Opening Day Opening Day lineup SOURCE:
Game recap Opening Day on March 28 – the earliest opening day in MLB history excluding international openers – saw a pitchers′ duel before a sell-out crowd at Nationals Park between the starters who had won the last three
Cy Young Awards: the
New York Mets′
Jacob deGrom, who won it in , and Washington's
Max Scherzer, who won it in as well as and and was the runner-up for it in 2018. DeGrom threw 93 pitches over six scoreless innings, scattering a double, four singles, and a walk, while striking out 10. – but left fielder
Juan Soto struck out and first baseman
Ryan Zimmerman popped out, stranding Turner at third. Scherzer became the 16th pitcher in MLB history to strike out 12 or more batters on Opening Day, On April 2,
Philadelphia Phillies starter
Zach Eflin broke Turner's index finger with a fastball as he squared to bunt, sending him to the injured list. In former Nationals outfielder
Bryce Harper's return to
Nationals Park with the rival Phillies,
Max Scherzer struck Harper out twice, but Harper hit safely in each of his last three at-bats, capped by a two-run home run off
Jeremy Hellickson with the Phillies already leading 6–2, giving the game its final 8–2 score. The Nationals salvaged the two-game series by winning April 3 on a bases-loaded, ninth-inning walk issued by Phillies reliever
David Robertson to rookie pinch-hitter
Jake Noll. Noll's first career RBI finished off a seesaw contest in which the Phillies scored twice off Nationals starter
Aníbal Sánchez in the first inning; the Nationals responded by reeling off six unanswered runs against Phillies ace
Aaron Nola; after Sánchez exited with a bruise on his hip from a line-drive comebacker, the Phillies scored six unanswered runs of their own off Nationals relievers; and after Phillies manager
Gabe Kapler inserted his closer
Seranthony Domínguez in the ninth inning, the Nationals scored one run on a double by catcher
Yan Gomes and then tied the game as Phillies first baseman
Rhys Hoskins couldn't haul in a relay throw to retire a hustling
Adam Eaton. Having already recalled infielder
Adrián Sánchez from the Triple-A
Fresno Grizzlies to replace Turner on the roster, the Nationals optioned Noll after the April 3 game to make room for the activation of veteran utilityman
Howie Kendrick from the injured list. General manager
Mike Rizzo publicly rejected the idea of calling up top shortstop prospect
Carter Kieboom to play in Turner's place. "We're going to see him sooner rather than later," Rizzo told reporters, adding, "When we feel he's ready, we'll bring him." The Nationals enjoyed a winning roadtrip through two series in New York and Philadelphia, taking two out of three from both the Mets and the Phillies. The bullpen remained a glaring issue for the Nationals against the Mets. Scherzer departed with a 12–2 lead in the rubber game on April 7, but reliever
Matt Grace allowed both inherited runners to score and gave up two more runs of his own,
Wander Suero pitched a scoreless eighth inning, then Ross allowed a three-run home run in the ninth inning before Doolittle was summoned to finish out the 12–9 win. But in Philadelphia, Nationals relief pitching held strong, allowing just two runs in the series: the deciding run in a 4–3 loss on April 8, and the lone Phillies run in a 15–1 blowout on April 10. Sandwiched between those games, the Nationals mounted a comeback from a five-run deficit on April 9. Down to his final strike, center fielder
Víctor Robles, the Nationals' top prospect, hit a game-tying home run with two outs in the ninth inning off
Edubray Ramos. Left fielder
Juan Soto hammered a three-run home run, with Robles adding an RBI double, to give the Nationals the lead in the tenth inning before Doolittle secured the 10–6 win. Bullpen woes again bedeviled the Nationals during a six-game homestand, which they split by losing two of three with the
Pittsburgh Pirates and winning two of three with the
San Francisco Giants. The bullpen collapsed late on April 12 after Corbin pitched seven strong innings and departed with a one-run lead;
Tony Sipp and
Kyle Barraclough combined to give up the tying and go-ahead runs, and after Rendon homered to force extra innings,
Justin Miller coughed up a three-run home run to Pirates pinch-hitter
Colin Moran in the tenth inning to lose the opening game of the homestand. Miller was placed on the 10-day injured list the next day with a lower back strain, and the Nationals recalled reliever
Austen Williams from Fresno. In that game, it was the Nationals who rallied late, with back-to-back home runs by Eaton and Kendrick reversing a one-run deficit in the eighth inning and giving Washington a 3–2 win. After a third straight strong start for the Nationals in the series, this one provided by Scherzer, Suero allowed a two-out RBI double to rookie
Jason Martin in the ninth, sending the home team to a 4–3 loss in the April 14 rubber game. The Nationals went on to drop their series-opener with the Giants on April 16, with
Stephen Strasburg shouldering the loss after giving up three home runs over six innings of work. Manager
Dave Martinez was ejected for the second time in his managerial career, arguing balls and strikes in the fifth inning. The Nationals won the next two games, although they didn't lack for late drama. After finishing out the eighth inning with a seven-run lead on April 17, Williams surrendered four runs on home runs by San Francisco outfielders
Gerardo Parra and
Steven Duggar before being pulled without recording an out. Barraclough and Doolittle combined to finish out the closer-than-expected 9–6 win. In the series finale on April 18, after the Nationals failed to score in the home eighth despite a leadoff double and steal of third base by Washington second baseman
Brian Dozier, Doolittle wobbled to give up his first earned run of the season on three base hits before locking down the save, securing Corbin's first win at home as a National. Heading to South Florida for a series against the division-rival
Miami Marlins on April 19, the Nationals made another change in their bullpen, sending Williams to the injured list with a right shoulder sprain and recalling right-hander
Austin L. Adams from Fresno. In the series opener, a bases-loaded walk by Aníbal Sánchez followed immediately by a hit-by-pitch by Grace in the sixth inning gave the Marlins a lead they wouldn't relinquish. A poor start by Scherzer led to a second consecutive loss on April 20, although the Nationals were able to salvage the three-game set the next day, shutting out the Marlins 5–0 behind eight strong innings from Strasburg in a bounceback outing. After optioning Austin L. Adams back to Fresno and recalling Noll as an extra infielder with Rendon dealing with soreness after a pitch struck his upper arm, Washington dropped yet another series opener on April 22 as they traveled to
Denver for three games against the
Colorado Rockies, as home runs by
Raimel Tapia,
Nolan Arenado, and former National
Mark Reynolds proved too much for the visitors to overcome. then announced they were calling up Carter Kieboom from the Grizzlies to bolster their infield the following day. Injured reliever
Koda Glover was transferred to the 60-day injured list to make room for Kieboom on the major league roster. The Nationals also moved Rosenthal to the 10-day injured list, citing a viral infection, and activated Miller after one rehab appearance with the Class-A Advanced
Potomac Nationals. Scherzer allowed two runs over seven strong innings, and Kieboom homered to center for his first major league hit off Padres reliever and former National
Craig Stammen to tie the game in the eighth inning after San Diego took the lead on a Gomes passed ball. However, the Nationals fell after Doolittle, pitching in a tied ninth inning, allowed a solo home run to Padres outfielder
Hunter Renfroe. In the April 27 game, Strasburg matched Scherzer's seven-inning effort, but Suero, Miller, and Grace combined to allow six runs in the tenth inning, and the Nationals lost 8–3. After placing first baseman
Ryan Zimmerman on the 10-day injured list with
plantar fasciitis in his right foot, the Nationals were greeted with six unanswered San Diego runs to start the April 28 game, as the home team got just three innings out of Hellickson. Facing their first series sweep of the season, the Nationals rallied behind home runs from Soto, Robles, and Kieboom to tie the game, with just-recalled right-hander
Erick Fedde putting up four scoreless innings in long relief and Barraclough, Ross, Sipp, and Miller contributing scoreless innings of their own, before replacement first baseman
Matt Adams slugged a deep flyball to right field off
Matt Wisler in the bottom of the eleventh inning; Adams' shot clanged off the foul pole for a walk-off home run. Fedde was optioned back to Double-A Harrisburg the next day, and Adrián Sánchez was recalled. The Nationals proceeded to drop consecutive games to the
St. Louis Cardinals, ending the month with a 12–16 record and in fourth place in the National League East. In the April 29 game, a strong four innings for Corbin led to a disastrous fifth in which he gave up six earned runs, the most for the Nationals left-hander in nearly a full year, and took the loss against visiting St. Louis. Ahead of another loss on April 30, the Nationals finally placed Rendon on the 10-day injured list as he continued to reel from his hit-by-pitch arm injury from the Marlins series, and they selected the contract of left-hander
Dan Jennings from Harrisburg, designating Austin L. Adams for assignment to clear space on the roster.
