Nats rotation competing with old and new faces

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – The first few weeks of spring training are like the first few weeks of school. Coaches and players are excited to reunite with longtime teammates and meet some new ones. The early assignments aren’t too hard, but everyone knows bigger tests are coming soon.

There’s excitement and nervousness in the air.

For the Nationals’ starting rotation, there’s a good mix of familiar and fresh faces. And while there’s a lot of excitement surrounding this young, impressive group, there are sure to be some nerves during camp as well while they compete in what might be the biggest position group battle of the spring.

MacKenzie Gore and Jake Irvin have solidified their positions at the top of the rotation. The 26-year-old left-hander with electric stuff may be the Nats’ Opening Day starter. The 28-year-old right-hander, who started the Grapefruit League opener on Saturday when Gore’s spring debut was pushed back to later this week so he could go multiple innings, is already lined up as the No. 2 starter.

Michael Soroka is the Nats’ highest-paid pitcher this year after signing a one-year, $9 million contract this winter, likely locking him into a spot in the rotation. And Trevor Williams was brought back on a two-year, $14 million deal to start games.

Finnegan returning to Nats on $6 million deal, source confirms

JUPITER, Fla. – Kyle Finnegan will be closing for the Nationals in 2025 after all.

Finnegan and the Nats have agreed on a one-year, $6 million contract, three months after the club chose to non-tender its All-Star closer, a source familiar with the deal confirmed. It’s a modest raise from his $5.1 million salary last year, but significantly less than the $8 million to $9 million he was projected to receive via the arbitration process.

The decision to non-tender Finnegan, 33, left the Nationals without an experienced closer, and though general manager Mike Rizzo and Davey Martinez insisted they were comfortable with veteran right-hander Jorge López or young lefty Jose A. Ferrer pitching the ninth inning, the prospect of a reunion with Finnegan always loomed large.

It took until the final days of February, two weeks into spring training, for the two sides to finally find common financial ground. Finnegan, who was holding out for a better deal, never got one from either the Nationals or another major league club.

FanSided.com and ESPN.com were first to report the new contract and its terms.

Gore and Soroka lined up to debut Saturday; Wood hopes to DH Thursday

JUPITER, Fla. – MacKenzie Gore arguably is the Nationals’ No. 1 starter. Michael Soroka is the Nats’ highest-paid starter. So why hasn’t either pitched in a game yet this spring, and why isn’t either scheduled to start any of the next four days?

“They’ll pitch here soon,” manager Davey Martinez said this morning. “We’ve still got time. We figured if we get them six starts here, they’ll be in good shape.”

So, this was by design, not the result of any setbacks?

“They’re both good,” Martinez said. “It’s based on conversations with them, what they need.”

Both Gore and Soroka confirmed that sentiment. Both have been throwing off a mound. Both threw Monday when the Nationals were off, with Gore saying he threw two innings against live hitters in the batting cage.

Starting lineups: Nats vs. Marlins in Jupiter

JUPITER, Fla. – After a much needed day off – given how much it rained here Monday, they wouldn’t have been able to play a game anyway – the Nationals are back in action this afternoon with their first true road game of the spring. It’s only a 15-minute drive to Roger Dean Stadium to face the Marlins, but this is the first time they’ve played this spring somewhere other than West Palm Beach.

A few regulars made the trip, headlined by Dylan Crews (who has started all three games so far), Paul DeJong, Jacob Young and Josh Bell (who makes his first appearance at first base after DHing Sunday). We’ll also see José Tena not at third base but at second base, perhaps further evidence that the plan is to have him play multiple infield positions this season.

Trevor Williams gets the start, hoping to set the tone with a solid first outing. The veteran right-hander was a completely different pitcher last year, successful thanks to an ability to keep everything down in the zone and the addition of a sweeper to his arsenal. The Nats gave him a two-year, $14 million deal to come back. Now it’s up to him to live up to that contract.

