Pay attention, kids. Josh Willingham is displaying how to correctly swing a bat.
(AP Photo/David Kohl)

  • Nationals 5, Reds 4:: Adam Dunn, Josh Willingham and pinch-hitter extraordinaire Ryan ZImmerman provided all the offense Washington needed to overcome a four-run fifth inning from the Reds and win their first series on the road since the middle of June. The three sluggers had big games in support of John Lannan, who looked incredibly average for the second straight start. Willingham delivered the most impressive blow, a towering two-run homer in the fourth inning with Dunn on base. Not to be outdone, Dunn was an on-base machine, reaching base four times (two doubles and twice hit by pitches) — while Zimmerman’s hit was the most timely of them all, a single which pushed both Dunn and Willingham home to retake the lead. The pen also came up big again: Jorge Sosa (2-1) got five outs in relief for the win, and Mike MacDougle picked up where Sosa left off and got the last four outs for the save, his 13th. The Nationals are off on Monday — it’s probably a good thing, as the team will be focusing all its efforts towards signing Stephen Strasburg before the midnight deadline.
  • Liberty 60, Mystics 59: Not a typo there, folks — this game really was that offensively-challenged. Washington couldn’t carry over its momentum after a big double-overtime win against Connecticut two days ago, dropping this ugly one to conference doormat New York. To blame? If dismal shooting from beyond the arc and at the free throws line wasn’t enough to assure the loss, fouling the opposition’s best player — Janel McCarville, who had 19 points — on a final shot McCarville herself called “ugly” certainly did the trick. This one hurts: in a three-way tie for second at the beginning of the night, the Mystics fall all the way to fifth place after the loss.