By Mark Zuckerman
April 10, 2008
Jason Bergmann is not, by nature, an emotional guy.
The 26-year-old right-hander is as easygoing and friendly as any player inside the Washington Nationals' clubhouse, so when he spent four minutes in front of his locker last night in full uniform repeatedly trashing himself following a 10-4 loss to the Florida Marlins, heads turned and ears perked.
"I'm pretty fired up," Bergmann said. "I'm really [ticked] off because I'm better than that. This team didn't need that. I failed these guys tonight, and I'm pretty [ticked] off about it."
Washington's sixth straight loss, played before a crowd of 23,340 at Nationals Park, was perhaps the ugliest of this ragged stretch. Certainly, the Marlins' seven-run fifth inning against Bergmann qualified as the low point of a season that began with much promise but has since taken a significant turn for the worse.
The Nationals (3-6) are starting to feel the strain.
"I know it's early, but we need to turn it around quick," catcher Paul Lo Duca said. "Because this is getting ridiculous."
The pressure on Bergmann to turn things around might be greater than on anyone else because he could find his job in jeopardy with another start like this.
That would never have seemed possible yesterday afternoon, when the list of candidates who could lose their job when presumptive ace Shawn Hill returns from the disabled list was limited to young lefties Matt Chico and John Lannan.
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