2017 Washington Nationals season

2017 Washington Nationals
Major League affiliations
Location
  • Washington, D.C. (since 2005)
Other information
Owner(s) Lerner Enterprises
General manager(s) Mike Rizzo
Manager(s) Dusty Baker
Local television MASN
WUSA 9 (CBS affiliate)
(Bob Carpenter, FP Santangelo, Johnny Holliday, Ray Knight)
Local radio 106.7 The Fan
Washington Nationals Radio Network
(Charlie Slowes, Dave Jageler)
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The 2017 Washington Nationals season is the Nationals' 13th season as the baseball franchise of Major League Baseball in the District of Columbia, the 10th season at Nationals Park, and the 49th since the original team was started in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Offseason

Team news

The Washington Nationals announced in October 2016 that their entire coaching staff would return for the 2017 season, led by manager Dusty Baker.[1]

The team lost several players to free agency after the 2016 season, including right-handed relief pitcher Matt Belisle, left-handed reliever Sean Burnett, infielder Stephen Drew, outfielder Chris Heisey, right-handed pitcher Mat Latos, closer Mark Melancon, catcher Wilson Ramos, and left-handed reliever Marc Rzepczynski.[2] Additionally, the Nationals chose not to exercise their 2017 option on right-handed pitcher Yusmeiro Petit, who also became a free agent,[3] and injured right-handed reliever Aaron Barrett declined an outright assignment to the minors and elected free agency as well.[4] The team did not extend a qualifying offer to any of its free agents. Ramos was considered a likely candidate for a qualifying offer, but due to an injury late in the 2016 season expected to sideline him for part of the 2017 season, he did not receive one;[5] he ultimately signed a two-year deal with the Tampa Bay Rays.[6] Outfielder Ben Revere was eligible for arbitration, but after an injury-plagued and offensively dismal season, he was not tendered a new contract and became a free agent;[7] he later signed a one-year deal with the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim for less than he was due to earn through the arbitration process.[8] The Nationals extended one-year contracts for the 2017 season to all of their other arbitration-eligible players: shortstop Danny Espinosa (who ended up being traded before arbitration to the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim),[9] right fielder Bryce Harper, catcher Jose Lobaton, third baseman Anthony Rendon, and right-handed pitcher Tanner Roark.[10] Heisey and Drew both signed new one-year contracts with the Nationals as well.[11]

At various times during the off-season, the Nationals were linked in trade talks to the Chicago White Sox for left-handed starting pitcher Chris Sale (ultimately traded to the Boston Red Sox)[12] and right-handed reliever David Robertson,[13] the Pittsburgh Pirates for center fielder Andrew McCutchen,[14] the Tampa Bay Rays for left-handed reliever Álex Colomé,[15] and the Minnesota Twins for second baseman Brian Dozier,[16] among other players. The Nationals also reportedly made an attempt to re-sign Melancon, who instead signed with the San Francisco Giants,[17] and to sign right-handed reliever Kenley Jansen, a free agent who ended up returning to the Los Angeles Dodgers.[18] They also were reported to have interest in other free agents, including right-handed pitchers Tyson Ross[19] (ultimately signed by the Texas Rangers),[20] Greg Holland[21] (ultimately signed by the Colorado Rockies),[22] and Sergio Romo[23] (ultimately signed by the Dodgers).[24]

The Nationals made one major trade during the off-season, dealing top pitching prospects Lucas Giolito and Reynaldo López and 2016 first-round draft pick Dane Dunning to the White Sox for Adam Eaton, an outfielder with team control through the 2021 season.[25] The Washington Post reported after the trade that the Nationals had become pessimistic after observing Giolito in 2016, including his first major league appearances, that the consensus top right-handed pitching prospect in baseball would end up developing as they had originally expected.[26] In trading Espinosa, who was reportedly unhappy about Eaton's acquisition as it was expected to mean center fielder Trea Turner would become the 2017 starting shortstop, the Nationals acquired pitching prospects Austin L. Adams and Kyle McGowin from the Angels.[27] Two other minor trades during the off-season sent lower-ranked prospects to the San Diego Padres and Tampa Bay Rays for catcher and former Nationals top prospect Derek Norris[28] and left-handed relief pitcher Enny Romero,[29] respectively. Norris was ultimately released during spring training after the Nationals signed catcher Matt Wieters out of free agency.[30]

Transactions

Spring training

For 2017, the Nationals moved to a new spring training facility at The Ballpark of the Palm Beaches, in West Palm Beach, Florida, which they share with the Houston Astros. Projected to cost US$135 million, the construction of the ballpark and training facilities actually cost US$150 million.[55] The new facility provided each team with two major-league-size practice fields, four-minor-league-size practice fields, an agility field, a half field, batting cages, and pitching mounds, and centered around a new baseball stadium with 6,400 ticketed seats and 1,250 berm seats. The move from their former spring training home, Space Coast Stadium in Viera, Florida, placed the Nationals far closer to other teams during spring training, facilitating travel for spring training games.[56]

Construction of the new facility was rushed so that it could be completed in 16 months. Nationals pitchers and catchers officially reported for spring training at the new facility on February 14, followed by the rest of the players on February 17. Construction was not yet complete, but the Nationals were able to prioritize the parts of the facilities most important to spring training so that it met their needs by the reporting dates.[55]

Washington began its schedule of spring training games on February 25 with three straight road games. With construction crews still putting the finishing touches on the stadium during the morning, the Nationals and Astros opened the Ballpark of the Palm Beaches with their first game there on February 28, with the Nationals playing as the home team at the shared facility. Commissioner of Baseball Rob Manfred cut a ceremonial ribbon, and a helicopter flyover took place during the opening ceremonies. Before a crowd of 5,897, Nationals non-roster invitee Jeremy Guthrie threw the first pitch at 1:07 p.m. EST, to Astros first baseman Marwin González, whom he eventually struck out. In the bottom of the first inning, second baseman Daniel Murphy doubled for the first hit in the ballpark′s history, and a few minutes later scored its first run when right fielder Bryce Harper doubled to drive him home. In the top of the fourth inning, Astros designated hitter Carlos Beltrán hit the stadium′s first home run, and catcher Derek Norris hit the first Nationals home run in the park′s history in the bottom of the fourth. With two outs in the bottom of the ninth, outfielder Michael A. Taylor hit a walk-off solo home run to give the Nationals a 4-3 victory in their first game at their new spring training home.[55]

World Baseball Classic

Five Nationals were granted leave from major league camp to participate in the 2017 World Baseball Classic. Starting pitcher Tanner Roark and second baseman Daniel Murphy played for Team USA, reliever Enny Romero played for Team Dominican Republic (eliminated in the second round), reliever Óliver Pérez played for Team Mexico (eliminated in the first round), and catcher Jhonatan Solano played for Team Colombia (eliminated in the first round). Reliever Rafael Martin was slated to be available for Mexico if it reached the second round,[57] but due to a controversial scoring decision, it failed to do so.[58] Starting pitcher Max Scherzer was originally expected to play for the United States in the World Baseball Classic, but he withdrew after announcing a stress fracture in the ring finger of his right hand in January.[59]

Team USA won the tournament, with Roark turning in a strong four-inning start in the semifinal against Japan.[60] Murphy received only two starts and six at-bats during the tournament, to the frustration of Nationals manager Dusty Baker,[61] who said he thought it was "hurting" both his players to spend most of their time during the World Baseball Classic on the bench. Of Murphy, he said, "How are you going to get your stuff together when you're not playing?"[62]

Roark had not planned to stay for the entire tournament, but he elected to stay on the roster in order to make a promised start in the championship round. He told The Washington Post, "Fortunately, it was all three rounds to win the gold, which is amazing to be a part of." Murphy said he spent his time on the team drilling and talking with USA teammates Ian Kinsler and Paul Goldschmidt about fielding and hitting.[63]

