Doing It the Hard Way
The top half of the Nats lineup had a field day on Thursday evening against a very strong Cardinals ballclub but the pitching staff nearly gave it away before Elijah Dukes hit a walk off home run in the 10th. The home town team was up 7 – 0 after three frames and gave up the lead in the top of the 10th on a homer by Cards rookie right fielder Joe Mather. After Christian Guzman singled to lead off the bottom half of the 10th, Dukes worked the count and then hit a rocket to the deepest part of the park to complete his 4 for 6, four rbi night.
Tim Redding started strong and with a seven run lead it appeared he was a cinch for his seventh win. But he gave up three in the fourth and three again in the sixth on a home run by one Mark Worrell – which sent him packing. You don’t know Worrell?! Well, no surprise. Thursday was his first appearance in the majors and his shot half way up the stands in left on a 3-2 Redding fastball was his first major league at-bat. Maybe he’s the second coming of this guy.
In addition to Dukes’ four hits, Guzman had four and Boone and Castro had three apiece to lead the 16-hit attack. And the highlight for the defense was a nifty 3-6-1 double play to end the fifth. But it looked bleak when Rausch gave up two in the ninth to tie it and Sanchez gave up a dinger in the 10th. And what was left of the 32,357 that attended the game reached for the Pepto-Bismol before Dukes’ heroics.
Diamond Nuggets
The kinks in the ballpark continue to irritate. Thursday night two concession stands had inoperative credit card scanners which forced me to bite the bullet and stand in line at the ATM. Which, of course, made me watch the Nats score two runs in the bottom of the third on t.v. while waiting in line.
I shared an elevator ride with Screech the mascot Thursday night. I must admit he was nice to the kids and didn’t smell despite his gray feathers. One notch in the “keep him” column.
As we begin to walk to the bus my daughter looks up at me and says, “Hey dad, what’s your favorite movie?” Without speaking I simply point to the screen that now has the credits rolling across.
“Yeah, me too,” she says.