May The Nationals salvaged their four-game series with the
St. Louis Cardinals, having lost three of four before capturing a tight 2–1 series finale on March 2 behind right-hander
Stephen Strasburg. After the series, the Nationals dismissed pitching coach
Derek Lilliquist and announced he would be replaced by minor league pitching coordinator
Paul Menhart. The fourth-place Nationals' woes continued on a roadtrip through
Philadelphia,
Milwaukee, and
Los Angeles. Left fielder
Juan Soto landed on the 10-day injured list on May 4 with back spasms, prompting the Nationals to recall outfielder
Andrew Stevenson from the Triple-A
Fresno Grizzlies; a day later, the Nationals placed first baseman
Matt Adams on the injured list after he jammed his shoulder on a defensive play against the
Philadelphia Phillies and recalled infielder
Jake Noll from Fresno. Stevenson lasted a week on the active roster before hitting the injured list with back spasms of his own, while left-handed setup man
Tony Sipp was sent to the injured list with an oblique injury on May 7. The Nationals activated third baseman
Anthony Rendon from the injured list on May 7, optioning top infield prospect
Carter Kieboom back to Fresno after he committed four errors in 11 major league games, and also recalled right-handed pitcher
Erick Fedde from the Double-A
Harrisburg Senators. Like
Joe Ross before him, Fedde was converted from starting to relieving by the Nationals, hoping to bolster their worst-in-MLB bullpen. After losing two of three in Philadelphia and suffering their first series sweep at the hands of the
Milwaukee Brewers, a series in which poor defense played a major role, the Nationals signed outfielder
Gerardo Parra to a one-year deal, designating Grizzlies reliever
Jimmy Cordero for assignment, before a four-game set against the
Los Angeles Dodgers. The Nationals won the series opener in a 6–0 shutout led by left-hander
Patrick Corbin. The Dodgers returned the favor on May 10, with starter
Kenta Maeda and left fielder
Joc Pederson leading Los Angeles to a 5–0 win. On May 11, the visitors rallied after being shut out into the eighth inning, scoring five runs off the Dodgers bullpen after starter
Walker Buehler left the game. The scoring was capped by a go-ahead grand slam to right-center field by Parra, his first hit as a National in his second start with the team, off reliever
Dylan Floro. However, the Dodgers again quieted Washington's bats, 6–0, on May 12 to earn a series split behind
Hyun-jin Ryu. The Dodgers starter carried a no-hit bid into the eighth inning before Parra hit a ground-rule double for the Nationals' only hit of the day. Soto was activated from the injured list for the final game of the series. It was more of the same in the first game of a homestand versus the division-rival
New York Mets on May 14.
Noah Syndergaard held the Nationals hitless into the sixth inning, and former National
Wilson Ramos, the Mets catcher, hit a grand slam off
Jeremy Hellickson in the first inning to supply all the offense the Mets needed in the 6–2 win. The Nationals rebounded to win the next two games for their first series win of the month, with Corbin turning in another potent effort to earn the win on May 15 and Washington surviving an early exit by starter
Aníbal Sánchez to win a tight 7–6 contest, again getting key offense from Parra and catcher
Kurt Suzuki, in the rubber game on May 16. With the
Chicago Cubs heading to town for a three-game series, the Nationals placed Aníbal Sánchez on the injured list with a hamstring strain and called up right-hander
Kyle McGowin from Triple-A Fresno, also activating shortstop
Trea Turner after he rehabbed a fractured finger and optioning Turner's struggling fill-in,
Wilmer Difo, to Fresno. The Nationals attempted a comeback after right-hander
Max Scherzer was shelled for three runs early on May 18, but
Brian Dozier was tagged out trying to score from third on an errant pitch that ricocheted back to reliever
Carl Edwards Jr., then the home bullpen melted down. The Cubs ran away with the series opener 14–6, scoring 11 runs off Nationals relievers. The Nationals placed reliever
Justin Miller on the injured list for the second time of the young season with a rotator cuff strain the next day and called up right-handed reliever
Tanner Rainey from Fresno. In the May 18 game, Strasburg delivered eight innings of two-run ball to lead the Nationals to a win. The Nationals again attempted a comeback after Hellickson opened his May 19 outing with three straight walks and gave up three runs before McGowin relieved him in the fourth inning, but they came up short in a 6–5 loss despite scoring four runs off Cubs starter
Kyle Hendricks. Heading to
New York City for another series against the Mets, on May 20, the Nationals designated
Dan Jennings for assignment after he appeared in eight games out of their bullpen, activated Sipp from the injured list, and claimed right-handed pitcher
Javy Guerra off waivers from the
Toronto Blue Jays. Hellickson was placed on the injured list with a shoulder strain, clearing space for Guerra on the roster. The Mets swept the four-game set against the Nationals. Corbin lost a rematch with Mets journeyman starter
Wilmer Font in the series opener, with the Nationals rallying late from a four-run shutout only to lose 4–3. In each of the next three games, the Nationals lost despite carrying a lead into the bottom of the eighth inning. After five scoreless innings from Fedde, making a spot start, on May 21, reliever
Wander Suero served up a three-run home run that gave the Mets the lead, and after the Nationals rallied to retake the lead, Rainey gave up a solo home run to rookie first baseman
Pete Alonso in the eighth, put two more runners on base when called out to pitch the ninth, and then took his first career loss as
Kyle Barraclough came in and gave up a walk-off hit on an infield single to shortstop. On May 22, the Nationals got six shutout innings from Scherzer and held a one-run shutout into the eighth, before Barraclough and closer
Sean Doolittle combined to give up six unanswered runs to lose the game, with center fielder
Juan Lagares doubling home three runs off Doolittle before the southpaw served up a three-run home run to veteran pinch-hitter
Rajai Davis in his first appearance with the Mets. The Nationals trailed by two runs heading into the eighth inning in the final game of the set on May 23, but after first baseman
Howie Kendrick and manager
Dave Martinez were ejected for arguing a checked-swing call, the team rallied and got a two-out, two-run single by Parra, pinch-hitting for Strasburg, to take the lead. That lead was handed back in the bottom of the inning as Suero, after getting two outs and two strikes on right fielder
Carlos Gómez, served up a three-run home run to take the loss. The Nationals were rejoined during the series by Matt Adams, who was activated from the injured list and took the place of infielder
Adrián Sánchez, who was optioned to Double-A Harrisburg. As the Nationals returned to Washington, D.C., to face the division-rival
Miami Marlins, with a 19-31 (.380) record and a 3.4% chance to win the World Series, local and national media speculation swirled around Martinez's future as the team manager. Two veteran
Washington Post sports columnists,
Thomas Boswell and
Barry Svrluga, suggested the Nationals should dismiss Martinez, with Boswell writing, "From Day 1, he has been just a step too far beyond his depth." The Nationals bounced back to win the first three of the four games against Miami, overcoming a shaky spot start by McGowin, who tallied his first career hit and run scored in his only trip to the plate, to win a seesaw 12–10 series opener on the back of a go-ahead home run by Soto in the eighth inning; shutting down the Marlins 5–0 behind a complete-game performance from Corbin on May 25; and winning three games in a row for the first time all year by clinching a series win on May 26, despite a shaky major league debut for right-handed reliever
James Bourque, who was called up from Harrisburg as Ross was optioned to Fresno, but couldn't make it through the ninth inning in his first appearance. Scherzer pitched well in the series finale and exited the game with a one-run lead, but the Marlins scored two unearned runs as Adams and Turner committed ill-timed fielding errors, and Miami salvaged the set by delivering the Nationals a 3–2 loss. The Nationals headed south for two games against the only division rival they had not yet played in 2019, the
Atlanta Braves, and swept the short series. Despite another eighth-inning hiccup on May 28 as Barraclough gave up a two-run home run, Doolittle bounced back from a pair of rough outings, showing off a tweaked delivery as he secured a save and a win for Strasburg, who outdueled Atlanta ace
Max Fried with seven strong innings. Aníbal Sánchez returned from the injured list on May 29, with Bourque being optioned to Fresno in a corresponding move, and carried a perfect game into the sixth inning as the Nationals put up 14 runs over the first five frames. Although McGowin, taking over in relief in the seventh inning, loaded the bases and gave up a grand slam to third baseman
Austin Riley before getting his first out, he struck out six more Braves en route to his first career save as he pitched three innings to finish off the 14–4 victory. The win was Sánchez's first as a National. Coming off their series sweep of the Braves, the Nationals finished out a 12–17 May with a loss as the
Cincinnati Reds chased a flat-looking Corbin in the third inning and cruised to victory at
Great American Ball Park. At month's end, the Nationals held fourth place in the
National League East Division, eight games back of the division-leading Phillies and eight games under the .500 mark.