WASHINGTON NATIONALS vs. MIAMI MARLINS
Where:
Roger Dean Chevrolet Stadium, Jupiter
Gametime: 1:10 p.m. EST
TV: None
Radio: MLB.com (Marlins’ feed)
Weather: Mostly sunny, 72 degrees, wind 15 mph out to right field

NATIONALS
RF Dylan Crews
2B José Tena
3B Paul DeJong
1B Josh Bell
LF Alex Call
DH Stone Garrett
SS Amed Rosario
CF Jacob Young
C Andrew Knizner

Kittredge brings elite chase rate to O's bullpen

Location, location, location. 

Important in real estate, shooting a "The Lord of the Rings" movie and throwing a slider.   

I’m pretty sure that’s what people say.

Glancing at Andrew Kittredge’s 2024 Statcast page, you’ll find that the reliever only had one advanced metric that ranked in the 75th percentile or better: chase rate. 

In fact, Kittredge’s chase rate ranked in the 100th percentile in baseball last season, with batters swinging at 38.9 percent of pitches that the right-hander threw out of the zone. That ranked as the best in baseball among pitchers with at least 200 plate appearances against. 

First game with ABS coming today; Nats to host O's in exhibition finale

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – The Nationals’ third game of the Grapefruit League season today will feature a new wrinkle that wasn’t a part of their first two games: The ABS challenge system.

ABS, which stands for “Automated Balls and Strikes,” is the so-called “robot ump” that calls pitches based on a group of camera angles and predetermined measurements for each batter. It’s been in use in the minor leagues for a few years now, and Major League Baseball is testing it out in some spring training games this year to see how it works at the highest level of the sport.

This isn’t the full-fledged robot ump, though. The plate umpire still makes every call on every pitch taken by the batter. But if a particular call looks to be wrong, either the batter, the catcher or the pitcher is allowed to challenge it by tapping his head.

The ABS system then kicks in, and on the stadium scoreboard for all to see, a digital strike zone is shown with the location of the pitch in question, followed by the correct call. It’s all done in a matter of seconds.

Here’s the catch: Each team is only allowed to get two challenges wrong per game. Nobody wants to run out of them, so the decision when and how often to use them becomes paramount.

Song remains the same for Young - another solid outing

SARASOTA, Fla. – Brandon Young will get noticed in any clubhouse for his height and long brown hair. He isn’t a lock to make the team, but man, those locks …

Young is expected to begin the season at Triple-A Norfolk, but his first outing Sunday in his first major league camp teased just how good he can be in 2025. He tossed two scoreless innings against the Phillies in Clearwater, retiring the side in order in the fifth. Back-to-back singles in the fourth, the initial one only 79.3 mph off the bat, were followed by a double play.

Both strikeouts were called, on 95.5 and 95.1 mph fastballs to Edmundo Sosa and Christian Arroyo, respectively.

“I was pleased for sure,” Young said. “First big league spring training game, it was just good to be out there.”

Young used his cutter, curveball and changeup – no sliders Sunday – but most impressive was how he averaged 95 mph with his four-seamer and topped out at 97. It sat around 92-93 mph last season with a high of 96, per Statcast.

Bautista nearing first exhibition game, today's Orioles lineup (game canceled)

bautista-pitching-white

SARASOTA, Fla. – Orioles closer Félix Bautista threw 25 pitches yesterday in his first live batting practice session. He’s going to do it again Wednesday or Thursday before likely making his Grapefruit League debut.

Bautista marked yesterday as another positive step because he finally got to face hitters for the first time since his elbow-reconstructive surgery in October 2023.

“It felt really good, I felt good,” he said via interpreter Brandon Quinones. “It feels like I continued where I last left off, so I’m really satisfied with how it went yesterday.”

The velocity in his bullpen sessions is topping in the mid-90s. Bautista routinely hit triple digits in the past.

“I do feel content with where I am right now,” he said, “and I know with the work that I’m putting in and the progression that I’ll continue going through, I know that I’ll get back to those previous forms.”

Step by step, Crews learning how to become big league star

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – It wasn’t the kind of hit most will remember. Dylan Crews has and will hit plenty more pitches a lot harder and create a lot more damage than he did with the slider he got from Astros reliever Miguel Castro in the Nationals’ exhibition opener Saturday afternoon.

But ask Crews about that bloop RBI single over a drawn-in infield and his eyes immediately light up. He knows how important that seemingly nondescript moment on Feb. 22 was in the broader scale of his development as a major leaguer.

