No Place Like Home

The boys are finally coming home. After a nice 4-2 road trip to start the season (let’s pretend the last 2 days didn’t happen) the Nationals are back home, ready to kick off their home schedule against their division rival the Mets. After a 4-0 start to the season and a 36-0 start in terms of innings with the lead, the Nationals were knocked back a bit over the last couple of days. After AJ Cole got absolutely pummeled on Tuesday night, Max Scherzer took the hill and a 5-1 start looked like a certainty. An error, a bomb, and a lackluster Max performance later, the Nationals instead head home 4-2. Back home, the Nationals are set to kick off the biggest, and possibly most scrutinized season in the history of Nats Park. If that wasn’t enough, the Nationals this morning announced the Mike Rizzo has been extended for 2 more year and the entire Nats fanbase breathed a big sigh of relief.

Stephen Strasburg takes the hill for game 1 of the series (and home schedule) against Nat-killer Jacob deGrom. Strasburg is coming off a strong start to the season against the Reds and is looking to continue his dominance from the second half of last year and the postseason against the Cubs. deGrom meanwhile, had a decent start his first time out as he picked up the win against the Cardinals despite laboring through only 5.2 innings. In this matchup, the Nationals throw their co-ace against the healthiest and most consistent Mets pitcher over the last few years. With a deeper lineup this year that is more balanced, look for the Nats to be patient with deGrom and work up his pitch count early on. With a top 3 of Eaton, Rendon, and Harper, the Nats should get plenty of opportunities early on to do just that.

In a bit of a scheduling quirk, the two teams take a day off and go back out there for game 2 on Saturday afternoon (snow-permitting) with Gio Gonzalez set to go against the Mets fragile lefty, Steven Matz. Gio dominated the Reds his first time out and looks to build on his past success against the Mets. Matz is healthy to start the year for a change, although he was knocked around his first time out giving up 3 runs, and 2 homeruns, in 4 innings against the Cardinals. With snow expected in the forecast, this game could get pushed back to Sunday afternoon as the 2 teams aren’t scheduled to play on Sunday until Sunday Night Baseball on ESPN at 8 PM.

The Sunday Night Baseball matchup pits the Nats most impressive starter so far, Tanner Roark, against oft-injured (notice a theme?) former Mets ace Matt Harvey. With the game-time temperatures expected to be in the low 30s, this will most likely be a low-scoring pitching duel. Harvey is looking to regain his magic from 2015 and get back to his status as a competent pitcher in the league after a couple of down seasons and sitting through trade rumors all winter. Roark, meanwhile, simplified his delivery over the winter and is looking to get through the bitter disappointment of not starting in last season’s division series (and not even pitching at all in the series) despite his strong resume.

While it will be hard to make definitive assumptions after a series this early in the season, a couple of strong starts from the injury-prone Matz and Harvey and the Mets can announce themselves as a potential challenger to the Nationals supremacy of the NL East. The Nationals can take this opportunity to continue their strong start to the season and show that they are still the big dog when everyone is healthy. I can’t wait for this series and this home season, but one thing is for sure: There is no place like home.

DC Playoffs – A tale of two teams.

As the playoffs quickly approach in the nation’s capital, the two teams gearing up for them are on completely different trajectories. The Capitals and Wizards yet again find themselves in the playoffs (woohoo!). This year however, things seem….different.

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Last fall fans all around the DC area had two questions on their mind: “Do you think the Caps will be the dominant force they once were?” AND  “Do you think this will be the Wizards year?” The questions were justified. The Capitals lost key players in FA, had gaping holes on defense and everyone just kinda assumed Ovi was old and past his prime. Then there were the wizards, max contracts all around, the message of consistency was being preached, our core group was kept together and everyone was healthy….

My how things change. Fast forward all of the seasons headlines and you come to where we are now. The Caps are 3rd in the East, winning their division on Sunday against one of their biggest rivals and on an impressive 11 game winning streak. Ovi has played in his 1000th game as a Captial, the same season he made goal number 600. The rookies have stepped up, and the questions on defense….well they shifted from the ones asked in fall.

On the other hand you have the Washington Wizards. John Wall, Bradley Beal, Otto Porter. The core of the Wizards. The ones who were to carry us to 50 wins, put us in great position for the playoffs and hopefully, at LEAST the conference championship. Again…how things change. Wall gets hurt. Porter gets banged up, but Beal…steps up. All-star season. The bench gets their act together and they make having an injured Wall seem not that big of a deal….for a while. The Wizards now are the 7th seed in the all of a sudden competitive East. 11 losses in the last 17 games is not how you want to enter the playoffs.

So where are we now? The Caps are set to face the first wild card seed, most likely the Philadelphia Flyers. If they can get into the 2nd round…the chances they meet the Penguins are very high…We’ve been there before. Lets cross that bridge if/when it happens. Everyone pray. The Wizards however are poised to meet the Kyrie Irving-less Celtics. As we’re getting healthy and finding our rhythm again, the Celtics are figuring out who to play and what match ups to chase without Irving or Marcus Smart. The thought now is…can the lower seeded Wizards, gain traction at the exact right time, be a dark horse and surprise all the teams they face in the playoffs? I say yes.

