Friday's Late Game
Marlins Keep Nats Reeling
Washington Remains Winless Since Losing Morgan: Marlins 9, Nationals 6
Sunday, September 6, 2009
Reprinted from yesterday's late editions
In separation, neither is better off. The Washington Nationals miss Nyjer Morgan as much as Morgan misses his team. Morgan has a broken hand. The Nationals, as a result, look like a piece of broken machinery, fractured at the top of their order -- and still winless since they lost their center fielder.
Morgan was built for nights like Friday, where the middle of Washington's lineup was cranking but just needed a spark. In a 9-6 loss to the Marlins at Nationals Park, the Nationals were halfway functional when they needed to be whole. Ryan Zimmerman had a triple, a single and a walk; Adam Dunn reached base four times; Josh Willingham had a homer and a single; Elijah Dukes had two singles and two walks.
But right now, without its top-of-the-order spark plug, the Nationals' lineup toggles on and off. In a game where the Marlins knocked out Garrett Mock after three innings and scored runs in five of the first six frames, the Nationals couldn't keep pace. Florida's 3-4-5 hitters had eight RBI. Washington's 3-4-5 hitters -- getting little help from leadoff man Justin Maxwell (1 for 4) and No. 2 hitter Cristian Guzmán (0 for 5, with a double play) -- had just four.
Washington must adjust. Morgan, injured Aug. 27, is out for the year. If anything, the week since his injury has only reaffirmed his value. He scored 34 runs in 48 games with Washington, batting .351 and stealing 24 bases.
The Nationals had a 22-26 record with him. Since he fractured his hand, though, they're 0-7. They have just one stolen base. They've scored 15 runs.
"Oh man, it [stinks]," Morgan said on Friday. "There have been a couple times where I've had to turn off the TV, because I've been playing along with the game in my head."
"He's not here," General Manager Mike Rizzo said, "so somebody has to pick up the slack."
Several players missed opportunities to tighten this game. In the fifth, trailing 7-5, the Nationals loaded the bases with one out, but Dukes struck out and Josh Bard grounded to first. In the seventh, with Washington trailing 9-5, the bases were again loaded for Bard, who struck out on a check swing. Only in the eighth did Zimmerman, for the first time all night, come to the plate with runners on base: His two-out single up the middle gave Washington its sixth and final run.
Early on, both teams -- with sluggers exchanging blows and pitchers taking a beating -- signaled the warning for a long, wild night. Three innings in, Florida and Washington had combined for 11 runs. The Nationals had two triples and a homer. The Marlins had two homers and a triple. And both starters had been knocked out..
Washington's Mock, trying to build on a run of recent quality, instead catered to a critical mass of quality hitting, and the home runs proved especially costly.
For Mock, the three-run, four-hit first inning was only the start. His final line: three innings, seven hits, six earned runs.
"Garrett has really made progress in the last month, but he just didn't have it tonight," interim manager Jim Riggleman said. "I shouldn't say he didn't have it, because that kind of takes credit away from the Marlins; they were really swinging the bat. They did a great job. A combination of Garrett not being sharp and those guys, they have a lot of professional hitters over there, and they got him."






