Well, the title sums it up.
On the plus side, great to see a quality start out of Jacob Turner. Good velocity (average of 95.8, peak of 97.6) even if most of the 96-97 heaters were early, decent strike ratio (59 of 84), not a ton of swing and miss (just 5 whiffs out of 84 pitches). But he walked nobody, got a K/inning, and kept his team in the game. And he was up 4-1 in the 6th before finally giving up a long ball (an inevitability in Denver). You can’t ask for much more from a spot starter.
Certainly better than what Jeremy Guthrie gave this team earlier this month
And once again I bring up the obvious; between Turner’s arm and stuff, and what Vance Worley is now doing for AAA New Orleans after his very serviceable 2016, what in the heck were the Nats thinking in giving Guthrie the first crack at spot starts for the big league team?
Enny Romero gave up the go-ahead homer to another top-notch slugger … but the nit is that as a lefty, he should have had the advantage against Charlie Blackmon. Instead Blackmon golfed one into the 2nd deck to put his team in the lead. Pitchers give up homers, sure. But Romero now has a 1.8 WHIP on the year. You just cannot have a middle reliever that puts on nearly 2 baserunners every time he gets the ball. I’m guessing Turner sticks around and Romero gets the DFA heave-ho once Strasburg catches up on his sleep and re-joins the team.
Meanwhile, is it obvious for me to say that of all the relievers in the bullpen, that Blake Treinen‘s stuff most poorly translates to the thin-air environment of Coors? Why would he be the choice out of the pen when his whole schtick is movement on his sinking fastball? Why was he left in a one run game and allowed to give up 6 hits and basically put the game completely out of reach? I guess you could excuse a couple of the hits (the Story single was a jam job that a better LF might have caught, Wolters RBI single was sharply hit but well placed past Rendon, who was playing up), but you can’t excuse 6 hits and 3 runs.
What’s the solution? Maybe you just say “oh its Coors.” Fine. But Treinen needs to find his way and fast. Our most effective reliever right now seems to be an NRI that we picked up off the street on Feb 1st (Matt Albers). That’s not a good thing … because its just a matter of time before he regresses to the mean as well. No wonder the Nats are “sniffing around” on bullpen help. Maybe something they should have done a better job at doing this past off-season.
I think Treinen might be one more blow-up from an option to AAA to clear his head. Keep Turner up; if he’s throwing 96-97 during starts, he’ll be fine in middle relief. DFA Romero and bring up Adams to see if his 2017 AAA numbers are legit. Can’t be any worse, right?