April is the best month of sports. NHL and NBA playoffs start, the same time the MLB and our Nationals begin their season. This year seems different though. The playoffs have come into DC as awkwardly and surprisingly as the forecast for snow this weekend. Everyone get ready…its going to be an interesting few weeks.

 

 

Nationals Start Perfect; Bryce Will Return

“I will not be discussing anything relative to 2019 at all…If you guys do ask anything about that, I’ll be walking right out the door.’’ In a Scott Boras written quote delivered with a classic Bryce flavor, the sweepstakes for arguably the most prized free agent of all time began. A former MVP and fivetime all-star rarely hits the open market at a ripe age like 26. Actually, it’s never happened. It’s easy to make an argument for Bryce commanding a record $400-$500mil contract but that would require ignoring what occurred this past offseason.

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Opening day last Thursday marked the end of one of the most curious offseason’s of baseball. An offseason that saw many of the top tier free agents remaining unsigned well into spring training. Ultimately the free agents that did sign eventually settled for less dollars and shorter contracts (many accepted one-year deals for less money than the qualifying offers they rejected just a few months earlier). This has led to a private panic in clubhouses around the league, especially among impending free agents. The question becomes should the biggest free agent of 2019 also be worried about what occurred this past offseason?

To fully answer that question, we have to explore the driving factors behind this slow offseason. Scott Boras wants you to believe that too many teams are tanking and are therefore choosing not to be competitive by passing on signing free agents. That explanation, however, fails to address a number of important factors. Despite Boras’s claim, when you look closely at this offseason, teams in the tank category such as the Padres or Phillies actually did spend big dollars on free agents while the usual big spenders like the Dodgers stayed pat. Two of the best explanations revolve around the luxury tax handicapping the richest teams as well as the rising value of young prospects around baseball. The former predictably results in less spending even by the wealthiest teams but the later requires more explanation. When a team signs a free agent, that team gives up both draft picks as well as international signing bonus money. That might not sound like a lot or even mean much to the average fan, but executives have estimated the exact cost of that to be an additional $50mil on top of the money guaranteed in the contract. All in all, luxury tax implications and sacrificing cheap young talent have stalled the free agent market in a big way.

Shifting back to Bryce, many wonder if the upcoming free agent king is immune to these larger forces redefining how MLB teams spend money. These recent changes in baseball play right into the hands of the Nationals front office. One important exemption to the rule of giving up picks and prospects to sign free agents is for the current teams of those free agents. That means that even without Bryce giving the Nats a home team discount, a discount of about $50mil is already built into the new contract. The other advantage that the Nationals have lies in their ability to exclusively discuss a new contract with Scott Boras all season long. Boras would never agree to a contract extension for Bryce before the season ends, but this at least allows the Nats to lay down a possible framework for a deal that can be finalized in the offseason. It also doesn’t hurt that Bryce’s agent and the owners of the Nats– the Lerner Family are very familiar with each other in terms of free agent negotiations. All things considered, the Nats have a lot going for them in their chances to resign Bryce and this past offseason only made it easier.

The NL East Won’t Be Close, But It Will Be Fun: Focus on the Mets

The Washington Nationals will win the NL East. It likely will not be close. The only semblance of competition may come once again from the New York Mets. It seems comical to say “once again” when the Mets barely competed last year. So, what is different this year? Well for starters (pun intended), they are going into the season healthy. They also made a change at the top, bringing in first time Manager, Mickey Callaway who coached the Cleveland Indians pitching staff to great success over the past couple of years. The Mets are hoping that Callaway can bring this experience to coach their potentially formidable and finally healthy starting rotation.

NL-EastThe Mets are only three seasons removed from a World Series appearance, where they got a glimpse of how good they can be for many years to come. This staff beat a much more stocked Dodgers team and mowed down the Cubs lineup, sweeping them in the NLCS, before losing to the Royals. The Mets followed up that season by making the playoffs again in 2016, the first time in their history they made the playoffs in back to back seasons.

This offseason, in addition to getting healthy, the Mets were smart and thrifty. They signed OF Jay Bruce, 1B Adrian Gonzalez, LHP Jason Vargaz, 3B Todd Frazier and reliever Anthony Swarzak to team friendly contracts. You may not like the sound of a thrifty big market team ( I hate it) but you can’t deny that in this market the Mets came out looking good.

For the Mets this season, it will come down to their starters and their health. Just for fun, and maybe some tears, here is a reminder of all the Mets who went down with an injury last year; Noah Syndergaard, Matt Harvey, Steven Matz, Zach Wheeler (who didn’t even pitch at all last season), David Wright, (check the numbers, he was on pace for a Hall of Fame career) Yoenis Cespedes, Michael Conforto, Jeurys Familia and others. Not to mention, they unloaded Jay Bruce (who has since resigned), Addison Reed and Neil Walker. All teams have injuries but the Mets were decimated and this year, everyone, sans Wright, is healthy. The Mets need 60 starts from the top two in the rotation (Syndergaard and Degrom) and they need Harvey and Matz to return closer to their top form. The Mets also have rotation depth for once with Jason Vargas, Seth Lugo, Robert Gsellman and Wheeler likely to pitch in that fifth rotation spot. This depth will keep their arms healthy. This is a top 5 in baseball rotation if healthy, if not, the Mets will be terrible.

