Clearing The Bases
June 16, 2011 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
Last week we discussed the most disappointing players at each position, this week we’ll go with the most surprising, players who are playing well and above what we thought they might in spring training. Some of the players listed are no longer playing at that position but that is where they qualified at coming into […]
Clearing The Bases
June 11, 2011 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
The baseball season is more than 1/3 completed, the weather is warming up, and pennant races are starting to shape up. We are in mid-June; no longer can any player state that they are in a slump. Slumps don’t last two plus months. With that in mind we are going to take a look at […]
Brad Peacock, Selig Man with Upside Heart
May 11, 2011 by Ted Leavengood · 3 Comments
Brad Peacock was taken in the 41st round of the 2006 draft as a “draft and follow” pick by the Washington Nationals. For Washington the 2006 draft was a disaster. Conducted when the team was still under management by Bud Selig and MLB, Inc., it might serve as a tutorial on all of the things […]
2011 Pre-Season Preview: AL Central – Chicago White Sox
March 28, 2011 by Jeffrey Brown · Leave a Comment
White Sox 1B Paul Konerko Chicago White Sox (2010 record: 88-74) The White Sox won 88 games last season and still didn’t get a sniff of the division title due to the success of the Minnesota Twins. During the off-season, GM Kenny Williams decided to re-shuffle the deck to play to his team’s strengths – […]
Turning the Corner in DC
March 28, 2011 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
The future for the Washington Nationals is about to arrive. Â The major league team looks vastly improved from the ones that finished dead last among the 30 teams two years in a row. Â But Baseball America’s new rankings put the Washington development pipeline at number 13 among MLB organizations. Â That climb from the bottom may […]
2011 Pre-Season Preview: NL East – Philadelphia Phillies
March 22, 2011 by Jeffrey Brown · Leave a Comment
Phillies 1B Ryan Howard Philadelphia Phillies (2010 record: 97-65) The Phillies entered the new year as one of the handful of teams with a legitimate claim to the designation as the best team in baseball. They entered the free agent fray towards the end of the process and lured southpaw Cliff Lee away from both […]
2011 Pre-Season Preview: NL East – Washington Nationals
March 19, 2011 by Jeffrey Brown · 1 Comment
Washington Nationals (2010 record: 69-93) The addition of free agent Jayson Werth speaks volumes about the Nationals’ growth in terms of the perception of the team as it continues its journey towards baseball relevance. The trade-off from Adam Dunn to Werth may or may not make an impact on the field in terms of wins […]
Daubach Interesting Choice as Bryce Harper’s First Manager
March 10, 2011 by Bob Wirz · Leave a Comment
    One of the charms of spring training that builds so much momentum for a baseball season is the great writing that emerges, and the memorable stories those in the baseball-writing business dig up.      Washington Post writer Dave Sheinin brought to the surface the fact Brian Daubach, who managed in the Can-Am League at […]
Fantasy Baseball Outlook: Top Five Catching Prospects For 2011
February 7, 2011 by Jeffrey Brown · 1 Comment
In articles such as this, many websites give readers a list of the best overall prospects at a given position, but the intention here is to focus on those prospects who are most likely to provide a significant fantasy impact during the 2011 season; therefore, a guy like Devin Mesoraco – who saw action in […]
Jim Riggleman, Still Light on His Feet
January 19, 2011 by Ted Leavengood · 3 Comments
Baseball personalities rarely lead lives connected to their home communties, which is what makes Jim Riggleman’s tenure as manager of the Washington Nationals so unique. Â This morning Jim was introduced to a breakfast crowd by a local Bethesda, Maryland woman who said “Jimmy” was the first boy to ask her to dance, back when they […]
Fantasy Baseball Outlook: Top Five 2B Prospects For 2011