June Rebounding from their series-opening loss to the
Cincinnati Reds at
Great American Ball Park, the Nationals took the next two games for their third straight series win. Former National
Tanner Roark, starting for the Reds, took the loss on June 1, despite hitting his first career home run off Nationals starter
Erick Fedde; the player for whom Roark was traded to Cincinnati in December 2018, right-hander
Tanner Rainey, earned his first career win in relief. Center fielder
Gerardo Parra hit a three-run home run off Roark to put the Nationals on top for good. In the rubber game on June 2, Nationals ace
Max Scherzer struck out 15 Reds over eight innings of one-run ball to lead Washington to victory. Manager
Dave Martinez made a trip to the mound with Scherzer at 117 pitches through innings, but Scherzer lobbied successfully to stay in the game before striking out Reds first baseman
Joey Votto on back-to-back-to-back called strikes. The Nationals swept a short homestand, taking two of two in interleague play against the visiting
Chicago White Sox. In the series opener on June 4, they pinned a loss on another former Nationals starter,
Reynaldo López, delivering home starter
Stephen Strasburg his 100th career win even though he allowed every White Sox run in the 9–5 game. After a strong start by
Aníbal Sánchez in the second game, the league-worst Nationals bullpen couldn't hold the lead, with right-hander
Kyle Barraclough surrendering a two-run home run in his second inning of work, followed by
Wander Suero, who had thrown 30 pitches in the June 4 game, allowing a game-tying home run to White Sox backup catcher
Welington Castillo on his first pitch after coming in to relieve Barraclough. The Nationals rallied, however, as shortstop
Trea Turner drilled a two-run home run—his first since coming off the injured list the previous month after rehabbing a fractured finger—to walk off the White Sox in the bottom of the ninth inning, 6–4. The sweep gave the Nationals their longest winning streak of the season to date, at four games. The Nationals split a four-game series in San Diego against the
San Diego Padres. Despite jumping out to a four-run lead in the first inning against Padres starter
Joey Lucchesi, the Nationals couldn't push across another run and lost as their starter Corbin gave up five unanswered runs, in the series opener June 6. The Nationals lost another 5–4 game on June 7, rallying to take the lead late only for closer
Sean Doolittle to give up the tying run on an RBI single by rookie outfielder
Josh Naylor followed by a walk-off RBI single by catcher
Austin Hedges. On June 8, the Nationals cruised behind another strong outing by Scherzer, who shrugged off a comebacker that deflected off his left calf to pitch seven shutout innings and earn the win. In the rubber game on June 9, the Nationals got seven innings of one-run ball from San Diego native Strasburg, then tagged former Nationals pitcher
Craig Stammen with the loss in relief in the eighth inning as pinch-hitter
Howie Kendrick broke the tie with a home run to left field, shortstop
Trea Turner homered to center in the next at-bat, right fielder
Adam Eaton homered to right-center in the at-bat after that, and third baseman
Anthony Rendon capped the barrage with a home run to right field. During the series, the Nationals activated reliever
Trevor Rosenthal after a monthlong rehab assignment, optioning right-hander
Kyle McGowin to the Triple-A
Fresno Grizzlies. Although Washington steamrolled the White Sox 12–1 on June 10 behind another dominant start from Sánchez, Corbin's struggles continued as he allowed a first-inning grand slam by Castillo, and the Nationals settled for a split of the two-game interleague series in Chicago as they lost June 11. Rookie center fielder
Víctor Robles earned his first career Major League Baseball Play of the Week Award with a diving catch behind Corbin, tracking down a hard-hit line drive from
Leury García, leaping to glove it, and ending up face-down on the warning track surrounded by a cloud of dust. The Nationals split their third series in a row as they hosted the
Arizona Diamondbacks. Veteran
Zack Greinke, who carried a no-hit bid into the seventh inning, outdueled Fedde in the series opener on June 13. Arizona worked around a rain delay to shut out the home team 5–0. With Scherzer, a
2006 first-round draft pick of the Diamondbacks, on the mound against former Nationals top prospect
Robbie Ray, the Nationals evened the series the next day. Strasburg turned in his worst outing of the year as he allowed six runs over five innings on June 15, taking the loss for the Nationals even though rookie Diamondbacks starter
Taylor Clarke, who grew up in Northern Virginia a fan of Strasburg and the Nationals, couldn't complete five full innings to qualify for the win. Following another poor relief appearance by Barraclough, who gave up three runs in the ninth inning while only recording one out, the Nationals placed him on the 10-day injured list with right radial nerve inflammation and summoned utilityman
Adrián Sánchez the next morning. Washington ran away with the fourth and final game of the series 15–5, with Aníbal Sánchez pitching effectively and first baseman
Matt Adams supplying almost half the offense, with seven RBIs on a three-run home run off reliever
Zack Godley and a grand slam off
Stefan Crichton. With the Nationals preparing to play three straight series against
National League East Division rivals, rainy weather in Washington, D.C., abbreviated a four-game set with the
Philadelphia Phillies, as two games were rained out with one being rescheduled for September 24. While taking bunting practice on June 18 before that day's game was officially rained out, Scherzer fouled a ball back into his face, leaving him with a broken nose and a swollen right eye—for the
heterochromatic ace, his blue eye. The Nationals swept a doubleheader on June 19 against the visiting Phillies, with a resurgent Corbin dominating the matinee and Scherzer, pitching with a black eye from his injury the day before, Washington completed the series sweep the following day, overcoming a shaky start by Fedde, who exited in the fourth inning. Preparing for a three-game series against the
Atlanta Braves on June 21, the Nationals optioned infielder Adrián Sánchez to the Double-A
Harrisburg Senators and called up right-hander
Joe Ross from Triple-A Fresno. The Nationals extended their winning streak to a season-high five games as Strasburg bested former
Cy Young Award-winning southpaw
Dallas Keuchel, who was making his season debut after the Braves signed him earlier in the month. Despite letting the first two batters in the ninth inning reach base, Suero retired the side to earn his first major league save, with the final out being recorded on a shallow flyball by the sliding right fielder Robles. On June 22, with a chance to simultaneously secure a series win against the division-leading Braves and get back to a .500 record for the season, the Nationals jumped out to a four-run lead behind former Brave Aníbal Sánchez, only for their league-worst bullpen to once again melt down. Rosenthal and Rainey combined to give up the lead in the seventh inning, with Rosenthal walking all three batters he faced before Rainey walked shortstop
Dansby Swanson to force in a run and then gave up a bases-clearing double to first baseman
Freddie Freeman. Entering for the eighth inning with a one-run lead, Ross gave up four runs, including a three-run Swanson homer, to take the loss.
Matt Grace coughed up one final Atlanta run in the ninth inning, and the Nationals lost 13–9. The next day, the Nationals bought out Rosenthal's club option for the
2020 season and released him. Martinez told reporters the Nationals decided it was "time to move on" as Rosenthal continued to struggle with his command despite his lengthy rehab stint with Double-A Harrisburg. The Nationals also optioned Ross back to Fresno, recalling McGowin and fellow right-hander
Austin Voth, who was tasked with the June 23 spot start. Showing a marked improvement in his velocity from the
previous season as his fastball topped throughout his six innings, Voth pitched well, striking out a career-high seven batters while allowing just two runs, both solo homers, on four hits. Rainey took the loss as he gave up two runs in the top of the tenth inning and the Nationals left the tying and winning runs on base against Braves closer
Luke Jackson. Heading to Florida for three games with the
Miami Marlins, the Nationals optioned Fedde to Triple-A Fresno, giving Voth a longer look in the rotation. They also optioned McGowin back to Fresno, transferred injured starting pitcher
Jeremy Hellickson to the 60-day injured list, and selected the contracts of veteran relievers
Fernando Rodney, who became the oldest player in MLB at 42 years old as he joined the Nationals in Miami, and
Jonny Venters. Rodney made his Nationals debut as the only reliever to pitch in the June 25 series opener, getting the ball in the ninth inning after Scherzer threw eight innings of one-run ball. He walked his first batter before getting a strikeout and a double play to finish off the 6–1 win. The Nationals rolled to a sweep over the bottom-feeding Marlins, winning June 26 behind a similarly dominant Corbin, as the offense finally got to Marlins starter
Zac Gallen after the rookie right-hander pitched five scoreless innings; then repeating the formula against
Sandy Alcántara in the series finale the next day. In both games, the Nationals mounted sixth-inning rallies that proved decisive, and in both, they centered around a three-run home run by the first baseman Adams. With the series sweep, the Nationals clawed back to a .500 record for the first time since April 23. The Nationals finished June with a winning record, taking two of three in interleague play against the
Detroit Tigers. They activated first baseman
Ryan Zimmerman to serve as the
designated hitter in the first two games of the series, optioning backup outfielder
Michael A. Taylor to Double-A Harrisburg as a corresponding roster move. Former Tigers Sánchez and Scherzer earned the wins for the Nationals in the series, holding the home team to one run apiece in starts on June 28 and June 30, respectively. Scherzer struck out 14 over eight innings in his start to secure the series win, after the loss on June 29, in which Voth struggled
en route to a fifth-inning hook and then Rainey and left-handed reliever
Tony Sipp combined to lose the late lead. Having gone 18–8 in June, their first winning month since
September 2018 and their best record since
May 2018, Washington finished the month with a 42–41 record, good for third place in the National League East. Scherzer and Rendon were named to the
All-Star Game roster for the
National League, although both declined to participate, citing minor injuries.