Another, team strength to go unnoticed is the Mets bullpen. Familia, the team’s single season saves leader (51) returns to do the bulk of the closing. Callaway has already confirmed that he will use the game scenarios and matchups to determine how he is going to use the backend of his bullpen, as he did in Cleveland. With so many strong backend arms, this can prove to benefit the Mets as this may help keep Familia out of those multiple out or multiple run saves he often blew. Gsellmen, or Lugo, or Wheeler or Vargaz will play pivotal roles as the long man out of the pen or spot reliever giving the rotation a breather and longevity.

Can you guess which teams in the National League hit the most home runs? Not the Cubs or the Nats. Answer, the Mets and Brewers. However, other than hit home runs the Mets did very little else right offensively. Again, injuries and trades killed this lineup, but don’t be mistaken, this team will hit again. This lineup is more balanced this year and the bench is solid. They have upgraded at just about every position. This lineup likely has four 30+ home run hitters (Bruce, Cespedes, Frazier, Conforto). What the Mets lose in speed, they make up for in power. There won’t be much small ball with this team, but you can expect they will produce a lot of runs this year.

The Mets will not win the National League East. However, the Mets will compete. This team can win 90 games or 70 games if it all falls apart again. My prediction, it won’t. The Mets will take one of the wild card spots. In the playoffs, this is not a team you want to face. With 2 aces a lineup that can hit and a long bullpen that is six men strong, other NL playoff teams will want to avoid the Mets. Then again, these are the Mets, and you never know how they will disappoint you again this year. (Careful Nats fans, you should refrain from laughter as your team has shown some great creativity in losing playoff series.)

It’s Opening Day, Let’s Play Ball!

Can Caps Uncork A Run In NHL Playoffs?

It’s hard to be a Capitals fan.

To love Washington’s entry in the National Hockey League is to love a team of immense gifts — Alex Ovechkin is perhaps the greatest scorer in NHL history — and immense heartbreak.

Since Ovechkin was the NHL’s Rookie of the Year in 2005-06, the Capitals have won their division seven times and have been to the playoffs nine times. In that span they’ve never so much as reached a conference final. Three of those times, they’ve led the league in points and lost a Game 7 in the first or second round of the playoffs.

Moreover, after first making the playoffs in 1983, the Caps have missed the playoffs only seven times. In 27 postseason tournaments, Washington has reached exactly one Stanley Cup Final — getting swept by Detroit in 1998.

So, here they are again, in first place entering March. What reasons are there to think the Capitals will avoid a fourth straight second-round ouster?

Not many, it appears.

Deadline Doldrums

The Caps more or less stood pat at the trade deadline, giving up third- and fifth-round draft picks for a couple of players best described as “defensive depth.”

The moves were underwhelming, considering Washington’s woes on the back end this season. Among the eight teams who would be in the Eastern Conference playoff bracket as of March 1, the Caps’ save percentage of .908 ranked sixth, their goal differential average of .08 ranked seventh, and their shot differential average of -3.8 was dead last.

It hasn’t helped that first-string goalie Braden Holtby is trending in the wrong direction. He’s carrying a save percentage of .908 — well off his career mark of .920 — and he’s even dipped since the halfway point of the season, when he was at .917.

At least his backup, Philipp Grubauer, has been on a hot streak of late. After posting a first-half save percentage of .909, he’s up to .922 (better than his career number) and won his last four February starts while allowing one goal against 29 shots in two relief appearances for Holtby.

Ovechkin and the Offense

True, at age 32, Ovechkin is showing no signs of slowing down. He’s leading the league in goals — if he finishes the season in that spot, he’ll tie Bobby Hull’s record of topping the league in that category seven times.

25-year-old center Evgeny Kuznetsov has blossomed after starting the season playing beside Ovechkin on the top line.

T.J. Oshie, after scoring 33 goals in a contract year last season, had just 12 entering March. And Nicklas Backstrom, feeding Ovechkin since 2007, has seen his assists dip as his ice time with the Russian superstar has become less consistent.

Now What?

February was a strange month. First place in the Metropolitan Division was briefly ceded to Pittsburgh as the Penguins won six straight. But Pittsburgh lost its last two of the month and the Caps won two of their last three to enter March atop the heap, with Philadelphia sneaking ahead of the Penguins.

Despite their spot in the standings, expectations for the Capitals are low. A TSN midseason poll — which last year had 15 coaches picking them to reach the Finals — saw the Caps earn not so much as a single mention.

Maybe sneaking up on the competition is their best bet.

Author bio: AJ Lee is Marketing Coordinator for Pro Stock Hockey (prostockhockey.com), an online hockey shop offering authentic pro stock hockey equipment. He was born and raised in the southwest suburbs of Chicago, and has been a huge Blackhawks fan his entire life. AJ picked up his first hockey stick at age 3, and hasn’t put it down yet.

Photo Credit: sportsgrinder.com