January 9, 2011 by Jeffrey Brown · Leave a Comment
  In articles like this, many websites provide readers with the best overall prospects at any given position, but the intention here is to focus on those prospects that are most likely to provide a significant fantasy impact in the ’11 season; thus, a guy like A’s prospect Jemile Weeks – who is currently […]
2011 MLB Power Rankings, The Ides of January Edition (Part I, #21-#30)
January 8, 2011 by Jeffrey Brown · 1 Comment
 With most of the top free agents now signed and teams starting to take shape as we approach spring training, I thought I would share my pre-pre-season pespective on the relative strengths (and weaknesses) of all 30 major league teams. I have broken the article down into three installments, and will publish one of […]
A Big Step Forward
December 6, 2010 by Ted Leavengood · 4 Comments
Mike Rizzo announced that the signing of highly prized free agent Jayson Werth was just the beginning of Phase II–competitive baseball for the Washington Nationals. It will hopefully mark the turning of the corner, where the Nationals can compete in the National League East on a daily basis. No one believes that a seven-year contract […]
Catch a Falling Star
December 3, 2010 by Ted Leavengood · 6 Comments
Lastings Milledge was non-tendered by Pittsburgh yesterday. It is just another benchmark in the descent of a once promising talent that was briefly with the Washington Nationals. Jim Bowden traded Ryan Church and Brian Schneider to the Mets for Lastings Milledge during the off-season before the start of 2008. The rumblings of his unpopularity in […]
Maximum Feasible Dunn
November 26, 2010 by Ted Leavengood · 6 Comments
And all through the house not a creature was stirring, no baseball news from even a mouse. Â Black Friday shoppers are out in force, but baseball has only the near silent whisperings of General Managers waiting to see which players accept arbitration before the Tuesday night deadline. One quiet household could be turned on its […]
The Yankees’ future is grid-locked
August 9, 2010 by Jess Coleman · 1 Comment
Remember a couple of months ago when Stephen Strasburg was ready to advance to the majors? The anticipation was as high as ever before: Nationals Stadium was sold out within hours of the announced date of his debut. It seemed as though the world of the Washington Nationals was waiting for the future to thrust […]
Deadline Day for Draftees is Quickly Approaching
August 5, 2010 by Aaron Somers · Leave a Comment
With a mere 11 days to go until the deadline for 2010 draftees to reach agreement with their respective teams there are a number of interesting stories worth monitoring. As of this morning, 25 of the first 50 picks have yet to sign a contract – including 7 of the first 10. The surprising part […]
Something Rotten in the State of Maryland
August 1, 2010 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
Mike Rizzo traded Matt Capps and Cristian Guzman for prospects and kept Adam Dunn. Â His team and his fans are both happy and the team is playing hungry again. Â Andy MacPhail failed to move Luke Scott or Ty Wiggington but hired Buck Showalter to make sense of it all. Â Still, something in Baltimore just doesn’t […]
He Uses ‘The Only Sane Part of My Body’ to Throw Batting Practice
July 30, 2010 by Bob Wirz · Leave a Comment
It often seems that when we dig deeper a story gets more interesting. That certainly has been the case this summer in the process of trying to find the best possible information for this Notebook.  So today we are going to veer largely away from the usual stories of pennant races and exceptional performances to […]
Opportunity Costs Will Dictate Modest Harper Bonus
June 20, 2010 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
Nationals fans, management and players are all seeing just what a great and phenomenal talent can do to transform a team. Â Strasburg left everyone breathless for more, but although some see Bryce Harper as Strasburg, Part Deux, few believe Harper will get as big a bonus for signing in Washington. Â Opportunity cost analysis says the […]
What Ever Happened to the 2005 Houston Astros?
