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Monday, September 11, 2006

Nats score, then give up more

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By

DENVER -- It has happened countless times all season, and Frank Robinson has harped about it to his players to no avail. The Washington Nationals just can't seem to score a run or two without giving two or three right back to the opposition.

And when they do that with the kind of regularity they displayed this weekend at Coors Field, the result is not pretty.

A 13-9 loss to the Colorado Rockies yesterday was only the latest indignity, a fitting cap to a miserable weekend of baseball in which the Nationals suffered a four-game sweep at the hands of a fellow last-place club and did so in embarrassing fashion.

Yesterday's calamity featured starter Pedro Astacio getting rocked for 21/3 innings, his teammates storming back to tie and then a woefully inexperienced bullpen blowing it.

Put it all together and the Nationals were outscored 43-27 during the series. Add the mid-June, four-game sweep against this same club at RFK Stadium and they finished the season 0-8 against the Rockies while being outscored 78-41.

Robinson insists it's not possible for one major league team to simply have another's number, but how then to explain Colorado's dominance of Washington this year?

"What is there to explain? It's very simple," the manager said. "When you don't play defensively well and you don't get good pitching, you're not going to win ballgames. That's how you explain it."

The Nationals (61-82) did nothing well over the weekend, especially when it came to a pitching staff that could not help the lineup's cause. Washington scored a run in 15 different innings in the series (not including a ninth-inning add-on yesterday). Colorado came back to score in the bottom of the same inning 10 times.

"It just takes the air out of you," Robinson said. "It takes the good feelings about what you just accomplished out of you. And it also puts you kind of back on your heels. No matter what you do, the other team's going to come back on us. That's what it does."

It happened every time the Nationals scored yesterday. They put two runs on the board in the third courtesy of a Nook Logan homer and a Ryan Zimmerman single, then watched as Astacio and Beltran Perez gave three runs back in the bottom of the inning. They scored five in the fifth to tie the game 7-7, then watched as Ryan Wagner gave one back on a walk, a wild pitch and two singles.

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