July After posting their best monthly record in more than a year in June, the Nationals jumped out to a 5–1 record for July heading into the
All-Star Break with a three-game sweep of the division-rival
Miami Marlins and two out of three versus the
Kansas City Royals in interleague play. In the ninth inning of the dramatic game, shortstop
Trea Turner cracked a double into the gap to score catcher
Yan Gomes all the way from first base, walking off the visitors. Starter
Max Scherzer was placed on the paternity leave the next day for the birth of his second child, daughter Kacey, and the Nationals recalled infielder
Adrián Sánchez from the Double-A
Harrisburg Senators. With dominant pitching performances from
Stephen Strasburg on July 3, who threw his first
immaculate inning and the fourth in Nationals history, and former Marlin
Aníbal Sánchez in the special
Independence Day matinee on July 4, the Nationals completed the sweep of the Marlins On July 6, the Nationals celebrated the 50th anniversary of the franchise by honoring the
1969 Montreal Expos. They wore similar uniforms to the 1969 Expos and dressed up the scoreboard to look like the original scoreboard at
Jarry Park Stadium. Other changes including offering food traditional to Montreal, doing announcements on the scoreboard and in the stadium in English and French as well as a bilingual version of the Canadian anthem and an instrumental guitar version of "The Star-Spangled Banner", showing Expos highlights on the TVs in the concourse, putting an Expos cap on the bullpen cart, and dressing up the mascots in Expos uniforms.
Vladimir Guerrero threw out the first pitch to Nationals manager
Dave Martinez, and a handful of players who played for the Expos were honored at a pregame ceremony. The event was also presided over by Canada's deputy ambassador to the United States,
Kirsten Hillman. Not missing a start despite his daughter's birth, Scherzer returned to dominate the Royals on July 6, leading a shutout of the visitors while also singling and stealing a base in the fourth inning. Voth was optioned to Double-A Harrisburg to clear a roster spot for Scherzer. On July 7, it was Corbin's turn to dominate for the Nationals, although he ended up with a no-decision after seven scoreless innings when relievers
Fernando Rodney and
Sean Doolittle combined to blow the lead in the eighth inning. Rodney allowed a run before being relieved, and Royals left fielder
Alex Gordon rifled Doolittle's first pitch out to the scoreboard in center-right field for an RBI double. The Nationals rallied in the bottom of the eighth inning, however, as right fielder
Adam Eaton slid under the tag to take the lead on a double by All-Star third baseman
Anthony Rendon off Royals reliever
Jake Diekman. Eaton was greeted at the plate by Scherzer, who admitted after the game he hadn't been paying close attention to the score and thought it was a walk-off win in the ninth inning. Pinch-hitter
Howie Kendrick, inserted into the game for a favorable matchup against the left-hander Diekman, plated two more runs with a double of his own before Doolittle pitched a scoreless ninth inning to secure the series win and send the Nationals victorious into the break. Venters was placed on the injured list during the break with left shoulder inflammation, and the Nationals recalled right-hander
Kyle McGowin from Double-A Harrisburg. On July 13, Scherzer was placed on the injured list with a back injury that was ultimately diagnosed as inflammation in the bursa sac under his right shoulder blade. The Nationals recalled catcher and first baseman
Spencer Kieboom from Double-A Harrisburg to fill his roster spot temporarily, although Kieboom did not see game action before being optioned back to the minor leagues on July 16. In the meantime, the Nationals opened a four-game series with the division-rival
Philadelphia Phillies by shutting them out 4–0 behind a Strasburg gem on July 12, then rallied in the ninth inning on July 13 as left fielder
Juan Soto slugged a go-ahead two-run home run off Phillies closer
Héctor Neris, leading the Nationals to a 4–3 win. It was the Washington bullpen that sprung a leak in the series finale July 14, however, as Philadelphia third baseman
Maikel Franco capped an impressive series by homering off Nationals left-hander
Matt Grace for a walk-off win in the bottom of the ninth. The Nationals continued their East Coast roadtrip by visiting the
Baltimore Orioles for their annual interleague "Battle of the Beltways" rivalry. Voth, recalled to pitch in place of Scherzer, While
Erick Fedde, called up for a spot start the following day (Adrián Sánchez was optioned in a corresponding move), matched Voth's effort, the Nationals' offense was flat and the bullpen collapsed to allow eight runs after Fedde left the game, handing Baltimore a 9–2 win and series split.
Wander Suero, who took the loss in relief, admitted after the game that he had received bad news of a personal nature before the game, hadn't told his coaches, and struggled to focus on his pitching. As they had in Philadelphia, the Nationals opened a four-game set against the division-leading
Atlanta Braves with a big win behind Strasburg, running up the score on starter
Kyle Wright and reliever
Touki Toussaint. Strasburg led off the third inning with a single up the middle off Wright, and after the Nationals batted around, he came to bat again versus Toussaint with two runners on base. Strasburg unloaded on a fastball for a 420-foot home run to left field, his longest career home run and his first since the
2017 season. In his third at-bat of the game, he added a two-run single, giving him five RBIs in the game. While the Braves pitched more effectively on July 19, with
Julio Teherán shutting the Nationals out through five innings before being chased in the sixth inning, the Nationals rallied in the ninth inning. Down to their final out, the Nationals sent rookie center fielder
Víctor Robles to the plate, and he hammered a two-run home run off Atlanta closer
Luke Jackson to tie the game. However, reluctant to use Doolittle, his closer, in a tied game on the road, Martinez opted to try to get a second inning out of Rodney after a scoreless eighth inning. Rodney loaded the bases on two walks and a single before surrendering a walk-off single to third baseman
Josh Donaldson, with Doolittle still warming in the bullpen. "Rodney is the eighth-inning guy and Doolittle is your closer," Martinez explained after the game. On July 20, however, Martinez went to Doolittle for a five-out save after getting two scoreless innings from Suero and an out in the eighth inning from Rodney. Doolittle notched the save without drama, getting an extra insurance run from right fielder
Adam Eaton in the top of the ninth inning as the Nationals won 5–3. Forced to turn to another spot starter with Scherzer still recuperating and Voth landing on the injured list with a shoulder injury of his own, the Nationals recalled
Joe Ross from Triple-A Fresno for his first start of the season on July 21. With the Nationals effectively stymied by Braves starter
Kevin Gausman, Ross gave up three runs in innings and took the loss, the first for a Nationals starter in more than a month. The first baseman Zimmerman aggravated the
plantar fasciitis in his right foot during the game and landed on the injured list the next day, with the Nationals also optioning McGowin to Double-A Harrisburg after he allowed two runs in an inning of work, recalling outfielder
Andrew Stevenson from Triple-A Fresno, and selecting the contract of veteran pitcher
Michael Blazek from Fresno's bullpen. The Nationals ended up playing four games in three days against the
Colorado Rockies after the commissioner's office elected to postpone the scheduled July 22 series opener due to rain in the forecast at Nationals Park. Behind a dominant start by Strasburg and Turner's second career
cycle the Nationals shellacked Colorado 11–1 in the series opener on July 23. The Nationals also swept the impromptu doubleheader on July 24, with Doolittle recording the save in both of the low-scoring contests. Catcher
Raudy Read was recalled in place of Fedde, who started the matinee game and was optioned before the evening game, and he flew out as a pinch-hitter in his first major league appearance since
September 2017. With Read returning to Triple-A Fresno, Scherzer was activated for the series finale on July 25. He gave up three runs in five hits, admitting after the game that he still didn't feel like he was at his best. The Nationals rallied more than once in the game, with Rendon clocking a three-run home run to pick up the Nationals' ailing ace, then pinch-hitter
Gerardo Parra hitting a clutch two-run double after Grace gave up another pair of runs. Martinez decided to turn to Rodney for the save after the 42-year-old veteran had pitched in both ends of the July 24 doubleheader. However, Rodney almost immediately blew the save by giving up a solo home run to former National
Ian Desmond to start the top of the ninth inning, then took the loss after another former National,
Daniel Murphy, legged out a potential inning-ending double play for an RBI infield single. Starting July 26, the Nationals hosted another opponent from the
National League West Division, the league-leading
Los Angeles Dodgers. Despite seven brilliant innings from Aníbal Sánchez, who gave up a run in the first inning before working out of a bases-loaded jam
en route to retiring 20 straight Dodgers, the Nationals offense could only muster one run off Los Angeles ace
Hyun-Jin Ryu, leaving the game in the hands of both teams' bullpens. With two outs in the eighth inning, Martinez turned to veteran left-hander
Tony Sipp to face two left-handed batters. After Sipp allowed both batters to reach base, Martinez pulled him in favor of
Kyle Barraclough, for whom the Nationals had swapped out Stevenson before the game to restock their depleted bullpen. Barraclough gave up a three-run home run to