Regular season

Opening Day

Opening Day lineup

Opening Day Starters
Name Position
Trea Turner Shortstop
Adam Eaton Center field
Bryce Harper Right field
Daniel Murphy Second base
Ryan Zimmerman First base
Jayson Werth Left field
Stephen Drew Third base
Matt Wieters Catcher
Stephen Strasburg Pitcher

The Nationals began their 2017 season at home against the division rival Miami Marlins. Marlins starter Edinson Vólquez pitched effectively, making heavy use of his changeup to bamboozle Nationals hitters and working out of jams in the first and fourth innings. He gave up four hits and a walk and allowed no runs while striking out six, but he left the game after five innings. Stephen Strasburg was efficient as the Opening Day starter for the Nationals, but the Marlins took the lead in the top of the fourth inning, with right fielder Giancarlo Stanton driving in catcher J.T. Realmuto with a double and then scoring on a single by Marcell Ozuna. The lead was cut in half as Nationals right fielder Bryce Harper hit his fifth career Opening Day home run to right field off Marlins reliever David Phelps in the sixth inning with no one on base, and then Phelps gave up the lead entirely in the bottom of the seventh inning, as pinch-hitter Adam Lind homered to center field after a two-out single by catcher Matt Wieters—both players new additions to the Nationals who signed late in the off-season, with Lind making his first plate appearance with Washington.[64]

Nationals second baseman Daniel Murphy made the score 4–2 with an RBI single in the eighth off Marlins reliever Junichi Tazawa, in Tazawa's first appearance for Miami, but another new Marlin, submariner Brad Ziegler, worked out of a bases-loaded, no-outs jam without letting in another run, striking out left fielder Jayson Werth and inducing third baseman Stephen Drew to ground into a double play, Drew's second of the game. Blake Treinen, named the Nationals' new closer two days before Opening Day, came on for a save situation in the top of the ninth inning and retired the Marlins in order on a popout and two strikeouts, earning his second career save. Strasburg collected the win and Phelps was collared with the loss.[65]

Two players who had originally been expected to make their season debuts on Opening Day for the Nationals sat out the game: starting pitcher Max Scherzer, who had pitched on Opening Day for Washington in 2015 and 2016, was moved back in the rotation after getting a late start to spring training due to a fractured knuckle,[66] and regular third baseman Anthony Rendon was held out with a calf contusion he suffered during the last week of spring training.[67]

Season standings

National League East

National League East W L Pct. GB Home Road
Washington Nationals 68 45 0.602 32–23 36–22
Miami Marlins 54 60 0.474 14½ 28–28 26–32
New York Mets 52 61 0.460 16 26–32 26–29
Atlanta Braves 51 62 0.451 17 26–30 25–32
Philadelphia Phillies 42 71 0.372 26 23–30 19–41

National League Wild Card

Division Leaders W L Pct.
Los Angeles Dodgers 81 34 0.704
Washington Nationals 68 45 0.602
Chicago Cubs 60 54 0.526
Wild Card teams
(Top 2 qualify for 1-game playoff)
W L Pct. GB
Colorado Rockies 65 50 0.565 +1
Arizona Diamondbacks 64 51 0.557
St. Louis Cardinals 60 56 0.517
Milwaukee Brewers 59 59 0.500
Pittsburgh Pirates 58 58 0.500
Miami Marlins 54 60 0.474
New York Mets 52 61 0.460 11
Atlanta Braves 51 62 0.451 12
San Diego Padres 51 64 0.443 13
Cincinnati Reds 49 67 0.422 15½
San Francisco Giants 46 70 0.397 18½
Philadelphia Phillies 42 71 0.372 21

Record vs. opponents

2017 National League Records

Source: NL Standings Head-to-Head
Team ARI ATL CHC CIN COL LAD MIA MIL NYM PHI PIT SD SF STL WSH AL
Arizona 2–4 2–1 3–3 6–6 5–8 1–3 4–3 3–0 6–1 4–3 9–4 5–5 3–4 2–4 9–1
Atlanta 4–2 0–3 2–1 0–0 3–4 7–4 4–2 5–7 2–11 2–5 5–2 4–3 0–3 6–7 7–7
Chicago 1–2 3–0 6–3 2–5 2–4 4–3 7–5 1–2 3–1 5–7 2–4 4–3 8–4 3–4 8–7
Cincinnati 3–3 1–2 3–6 3–4 0–6 2–5 3–7 0–0 4–2 8–2 3–4 4–3 8–5 1–6 5–12
Colorado 6–6 0–0 5–2 4–3 5–7 0–0 3–1 3–3 5–2 3–3 8–4 10–4 2–4 3–4 8–6
Los Angeles 8–5 4–3 4–2 6–0 8–5 6–1 2–1 7–0 3–0 3–0 7–2 7–6 4–3 1–2 12–3
Miami 3–1 4–7 3–4 5–2 0–0 1–6 1–2 7–6 4–4 3–4 2–1 3–0 2–5 6–7 9–11
Milwaukee 3–4 2–4 5–7 7–3 1–3 1–2 2–1 5–2 3–3 3–8 5–2 2–2 8–6 1–2 11–9
New York 0–3 7–5 2–1 0–0 3–3 0–7 6–7 2–5 7–3 3–3 3–4 5–1 3–4 3–9 7–6
Philadelphia 1–6 11–2 1–3 2–4 2–5 0–3 4–4 3–3 3–7 2–5 1–2 2–1 1–5 5–7 4–13
Pittsburgh 3–4 5–2 7–5 2–8 3–3 0–3 4–3 8–3 3–3 5–2 3–3 1–5 4–5 2–1 7–8
San Diego 4–9 2–5 4–2 4–3 4–8 2–7 1–2 2–5 4–3 2–1 3–3 9–4 0–0 1–2 8–10
San Francisco 5–5 3–4 3–4 3–4 4–10 6–7 0–3 2–2 1–5 1–2 5–1 4–9 2–1 0–3 7–10
St. Louis 4–3 3–0 4–8 5–8 4–2 3–4 5–2 6–8 4–3 5–1 5–4 0–0 1–2 3–3 7–8
Washington 4–2 7–6 4–3 6–1 4–3 2–1 7–6 2–1 9–3 7–5 1–2 2–1 3–0 3–3 7–8

Through games of August 10, 2017.

April

The Nationals started their season by taking two out of three in a series at home against the Miami Marlins, a division rival in the National League East.[68] The team began their 2017 campaign with an unusual roster configuration of 14 position players and 11 pitchers, but they reverted to a more typical 13-and-12 split by purchasing the contract of right-handed pitcher Jeremy Guthrie for a start on April 8 at Citizens Bank Park against the rival Philadelphia Phillies and optioning outfielder Michael A. Taylor to Class-AAA Syracuse of the International League.[69] After Guthrie gave up 10 earned runs and got just two outs—statistically the worst start in Montreal–Washington franchise history, and only the fourth time in the past 100 years a pitcher had allowed double-digit earned runs without recording at least three outs[70]—en route to a 17–3 loss, the spot starter was designated for assignment the next morning, and the Nationals selected the contract of minor league reliever Matt Albers.[71]

