2006 Washington Nationals Preview
2005 Overview:
Contenders for much of 2005 before finishing .500, Frank
Robinson's Washington Nationals (formerly the Montreal Expos)
were the talk of the National League East prior to the all star
break. The D.C. community embraced the "Nats" as the team was
happy to find a permanent home stadium after splitting much of
their games in 2004 between two different stadiums in Montreal
and Puerto Rico. Despite holding onto first place in the
National League East through the month of July, Washington fell
quickly finishing their 2005 season with an 81-81 record and
ended their year 9 games behind the first place Atlanta Braves.
The 2005 starting lineup was led by the newly acquired
outfielder Jose Guillen (.283 24 76) and 1st baseman Nick
Johnson (.289 15 74). Outfielder's Brad Wilkerson (.248 11 57)
and Preston Wilson (.26110 43) joined catcher Brian Schneider
(.268 10 44) to provide the team with the rest of their offense.
Starting pitchers Livan Hernandez (15-10 3.98) and former NY
Yankee Esteban Loaiza (12-10 3.77) joined John Patterson (9-7
3.13), Tony Armas (7-7 4.97) and closer Chad Cordero (2-4 1.82
47 saves in 74 games) to stabilize the 2005 pitching staff as
the team greatly improved on their losing 67-96 2004 record.
Off Season Moves:
The "Nats" lost Esteban Loaiza to the Oakland Athletics and
traded away Brad Wilkerson for Alfonso Soriano (.268 36 104) to
help improve their offensive production which was the lowest in
baseball in 2005. Washington also traded for San Diego's Brian
Lawrence (7-15 4.83) and the signed free agent Ramon Ortiz (9-11
5.36) in order to help bolster their rotation. The Nationals
will also have a newcomer at third since Vinny Castilla (.253 12
66) was traded to the Padres in the deal for Lawrence. Veteran
Mike Stanton (3-3 4.64) was also added to help strengthen the
bullpen as he was signed as a free agent late in the off season.
2006 Analysis:
The loss of Loaiza will hurt the team's starting pitching. He
provided the Nationals with 217 innings in 2005 and the
Washington has yet to make any significant moves that will
replace those innings. While Washington did acquire two
additional starting pitchers there is little chance that either
will prove as reliable as Loaiza did last season. Brian Lawrence
had a terrible 2005, despite pitching in pitching friendly Petco
Park, and Ramon Ortiz was released by Cincinnati Red who became
frustrated with his ability to deliver any quality innings.
Soriano should prove to be a great pickup, but he will not go
quietly into the outfield with Jos