D.C. GM Mike Rizzo made an appearance on 106.7 the FAN in D.C. this afternoon to talk to hosts Danny Rouhier and Grant Paulsen about the beginning of Spring Training and the high expectations for the Washington Nationals this season, which are higher than they've been in any year since baseball returned to the nation's capital in 2005. The Nationals too expect a lot of themselves the general manager explained. "We've said all along that we're here to win games and to win championships and that type of thing," Rizzo said, "but it's not a short process, you need to build to that end. We [feel] that we've got ourselves a good foundation of a good ballclub. The Philadelphia Phillies are still the king of the mountain here in the National League East, and we've got ourselves in a very difficult division. With that said, though, we intend to be playing meaningful games in September and October. We're going to give that message to our players here when they all assemble, when position players get here and they take their physicals and we're ready to take the field."
"We've done a good job developing our young talent, our young core in the major leagues," Rizzo continued, "A good farm system. We made some acquisitions via trade and free agency that we like. We like the construction of the ballclub as it is and the future as it lays, and we're going to tell the players it's time for them to take the next step and win some ballgames."
• Listen to D.C. GM Mike Rizzo Talk Nats With 106.7 the FAN's Danny Rouhier and Grant Paulsen:

The Nationals improved from 59 wins in '09 when Rizzo took over as the Nats' GM, to 69 wins in 2010 and 80 wins last season. The Nats' GM was asked if another 10-game improvement be enough to consider the season a success or if the Nationals have to make the playoffs to consider 2012 a successful campaign? "I think we can look back at the season, at the end of the season," Rizzo said, and, "if we've played good baseball and guys have taken steps towards the next level and it's a year where somebody just has a terrific season ahead of us and we fall a little short of the playoffs, I can take that as a successful season, but again, we're here to win games, we're judged on wins and losses and we want to make the playoffs. We're not afraid to say the word this year. The onus of this is on the players, and they have to perform and we're going to let them know that and that's kind of the way I feel. But to answer the question, I think you can have a good meaningful season without making the playoffs this year, but I would probably be a little disappointed that we didn't make it."
After searching for legit starters to pitch alongside Stephen Strasburg and Jordan Zimmermann and a center fielder/leadoff man to fill that hole in the lineup his winter, the Nationals settled for adding all the pitching they could when they couldn't find the right outfielder. What was the thought process behind continuing to add pitching though they missed out on an outfielder? "The thought process is you can never have enough pitching," Rizzo explained, "You look at that Philadelphia Phillies team, the Atlanta Braves team and now the Miami Marlins team. They're running a good starter out at you every darn day and that's what you have to compete against. So we felt that if we couldn't fill the position of leadoff/CF in a way that made sense for us that we would go out and really strengthen what was already a pretty strong point of ours in the starting rotation and in the bullpen."
"The Gio Gonzalez trade we felt was a good trade for us cause it gives us a power, stuff-type of left-handed pitcher to put in between our two power right-handers [Stephen Strasburg and Jordan Zimmermann]," Rizzo said referring to the deal that sent four of the Nats' top prospects to Oakland for the A's left-hander, "and it's not like we traded for a wily old veteran, this guy is a 26-year-old guy that's pitched in an All-Star Game and has had two terrific seasons already. He's a two-plus major league service time guy, so we've got him for a long, long time and his future is extremely bright and we feel that he has something left that's even better than he's already performed."
Who'll play center for the Nationals on Opening Day? "That's what Spring Training is all about," Rizzo said, and that's where the Nationals will answer that question one way or another. "There [are] a couple of spots of competition that [are] going to be open and that certainly is one of them," the GM continued, "We've brought in Rick Ankiel again for a second season with the Nationals. He had a terrific defensive season last year, showed great range in center field, he's got a cannon for an arm. It really is a weapon because he stops the running game on the other teams. We're hopeful that he has a bounce-back year and is an effective offensive player for us. But he's going to be in the mix. Jayson Werth has shown towards the end of the season and [in] seasons before that that he can handle the center field position. We've got Roger Bernandina. We've got some minor league guys coming into camp that are going to compete for some type of playing time and to make the club and you always have the flexibility of moving Jayson Werth to center and if a young player like Bryce Harper is ready to play in the big leagues, that also is an option for us."