Both the Nationals' starting shortstop, Trea Turner, and his primary backup, Stephen Drew, were placed on the 10-day disabled list with strained hamstrings within days of one another. The team recalled Taylor on April 10[72] and purchased the contract of utility infielder Grant Green on April 12, making Green the third non-roster invitee to the Nationals' spring training in West Palm Beach (after Guthrie, who was removed from the roster after less than 24 hours, and Albers) added to the roster during the month.[73] Turner was activated on April 21 for a game against the division rival New York Mets, and Green was designated for assignment;[74] in his return, as a pinch-hitter, Turner had the game-winning RBI in a 4–3 victory when he took a bases-loaded walk in the 11th inning.[75] On the pitching side of the ledger, left-handed reliever Sammy Solis was placed on the disabled list with elbow inflammation on April 19, and the Nationals called up Joe Ross to start against the division rival Atlanta Braves;[76] Washington won that game 14–4 on the back of two grand slams, struck by right fielder Bryce Harper and first baseman Ryan Zimmerman, in a 20-hit effort and Ross earned the win.[77]

The struggles of newly minted closer Blake Treinen in the ninth inning prompted manager Dusty Baker to announce on April 19 that closing duties would be shared between relievers Shawn Kelley and Koda Glover. Baker said concerns about Kelley's resiliency, due to a twice-repaired elbow,[note 1] and Glover's lack of experience, as a rookie without a career save, kept the team from giving either one the sole job of closer.[78] Glover earned his first career save on April 22, coming into the ninth inning with two outs and retiring the only batter he faced.[79] However, he landed on the disabled list with a left hip impingement on April 26, and left-handed reliever Matt Grace was recalled.[80]

The Nationals placed starter Stephen Strasburg on the paternity list on April 24, with the right-hander anticipating the birth of his second child, and made Jacob Turner the fourth spring training non-roster invitee (after Guthrie, Albers, and Green) to crack the team's active roster in the month of April. Turner, a right-handed pitcher whose contract was selected from Class-AAA Syracuse, was given the opportunity to start against the Colorado Rockies in the first of a four-game set at Coors Field.[81] Although Turner supplied a quality start, giving up three earned runs over six innings, and left the game with a lead, the Rockies scored five unanswered runs off the Nationals' bullpen for an 8–4 finish.[82] The game ended up being the only one the Nationals lost on their 10-game roadtrip, with their 9–1 run through series visiting the Braves, Mets, and Rockies standing as the best such mark in team history.[83] On April 25, Trea Turner hit for the cycle for the first time in his career, cracking a two-run home run off Rockies reliever Jordan Lyles in the sixth inning and rounding out his four-hit night with a bases-clearing triple in the seventh inning as the Nationals won a high-scoring 15–12 contest.[84] In an emphatic finish to the trip, on April 27, the Nationals defeated the Rockies 16–5, with the winning margin of 11 runs being supplied entirely in the seventh inning—the most runs the Montreal–Washington franchise had scored in an inning in almost 20 years.[note 2] Strasburg was also reactivated on April 27 and Grace was optioned back to Class-AAA Syracuse, with Jacob Turner reassigned to the bullpen after his spot start.[85]

The team suffered a serious blow when center fielder Adam Eaton, acquired in the off-season in a trade with the Chicago White Sox, stepped awkwardly on first base beating out an infield single in the ninth inning at Nationals Park against the Mets on April 28. Eaton had to be carried off the field, and an MRI showed he had torn his anterior cruciate ligament and knee meniscus and sprained his ankle.[86] The injuries were expected to rule him out for the season, although Eaton said he would work as hard as he could to return in time for the playoffs.[87] The Nationals called up outfielder Rafael Bautista to replace Eaton on the active roster.[88]

Despite losing Eaton and dropping the first two games of the three-game series against the Mets, the Nationals capped the month with a historic performance against their New York rivals on April 30, scoring in every inning but the second and winning 23–5 — the first time an MLB team had scored 23 or more runs in a game in nearly 10 years[note 3] — and benefiting from a stellar performance from third baseman Anthony Rendon. Rendon had never had more than four RBIs in a game before, and during his 95 plate appearances of the season prior to April 30 had not a hit a home run and had driven in only five runs,[89] but on April 30 he set a Montreal-Washington franchise record for runs batted in in a single game with 10,[note 4][note 5] hitting three home runs and a three-run double while going 6-for-6 and scoring five runs.[89][note 6] Rendon became one of only six Major League Baseball players to go 6-for-6 and hit three home runs in a game, only the second player in history to do it while also driving in at least 10 runs,[89][note 7] and only the 13th player in history with at least 10 RBIs in a game.[89] He also became only the fifth Nationals player to hit three home runs in agame, joining Adam Dunn, Bryce Harper, Alfonso Soriano, and Ryan Zimmerman.[89] Bautista also made his major league debut in the game, batting twice against Kevin Plawecki, a catcher making his first-ever major league appearance as a pitcher, and going 0-for-2.[90] Plawecki pitched two innings for the Mets, retiring the side in order in the seventh inning before giving up four runs in the eighth inning, allowing solo home runs by Harper and Rendon and a two-run pinch-hit home run by Adam Lind.[91] The game′s 23 runs and seven home runs were both Nationals records, and the Nationals tied the single-game club record for hits with 23.[92] (Coincidentally, on the same day as the Nationals' 23–5 win, the team's Class-A Full Season affiliate, the Hagerstown Suns, also won by 18 runs as they defeated the Lexington Legends 22–4. Like Rendon for Washington, top Nationals infield prospect Carter Kieboom hit three home runs for Hagerstown in that game. The Suns set a South Atlantic League record with 30 hits in the game.[93])

Overcoming their injuries, the Nationals wrapped up April with a 17–8 record, the best in the major leagues, and finished the month five games ahead of both the Marlins and the Phillies in the National League East.[94] The Nationals became the first team in MLB history to score at least 14 runs in a game five times in April.[95] They scored 170 runs, a club record for a calendar month[89] and 31 more runs than the next-best team, the Arizona Diamondbacks, even though the Diamondbacks played one more game.[89] The Nationals averaged an MLB-high 6.8 runs per game during April,[96] 1.2 runs per game better than any other team,[96] and finished the month leading MLB in hits (with 265), walks (with 102), team on-base percentage (at .369), team slugging percentage (at .510), and doubles (with 58), and second in MLB in home runs with 45.[89]

In his 90 plate appearances during April, Zimmerman set a new Nationals record for runs batted in during a month with 29,[89] and he finished April leading the MLB in several categories.[note 8] Zimmerman was announced on May 1 as National League player of the week for the last week of April, during which he played and hit safely in all six games, had two or more hits in four of them, and drove in more than one run in five games.[96] During the week, he batted .500 (13-for-26), and had two doubles, five home runs, and 13 RBIs and scored 11 runs. He hit safely in each of them, had at least two hits in four, and drove in multiple runs in five. It was his fourth National League player of the week award and first since July 2012.[96] On May 3, he was named National League Player of the Month for April, the first time he had received the award.[97] It was the seventh time a Nationals player had won the award, and the fourth time a National had received the award in the last seven times it had been awarded.[97] Meanwhile, Harper set an MLB record for the most runs scored in April with 32.[note 9] He finished the month leading the MLB in on-base percentage at .509.[89][96]

Despite the team's winning ways in April, the bullpen was a source of problems all month, with its combined 5.70 ERA ranking as the highest in the National League during April. Nationals relievers pitched in all 25 games in April and gave up runs in 19 of them. Although Nationals relievers issued a National League-lowest 2.93 walks per nine innings and threw a higher percentage of their pitches in the strike zone than any other MLB bullpen by a full two percentage points, they also threw the fourth-lowest number of first-pitch strikes among MLB bullpens, suggesting problems with command in the strike zone. Much of the bullpen's struggles came from relievers giving up 1.86 home runs per nine innings, a rate one full home run higher than the previous season's.[98][99]

