By Mark Zuckerman
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
May 28, 2007
ST. LOUIS -- They left town a week ago content from a successful homestand but cognizant it could have been nothing more than a brief part of a long season.
When they arrived back in Washington last night following a 7-2 win over the St. Louis Cardinals to cap a hugely successful road trip, the Nationals suddenly had reason to believe this has been no brief trend but rather a legitimate sign of better things to come.
"Only time will tell," cautious manager Manny Acta said. "But everything is clicking right now."
Yesterday's triumph on a rainy afternoon at Busch Stadium was only the kicker to a Nationals turnaround that is now approaching three weeks. Acta's club has won 12 of its last 17 games, improving to 21-30 and all but ensuring it won't rank among the sport's all-time worst teams by season's end.
It would take a monumental collapse from here on out, the likes of which have never been seen in baseball history, for Washington to re-enter the discussion with noted losers like the 1962 New York Mets and the 2003 Detroit Tigers. Those teams barely won 40 games. This team already is halfway there by Memorial Day.
"We're out to prove people wrong," rookie left-hander Matt Chico. "They said a lot of things when the season started, and I think that's what we're trying to do: prove them all wrong."
The Nationals certainly made believers out of the Cardinals after taking two of three from the defending World Series champions. No, Tony La Russa's current club bears no resemblance to the one that toppled the Tigers in October, but there was little doubt Acta was managing the better team this weekend.
Washington got better pitching, both from its starters and its bullpen, than St. Louis. And it certainly got better production in key moments at the plate than a Cardinals squad that is now 20-27.
All that was evident during yesterday's game, which was interrupted by a 61-minute rain delay.
However, the only player who was hurt by the fifth-inning delay was Chico, who had tossed four shutout innings to that point but wasn't allowed to retake the mound after the long layoff and thus was denied a chance to earn his fourth win of the season.
"Too bad," Acta said. "But we couldn't take a chance with a kid like that, send him out there again like that."
Chico, who has had two of his four starts cut short by rain, said he could have remained in yesterday's game but understood the manager's rationale for pulling him.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Privacy Policy |
About TWT |
Community Relations |
Search |
Site Map |
Contact Us
Advertise |
Subscription Services |
TWT Gift Shop
All site contents copyright © 2007 The Washington Times, LLC.