The Nats' GM explained that when it comes to Harper, they want to be sure that when he's up, he's up for good. "How will they know when Harper is ready?" Rizzo was asked, when it's a matter of his maturity and mental approach to the game instead of simply production? "Because I'm with him every day of Spring Training," Rizzo said, "I've been with him for a year now, I know the player, I know the personality, I know what the player has to look like to be ready to play in the big leagues. I've been doing this on the player development side long enough. I went through another phenom at the same age in Justin Upton [in Arizona]. I've been down this road. Davey [Johnson's] been down this road before. We're going to do what's best for the ballclub and what's best for Bryce Harper and the [two things] they're not mutually exclusive, they may not be mutually exclusive. He's going to be a great player in this league, it's not 'if', it's 'when.'"
0 recs | 36 comments
Is Corey Brown invited to Spring Training?
Bsullivan - February 20, 2012
Yes
HG_VA - February 20, 2012
Washington Nationals Non-Roster Invitees
from MLB
HG_VA - February 20, 2012
Tfirst question after the break seems odd,
do you really think there is a chance that a 90 win team doesn’t make the playoffs?
Doncosmic - February 20, 2012
BoSox
last year. And if ATL hadn’t crapped the bed, STL probably would have been on the outside with a 90-win season.
wittcap79 - February 20, 2012
That second wild card hasn't been approved yet
So, yeah it’s quite possible.
RobBobS - February 20, 2012
Ditto
National League is top-heavy this year. The good teams are good and the bad teams are terrible.
Pig.Pen - February 21, 2012
I think it's pretty balanced:
Most likely division winners – Phillies, Cardinals, D-Backs.
Can compete for ONE wildcard – Braves, Marlins, Nats, Reds, Giants.
Can compete for TWO wildcards (those above plus these teams) – Brewers, Pirates, Rockies.
Those MAYBE on the outs – Padres and Dodgers
Those definitely out – Mets, Cubs, Astros
Mattionals - February 21, 2012
The real question is how many teams can reasonably hope to pile up the big wins
I suspect that both the Braves and the Phillies are hoping and/or expecting to pick up at least 95 wins this year. I don’t think anyone else is.
RobBobS - February 21, 2012
Agreed
I for one am interested in Jackson. I think if he can tweak his delivery, we should then think about signing him for another three to five years. If we still have a lefty like Detwiler for next year’s rotation (hopefully Purke by 2014) then we will have five legit power arms that could potentially be the best rotation in baseball. I think we are already in the top 5.
Also saw that article on Parra but I don’t think we could land him even though he makes THE MOST SENSE. His cost will be too high. If we could fill in that missing link in CF then I think the 95 win idea isn’t out of the question, just some guys NEED to over-perform in order to achieve it.
Mattionals - February 21, 2012
I'm guessing that one of the Cards/Reds/Brewers ends up with 95 or better.
chubias - February 21, 2012
Maybe
But none of them are expecting to, I’d wager.
RobBobS - February 21, 2012
I’m still wondering where all the Cardinals love is coming from. My guess is that they struggle to remain above .500; however, I do recognize the division they play in will help them considerably.
sullyzz - February 22, 2012
They should be comfortably above .500 most of they year, I'd wager
They’ve got Carpenter and Wainwright, and a still-potent offense.
RobBobS - February 22, 2012
The meat of their order is at least as good as that of the Nationals
Beltran, Berkman and Holliday may well put up better seasons collectively than Zimmerman, Morse and Werth. They don’t have Strasburg, but it’s hard to argue with Carpenter and Wainwright at the top of the rotation if Wainwright is healthy. Garcia and Lohse are solid starters too. The Nats have a better bullpen IMO.
I wouldn’t trade rosters – the Cardinals are a lot older than the Nationals at virtually every position, and especially their key players (Molina, Furcal, Holliday, Beltran, Berkman, Carpenter and Wainwright) are all at or past their primes where the Nationals have room to grow. But don’t count them out in 2012, especially in that division.
d_c_guy - February 22, 2012
'Wouldn't trade rosters'
Agree, they are probably at the beginning of a substantial, sustained slide downhill, while the Nats are obviously going the other way.
RobBobS - February 22, 2012
Amanda Comak:
All of the #nats pitchers & catchers have reported or will report today. Henry Rodriguez will be the last to arrive today, an excused tardy
dc Roach - February 21, 2012
William Ladson:
All the position players have reported to camp except for Michael Morse, Mark DeRosa and Xavier Paul. #Nats #MLB
dc Roach - February 21, 2012
So I am assuming everyone on the active roster is there including Eury Perez
I’d like to see what he can do against good pitching. I don’t think he is ready but I at least hope he isn’t overmatched.