May

The Nationals optioned starter Joe Ross to Class-AAA Syracuse on May 1, following consecutive starts in which he failed to pitch five full innings, and called up pitcher A. J. Cole.[100] Closer Shawn Kelley landed on the 10-day disabled list on May 5 with a lower back strain and reliever Matt Grace was recalled from Class-AAA Syracuse.[101] With both Kelley and alternate closer Koda Glover on the shelf with injuries, reliever Matt Albers was called upon to close out a 4–2 game against the division rival Philadelphia Phillies on May 5. Albers hit the leadoff batter with a pitch but retired the next three to finally earn his first career save.[note 10] Albers finished the game having given up no runs, no walks, and only four hits in 11⅓ innings pitched in 2017.[102]

On May 6 in a 6–2 victory at Philadelphia, outfielder Rafael Bautista made his first career start (playing right field) and notched his first career hit, a single through the infield off Phillies pitcher Vince Velasquez.[103] Bautista was optioned back to Syracuse on May 8, with the Nationals recalling outfielder Brian Goodwin to take his place on the bench.[104] After being swept in two games at Oriole Park at Camden Yards against their American League "natural rival", the Baltimore Orioles, the Nationals rallied as the annual home-and-home "Beltway Series" came to Washington, coming from behind on May 10 to win on a walk-off single by former Orioles catcher Matt Wieters.[105] The series finale on May 11 was rained out – it was rescheduled for June 8 – as was the next day's game against the Phillies, which was rescheduled for May 14 as part of a day-night Sunday doubleheader. Glover and Kelley were activated from the disabled list on May 12, with Cole and Grace being optioned to Syracuse,[106] but Grace returned days later after reliever Joe Blanton was placed on the disabled list with right shoulder inflammation on May 17 after a string of poor performances out of the bullpen.[107]

On May 13, the Nationals announced they had reached a one-year deal for the 2018 season with right fielder Bryce Harper at $21.625 million – the highest salary for an arbitration-eligible player in MLB history[108][note 11] – effectively buying out Harper's final year of arbitration eligibility; it was a raise of about $8 million over his 2017 salary.[108][note 12] That night, Harper hit a two-run walk-off home run to defeat the Phillies 6–4, with Kelley earning the win in relief.[109] In the second game of the day-night doubleheader, which the Nationals split with the Phillies, on May 14, Washington starting pitcher Max Scherzer threw just the second immaculate inning in team history, striking out César Hernández, Odubel Herrera, and Aaron Altherr on nine pitches in the fifth inning en route to a 6–5 victory.[note 13] In the team's next game on May 16, Harper notched another personal achievement as he hit a home run at PNC Park against the Pittsburgh Pirates, the last ballpark in the National League at which Harper had not homered.[110]

Ross was recalled from Class-AAA Syracuse for a start against the Seattle Mariners in interleague play at Nationals Park on May 23. Goodwin was optioned back to Syracuse to make room on the roster, giving the Nationals a four-man bench and an eight-man bullpen.[111] However, Goodwin was recalled the next day after outfielder Chris Heisey tore his biceps tendon while taking batting practice before the game, an injury that put him on the disabled list.[112] On May 25, manager Dusty Baker named Glover as the team's closer after previously hinting that he would be giving the rookie right-hander the ninth inning. "He had said that's the job he wanted, and so it's his now," Baker explained.[113] Saving a 5–1 game with the bases loaded by the San Diego Padres on May 26, Glover struck out Hunter Renfroe to end the game on a 95.6 mph slider, the hardest slider thrown for a swinging strike all year.[114] Starting pitcher Stephen Strasburg set a personal best in a win on May 27, striking out 15 Padres to exceed his previous career high by one. The 3–0 win over San Diego was also the first shutout thrown by Nationals pitchers in the 2017 season.[115]

Infielder Stephen Drew returned from the disabled list, with Grace once again optioned to Syracuse,[116] and the Nationals began a nine-game swing through California on May 29. On the first game of the road trip, the Nationals obtained their second shutout win of the year, beating the San Francisco Giants 3–0 behind a strong start by Tanner Roark. The game was marred, however, by an eighth-inning brawl that broke out after Giants reliever Hunter Strickland, facing Harper for the first time since the Nationals right fielder went 2-for-2 with two home runs off him during the 2014 National League Division Series, drilled Harper in the hip with a 98 mph fastball with his first pitch. Harper tossed aside his bat and charged Strickland on the mound, throwing his helmet wide to the left of Strickland before the two players traded punches. They were separated by their teammates, with Giants first baseman and former National Michael Morse quickly getting between them before being bowled over (and concussed) by Giants pitcher and former University of Notre Dame football star Jeff Samardzija,[117] and ejected from the game.[118][119] Harper said after the game that he decided immediately that the pitch was intentional: "You never want to get suspended or anything like that, but sometimes you've got to go and get him. You can't hesitate. You either go to first base or you go after him, and I decided to go after him." He suggested Strickland was retaliating for the 2014 home runs (which Strickland denied), saying, "It was three years ago. ... I don't know why he's thinking about it. He's got a World Series ring, it's on his finger, and he can look at it every single night he wants to."[120] Both Harper and Strickland were issued suspensions by Major League Baseball, with Harper receiving a four-game penalty,[121] which was lowered on appeal to three games. He began serving the suspension on May 31.[122]

The Nationals finished May with a sweep of the Giants in their three-game set at AT&T Park, their only series sweep of the month.[123] During May, they won a series at home against the Arizona Diamondbacks, then won a series on the road against the Phillies, lost both games at Oriole Park at Camden Yards, won the one game against the Orioles played at Nationals Park (with the second postponed until June), took another series against the Phillies at home, lost back-to-back series on the road against the Pirates and division rival Atlanta Braves, and then won consecutive series at home against the Mariners and Padres before the sweep in San Francisco. The Nationals led the National League East Division by 9½ games over the New York Mets with a 33–19 record at the end of the month, one of just two MLB teams with fewer than 20 losses (with the Houston Astros in the American League) and owning the best win percentage in the National League.[124]

June

The month of June began with the Nationals taking two out of three in interleague play visiting the Oakland Athletics. Outfielder Brian Goodwin struck his first major league home run off Athletics reliever Zach Neal on June 2, a two-run shot over the high wall in Oakland Coliseum's right-center field.[125] Starting pitcher Joe Ross's place in the rotation was unclear after a second consecutive losing start in which he failed to go more than four innings, as he gave up seven runs in three innings of a 10–4 loss to the Athletics on June 3.[126] The Nationals also got bad news on injured outfielder Chris Heisey, as he was evaluated after a short rehab assignment and shut down due to swelling in his arm after he ruptured a biceps tendon the previous month, with manager Dusty Baker telling media that Heisey "might have rushed it a little sooner than he should have".[127] On June 4, the Nationals defeated Oakland 11–10, but the win brought up fresh concerns about the team's bullpen after closer Koda Glover and reliever Shawn Kelley combined to allow six earned runs in the bottom of the ninth inning, including four on a grand slam home run by Matt Joyce off Kelley, before Kelley locked down the save.[128] Outfielder Jayson Werth was placed on the 10-day disabled list after fouling a ball off his foot in the June 3 game, and the Nationals selected the contract of veteran utilityman Ryan Raburn on June 5 as they headed into a three-game series with the Los Angeles Dodgers, their first meeting with the Dodgers since the 2016 National League Division Series, to take over for Werth in left field. Minor league pitcher Rafael Martin was designated for assignment to make room for Raburn on the 40-man roster.[129]

