Nationals president of baseball operations Mike Rizzo spoke this week about the upcoming offseason, with Andrew Golden of The Washington Post relaying some the details. Rizzo stated that the club is looking to bolster both its starting and relief pitching, as well as mentioning a middle-of-the-order bat.
That the club is open to additions all over the roster is hardly surprising since they have been aggressively rebuilding for a while now. The past few years have seen Trea Turner, Max Scherzer, Juan Soto and many others flipped for prospects, leading to the Nats finishing last in the National League East three years running. The 2023 club won 71 games, a jump of 16 from the dismal results of 2022, but there were also some less-encouraging signs. The club had a run differential of -145, second-worst in the National League, ahead of just the Rockies. They outpaced their expected win-loss record of 66-96 thanks to some help from a record of 28-21 in one-run games and a 6-2 mark in extra innings.
On the pitching side, the club had a collective earned run average of 5.02, a mark that topped just the Royals, Athletics and Rockies. The starting staff and the relief corps were equally ineffective, as both groups had matching ERAs at that 5.02 figure.
Stephen Strasburg is still on the roster, although he won’t be a factor going forward. It’s been known for some time that his battle with thoracic outlet syndrome isn’t going to allow him to compete at the major league level anymore. He and the Nats were discussing a retirement deal last year, even though his contract runs through 2026, but the club walked away and he was activated from the IL earlier week. Both Rizzo and Scott Boras, Strasburg’s agent, admit that the righty’s pitching days are done. “Medically, it’s going to be difficult to see him pitching again at the big league level,” Rizzo said, per Golden. “We understand where he’s at physically. We have understood it since last year, so that hasn’t changed.” While coming to some sort of agreement about his retirement would allow the club to free up a roster spot, that doesn’t seem imminent. “The roster spot is important,” Rizzo says. “But there’s certain rules and protocols that have to be met within the CBA to conclude these types of things when [players] are under contract.” He didn’t clarify which parts of the CBA are currently standing in the way of Strasburg’s retirement.
Without Strasburg, the rotation currently consists of Patrick Corbin, Josiah Gray, MacKenzie Gore, Jake Irvin and Trevor Williams. Corbin hasn’t been terribly effective lately, with his strikeout rate having dropped in each of the past four years. But he will likely continue to hold a place based on his contract. He’s set to make $35MM next year, the final year of his deal. Since he’s a fairly reliable innings eater, the Nats will likely give him the ball every fifth day as they manage the workloads of their younger pitchers.
Gray had a 3.91 ERA last year but may have been lucky to do so. His 20.5% strikeout rate, 11.5% walk rate and 37.8% ground ball rate were all worse than league average. An 80.4% strand rate likely helped to keep some runs off the board, which is why he had a 4.93 FIP and 5.08 SIERA. Gore had better peripherals but allowed more home runs, leading to a 4.42 ERA. Both of them are still fairly young, Gray going into his age-26 campaign and Gore his age-25, and neither has reached arbitration yet. They will be in the rotation again next year as the Nats hope they take a step forward in 2024.
Williams signed a two-year deal with the Nats last offseason but the first season of that contract didn’t go especially well as he posted a 5.55 ERA over 30 starts. Similar to Corbin, he could serve an innings-eating role but the club is likely less committed to Williams. He’s only making $7MM in 2024 so his deal would be easier to walk away from. Irvin had a 4.61 ERA in 2023 with fairly uninspiring peripherals.
The Nats also have Joan Adon, Thaddeus Ward, Jackson Rutledge and Roddery Muñoz on the roster, though each of those guys is likely stuck in a depth role until they have better results. Given the current options, it’s fair to see how Rizzo could find room for an external addition or two.
It’s unclear who the Nats would target but they kept things fairly modest last year. Apart from the two-year contract for Williams, they stuck to one-year deals for bounceback candidates like Jeimer Candelario and Dominic Smith. If they set similar targets this winter, they could perhaps look to pitchers like Wade Miley, Martín Pérez, Kyle Gibson, Frankie Montas, Luis Severino and others.
On the bullpen side of things, there are plenty of arms available they could look to add, but it also sounds like subtraction is possible. Rizzo says other clubs have been asking about righties Kyle Finnegan and Hunter Harvey, per Jon Morosi of MLB.com. It’s not a surprise to hear that the two are drawing interest, both because of their strong results and because they also were in trade rumors at the deadline a few months back.
Both players stayed and Finnegan finished the year with a 3.76 ERA, racking up 28 saves in the process. Harvey’s ERA was almost a full run better at 2.82, striking out 28.5% of batters while notching 10 saves and 19 holds. The Nats don’t need to move either, since they are both controllable via arbitration through 2025. However, performance from relievers can be volatile and an injury can happen at any time. The Nats could open their next competitive window in the next two years but there would be some sense to flipping these guys for players that could be more meaningful pieces of that window.