“For sure,” he said. “I think you learn something new every day. I’m trying to get better every day, and this is why we’re doing this right now in spring training. Trying to really just look at the details of what the game’s providing you, and then trying to succeed as much as you can. So then when you get to the season, they just almost happen naturally.”

Why was that bloop base hit so significant? Because of the situation it came in (runner on third, less than two outs) and because of the type of pitch it came on (an 0-2 slider off the plate).

Crews did a lot of things well in his first five weeks in the big leagues last fall. He smoked fastballs with authority. He excelled in right field. He ran the bases well.

Baker making slight change to off-speed pitch

SARASOTA, Fla. – Bryan Baker stumbled upon it almost by accident. A minute adjustment to his changeup grip that’s gotten noticed in bullpen sessions. Perhaps it marks the birth of another weapon that Baker can use to defend himself against hitters.

Whether he’s doing it with the Orioles is another matter.

One topic at a time.

Baker faced three Pirates batters in Saturday’s first exhibition game and retired all of them. Former Orioles minor league outfielder Billy Cook grounded to short, Liover Peguero flied to right field, and Enmanuel Valdez grounded to second. It happened quickly and what appeared to be effortless.

“Felt good for Day One,” Baker said yesterday morning. “First real outing in five or six months, so it felt good to be in the strike zone and going right at hitters.”

Ogasawara tosses scoreless debut inning on "my special day"

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – There were nerves, plenty of them, Shinnosuke Ogasawara admitted. And when the first major league batter he’d ever faced, Tyrone Taylor, ripped a ball to deep left-center, the Japanese left-hander held his breath for a moment as he waited to see where it would land.

Once Jacob Young tracked it down at the base of the wall, Ogasawara could breathe easy again. This was just another baseball game, ultimately an 11-6 drubbing of a split-squad Mets team, albeit one a continent away from every other baseball game he’d ever pitched.

And though his one-inning Nationals spring training debut included a healthy amount of loud contact, it nevertheless ended with a zero on the scoreboard and a wide smile on Ogasawara’s face.

“Of course the first hitter, he got good contact,” he said, via interpreter Jumpei Ohashi. “I was kind of nervous and upset, but after that it’s fine.”

Ogasawara’s first Grapefruit League outing lasted only eight pitches. The notorious strike-thrower lived up to that reputation, never reaching the fourth pitch to any of the four Mets batters he faced. He threw mostly fastballs, amped up a bit and reaching 92 mph, and never got to his slider before the inning was over.

New infield gets first game together; Wood resumes outfield work

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – The Nationals’ second game of the exhibition season provides a first opportunity for the team’s new infield to work as one unit.

Today’s lineup against the Mets features returning shortstop CJ Abrams and second baseman Luis García Jr., plus new first baseman Nathaniel Lowe and third baseman Paul DeJong. It’s a quartet club officials believe could work extremely well together.

“We should be able to catch the ball,” manager Davey Martinez said. “And I’m looking forward to our pitchers getting on the mound and watching those guys work.”

The Nats knew they were getting a premier defensive first baseman when they traded reliever Robert Garcia for Lowe (who won the Gold Glove Award in 2023 with the Rangers). They believe his presence will especially aid García and Abrams, who now have a security blanket to their left.

“He catches the ball. He makes all the plays,” Martinez said. “It’s a good target for our infielders to throw over there as well. It makes things a lot easier.”

Starting lineups: Nats vs. Mets in West Palm Beach on MASN

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – One of the most intriguing stories of the spring is the quest to find out if Shinnosuke Ogasawara is good enough to be successful against major league hitters. The Nationals have scouted the Japanese left-hander plenty, and they’ve seen him throw plenty during the first week-plus of spring training. But now they’re finally going to start to find out how he fares against a real opponent.

There’s only so much they can learn from the one inning Ogasawara is scheduled to pitch this afternoon against a split-squad Mets lineup. But it’s still going to be more tangible evidence than anything else they’ve gotten to date.

The Nats pulled off a 6-3 win over the Astros in Saturday’s Grapefruit League opener, despite a number of regulars sitting out. Those guys will be in the lineup today, so get ready to see CJ Abrams, Luis García Jr. and Nathaniel Lowe, in particular against Mets reliever Ty Adcock, who gets the start.