Starting pitcher Max Scherzer joined an exclusive club of pitchers in a June 6 game against the Dodgers by striking out 11 batters through the first four innings of the game. The feat had only been accomplished by four other pitchers in major league history.[note 14] Scherzer ultimately ended up with 14 strikeouts and zero earned runs through seven innings of a 2–1 Nationals victory.[130] The Nationals dropped the last game of the series to Clayton Kershaw, the Dodgers' ace, to finish 7–2 on their California roadtrip. Washington's Stephen Strasburg, who took the loss despite giving up just one earned run over seven innings and striking out eight Dodgers, tied Kerry Wood's record for most strikeouts in the first 1,000 innings of a starting pitcher's career at 1,166 during the game.[131][132] Getting another start after a pair of poor outings, Ross bounced back in a makeup game against the Baltimore Orioles in interleague play at Nationals Park on June 8, pitching 7⅓ innings and allowing one earned run for the win and setting a new personal best for strikeouts in a game with 12.[133]

The Nationals were swept at home for the first time in 2017 by the Texas Rangers in interleague play. Closer Glover blew his first save opportunity of the season on June 10 and admitted after the game that he had injured his back that morning and had not told the team about his condition. Glover was placed on the disabled list the next day and Joe Blanton was reactivated.[134] On June 12, infielder Wilmer Difo—who had frozen up on a potential game-winning bunt single in the June 10 game while leading off third base, being tagged out in a rundown before an eventual Nationals 6–3 loss[135]—was optioned to the Class-AAA Syracuse Chiefs. Reliever Trevor Gott was called up, giving the Nationals an eight-man bullpen as they headed into a series against the division rival Atlanta Braves.[136] Gott picked up the win in his first game on June 13, with the Nationals defeating the Braves 10–5, but after a relief appearance the following day in which he was charged with five earned runs over 1⅔ innings, he was optioned back to Class-AAA Syracuse and left-hander Matt Grace recalled for a series against the division rival New York Mets beginning June 15.[137][138] The Nationals took three out of four against the Mets, with Grace appearing in two games.[139]

On June 18, Kelley was placed on the disabled list with a trapezius strain amid a dismal stretch that saw him post a rate of 4.5 home runs per nine innings, and right-handed pitcher A. J. Cole was called up from Syracuse to take his place on the roster.[140] Cole did not appear in a game before the Nationals optioned him back to Syracuse on June 22. Difo was recalled the following day for a series against the Cincinnati Reds,[141] with center fielder Michael A. Taylor reportedly dealing with an undisclosed injury.[142] Difo made his first career start in the outfield on June 23, playing center field, but after multiple defensive misplays that led to Cincinnati runs, he was lifted from the game in favor of Raburn. The Nationals defeated the Reds 6–5 behind Goodwin's first career two-homer game and a walk-off single by right fielder Bryce Harper.[143] Taylor returned to the starting lineup on June 24,[144] notching four hits with two home runs in an 18–3 rout of the Reds.[145]

In a 6–1 victory over the visiting Chicago Cubs, defending World Series champions, on June 27, the Nationals tied a franchise record for stolen bases in a game with seven, all off the battery of pitcher Jake Arrieta and catcher Miguel Montero.[146] Four of those steals were notched by shortstop Trea Turner, who stole seven bases in the four-game series against the Cubs at Nationals Park before leaving the rubber game on June 29 after being hit in the right wrist by a fastball from reliever Pedro Strop. The team announced after the game, a seesaw 5–4 loss, that Turner had suffered a non-displaced fracture in his wrist, an injury for which the team offered no recovery timetable but which Turner compared to a similar wrist fracture weeks earlier in the season that had sidelined Braves first baseman Freddie Freeman for an anticipated two months.[147] Turner was placed on the 10-day disabled list and the Nationals selected the contract of infielder Adrián Sánchez from Class-AAA Syracuse to replace him on the roster, moving rehabbing left-handed reliever Sammy Solis to the 60-day disabled list in the process.[148] The injury announcement came just a day after Glover, placed on the disabled list earlier in the month with back stiffness, told reporters he had been experiencing right shoulder pain since late May and was continuing to deal with severe rotator cuff inflammation after initially trying to pitch through the issue. He blamed the back injury, which he said involved a displaced vertebra after he slipped while showering, on "overcompensation" due to the shoulder pain.[149] The Nationals also lost first base coach Davey Lopes during the Cubs series, as he was granted leave from the team due to a family emergency. Outfield and baserunning coordinator Gary Thurman took over Lopes' role in his absence.[150]

In sum, heading into a three-game roadtrip visiting the St. Louis Cardinals and extending into the next month, the Nationals won series against the Athletics[128] and the Dodgers[151] and then earned a season split with the Orioles by winning their makeup game to begin the month on a positive run,[152] then lost their next two series against the Rangers[153] and Braves[154] before taking three out of four in Queens against the Mets,[155] dropped a series on the road against the Miami Marlins,[156] and then returned home to win a three-game series against the Reds[157] and split their four-game set with the Cubs.[158] The Nationals dropped their series opener at St. Louis 8–1 on June 30, with Sánchez making his major league debut as a pinch-runner and defensive replacement at shortstop late in the game,[159] to finish 14–14 in June wins and losses, 8½ games over the Braves and 9½ games over the Mets, with a 47–33 overall win-loss record. It was the first full month since September 2015 in which they did not post a winning record.[160]

Two Nationals stars—Scherzer and first baseman Ryan Zimmerman—made franchise history in June. On June 13, Zimmerman hit two home runs off Braves starter R.A. Dickey to tie Vladimir Guerrero for the Montreal–Washington franchise record of 234 home runs,[161] although he did not hit another home run for the remainder of the month and finished June still tied with Guerrero for the record. One start after recording his 2,000th strikeout against the Rangers, Scherzer struck out ten Mets on June 16 to tie Pedro Martínez's franchise mark of five consecutive starts with double-digit strikeouts,[162] and in his next start on June 21, he struck out 11 Marlins to set the franchise record at six.[163] Scherzer was named the National League Pitcher of the Month, posting a 0.99 ERA on the month.[164]

July

Following a rough outing in long relief for Jacob Turner the previous day, the Nationals designated him for assignment on July 1. Left-handed reliever Sammy Solis was activated off the 60-day disabled list.[165] The Nationals rallied in the ninth inning of a June 1 game against the St. Louis Cardinals, scoring a run and loading the bases against closer Trevor Rosenthal. St. Louis brought in reliever Matt Bowman to try to nail down his first career save, while Nationals manager Dusty Baker sent infielder Adrián Sánchez to the plate to pinch-hit in his first MLB at-bat. Sánchez worked the count full before taking a pitch roughly six inches off the plate away for what would have been ball four and a game-tying walk, but home plate umpire Manny Gonzalez called him out on strikes to end the game at 2–1 in the Cardinals' favor.[166] Baker praised Sánchez after the game, saying the call "just wasn't fair to him" and remarking, "You hate to have an at-bat like that and have it settled on apparently a bad call."[167][168] In the following game, minutes after being named to play in the 2017 All-Star Game as the top overall National League vote-getter,[169] right fielder Bryce Harper hit two home runs off fellow All-Star Carlos Martínez. Starting pitcher Max Scherzer, also named to the All-Star roster, struck out 12 Cardinals while allowing no runs in seven innings to earn the 7–2 win.[170]