Bsullivan - February 21, 2012
Well that was nice
Up until I saw this, I had completely forgotten the Nats had signed Mark DeRosa whose wrist is still held together with chicken wire, duct tape and old piece of chewing gum.
Pig.Pen - February 21, 2012
I read his kind of wrist injury takes two years to heal up nicely and this is year two...
Berndaddy - February 21, 2012
Really?
I read that his type of wrist injury never fully heals and that he still can’t pull the ball. I think the article you read was written by one Mark DeRosa, although it was probably typed by someone else.
Pig.Pen - February 21, 2012
Great radio segment - 106.7 isn't nearly as annoying when Lavar and Dukes aren't around
d_c_guy - February 21, 2012
They'd hang up on Rizzo if he made a silly comment
Bsullivan - February 21, 2012
I actually grew up with Rouhier
So its nice to know that there is actually a baseball fan working for the Fan. Holden I know also likes baseball and does MLB radio stuff.
They just do way too much Redskins. I know that probably drives ratings. But its irritating. They talk more Jeremy Lin than the Nats.
Bsullivan - February 21, 2012
ESPN has moved from "all Tebow all the time" to "all Lin all the time"
They went to Tampa for a story on the Yankees spring training, and spent much of the time asking the players what they thought about Lin. Osi U(however he spells his last name) was on the set live in another segment, and they decided to spend significant air time asking him what HE thought about Lin. I like the Lin story, but ESPN? Not so much.
d_c_guy - February 21, 2012
They do a fantastic job at sensationalizing stories.
RossingtonCollins - February 21, 2012
Agreed
The Lin story is fascinating, for sure, but 48 hours after it broke I was completely sick of it. Two weeks later, I’m STILL changing the channel every segment on him, waiting for the dust to settle. Ugh!
terpsDC - February 21, 2012
I’m so sick of Lin and Tebow, maybe we’ll have another Brett Favre comeback.
I stopped watching ESPN until baseball baseball season starts in April.
RoscoeNats - February 21, 2012
My wife is half Taiwanese/Chinese
She’s having her moment as well as a lot of asians that I know. Lord willing it dies down a bit.
Berndaddy - February 21, 2012
She should take up hoops if she hasn't already.
RoscoeNats - February 21, 2012
Rizzo answered the Rendon question well
Exactly how we wanted to hear it. Zimmerman here long term, check. Rendon forcing his hand and maybe considering him at another position, check.
Bsullivan - February 21, 2012
Zimmerman had a great response to the question of Rendon playing third base.
Basicly if he’s the better player and it makes us better more power to him, but he’s going to have to beat Zimm off the position. We need both of these kids on the team. That’s what I say…
Berndaddy - February 21, 2012
Adam Kilgore:
Hey, Davey, Strasburg gonna make club? “He might. A little rusty.”
dc Roach - February 21, 2012
Nice OF Article by Phil Wood.....
I think a couple of folks have mentioned Geraldo Parra. Wood posted an article this morning that discusses why Parra makes a lot of sense for the Nationals. Here’s the link:
MASNSPORTS
sullyzz - February 21, 2012
Parra does have some question marks, and probably wouldn't be cheap, but I like him.
One thing that Wood leaves out is that Parra drew 16 intentional walks, or one more than Albert Pujols this year. Parra mainly hit in the #8 slot, and drew several walks because of it. If you take out those IBBs he has an OBP of .325, give him 4 IBBs (the avg. Nationals IBB) and he has an OBP of about .333. All of this to say that Parra is a decent MLB hitter, but not an elite lead-off. Additionally, although Parra would likely be adequate in CF, he hasn’t spent much time there, and most metrics suggest that he is below average. The small-sample size, however, renders this a useless conjecture.
I think the bigger problem would be what we could trade the Diamondbacks. We have very little to offer outside of bullpen options. We don’t have a great deal of bench depth or near ready prospects. AZ might be interested in Lombardozzi, but I don’t think that would be a good move for the Nationals. Arizona does have some prospects coming up in AJ Pollock and Adam Eaton, so they might be willing to move Parra or Chris Young. I doubt either would happen cheaply though.
chubias - February 21, 2012
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