And, yes, you can indeed see this game in its entirety on MASN, the network’s 2025 spring debut telecast. Tune in at 1 p.m. for all the action live from West Palm Beach.

WASHINGTON NATIONALS vs. NEW YORK METS (ss)
Where:
CACTI Park of the Palm Beaches, West Palm Beach
Gametime: 1:05 p.m.
TV: MASN, MLB.tv
Radio: 980 AM, MLB.com
Weather: Partly cloudy, 74 degrees, wind 9 mph in from right field

Hassell, Crews, Irvin all deliver in Nats' spring-opening win

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – Robert Hassell III has been here before. One year ago, in his spring training debut, the Nationals prospect went 2-for-3 with a triple. Three days later, he homered. By the end of March, he sported a .357 batting average and 1.198 OPS.

So there was a comfort level for Hassell when he stepped to the plate with the bases loaded in the ninth inning of a tie game this afternoon. Sure, he was annoyed at striking out in his first at-bat back in the fifth and lining out his next time up in the eighth. Here, though, was another opportunity to make a statement.

And that’s just what Hassell did, driving a two-out, two-strike pitch from Astros reliever Joey Mancini off the left field wall for a three-run double, the decisive blow in the Nats’ 6-3 victory to open the Grapefruit League season.

“I think I’m more prepared, for sure,” he said when asked to compare this spring to the previous one. “I think last year, they were coming right at me, the pitchers were. It wasn’t too fast for me, but just like today, I was getting down in counts a little bit. But I’m definitely more comfortable just from being here, for sure.”

A year ago, Hassell wasn’t able to parlay a strong spring into a strong regular season. Hampered yet again by a persistent hand injury, he was limited to 85 games between Double-A Harrisburg and Triple-A Rochester. He batted just .241, slugged just .328, totaled just 16 extra-base hits in 362 plate appearances.

Updates on Wood, Cavalli, Thompson and Sims

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – A bunch of guys are going to play for the Nationals today in their Grapefruit League opener against the Astros. But not everyone.

Some prominent regulars are being held back and are expected to debut Sunday against the Mets, including CJ Abrams, Luis García Jr. and Nathaniel Lowe. That’s the routine in late February, when hardly anyone plays in back-to-back games.

Then there are those players who aren’t ready to take the field for game action quite yet. And there are some significant names on that list.

Most notable is James Wood, who has been dealing with right quad tendinitis. The 22-year-old outfielder continues to take batting practice, and on Friday he was cleared to begin light running. But there doesn’t appear to be a rush to get him into games just yet.

“He’s been hitting. He’s starting to a run a little bit,” manager Davey Martinez said. “But we’re kind of going to slow play this a little bit and try to nip this in the bud.”

Orioles' first exhibition lineup, Young enjoying first camp experience (with Sugano update)

SARASOTA, Fla. – Gunnar Henderson is batting leadoff this afternoon and Jackson Holliday is the second baseman for today’s exhibition opener against the Pirates at Ed Smith Stadium.

Left fielder Dylan Carlson is the only player in the lineup who isn’t projected to make the Opening Day roster, though he’s competing for a job.

Cedric Mullins is batting second. Jordan Westburg is playing third base and batting third. Ryan O’Hearn is the cleanup hitter and designated hitter.

Ramón Laureano is in right field.

Gary Sánchez is catching Albert Súarez.

Starting lineups: Nats vs. Astros in West Palm Beach

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – Who’s ready for some baseball? I can assure everyone here is, having made it through 10 days of pitchers and catchers and eventually full-squad workouts. Those days get tedious toward the end, and everyone is itching to get the Grapefruit League started this afternoon.

The Nationals are on the road for their opener, but that doesn’t mean they have to pack their bags and board a bus to go anywhere. Because they’re facing their co-residents of CACTI Park of the Palm Beaches, all they have to do is make sure they’re wearing gray pants and prepare to bat in the top of the first. It’s not a bad situation at all.