The Nationals played their annual Independence Day contest at Nationals Park on July 4 against the division rival New York Mets, with Joe Ross starting for the home team. The Nationals won 11–4, marking yet another game for Ross in which he received run support in the double-digits: his seventh in 12 starts on the season to that point. The win was also Washington's 50th of the season.[171] The next day's game was postponed due to rain, while the game on the day after that—the opener of a series at Nationals Park against Washington's top division rival, the Atlanta Braves—was delayed for more than three hours due to a thunderstorm in the forecast, which never materialized, prompting some criticism of the Nationals for unnecessarily pushing back the start time until 10:10 EDT.[172][173][174] The July 6 game, which actually finished early in the morning of July 7 due to the late start, was a 5–2 Braves win. Starting center fielder Michael A. Taylor was lifted midway through the game with an oblique strain, which manager Dusty Baker announced after the game would send him to the 10-day disabled list, with outfielder Chris Heisey being activated from the disabled list in a corresponding move.[175] The Nationals struck back that evening, mounting a ferocious ninth-inning rally in the July 7 game to come back from a three-run deficit and force extra innings. In the tenth inning, the shortstop Sánchez lined a slider from former National Ian Krol, pitching in relief for Atlanta, up the middle for his first career hit. Three at-bats later, Sánchez came around to score on second baseman Daniel Murphy's walk-off single over the head of left fielder Matt Kemp, and the Nationals won 5–4.[176] In the July 8 game, though, the Nationals suffered their first shutout of the year, losing 13–0 as the Braves pummeled starter Stephen Strasburg, who exited the game in the third inning after being hit on the hip with a line drive comebacker; usual starter Tanner Roark, in his first relief appearance of the season; and Solis, still working his way back from injury.[177] The Nationals defeated Atlanta 10–5 to earn a split of the four-game series on July 9, in their last game before the All-Star Break. Ross again received double-digit run support, for the eighth time in 13 starts to begin the season,[178] but exited in the fourth inning after exhibiting a marked decrease in velocity and struggling with his command.[179] The team announced several days later that Ross would undergo Tommy John surgery, forcing him to miss the remainder of the season and beyond.[180]

With Ross on the disabled list and Solis optioned back to the Class-AAA Syracuse Chiefs after a string of poor relief outings, the Nationals promoted right-handed relievers Trevor Gott and Austin L. Adams from Syracuse for a series against the Cincinnati Reds beginning July 14.[181] Behind starter Gio González's first eight-inning outing since 2015, as he went 8⅓ innings, the Nationals shut out the Reds 5–0 in the July 14 game and reliever Matt Grace notched his first career save, inheriting a bases-loaded jam and inducing a groundout to end the ballgame.[182] Both Gott and Adams floundered in the July 15 game in Cincinnati, giving up a combined seven runs without retiring a batter, as Adams loaded the bases, walked in a run, and gave up an RBI single in his major league debut before being pulled from the game and Gott surrendered two runs on base hits followed by a three-run home run by Scooter Gennett. Grace came into the game with nobody out in the ninth and retired the side in order for his second career save, a day after his first, preserving a 10–7 final score.[183] In the first three games of the series, for the first time in Montreal–Washington franchise history, three different players hit two home runs per game: Harper on July 14, Anthony Rendon on July 15, and Murphy on July 16.[184]

On July 16, the Nationals completed a five-player trade with the Oakland Athletics, acquiring relievers Sean Doolittle and Ryan Madson for right-hander Blake Treinen and prospects Jesus Luzardo and Sheldon Neuse. Ross was moved to the 60-day disabled list to make room on the roster.[185] The Nationals again purchased Turner's contract from Syracuse, re-adding him to the roster, to take Treinen's place in the bullpen on July 17 while awaiting the activation of Doolittle and Madson, who were expected to join the team in Anaheim the next day for a series against the Los Angeles Angels in interleague play; injured closer Koda Glover was transferred to the 60-day disabled list to clear roster space.[186] That day, Washington concluded a four-game sweep of their series in Cincinnati in a 6–1 game that included several notable occurrences: Ryan Zimmerman hit his 20th home run of the year to surpass Expos star Vladimir Guerrero's Montreal–Washington franchise record with 235 career home runs as a National,[187] Murphy scored all the way from second base on a sacrifice fly hit by catcher Matt Wieters,[188] and Murphy struck out three times for the first time since May 20, 2014, when he was with the Mets.[189]

The Washington Post reported that amid a slower-than-anticipated recovery for left fielder Jayson Werth from a bruised foot suffered the previous month, Werth said on July 18 that scans had revealed a fracture of his first metatarsal bone as well as a bone bruise.[190] The Nationals made a series of roster moves on July 18 as well: Turner was designated for assignment for the second time of the month, just a day after being re-added to the roster and without appearing in a game in that brief stint, while Adams and Gott were optioned back to Class-AAA Syracuse. Those roster moves cleared room for the Nationals to activate Doolittle and Madson as well as select the contract of Edwin Jackson from Syracuse, tabbing Jackson to start the first of their two-game interleague series against the Angels.[191] The changes to the pitching staff left the Nationals unusually heavy on left-handed relievers, with four in the bullpen (Doolittle, Grace, Enny Romero, and Óliver Pérez) to three right-handers (Matt Albers, Joe Blanton, and Madson).[192] Making his first start for the Nationals since the 2012 season, Jackson pitched seven innings and gave up two earned runs, both on solo home runs, to earn his first win of the season.[193] Doolittle gave up his first hit of the year to a left-handed hitter, a double high off the wall by Kole Calhoun, but nailed down the save after allowing an earned run in his first appearance for Washington.[194] Harper came a close call at second base away from hitting for the cycle in the July 18 contest, as he was called out trying to stretch a single into a double while going 4-for-4 overall with a home run and a triple.[195]

The Arizona Diamondbacks led off what would ultimately be a 6–5 victory on July 21 over the visiting Nationals with back-to-back-to-back home runs off Scherzer, the first time in Nationals history that an opponent had blasted three consecutive home runs in a game and the first time it had happened to Scherzer.[note 15] The Nationals rallied to win the second game of the series behind a revamped pitch arsenal from starter Roark, who befuddled Diamondbacks batters by ditching his four-seam fastball and mixing in a heavier-than-usual dose of curveballs.[196] Facing rookie starting pitcher Anthony Banda in his major league debut, Harper crushed a 467-foot home run onto the Chase Field concourse in right-center field — the longest home run of his career to that point[197][198] — to extend his hitting streak to a career-best 15 games.[199] Heisey suffered a groin injury while legging out a pivotal triple in the 4–3 contest and was placed on the 10-day disabled list. Left fielder Ryan Raburn was also assigned to the bereavement list, taking leave to attend his grandfather's funeral. Washington recalled catcher Pedro Severino and selected the contract of outfield prospect Andrew Stevenson to take Heisey and Raburn's roster spots.[200] Stevenson made his major league debut in the July 23 rubber game, being inserted mid-game to replace Wilmer Difo in left field and going 0-for-2 at the plate.[201] The Nationals won 6–2, but Strasburg exited the game just two innings into his start with forearm tightness,[202] with Blanton picking up the win in relief.[203] The Nationals announced July 25 that Strasburg had been treated for a nerve impingement.[204] He was placed on the 10-day disabled list, with top pitching prospect Erick Fedde tabbed to make a spot start in his place.[205] Raburn was transferred from the bereavement list to the disabled list with a trapezius strain on July 26.[206] The Nationals recalled Solis to give them an extra reliever the next day, bringing the bullpen up to a total of five left-handed relievers.[207] First base coach Davey Lopes returned the same day after an extended leave of absence.[208]

On July 27, the Nationals tied a franchise record for home runs hit in a game, blasting eight in a 15–2 rout of the visiting Milwaukee Brewers.[note 16] In the third inning, the center fielder Brian Goodwin, the shortstop Difo, the right fielder Harper, and the first baseman Zimmerman hit back-to-back-to-back-to-back home runs off Brewers pitcher Michael Blazek, a veteran reliever getting his first major league start.[note 17] Rendon, the Nationals' third baseman, added another home run off Blazek later in the inning to tie the major league record for home runs in an inning with five, with Blazek setting a new record for home runs surrendered by a single pitcher in an inning.[209] After being inserted mid-game to play center field, Stevenson rifled a line drive single to right field in the eighth inning, his first major league hit, off Brewers outfielder Hernán Pérez, sent to the mound for his major league pitching debut with his team trailing by 13 runs.[210] Scherzer earned the win over Blazek and the Brewers on his 33rd birthday.[211]

