sign of the straits in which the club finds itself that one of the major attempted deals of the offseason was a throwaway contract to a washed up slugger. As the 2006 season approaches, the city's attention remains focused on the ups and downs of the stadium saga, a distraction that threatens to seriously undermine the value of the club, but the difficulties in settling the Nats into D.C. on a more permanent basis are merely symptoms of a more serious problem with baseball, the league's antitrust exemption.
After a promising start to the weekend (a 4-1 win on Friday night), the Nationals dropped back-to-back games to the Cardinals in all too familiar fashion: Back-to-back 6-0 losses to the best team in baseball, and consecutive no-shows by the Nats' bats. Saturday, the Nats had no answer for the previously struggling Jason Marquis, managing just two hits. Yesterday they collected just four hits and two walks. It all adds up to another series' loss...
(Editor's Note: DCist would like to welcome Chris Kelly to our Sports staff. He will be assisting in our coverage of the Nationals with a weekly column each Monday.) Call 'em "The Comeback Kids", "The One-Run Wonders", "The Cardiac Kids"; doesn't matter. Call 'em whatever you want, but your first place Washington Nationals extended their 10-game winning streak yesterday with yet another 1-run victory (8 out of their last 13 wins have been by 1...
After being swept by the woeful Reds (21-31) last Thursday, the Nats' prospects against the non-woeful Cardinals (33-18) looked pretty bleak. Friday's inevitable loss brought the team to .500, a low since late April, when the team record was just 11-11. Then Saturday's "L" put them under the halfway mark for the first time since the Nats' seventh game of the season, where they fell to division rival Atlanta. But then something happened: the Nats...
The short, troubled association of the Washington Nationals and centerfielder Endy Chavez came to an end late last week, and unlike Boyz II Men, we still can let go. Chavez's conspicuous habit of causing third outs during spring training earned him the nickname "Inning-Endy" among Nats bloggers, and it seemed to many like his time with the Nationals would be short. Sure enough, the Nats sent him down to the minors before opening day, and his return was not expected. So when he got called up in the middle of the series against the Dodgers last week, something had to be up.
It was starting to look a little dismal for the Nationals. As of Tuesday afternoon, the Nats had lost six of their last eight games (although it'd be unfair not to point out that they murdered the Mets 11-4 on Sunday). But then a funny thing happened: Nick Johnson drilled a home run into the right-center stands in the first inning. Caveat one: Yes, the Phillies had already scored a run of their own. But...
Last night at the National Press Club, Nats fans got a few minutes of Nationals president Tony Tavares' time. He appeared with the W. Post's John Feinstein, NPR's Scott Simon and moderator Marvin Kalb, as part of Kalb's semi-annual "Kalb Report" interview show/discussion panel.
After what seemed like days without any news from the world of D.C. baseball, when DCist was last seen opining that the Nats were done trading, several trade/acquisition rumors have cropped up and been deemed worthy of coverage by the Post and MLB.com. So DCist will play along:
Yesterday's announcement that the L.A. Dodgers will re-sign lefty Odalis Perez for $24 million over three years effectively ends the Nats' offseason moves.