June 13, 2010 by Bill Gilbert · Leave a Comment
In the last week, Eric Bruntlett was released by the Washington Nationals, Jason Lane was released by the Florida Marlins, Adam Everett was designated for assignment by the Detroit Tigers and Mike Lamb was designated for assignment by the Marlins. All four were members of the 2005 Houston Astros team that won the National League […]
Washington Is a Baseball Town (Again)
June 8, 2010 by Ted Leavengood · 2 Comments
At the top of the seventh inning the crowd began the chant, “Let’s Go Stras-burg” to the same cadence that fans in DC have grown tired of listening to from Philly, Dodger, Red Sox and just about anywhere fans. Â But this chant was all DC and it grew and built. Â “Let’s Go Stras-burg” the entire […]
Recent Indy Grad Rene Rivera Only Hitter to Take Stephen Strasburg Over the Fence
June 4, 2010 by Bob Wirz · Leave a Comment
Rene Rivera is one of only a dozen and a half baseball players in the Independent leagues who has had his contract purchased by a major league organization in this still young season. The stocky catcher has a unique distinction, though, not only among the privileged group that has moved one step closer to the […]
Another Brick in the Wall
June 2, 2010 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
Is Strasburg’s looming debut next Tuesday more important for the future of the Nationals, or Roy Oswalt’s admission on Tuesday of this week, that he would accept a trade to Washington? The two are inextricably linked. Â Oswalt’s view that there are good things going on in Washington redounds to the excitement Strasburg is generating, but […]
A Capps-i-tal Idea
April 29, 2010 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
The Washington Nationals have a negative run differential of minus fourteen, yet a winning record at 12-10. Â When they have been bad they have been horrid, but give their bullpen a lead into the late innings and they have been extra-ordinary. Tyler Clippard and Matt Capps have done it by allowing a scant three runs–two […]
A Passion For Pitching
April 23, 2010 by Mike Lynch · Leave a Comment
As a teenager Doug White was an all-star—”an average player for my age but above average for the area where I played”—but he wanted to improve his game so he attended the Doyle Baseball School after his Freshman year of high school and, through a long-toss program he learned from the instructors, added more than […]
Call Them World Champions — Yet Again
April 21, 2010 by Brandon Williams · Leave a Comment
A simulated season on Out of the Park Baseball 11 (www.ootpdevelopments.com) determined that the New York Yankees will win the 2010 World Series over the Philadelphia Phillies. The title would be the 29th in franchise history, but the first one via wild card for the Bronx Bombers, who finished second to Tampa in the American […]
Strasburg In Harrisburg: Altoona, April 11, 2010
April 18, 2010 by Gerry Von Hendy · Leave a Comment
Who is he? He’s a right-handed pitcher, picked first in the nation by the Washington Nationals in the 2009 draft. We know as much. He grew up in Santee, California, under his parents Jim and Kathleen Swett, and went to West Hills High School there. He then attended San Diego State University as a public […]
Been Down So Long
April 17, 2010 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
A scant year ago, Jim Bowden departed Washington, DC with the Nationals baseball team as ruined as his reputation. Â Just as we tend to forget the desert at the first oasis, so the barren geography of hopeless losing was washed away this weekend as Matt Capps converted his first five save opportunities and up and […]
Dan’s daring predictions for diamond action
March 23, 2010 by Dan Schlossberg · Leave a Comment
Predicting the future — in any venue — is difficult even for Alison DuBois or others blessed with psychic powers. That is especially true when it comes to baseball, where teams play nearly 200 games and face each one without knowing who will get hot, who will get hurt, or who will perform above or […]
Fresh squeezes from the Grapefruit League
March 16, 2010 by Dan Schlossberg · Leave a Comment
Making baseball predictions public is always a bad idea. Somebody always gets hot, or gets hurt, and players can stumble into hot streaks or slumps — some of them lasting a full season. Media types who predicted the Washington Nationals to revive in 2010 were greeted this spring with 11 consecutive exhibition game defeats. That’s […]
Home Cooking
March 13, 2010 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
Chemical additives have played havoc with athletics and our food. Â Cooking at home is a good place to start to combat both concerns. Â Some teams, notably the Braves, emphasize drafting amateurs from close to home in Georgia, then slow cook them into quality professionals in their minor leagues. Â The Nationals could use a little of […]