After having traded Luzardo as part of the deal with the Athletics, the Nationals traded two more left-handed pitching prospects at the July non-waiver trade deadline. First, they made a trade with the division rival Philadelphia Phillies on July 28, fencing 18th-ranked prospect McKenzie Mills to Philadelphia for veteran utilityman Howie Kendrick.[212] Kendrick was activated the next day, with the Nationals placing infielder Stephen Drew on the 10-day disabled list and designating minor league first baseman Matt Skole for assignment to clear a spot on the 40-man roster.[213] Kendrick lashed a pinch-hit double in his Nationals debut against Germán Márquez of the Colorado Rockies in the July 29 game and scored one of the team's two runs in the 4–2 loss, in which Harper's hitting streak came to an end at 19 games.[214] Heading into a double-header against the Rockies on July 30 due to a rainout, the Nationals selected Fedde's contract to start the first game. In a corresponding move, they released veteran outfielder Heisey, who had hit .162 for Washington while spending considerable time on the disabled list during the season.[215] In his major league debut, Fedde pitched four innings while giving up seven runs, five of them earned, and striking out three. He took the loss in the 10–6 contest,[216] in which Zimmerman homered twice to set a new record in the history of Washington, D.C., professional baseball for career home runs, surpassing Frank Howard's mark of 237 for the Washington Senators.[217] Severino was optioned July 30 but remained with the team for the day as an extra player allowed on the roster for the double-header.[215] Minutes after the expiry of the July 31 trade deadline, the Nationals announced they had completed a trade with the Minnesota Twins to acquire closer Brandon Kintzler for 17th-ranked prospect Tyler J. Watson. Minor league reliever Jimmy Cordero was designated for assignment to clear space for Kintzler on the 40-man roster.[218]

The Nationals finished July having won four series and lost two, including the three-game set against the Cardinals that began the previous month,[219] while splitting two. Coming out of St. Louis, they swept two games against the Mets (with the third game of the series postponed by rain),[220] split a four-game set with the Braves,[221] swept the Reds in four games after the All-Star break,[222] split a two-game series visiting the Angels,[223] took two out of three against both the Diamondbacks[224] and the Brewers,[225] and dropped two of three to the Rockies[226] before heading to Miami to play the division rival Marlins for three games beginning July 31.[227] In that game, the Nationals shut out the Marlins 1–0 behind eight no-hit innings from their starter González, pitching on what would have been the 25th birthday of his friend, the late Marlins pitcher José Fernández.[228][229] With the win, the Nationals improved to 63–41, finishing the month of July up 14 games on the second-place Marlins in the National League East Division and with the second-best overall record in the National League.[230]

August

Ace Max Scherzer hit his first career home run, a three-run shot off Miami Marlins starter Chris O'Grady in the second inning on August 1. Scherzer was unable to complete his pitching warm-up afterward, however, exiting after just one inning of work with what the team announced as a neck spasm. Scherzer said after the game he had "slept on it wrong" and considered it a day-to-day injury rather than a serious issue. The Nationals were unable to hold Scherzer's six-run lead, as the division rival Marlins won 7–6 despite a 5-for-5 performance from Nationals left fielder Howie Kendrick.[231] Washington called up A. J. Cole from the Class-AAA Syracuse Chiefs for a spot start on August 2 — a 7–0 shutout at the hands of the Marlins to give them the series win, with former Nationals spring training invitee Vance Worley earning the win for Miami[232] — also activating right-handed reliever Brandon Kintzler after he was acquired in a July 31 trade with the Minnesota Twins. Starter Erick Fedde and left-handed reliever Sammy Solis were optioned to Syracuse.[233] Solis was recalled August 4, however, with left-handed reliever Enny Romero landing on the disabled list with a left forearm strain.[234] Fedde also returned to the major league team on August 5, as starting pitcher Gio González took leave from the team for the birth of his second child.[235] The Nationals clinched a series win over the Chicago Cubs with a 9–4 victory on August 6, as although Fedde left the game after 5⅓ innings in line for the loss, having given up three home runs and four earned runs in total in his second major league start, the team rallied to take the lead against Cubs reliever Carl Edwards Jr., who hit third baseman Anthony Rendon on the shoulder with the bases loaded and ended up taking the loss as catcher Matt Wieters hit the next pitch out to straightaway center field for a go-ahead grand slam.[236] Fedde was optioned back to Syracuse on August 7, as González was activated.[237]

The Nationals took three out of four from the division rival Marlins at Nationals Park, capping the series win on August 10 with a diving catch down the left field line by rookie outfielder Andrew Stevenson to take away an RBI and extra bases from Miami second baseman Dee Gordon with two outs in the top of the ninth. The catch preserved a 3–2 ballgame as closer Sean Doolittle locked down the save.[238] Also in the series, on August 9, first baseman Ryan Zimmerman turned in a two-homer effort as he overtook Tim Wallach as the RBI leader in Montreal–Washington franchise history. Wallach, who played for the Montreal Expos, was in the visitors' dugout for the series as the Marlins' bench coach.[239]

Notable transactions

Major league debuts

Game log

Legend
 Nationals win
 Nationals loss
 Postponement
BoldNationals team member
2017 Game Log: 68–45 (Home: 32–23; Away: 36–22)

Current roster

Washington Nationals roster
Active roster Inactive roster Coaches/Other

Pitchers
Starting rotation

Bullpen

Closer

Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders

Pitchers

Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders

Manager

Coaches

60-day disabled list


25 active, 15 inactive

7- or 10-day disabled list
dagger Suspended list
# Personal leave
Roster and coaches updated August 7, 2017
TransactionsDepth chart

All MLB rosters

Statistics

Batting

(Updated as of xx/xx/xx)

Players in bold are on the active roster.

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; R = Runs; H = Hits; 2B = Doubles; 3B = Triples; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; BB = Walks; SO = Strikeouts; Avg. = Batting average; OBP = On Base Percentage; SLG = Slugging Percentage; SB = Stolen bases

Player G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI AVG OBP SLG SB

Pitching

(Updated as of xx/xx/xx)

Players in bold are on the active roster.

Note: W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; SV = Saves; IP = Innings pitched; R = Runs allowed; ER = Earned runs allowed; HR = Home runs allowed; BB = Walks allowed; K = Strikeouts

Player W L ERA G GS SV IP H R ER HR BB K

Awards and honors

All-Stars

First baseman Ryan Zimmerman, second baseman Daniel Murphy, and right fielder Bryce Harper were voted onto the National League All-Star roster as starting position players, while starting pitchers Max Scherzer and Stephen Strasburg were also selected to the team. For Zimmerman and Murphy, it was their first time being voted in as starters, while it was Harper's fourth start and fifth overall selection. Murphy was also an All-Star in 2016, although he was not a starter, and Zimmerman was an All-Star in 2009. Scherzer was named an All-Star for the fifth consecutive year. Strasburg was named to the All-Star team for the third overall time. Harper was the top overall vote-getter from the National League.[256] Future National Brandon Kintzler, closer for the Minnesota Twins before being traded to Washington at the end of July, was also selected to the American League All-Star team.[257]