Jake Irvin gets the ball for the opener, and the right-hander is thinking big things for his 2025 season. Irvin knows consistency is the name of the game, and while there’s only so much he can during his one scheduled inning this afternoon, he can get things off on a right foot with a quick, easy frame against Houston.

The Astros have split-squad games today, so half of the team is headed up to Port St. Lucie to face the Mets while the other half stays here for this game. Their starter this afternoon is Ryan Gusto, a 25-year-old right-hander who had a 3.70 ERA and 141 strikeouts last season at Triple-A Sugar Land.

Facing Gusto is a Nats lineup featuring some, but not all, of the regulars. With CJ Abrams sitting until Sunday, it'll be Dylan Crews in the leadoff spot and Amed Rosario at shortstop. We'll also see Keibert Ruiz behind the plate and Josh Bell serving as designated hitter.

Abrams will remain Nats' leadoff hitter to begin season

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – If there was any reason to debate who will hold the top spot in the Nationals’ batting order to begin the season, Davey Martinez put it to rest today with a fairly definitive revelation.

“CJ is going to lead off,” the eighth-year manager said. “The 3-4-5 will be kind of different. The 2-spot might be a little different at times. But we do know CJ’s going to lead off for us, and we’ll go with that for now.”

So there you have it: CJ Abrams will reclaim the leadoff spot he held for the majority of the 2024 season but did lose at one point when he was struggling at the plate.

The Nats have long believed in Abrams as their long-term answer at the top of the lineup. And over a 13-month stretch from July 2023 into August 2024, he held that job nearly every day, batting .252 with a .318 on-base percentage, .441 slugging percentage, 111 runs scored, 35 doubles, nine triples, 28 homers, 89 RBIs and 56 stolen bases.

But Abrams’ second half slump last summer prompted Martinez to move him out of the leadoff spot for a while, giving him a chance to clear his mind and hopefully get himself back on track. During that stretch – and during the final week of September after Abrams was demoted to the minors for disciplinary reasons – rookie Dylan Crews took over the No. 1 position in the order.

Sugano faces hitters in first live batting practice

SARASOTA, Fla. – Tomoyuki Sugano reported to Orioles camp on Saturday, but today felt like the beginning of spring training. Three different hitters stood at the plate against him in live batting practice at Ed Smith Stadium, rotating until he faced eight during his session. A lengthy mound conference followed with catcher Adley Rutschman, pitching coach Drew French, guest instructor and former pitcher Ben McDonald, and interpreter Yuto Sakurai.

Sugano lingered for a little bit longer as the session broke up, sweeping his foot across the dirt and measuring his stride. The mounds in Japan have a softer composition and the rubber sits further back. Just one more adjustment.

The Orioles scheduled only one live BP today and arranged for Sugano to face prospects Enrique Bradfield Jr., Dylan Beavers and Jud Fabian. Beavers flied out and doubled twice on a pair of hard-hit line drives. Fabian struck out twice and singled or doubled into left field – players don’t run the bases – and Bradfield grounded out and lined to left field.

Here’s what they’re saying about the session:

Sugano (via Sakurai)

Ogasawara to debut Sunday, Wood cleared to jog, Poche returns from illness

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – After 10 days of official workouts, not to mention plenty more unofficial workouts that took place before camp actually opened, the Nationals are undoubtedly ready for something different. Like exhibition games, which fortunately start showing up on the schedule Saturday.

“Yeah, we’re ready,” manager Davey Martinez said. “As I’ve said before, these guys have been here for a while now. They’re itching to get out there and compete.”

The Nationals wrapped up the first portion of spring training today with one final full-squad workout on the back fields behind CACTI Park of the Palm Beaches. They’ll finally set foot inside the main stadium Saturday to face the Astros in both teams’ Grapefruit League opener.

Don’t expect the entire projected Opening Day lineup to be out there right off the bat. We already know James Wood (who is dealing with left quad tendinitis) is being held back for the moment. It also sounds like CJ Abrams will sit Saturday, with veteran utilityman Amed Rosario getting the nod at shortstop.

“We’re still in February,” Martinez said. “I’m going to give everybody a chance to get out there and play and get going. We’ve just got to be careful. The ultimate goal is to keep everyone healthy and get them ready for Opening Day at the end of March.”