Saturday, October 13, 2012

HBT: Yep, Nats blew it with Strasburg

Yeah, it?s totally crazy to think that the team is better with one of the best pitchers in baseball. ?In a postseason where anything can happen, and where nine of the ten teams who enter will not leave alive, it?s always the case that the best on-paper team wins it. The ones who lose never ever wish that they had an extra ace pitcher at their disposal. It?s ludicrous to suggest otherwise.

? Craig Calcaterra, quite sarcastically, on September 3, 2012.

Cheap shot? Sorry, get used to it Nats fans. And not from me (well, not just from me). ?Because after last night?s stunning loss, you don?t get to write the history of the 2012 Washington Nationals. Everyone else does. That history is going to always mention Stephen Strasburg, and your arguments to the contrary won?t matter. That?s just how it goes.

At the outset, yes, there were so, so many non-Strasburg reasons the Nats lost that lead and then the series last night. ?Drew Storen not throwing strikes in the ninth. Davey Johnson sticking with him (and pitching him the previous couple of days too). Ian Desmond not getting to that Descalso single. Any number of things that happened while the Cards chip, chip chipped away at the 6-0 lead throughout the game.

And as I said on Wednesday after the loss that put Washington down 2-1 in the series: the failures were many. The offense in games 2-3 (and 1 and 4 too, though that didn?t matter). Jordan Zimmermann and Edwin Jackson pitching poorly. The Cards, you know, being good.?In light of that, it is overly simplistic to say that having Stephen Strasburg available would have given the series to Washington. Any number of other things could have given the series to Washington. The Nats could have and almost did advance without him.

But people are certainly saying it this morning and they?re going to say it all winter. ?And frankly, I don?t have a problem with that, even if it doesn?t represent the best and sharpest analysis in the world. For the simple reason that when you lose and lose big like Washington did, you no longer get to author your own narrative. The Nationals, their fans, and a great number of the team?s surrogates in the media set the terms of debate in the middle of the season and those terms were?uncompromising: ?this team was good enough to win the World Series without Stephen Strasburg!? they said. And woe be to anyone who suggested that wasn?t the case. We could kiss their press pass if we disagreed.

That is now undeniably not the case, and it would be beyond hubris to say ?but we were good enough, we were!? The losers never get to set the narrative. Just ask the Buffalo Bills fans who want their great early 90s run recognized as a success rather than a failure. Just ask Atlanta Braves fans (cough, cough) who have tried for years to say that their team was better than any other one-time World Series champ. Ask anyone else who roots for a team that, however good, doesn?t follow through on its promise. You can say you were good enough among friends and you can all make yourself feel better about things by doing so, but you?re never going to convince anyone else of it. Sports don?t work that way. Winners are the winners and losers are the losers, and when you conspicuously tempt fate and conventional wisdom the way the Nationals did with Strasburg, the voices calling you losers will be even louder.

Nats fans can look at Zimmermann and Jackson?s bad starts and say ?hey, they would have started anyway, so it?s not the fault of the shutdown.? ?They can look at Ross Detwiler?s great start on Thursday and say Stephen Strasburg?s playoff rotation replacement did just as good a job as Strasburg would have done, if not better. ?They can also say that they twice came within one strike of advancing last night, and Stephen Strasburg would not have been throwing those pitches. ?But guess what: it?s futile.

Because everyone else will note that the Nationals (a) willingly chose to enter the playoffs with their best pitcher on the bench; (b) lost a series in which they gave up 32 runs and had only one quality start in five games; and (c) used a starting pitcher in relief in Game 5 on short rest, so all hands ? except for their best hand ? were obviously on deck.

And no matter what holes you can poke in that argument, Nats fans, the fact is that your team did not advance. They lost, and losers do not get to write the history when it comes to such matters. Believe me. I know from experience.

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/10/13/sorry-nats-fans-but-history-is-not-written-by-the-losers/related/

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