Justin Turner, and the Dodgers cruised to victory. Barraclough was optioned back to Double-A Harrisburg the next day, as the Nationals recalled Adrián Sánchez. In the July 27 contest, trying to even the series against former
Cy Young Award-winning southpaw
Clayton Kershaw, Martinez deployed Grace as a two-inning "opener" against the Dodgers' lefty-heavy lineup before bringing in the day's presumptive starting pitcher, Ross, who was known to struggle against left-handed hitters. While Grace started the game with two perfect innings, Ross was hammered over his innings of work, giving up seven runs. The Dodgers tacked on two more runs against reliever
Javy Guerra to win 9–3. The Nationals managed to salvage the series as Strasburg allowed just one run over seven innings, matching that by driving in a run of his own, in the July 28 finale. Despite losing both Eaton and Martinez, who were ejected by home plate umpire
Jeremie Rehak in the first inning after taking issue with Rehak's strike zone, as well as starting first baseman
Matt Adams, who exited the game after fouling a ball off his foot and later running into an out at home, the Nationals woke up the bats starting in the fifth inning, and Strasburg outdueled Dodgers right-hander
Walker Buehler, who gave up key hits to former teammate
Brian Dozier as well as Robles and Kendrick, who had been slated for days off but entered as replacements for Eaton and Adams respectively. The Nationals won 11–4, with Blazek coughing up a three-run home run to Dodgers shortstop
Corey Seager before finishing out the game in the ninth inning. With Scherzer continuing to experience discomfort because of a balky back and right shoulder, following the series, the Nationals placed their ace back on the injured list with a rhomboid strain and recalled Fedde from Double-A Harrisburg to rejoin the rotation. The Nationals opened another series against the division-leading Braves on July 29 with a 6–3 win behind Corbin and Rendon, who smashed a go-ahead grand slam off Atlanta reliever
Chad Sobotka in the sixth inning. However, they dropped the last two games of the series and homestand. Atlanta jumped all over Fedde in his start on July 30, scoring nine runs off him and chasing him from the game in the fourth inning. While the Nationals rallied to bring the final score within three, the Braves held on for the win to even the series. They captured the finale in similar fashion, getting to Aníbal Sánchez early and then hammering the final nail into the coffin off Washington's league-worst bullpen. The Nationals were able to chip away at the lead but made little of two prime scoring opportunities, as third base coach
Bob Henley sent the sluggish Kendrick home from first in the sixth inning on a Turner double only for him to be out at the plate by several feet, then Parra grounded into a bases-loaded, no-outs double play in the ninth inning that tied the game against Jackson but failed to push across the winning run from scoring position. In the tenth inning, Doolittle gave up a solo home run to Donaldson for the game's final score. With the loss, the Nationals fell seven games behind the Braves, in second place in the National League East but just half a game ahead of the third-place Phillies. All told, they went 15–10 in July, putting together two winning months for the first time since
August–
September 2017, and finished the month with a 57–51 record for the season. Strasburg was named National League Pitcher of the Month with a 1.14 ERA and a .571 slugging percentage in July. July 31 was also the MLB trade deadline. For the first time, the deadline applied to both waiver and non-waiver trades. Although the Nationals were publicly connected to top relievers like
Shane Greene of the
Detroit Tigers,
Kirby Yates of the
San Diego Padres, and
Sam Dyson and
Will Smith of the
San Francisco Giants, and closers
Roenis Elías and
Hunter Strickland of the
Seattle Mariners, all of whom were acquired for minor league pitching prospects. Washington general manager
Mike Rizzo acknowledged that he was constrained by the team's commitment not to exceed the competitive balance threshold, as it had in
2017 and
2018, and he noted that Hudson, Elías, and Strickland were added without the Nationals having to give up any of their top prospects, with the highest-ranked minor league player they traded being Triple-A left-handed reliever
Taylor Guilbeau as part of Seattle's return. Rizzo did not consummate any other trades at the deadline, sticking with the Nationals' slate of starting pitchers despite Scherzer, Voth, and
Jeremy Hellickson's nagging injuries and not making any changes to their group of position players.
August Prior to opening a series at
Chase Field with the
Arizona Diamondbacks, the Nationals added newly acquired relievers
Roenis Elías,
Daniel Hudson, and
Hunter Strickland to the active roster. Journeyman relievers
Michael Blazek,
Javy Guerra, and
Tony Sipp were designated for assignment to clear roster space for Elías, Hudson, and Strickland. Struggling right-hander
Joe Ross turned in his best outing of the season to date on August 2 and was rewarded with his first win of 2019, leading the visitors to a 3–0 shutout win over Arizona and allowing just one hit, an infield single by Diamondbacks starting pitcher
Alex Young, despite walking five batters. However, after relieving Ross, inducing a flyout, and then striking out Diamondbacks right fielder
Adam Jones, Elías was called upon to bat for himself in the seventh inning, with the Nationals carrying a short bench. Although manager
Dave Martinez claimed later that he told Elías not to swing the bat, Elías hit a groundball to second base and pulled up lame at first base with what was eventually diagnosed as a hamstring strain. The next day, the Diamondbacks evened the series, scoring nine runs off Nationals co-ace
Stephen Strasburg, the reigning National League Pitcher of the Month. With the Nationals trailing by nine runs in the bottom of the eighth inning, Martinez called on outfielder
Gerardo Parra to make his major league debut as a relief pitcher. Despite hitting on the stadium radar gun, Parra was unable to find the strikezone, walking in Diamondbacks reliever
Zack Godley before
Brian Dozier, normally the Nationals' second baseman, relieved him. Dozier allowed all three inherited runners to score and gave up a three-run home run to former
Minnesota Twins teammate
Eduardo Escobar before retiring the side. The Diamondbacks won 18–7 despite Godley allowing a three-run homer by Nationals third baseman
Anthony Rendon in the ninth inning. Former Diamondback
Patrick Corbin fared little better than Strasburg in his first Chase Field appearance in a new uniform, giving up five earned runs and being chased from the game in the sixth inning, although it was reliever
Wander Suero who took the loss, allowing a two-out, two-run double to Jones to break the deadlock in the seventh inning. The Nationals departed Arizona having lost their third straight series, as well as having lost Elías and infielder
Howie Kendrick to hamstring injuries. The team added Guerra, a
Phoenix resident who had yet to report to the Triple-A
Fresno Grizzlies after being outrighted, back to the roster and also recalled outfielder
Andrew Stevenson to take Kendrick's place on the bench. The Nationals continued their swing through the
National League West Division by sweeping a three-game series against the
San Francisco Giants at
Oracle Park. Right-hander
Erick Fedde, following Ross' example, rebounded from a dreadful start against the
Atlanta Braves the week prior to lead the Nationals in a 4–0 win over the Giants on August 5, as the visitors knocked out San Francisco starter
Jeff Samardzija early and kept the pressure on to shut out the Giants. Before the second game of the series, the Nationals brought in some reinforcements, optioning utilityman
Adrián Sánchez to the Double-A
Harrisburg Senators and reuniting with veteran infielder
Asdrúbal Cabrera, who played for the
2014 Washington Nationals and had recently been released by the
Texas Rangers, to bolster the bench. Reliever
Kyle Barraclough, who was assigned to the Senators after struggling to a 6.66 ERA with the Nationals, was designated for assignment. While Cabrera wasn't a factor in the win, grounding into a double play in his only plate appearance of the game, the Nationals downed the Giants 5–3 behind starting pitcher
Aníbal Sánchez and a three-hit night for catcher
Kurt Suzuki, who drove in Washington's first three runs of the game on a first-inning single and a third-inning home run deep to left. Ross continued his return to form in the series finale, shutting out the Giants through six innings. Parra, whom the Giants had cut loose from a major league deal earlier in the season, hit a huge three-run home run to power Washington's offense in the 4–1 win. Heading to
Citi Field for their first series against the division-rival
New York Mets since the Mets' four-game sweep in late May, the Nationals picked up right where they left off, dropping the first two of three games thanks to bullpen blowups much like the ones that doomed them in their last go-round in
Queens. On August 9, a resurgent Strasburg set a new franchise high in strikeouts but ended up with a no-decision after closer
Sean Doolittle blew a three-run lead on a
Todd Frazier home run in the ninth inning, then right fielder
Adam Eaton missed a
Michael Conforto line drive that fell in for a walk-off single. Despite 20-year-old left fielder
Juan Soto delivering the fourth multi-homer game of his young career, homering twice for the first time in the 2019 season, and Corbin going toe-to-toe with Mets starter
Noah Syndergaard, on August 10, it was veteran setup man
Fernando Rodney's time to blow the save, giving up a home run to pinch-hitter
Luis Guillorme—the first of his career—in the eighth inning to tie the game. Rodney shouldered the loss as he combined with the freshly acquired Hudson to give the Mets the lead, as Hudson surrendered a sacrifice fly by