As for the middle-of-the-order bat Rizzo referenced, there are plenty of options available, depending on how aggressive they are willing to be. First baseman Dominic Smith and third baseman Carter Kieboom are both non-tender candidates. If Smith were out of the picture, Joey Meneses could take on some extra first base time, or the club could look outside. In the outfield, Lane Thomas is coming off a solid season but did most of his damage against lefties. Stone Garrett also had a good year but finished it on the injured list due to a fractured leg. Victor Robles is coming off another frustrating season.
If the Nats wanted to make a splash, they could target players like Teoscar Hernández, Lourdes Gurriel Jr. or Rhys Hoskins, but other options include Tommy Pham, Jason Heyward, Adam Duvall and Joc Pederson.
jvent
The Nats would have to wait, I’m sure players would rather try other teams 1st before settling on the Nats, Royals, A’s or Rockies lol
mlb fan
Players have shown thru the years, that they’ll go anywhere the money is right. The Royals, A’s and Rockies rarely pony up the money and that’s why Players don’t go there. The Nats will not have any problem attracting talent, since they’ve shown a willingness to pony up $$ in their recent past.
Not a clever name
J ent, add the Giants to that list, no starter wants to begin pitching on the 2nd or 3rd inning.
Brew’88
“#######” Hope To Add Pitching This Offseason” Has to be the 5th article with this title in a week. Plug in your team’s name and presto, story on.
stanton100
How would you say it Hawthorne?
Brew’88
“Hawthorne Hopes to Add Pitching This Offseason”
(pftttt….don’t we all..).
CO Guardening
“You can never have enough pitching.” -Abraham Lincoln
Curly Was The Smart Stooge
“You can never have enough catching” -Elton John
Dogbone
Can’t have enough Hope.
Logistics Guy
This Idea that free agents do not wanted to go to clubs that are rebuilding Is Hog Wash.
I can not see many players working to get to free agents only to turn down 20-50 million dollars to sign with a team that has a better win lose record
splooz
I think Rizzo may spend big on 1 or 2 front line starters or maybe bring in Bauer. They need to add some top of the rotation arms to start pushing towards their stated goal of competing in 25 and Rizzos been known to spend big on a pitcher or 3
TheFuzzofKing
Pap aside, Rizzo doesn’t let in guys with character/chemistry issues.
Dogbone
Drew Smyly is available – could be the opening day starter.
splooz
Other than the time he does a thing…he never does a thing!
Someone’s gonna take a chance on Bauer and the most likely candidates are teams that want to keep payroll lower but can take a chance. Nats fit that bill along with Pitt.
TheFuzzofKing
Bauer won’t be a Nat.
Probably won’t pitch in MLB.
dclivejazz
I can hear it now from Rizzo: “we did our due diligence and feel strongly that Trevor has committed to turn over a new leaf. Scott Boris has assured us that he hasn’t strangled or bruised the face of a date in more than two years. We believe everyone in America deserves a second chance after they have served the penalty for their transgressions and that he’ll give our club a big boost…..”
Actually I don’t think the Nats would do this (it would be more of an Astros move) but it’s not beyond the realm of possibility.
redsox>
trevor andrew bauer
In nurse follars
It would be news if the report said “Team has no need for more pitching . Wont seek pitching in off season.” Really, is there a team in baseball that is not looking to add pitching?
Mikenmn
Doesn’t look like a team ready to compete. With the lackluster FA market, not a huge incentive to spend.
splooz
Signing a long term SP this year for some teams isn’t just about 24 but about 24-28 and the Nats look to be poised for an open window then. It’s like when they signed Werth just prior to Harper/Stras arriving.
Baseball Babe
True but they didn’t add Max until they were already good. Like when the Braves signed Greg Maddux when they already had Tim Glavine, John Smoltz and Steve Avery.
Wheeler Dealer
If you sign Stroman you are a fool
EasternLeagueVeteran
Seems like the team could use Eduardo Rodriguez. But yes, not Stroman.
dclivejazz
Rizzo is talking the talk that Nats fans want to hear, but I do t believe ownership is committed to such moves. More scavenging amongst flippable rebound candidates is in the offing. The Lerners are clearly in cost containment mode. Hope they prove me wrong but that’s what I expect to see.
nanyuanb
I’d rather see trading Lane Thomas , Finnegan, Harvey, who are not going to contribute when the Nats can compete. And see if there can be more chances this year to pick up a Candy.
believeitornot
Why would they not contribute when the Nationals can compete? That could be as soon as 2025. All three are signed through 2025. Do you mean Lane thomas would be traded because Crews and Wood would be in the same outfield? Garrett could d.h.
Armaments216
Tyler Mahle makes a lot of sense on a 2-3 year deal for a team like the Nationals. Can use 2023 to ramp back up with an eye toward becoming a rotation cog for a competitive team in 2025.
badco44
Looks to add pitching? So does every other team… the good ones will more then likely want the bank and the kitchen sink!