Scherzer started the All-Star Game at Marlins Park for the National League on July 11, allowing a single and striking out two, including Home Run Derby champion Aaron Judge, in one inning of work. Harper started in right field and went 1-for-1 with a walk, while making a diving catch on defense to rob American League catcher Salvador Pérez in the second inning. Murphy, the starting second baseman, went 1-for-2, grounding out in his second at-bat with the bases loaded to waste the National League's best chance of the evening to take the lead. Zimmerman went 0-for-2 while hitting into two double plays, one on a groundball and one on a flyout to center field. Strasburg did not appear in the game, an eventual 2–1 victory for the American League in 10 innings.[258]

Farm system

Level Team League Manager
AAA Syracuse Chiefs International League Billy Gardner, Jr.
AA Harrisburg Senators Eastern League Matthew Lecroy
A-Advanced Potomac Nationals Carolina League Tripp Keister
A Hagerstown Suns South Atlantic League Patrick Anderson
A-Short Season Auburn Doubledays New York–Penn League Jerad Head
Rookie GCL Nationals Gulf Coast League Josh Johnson
Rookie DSL Nationals Dominican Summer League

Notes

  1. Shawn Kelley previously underwent Tommy John surgery as a college pitcher at Austin Peay State University in 2003 and while in the Seattle Mariners organization in 2010. (See Waldstein, David, "Rare 2nd Operation Saved Yankee Pitcher's Career," The New York Times, August 31, 2013.)
  2. The Montreal Expos set the all-time franchise record in their 1997 season on May 7, when they scored 13 runs against the San Francisco Giants in the sixth inning en route to a 19–3 win. (See Etkin, Jack, "Washington Nationals use 11-run inning to rout Colorado Rockies," UPI, April 27, 2017.)
  3. The most recent time a team had scored at least 23 runs in a game was August 22, 2007, when the Texas Rangers notched a record-setting 30–3 win over the Baltimore Orioles. (See "The unlikeliest amazing day of all time? Anthony Rendon delivers," ESPN, April 30, 2017.) The 23 runs were also the second-highest total the Mets had ever given up in a game, exceeded only by 26 runs the Phialdelphia Phillies scored against them on June 11, 1985. (See Castillo, Jorge, "Anthony Rendon’s historic day and the Nationals’ historic month by the numbers," washingtonpost.com, April 30, 2017.)
  4. The previous Montreal-Washington franchise record was set by Josh Willingham, with eight runs batted in for the Washington Nationals on July 27, 2009, against the Milwaukee Brewers on two grand slam home runs. (See Ladson, Bill, "Two slams from Willingham vault Nats," MLB.com, July 28, 2009.)
  5. Rendon′s 10 RBIs on April 30 were the most in a single MLB game since August 21, 2007, when Garret Anderson of the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim drove in 10 runs against5 the New York Yankees.
  6. Anthony Rendon's 6-for-6 performance with 10 RBIs made him just the second player in major league history to record a hit in every at-bat while batting in a double-digit number of runs. The feat was first accomplished by Jim Bottomley of the St. Louis Cardinals in their 1924 season, when he went 6-for-6 with 12 RBIs against the Brooklyn Robins on September 16 in a 17–3 win, setting the major league record for RBIs in a game. (See Schuster, Blake, "Anthony Rendon's 10 RBIs didn't even account for half of the Nationals total on Sunday," Yahoo! Sports, April 30, 2017.)
  7. The only other player to go 6-for-6 and hit three home runs and drive in 10 runs in a single game was Walker Cooper for the 1949 Cincinnati Reds. (See Castillo, Jorge, "Anthony Rendon’s historic day and the Nationals’ historic month by the numbers," washingtonpost.com, April 30, 2017.)
  8. Ryan Zimmerman led the major leagues in hits (with 37), extra-base hits (with 19), batting average (at .420), slugging percentage (at .886), on-base-plus-slugging percentage (at 1.345), weighted runs created plus (wRC+) at 244, and RBIs (with 29) and tied for the MLB lead in home runs (with 11). Additionally, he tied for second in MLB for multi-hit games (with 12), and ranked sixth in the major leagues in on-base percentage at .458. (See also Kramer, Daniel, "Big April nets Zimmerman NL monthly honor," mlb.com, May 3, 2017 and Castillo, Jorge, "Ryan Zimmerman named National League player of the month," washingtonpost.com, May 3, 2017.)
  9. The previous record was set by Larry Walker of the Colorado Rockies, who scored 29 runs in April 1997. (See Baer, Bill, "Bryce Harper sets April record for runs scored," NBC Sports, April 30, 2017.)
  10. Albers was an oddity among relief pitchers: Entering the May 5 game, he had played 16 seasons of professional baseball, 12 of them at the major-league level and 10 of those as a full-time reliever, without ever earning a save, despite appearing in 592 professional baseball games, including 460 games at the major-league level and 436 major-league relief appearances, and despite finishing 102 major-league games; only Ryan Webb, with 105 major-league games finished, had finished more major-league games without ever earning a save. (See Zuckerman, Mark, "After 461 appearances, Albers finally gets to save the game," masnsports.com, May 6, 2017.)
  11. Prior to Harper′s May 2017 arbitration deal, the largest deal for an arbitration-eligible MLB player had been for a $20.1 million annual salary for center fielder Mike Trout as part of his six-year contract extension with the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim in 2014, while the highest one-year deal for an arbitration-eligible MLB player had been $19.8 million for pitcher David Price with the Detroit Tigers in 2015. (See Janes, Chelsea, and Jorge Castillo, "Nationals and Bryce Harper reach deal for 2018, taking arbitration off the table," washingtonpost.com, May 13, 2017, 6:13 p.m. EDT.)
  12. Harper′s 2017 salary, agreed to via arbitration in January 2017, was $13.625 million. (See Janes, Chelsea, "https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/nationals-journal/wp/2017/01/13/bryce-harper-settles-at-13-625-million/ washingtonpost.com. January 13, 2017. and Janes, Chelsea, and Jorge Castillo, "Nationals and Bryce Harper reach deal for 2018, taking arbitration off the table," washingtonpost.com, May 13, 2017, 6:13 p.m. EDT.)
  13. Jordan Zimmermann was the first Nationals pitcher to notch an immaculate inning, accomplishing the feat on May 6, 2011, against the Florida Marlins. On three occasions, Montreal Expos pitchers threw immaculate innings prior to the franchise's relocation to Washington, D.C. (See Reddington, Patrick, "Nationals’ Max Scherzer throws immaculate inning vs Phillies tonight in D.C.," Federal Baseball, May 14, 2017.)
  14. Nolan Ryan, Randy Johnson, Zack Greinke, and Alex Cobb were the only pitchers who had 11 strikeouts through their first four innings prior to Scherzer's outing, tying for the all-time record. (See McCotter, Trent, "Max Scherzer is 5th pitcher in MLB history with 11 K thru first 4 innings of a game," twitter.com, June 6, 2017.)
  15. The most recent time any major league team had started a game with three consecutive home runs was on May 10, 2012, when the Baltimore Orioles did it against the Texas Rangers. (See "Diamondbacks open with back-to-back-to-back HRs against Nationals," espn.com, July 22, 2017.)
  16. The eight-homer eruption tied the mark set by the Montreal Expos on July 30, 1978, against the Atlanta Braves. (See Ginsburg, David, "Brewers: Nationals hit eight home runs, tie two MLB records in rout," Wisconsin State Journal, July 27, 2017, and "8 Expo homers bury Braves," Chicago Tribune, July 31, 1978.)
  17. The most recent time a major league team had tallied four consecutive home runs in a game was August 11, 2010, when the Arizona Diamondbacks went back-to-back-to-back-to-back. Coincidentally, the Diamondbacks' feat also came against the Milwaukee Brewers. (See Rapaport, Daniel, "Watch: Nationals Go Back-to-Back-to-Back-to-Back, Hit Five Homers in One Inning," si.com, July 27, 2017.)

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