J. D. Davis that brought home an inherited runner. With second place in the division, first place in the wild card standings, and an eight-game winning streak for New York on the line, the Nationals salvaged the series with a 7–4 victory on August 11, with the big blows being delivered against the Mets bullpen by the second baseman Cabrera, who doubled in two runs against his former team, and center fielder
Victor Robles, who came in as a defensive substitute and hammered a two-run home run off
Edwin Díaz. Doolittle closed out the game for his first save of the season at Citi Field. Robles came into the game as a replacement for Soto, who injured his ankle rounding third base on Cabrera's go-ahead double. To the Nationals' relief, the injury was diagnosed after the game as a mild ankle sprain, keeping Soto off the injured list. In other positive injury news, the Nationals activated Kendrick the next day, optioning Stevenson back to Double-A Harrisburg. Even with Soto sitting out as a precaution, the Nationals offense had its way with
Anthony DeSclafani and the
Cincinnati Reds as they opened a series at
Nationals Park on August 12. DeSclafani was chased from the game after four innings as the Nationals bashed him for six runs on their way to a 7–6 win. Starting for Washington, Fedde gave up a home run to
Jesse Winker to lead off the game, but he settled in after Robles threw out
Joey Votto at home as he tried to score on a base hit by
Josh VanMeter. The throw was clocked at on a line to catcher
Kurt Suzuki. While Doolittle recorded the save, the Reds scored two off the struggling Nationals closer, on a home run by
Phillip Ervin and a double by Votto, and put the go-ahead runner on base before VanMeter popped out to end it. While Martinez expressed confidence in Doolittle after the game, Doolittle admitted to reporters that he was fatigued. Ross extended his scoreless streak to 17 innings, a season high for a Nationals pitcher, before allowing the Reds' only run of the night in the seventh inning. Inserted to work out of an eighth-inning jam, Hudson ended up collecting a four-out save, his first save as a National since being acquired from the
Toronto Blue Jays. The next afternoon, it was Guerra who notched his first Nationals save, also since coming from the Blue Jays earlier in the season. However, Guerra's save came under very different circumstances, as he gave up three runs—enough to blow a conventional one-inning save opportunity—but pitched the last three innings of a game the Nationals won by ten runs. With a ten-run fifth inning, the first inning in Nationals team history in which every member of the starting lineup scored at least one run, the Nationals stunned Reds ace
Trevor Bauer, who was charged with a career-high nine earned runs, one of which was driven in by Strasburg. Coming off their three-game sweep of the Reds, the Nationals nearly matched the feat against the
Milwaukee Brewers. After winning a 2–1 series opener behind Corbin on August 16, the Nationals rallied from a five-run deficit and led by three heading into the ninth inning in the second game of the series. However, Doolittle surrendered a leadoff home run to defending National League MVP
Christian Yelich, followed by a two-run homer by Brewers third baseman
Mike Moustakas and a solo home run by
Ryan Braun. Robles, who also threw out two baserunners at second base during the fourteen-inning affair, was twice responsible for a blown Milwaukee save, singling in a run off Brewers closer
Josh Hader to tie the game in the bottom of the ninth before Hader struck out the side with the bases loaded to send the game into extra innings, then later hitting a sacrifice fly off
Junior Guerra in the bottom of the thirteenth after the Brewers scored in the top of the inning. Javy Guerra allowed a two-run home run to
Eric Thames in the top of the fourteenth inning, and while the Nationals got one back as Eaton scored on an errant throw by second baseman
Keston Hiura in the bottom of the fourteenth, Junior Guerra was able to close out the 15–14 Brewers win by striking out Ross, who was inserted to pinch-hit for Javy Guerra. The Nationals placed Doolittle on the injured list with right knee tendinitis on August 18 and recalled right-hander
Kyle McGowin from Double-A Harrisburg. including two by Soto in his second two-homer game of the season. Fedde gave up four runs of his own through five innings but was credited with the win. McGowin gave up four more runs in the ninth inning before sealing the win. Dozier also had a two-homer game for the Nationals, hitting the Nationals' final home run of the day off
Hernán Pérez, normally a position player, whom Milwaukee manager
Craig Counsell inserted to pitch the eighth inning. Nationals hitting remained hot as the team went to
PNC Park to start a four-game series against the
Pittsburgh Pirates. Although they lost Dozier to the three-day paternity list as he welcomed a new child, with Adrián Sánchez recalled to take his place, Washington shut out Pittsburgh 13–0 on August 19. Ross exited in the fourth inning after being struck by a comebacker on the leg. Guerra pitched perfect innings to pick up the win in relief. Although Strasburg supplied seven scoreless innings on August 20, the Pirates shocked the Nationals with a four-run eighth inning against Suero and Hudson, winning 4–1. Corbin kept the Nationals' strong starting pitching going as he led an 11–1 win on August 21 with eight scoreless innings. With ace
Max Scherzer returning from a shoulder injury, Dozier coming back from paternity leave, and McGowin and Adrián Sánchez optioned in a corresponding move, Washington won the series, again holding the Pirates to one run, with a 7–1 win on August 22. Scherzer only pitched four innings, making him ineligible for the win, saying later that while he felt well enough to play, he was "not out of the woods yet" following the injury. The Midwest roadtrip continued at
Wrigley Field, where the Nationals swept the
Chicago Cubs over three games. Despite playing in a day game after a night game and travel, the Nationals came out swinging, beating the Cubs 9–3 on August 23 behind Aníbal Sánchez, who carried a complete-game shutout bid into the ninth inning for his longest outing of the year. Like Scherzer two days earlier, Ross was shakier than usual in his first game after his leg injury on August 24, but the Nationals won as Suero stranded two runners inherited from Ross in the fifth inning and the bullpen shut Chicago out the rest of the way. Strasburg was in line for the win after two-out hits by Soto and Cabrera put the Nationals up by three runs in the seventh inning in the series finale, but the bullpen couldn't hold the lead, with the Cubs tying the game on home runs off Strickland and Rodney. Washington rallied against
Tyler Chatwood in the top of the eleventh inning, and Hudson closed out the win, pitching two perfect innings. Strickland left the team immediately after the Cubs series for the birth of his second daughter, Brylee Drew, and was replaced temporarily by catcher
Spencer Kieboom, whom the Nationals recalled from Double-A Harrisburg while Strickland was on the paternity list. Despite coming in hot as they returned home to face the
Baltimore Orioles, one of the worst-performing teams in the
American League, in interleague play, the Nationals were stunned in a shutout on August 27. Corbin gave up the only two runs of the game in the first inning, and the Washington offense was unable to rally against Orioles starter
Aaron Brooks or their worst-in-the-majors bullpen. Rallying from the unexpected loss, the Nationals defeated the Orioles for a series split on August 28. Scherzer again struggled as his pitch count climbed and didn't make it out of the fifth inning, although he passed the 200-strikeout threshold for the season in the win. The Nationals offense powered up early, though, scoring five runs off of Baltimore starter
Asher Wojciechowski in the first inning and tacking on three more against
Richard Bleier in the fifth, enough to win 8–4. Although shortstop
Trea Turner reached base on an error during the game, his career-best on-base streak officially ended at 33 games. Eaton exited the game after being hit near his right knee by a Wojciechowski fastball, prompting Martinez to hold him out of the lineup for the next series against the
Miami Marlins. Kieboom was optioned after the two-game series without having made an appearance. the Nationals rolled over the Marlins in the three-game set, finishing August on a three-game winning streak after splitting with the Orioles and taking the first two games against their Miami division rivals. Although the bullpen couldn't hold a win for Aníbal Sánchez in the series opener on August 30—Strickland loaded the bases and gave up a run before recording an out in the seventh inning, and both Elías and Hudson were tagged with blown saves—the Nationals rallied after a two-run
Starlin Castro home run briefly put Miami on top in the ninth inning. Rendon, who took the lead for the National League batting title with three hits in the contest, singled home Kendrick and Turner to walk off the Marlins; he was showered with chants of "
M-V-P" from the home crowd as the team celebrated on the field. The Nationals shut out the Marlins the next day behind eight strong innings from Strasburg, who didn't allow a baserunner after the first inning and struck out 14 Marlins to pull into the lead for strikeouts in the National League. The game also featured back-to-back home runs by Rendon and Soto, who both reached 30 home runs for the season with their solo shots to left. August saw the Nationals post their best win–loss record of the season to date, at 19–7. They finished the month with a 76–58 record, good for first place in the National League Wild Card race and second in the National League East Division, 5.5 games back of the Atlanta Braves.
September With rosters expanding, the Nationals activated a slew of veterans from the injured list: first baseman
Ryan Zimmerman and pitchers
Sean Doolittle,
Jeremy Hellickson, and
Austin Voth, all of whom had completed rehab assignments in the minor leagues the previous month. The team also recalled catcher
Raudy Read from the Triple-A
Fresno Grizzlies, along with infielder
Adrián Sánchez and outfielder
Andrew Stevenson from the Double-A
Harrisburg Senators, giving them an active roster of 32. On September 1, the Nationals completed their three-game sweep of the division-rival
Miami Marlins, with Zimmerman contributing a two-run home run in the win behind left-hander
Patrick Corbin. Corbin became the third Nationals starting pitcher, behind
Stephen Strasburg and
Max Scherzer, to pass the 200-strikeout threshold for the season. The Nationals endured a difficult stretch against two more division rivals, the
New York Mets and the
Atlanta Braves.
Joe Ross started the series opener against New York on September 2, but still showing signs of discomfort after exiting early in his previous start with an injury, Ross allowed seven runs and didn't make it out of the fourth inning.
Noah Syndergaard kept the Nationals off the board for seven innings, and despite a three-run home run in the ninth inning by former Met
Asdrúbal Cabrera, the Mets won easily. The second game in the series was trending the same way, especially after left-handed reliever
Roenis Elías gave up two home runs to left-handed batters, then after shortstop
Trea Turner appeared to forget the number of outs, throwing to first base instead of second on a routine double play ball with one out in the top of the ninth inning, and reliever
Daniel Hudson proceeded to give up four more runs as the inning continued. But with the Mets leading 10-4, the Nationals put together a rally against Mets relievers
Paul Sewald,
Luis Avilán, and
Edwin Díaz in the bottom of the ninth. Center fielder
Víctor Robles singled and then scored on a Turner double to the wall. Cabrera,
Anthony Rendon, and
Juan Soto singled. Zimmerman, pinch-hitting against Díaz, doubled over the head of right fielder
Michael Conforto to make the score 10-8 and bring up catcher
Kurt Suzuki as the potential winning run. Suzuki worked the count full against Díaz and then unloaded on a fastball, pulling it into deep left field for a walk-off three-run home run. It was the largest ninth-inning comeback by any team in the
2019 Major League Baseball season. After the big comeback win, however, the Nationals struggled. On September 4, they selected the contract of right-handed reliever
Aaron Barrett—a former major league staple with the Nationals in the
2014 and
2015 seasons before his career was derailed by injury, who had spent the season as the closer for Double-A Harrisburg. But that day, they dropped the rubber game in the three-game series to New York. Starter
Aníbal Sánchez was dealt his first loss in nearly four months, giving up seven runs in five innings. The Nationals lost 12 of 19 head-to head matchups with the Mets in 2019, by far their worst record against any team. The loss stretched into a losing streak in
Atlanta, as
Max Fried,
Dallas Keuchel, and
Julio Teherán smothered the Nationals' offense over three consecutive starts and Washington was unable to come all the way back against the Braves bullpen. Ross was scratched from his scheduled start opposite Teherán with a forearm strain, and Voth was tabbed to fill in. Barrett pitched for the first time in a major league game since August 5, 2015, as he provided a scoreless inning of relief with one walk and one strikeout behind Voth on September 7. Later that game, Soto achieved his first 100-RBI season as he doubled home a pair of runs in the eighth inning. With Suzuki experiencing pain in his throwing arm, the Nationals purchased the contract of Harrisburg catcher
Tres Barrera on September 8, bringing him up to the major leagues for the first time. Minor league catcher
Spencer Kieboom was placed on the 60-day injured list to clear a spot for Barrera on the team roster. The Nationals rebounded behind Scherzer in the series finale that day, scoring nine times to beat the Braves and salvage the series. Scherzer singled, stole a base, and scored one of the Nationals' runs in the critical seventh inning. At
Target Field for a three-game interleague series against the
Minnesota Twins, the Nationals' offense went silent as
José Berríos led the Twins to a shutout win on September 10. Aníbal Sánchez took a no-hit bid into the fifth inning but was collared with the loss after Twins catcher
Mitch Garver slugged a two-run home run against him. However, the visitors rebounded to take the second and third games of the set. On September 11, the Nationals jumped all over Twins starter
Martín Pérez, scoring five runs over the first three innings, including two on a Zimmerman home run,
en route to a 6–2 victory. In the series finale on September 12, the Twins'
Kyle Gibson made his first start since coming off the injured list and was hit hard, giving up six runs before being hooked in the fifth inning. Inserted to protect a huge lead in the eighth inning, in just his second game with the Nationals since his return, Barrett struggled badly, giving up a two-run home run to
Jonathan Schoop and exiting with just one out and two runners on base. Veteran reliever
Fernando Rodney entered and, after walking the bases loaded, worked out of the jam with no further damage. The Nationals won 12–6, getting extra insurance in the ninth on a
Yan Gomes two-run homer. Returning to Nationals Park for a short homestand against the Braves on September 13, the Nationals were again shut out for the second straight series opener, as Soroka avenged his previous loss and the Braves pinned the loss on Scherzer in the rematch. Scherzer wasn't as sharp as he was six days earlier, giving up three runs in five innings of work. Washington's offense fared little better the next day against
Mike Foltynewicz, who gave up an early run on a Rendon double but stifled the Nationals the rest of the way. Voth pitched effectively for five innings, holding the one-run lead, but he bequeathed a runner to
Wander Suero in the sixth inning, and after Atlanta cashed in that run on back-to-back singles off Suero, the bullpen fully collapsed in the seventh inning. Rodney came on after Suero issued two walks, and as
Charlie Culberson squared to bunt, Rodney's first pitch—a two-seam fastball—ran in on the right-handed batter and struck him just below the eye, causing multiple fractures to his cheekbone. Culberson managed to flash a thumbs-up to the crowd as he was carted off the field. Atlanta manager
Brian Snitker began shouting and was ejected from the game after the umpires ruled that the play was not a hit-by-pitch but a strike, because Culberson had squared around to bunt and hadn't pulled back his bat at the time he was hit by Rodney's fastball. While that at-bat concluded, with
Adam Duvall standing in for Culberson as a pinch-hitter, with a strikeout, Rodney gave up four runs thereafter in the inning, two of them charged to Suero. The Braves went on to win 10–1, padding their lead against long reliever
Erick Fedde in the later innings. one day before his 25th birthday. The Nationals rebounded to salvage the series finale on September 15, benefiting from a pristine start by Aníbal Sánchez and scoreless relief innings by
Hunter Strickland and Doolittle, as well as an offensive resurgence that sent Fried to a third-inning exit and a loss. First baseman
Howie Kendrick contributed with a standout effort, including a two-run single in the third inning and a home run in the fifth inning. Inconsistency on offense continued to plague the Nationals as they began their final roadtrip of the regular season. As the wild card race in the
National League continued to tighten, the Nationals dropped two of three against the
St. Louis Cardinals. Key cogs in the previous game, Doolittle and Strickland combined to give up the go-ahead runs in a 4–2 loss on September 16, with a runner Doolittle bequeathed to Strickland scoring on a ground-rule double by
Marcell Ozuna. Washington rebounded with a win on September 17 behind Corbin, who avenged himself against St. Louis after a rocky start early in the season, and Kendrick, who finished a double shy of the cycle. Hudson locked down a two-inning save. The bats again went quiet, though, as veteran starter
Adam Wainwright led the Cardinals to a series win on September 18, outdueling Scherzer, who gave up five runs in the loss—the last two on a pinch-hit home run by former Nationals batterymate
Matt Wieters. The Nationals headed for another series against the Marlins in
Miami up 1½ games over the
Chicago Cubs and
Milwaukee Brewers for the first wild card. With Martinez returning to the Nationals dugout, Washington won the first two games, overcoming a rough start by Sánchez and a shaky relief outing by Suero to win 6–4 on September 20 and then putting up a huge top of the tenth inning to win an extra-innings contest, 10–4, on September 21. In the latter game, Rodney blew a four-run lead in the eighth inning, with a bases-clearing
Austin Dean double tying the game, before Suero posted a scoreless ninth inning and the Nationals reeled off six runs, capped by a bases-clearing double of their own—in Suzuki's first plate appearance since suffering an arm injury two weeks prior—to win in the tenth. However, the visitors were unable to make it a sweep as they couldn't rally after yet another bullpen collapse, in which Strickland, Suero, and
Tanner Rainey combined to turn in a two-run lead into a two-run deficit in the seventh inning, in the series finale on September 22. With a disappointing three weeks just as the Brewers were enjoying a winning run, as they began their last homestand of the year, the Nationals had whiled away an advantage that once stood at 7½ games into a virtual tie with Milwaukee atop the wild card race. But the Nationals were done losing in September. They opened an unusual five-game homestand with the division-rival
Philadelphia Phillies with a 7–2 rout behind Corbin on September 23, then swept both ends of a split doubleheader on September 24, with Hudson saving both contests. By winning the first game, in which Ross made his first start since his seven-run disaster against the Mets on September 2, the Nationals eliminated the Phillies from playoff contention. That evening, the Nationals were trailing by two runs in the sixth inning before Turner came up to bat with the bases loaded against Phillies reliever
Jared Hughes. Turner hit a grand slam into the stands behind the visitors' bullpen in left field to put the Nationals on top. The bullpen held on for the 6–5 win, although Strickland allowed a solo home run to former National
Bryce Harper in a grudge matchup in the seventh inning. With their win in the nightcap, followed just minutes later by the Cubs' loss—shown on the Nationals Park jumbotron, with most of the home team lingering on the field to watch—the Nationals formally clinched a wild card, sending them back to the postseason for the first time since the
2017 season. Sánchez rebounded from his rocky previous start to lead the Nationals to a 5–2 win on September 25, with September-callup infielder
Wilmer Difo singling in the winning run in the seventh inning in his first start since returning to the major leagues. The Nationals sealed the sweep with a 6–3 win on September 26, with Strasburg earning the win in his last start of the regular season. It was the Nationals' first sweep of a five-game series in franchise history. The
Cleveland Indians, who came to Washington to end the season with three games of interleague competition, ran into the Nationals buzzsaw as they were swept, with Nationals outfielder
Gerardo Parra emerging from a lengthy slump to particularly bedevil Cleveland as he tallied 11 RBIs in the series. In his final start of the season on September 27, Voth got the win with six strong innings against the Indians. The Nationals scored five runs in the sixth inning to salt the game away, with Cabrera pinch-hitting for Voth and driving in two with a double. By losing the game, the Indians were eliminated from playoff contention for the first time since the
2015 season. Washington quickly jumped out ahead on September 28 with a nine-run second inning, punctuated by a Parra grand slam to straightaway center. The big inning gave the Nationals enough room to work around one of Corbin's worst starts of the year, as the southpaw was chased from the mound in the fifth inning after allowing six earned runs in his last start of the regular season. The Nationals won 10–7, ensuring home field advantage in the Wild Card Game. The Nationals went 17–11 in September to finish the 2019 regular season with a 93–69 record, four games behind the
National League East Division champion Atlanta Braves but with a wild card into the playoffs for the first time in franchise history. Rendon, the Nationals' starting third baseman, led the major leagues in
runs batted in with 126; Strasburg led the National League in wins with 18; and the rookie center fielder Robles led the major leagues in outs above average with 21, as determined by
Statcast.
Notable transactions • April 15: The Nationals signed left-handed relief pitcher
Dan Jennings to a minor-league contract. • April 26: The Nationals selected the contract of infielder
Carter Kieboom from the Triple-A
Fresno Grizzlies. • April 30: The Nationals selected the contract of left-handed relief pitcher
Dan Jennings from the Double-A
Harrisburg Senators and designated right-handed relief pitcher
Austin L. Adams for assignment. • May 2: The Nationals fired
pitching coach Derek Lilliquist and announced his replacement by Nationals minor-league pitching coordinator
Paul Menhart. • May 4: The Nationals traded relief pitcher
Austin L. Adams to the
Seattle Mariners for minor-league left-handed pitcher
Nick Wells and cash considerations. • May 9: The Nationals signed outfielder
Gerardo Parra to a one-year deal and designated pitcher
Jimmy Cordero for assignment. • May 11: The Nationals purchased the contract of right-handed pitcher
Michael Blazek from the
Lincoln Saltdogs and signed him to a minor-league contract. • May 15: The Nationals lost pitcher
Jimmy Cordero to the
Toronto Blue Jays on a waiver claim. • May 20: The Nationals acquired right-handed relief pitcher
Javy Guerra from the
Toronto Blue Jays on a waiver claim and designated left-handed relief pitcher
Dan Jennings for assignment. Jennings elected free agency. • May 21: The Nationals purchased the contract of right-handed pitcher
Kevin McGowan from the
Sugar Land Skeeters and signed him to a minor-league contract. • May 25: The Nationals purchased the contract of right-handed pitcher
George Kontos from the
Long Island Ducks and signed him to a minor-league contract. • May 29: The Nationals signed left-handed pitcher
Jonny Venters to a minor-league contract. • June 2: The Nationals signed pitcher
Fernando Rodney to a minor-league contract. • June 23: The Nationals released relief pitcher
Trevor Rosenthal. • June 25: The Nationals selected the contracts of relief pitchers
Fernando Rodney from the Triple-A
Fresno Grizzlies and
Jonny Venters from the Double-A
Harrisburg Senators. • July 12: The Nationals signed pitcher
Brad Boxberger to a minor-league contract. • July 22: The Nationals selected the contract of relief pitcher
Michael Blazek from the Triple-A
Fresno Grizzlies. • July 29: The Nationals designated right-handed relief pitcher
Justin Miller for assignment. He was outrighted to the Triple-A
Fresno Grizzlies. • July 31: The Nationals acquired left-handed relief pitcher
Roenis Elías and right-handed relief pitcher
Hunter Strickland from the
Seattle Mariners for minor league pitchers
Elvis Alvarado,
Aaron Fletcher, and
Taylor Guilbeau, acquired right-handed relief pitcher
Daniel Hudson from the
Toronto Blue Jays for minor league pitcher
Kyle Johnston, and designated right-handed relief pitchers
Michael Blazek and
Javy Guerra for assignment; Blazek and Guerra were outrighted to the Triple-A
Fresno Grizzlies. • August 2: The Nationals designated left-handed relief pitcher
Tony Sipp for assignment. He elected free agency. • August 4: The Nationals selected the contract of right-handed relief pitcher
Javy Guerra from the Triple-A
Fresno Grizzlies and purchased the contract of infielder
T. J. Rivera from the
Long Island Ducks and signed him to a minor-league contract. • August 6: The Nationals signed infielder
Asdrúbal Cabrera to a major-league contract and designated relief pitcher
Kyle Barraclough for assignment. • August 9: The Nationals lost relief pitcher
Kyle Barraclough to the
San Francisco Giants on a waiver claim. • August 13: The Nationals signed right-handed relief pitcher
Greg Holland to a minor-league contract. • August 21: The Nationals signed left-handed relief pitcher
Sam Freeman to a minor-league contract. • August 23: The Nationals signed right-handed relief pitcher
Jake Buchanan to a minor-league contract. • August 27: The Nationals signed right-handed relief pitcher
Josh Lucas to a minor-league contract. • August 30: The Nationals designated left-handed pitcher
Matt Grace for assignment; he was outrighted to the Triple-A
Fresno Grizzlies. • September 4: The Nationals selected the contract of right-handed relief pitcher
Aaron Barrett from the Double-A
Harrisburg Senators. • September 8: The Nationals selected the contract of catcher
Tres Barrera from the Double-A
Harrisburg Senators.
Major league debuts • March 30:
Jake Noll • April 26:
Carter Kieboom • May 26:
James Bourque • September 14:
Tres Barrera Broadcasters In mid-September 2018,
Ray Knight, who had served as the studio analyst on the
Mid-Atlantic Sports Network′s (MASN) pre-game and post-game
Nats Xtra shows on the
Mid-Atlantic Sports Network (MASN) since the
2007 season, was pulled from broadcasts after a verbal altercation with a staff member at MASN; he did not return to the air during the
2018 season, and his 2019 contract option was not picked up.
Culture and entertainment Cabbage Smash Kids On February 17, during spring training,
third base coach Bob Henley, in order to inspire Nationals players, gathered players who had reported to spring training – mostly pitchers at the time – and informed them that it was both
National Cabbage Day and
National Random Acts of Kindness Day. He produced a head of
cabbage and spoke in praise of it, noting that it is very versatile and always sticks together. as well as in the dugout, with Nationals players clapping their forefinger and thumb together as "baby shark" to celebrate a single, their hands together as "mommy shark" for a double, and their arms together as "daddy shark" for a triple or home run. On July 23, the Nationals added a jumbotron animation showing three Parra figures clapping along with the song to accentuate his walkup music. Local and national sports media picked up on Parra's contributions to clubhouse chemistry and a positive atmosphere at Nationals Park after the team's early-season struggles, with
NBC Sports describing "Baby Shark" as "a rallying call" for the Nationals.
"Calma" After clinching the Wild Card, during locker room celebrations, the Latino players started singing "
Calma" by
Pedro Capó. This was furthered by
Brian Dozier going shirtless during the celebrations, something he would continue to do after winning the Wild Card, NLDS, NLCS, and World Series. He would also end up doing it at the parade, yelling into the microphone, "My wife's gonna kill me."
Attendance The Nationals drew 2,259,781 fans at Nationals Park during 2019, their tenth-highest attendance since arriving in Washington in
2005 and lowest since
2011. It placed them twelfth in attendance for the season among the 15 National League teams, down from eighth in
2018. It was the second consecutive season in which their attendance had dropped from the previous year. Their highest attendance at a home game occurred on March 28, when they drew an
Opening Day crowd of 42,263 for a game against the
New York Mets, while the low mark was 14,628 for the first game of a split doubleheader against the
Colorado Rockies on July 24. Their average home attendance was 27,899 per game, tenth-highest since their arrival in Washington.
Game log ==Postseason==