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Washington Nationals news & notes: Nats fight but fall to Reds, 3-2; + bullpen news; plenty more… – Federal Baseball
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Notes and quotes from the Nationals’ loss to the Reds in the series opener in D.C.
Davey Martinez told reporters, before Jake Irvin’s third start back on the mound following the club’s decision to skip him for one turn in the rotation so the 26-year-old rookie could work on some things behind the scenes they had identified in his previous outings, he did think it had the desired effect.
“He worked on some things with [Nationals’ Pitching Coach Jim] Hickey, and Hickey got him straightened out a little bit, about not being so rotational on his hip, staying on his legs,” the manager said.
“It’s given him a little bit more power in his lower half, so and throwing better strikes, more consistent strikes. And hopefully he goes out there again today and repeats that and gives us a good outing.”
Irvin gave up three runs (2 ER) in his first two starts back in the starting mix, and his manager said he was pitching with a little more confidence since taking the turn off.
In his manager’s mind, it was about Irvin, “… accepting the fact that he’s still got some stuff to learn, working with Hickey, understanding what we’re trying to get out of him and what he needs to be, and him going out there and actually working on these things. He’s going to be — like I’ve said before — he’s going to be one of the guys that we count on in the future.
“He’s going to be a guy, a kid, that can give us 6-7 innings. He was hurt before, we got him back, and now he’s starting to really understand what he can do when he utilizes his body the way he’s supposed to, and throws strike one.
“When he gets ahead, he’s got a great changeup, good curveball, his fastball is electric, but he’s got to work ahead.”
Irvin gave up two runs early in his third start back, but settled in after that (1 ER on 3 hits over 5 IP) and helped the club win in Seattle.
“Irvin again, gave us a good outing. He stayed in there and gave us enough to keep us close,” Martinez said after the W.
Irvin tossed a scoreless, 15-pitch first in last night’s series opener against Cincinnati’s Reds in the nation’s capital, but gave up three hits and a run in the top of the second inning, with Jake Fraley singling with one out, taking third on Spencer Steer’s two-out hit, and scoring on Tyler Stephenson’s RBI line drive to right to make it 1-0 Reds.
Tyler Stephenson is hitting .400 over his last 7 games‼️@Tyler_Step22 pic.twitter.com/8KmhxXHzpY
With a runner on and one out in the top of the fourth inning, Joey Votto, who stepped in in the second with a runner on and one out and sent a center-cut 94+ MPH, first-pitch, four-seamer out to the warning track in right field the first time up, got another shot with one runner on base and hit another meaty fastball 394 ft to left-center for a two-run blast and a 3-0 Reds’ lead.
Your bus driver could never. @JoeyVotto pic.twitter.com/4x1ZQIt4t8
It was 3-1 in the fifth inning, when Irvin stranded a leadoff single in a 20-pitch frame which left him at 75 pitches total after five, and he came back out with a clean, 14-pitch, 1-2-3 top of the sixth, which ended his 12th outing of the year…
Jake Irvin’s Line: 6.0 IP, 6 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 1 BB, 3 Ks, 1 HR, 89 P, 56 S, 5/7 GO/FO.
Four starts back from the break, Martinez said, he’s been really happy with what he’s seen from Irvin.
“It’s been really good,” he said. “Not only the rest, but the work he put in-between that to get him squared away with his lower half. I thought Hickey did a great job with him and trying to get him to understand how that lower half works with him, and he’s been really, really good, really good. He’s throwing the ball on a downward plane, he’s throwing the ball north and south, but really, really well. And kudos to him for allowing Hickey to talk to him about it and work on it, and like I said, he’s pitching really well.”
• Lane Thomas had hits in 18 of his last 20 games after he lined a ground-rule double over Reds’ left fielder Will Benson’s head on a 2-1 fastball up from Luke Weaver which he hit into the visitor’s bullpen on a bounce, but he was stranded three outs later, with a fly to center by Luis García moving him to third, before Jeimer Candelario K’d chasing out a high fastball and Dominic Smith grounded out. 0 for 3 w/ a runner/RISP to start the game.
• As the Nationals noted in the pregame notes for the series opener with the Reds, All-Star snub (so far, he’ll probably end up going) Jeimer Candelario went into the first of four with Cincinnati in D.C. having, “… hit safely in nine straight games and in 14 of his last 16, going 21-for-61 (.344 AVG) with nine doubles, three home runs, nine RBI[s], five walks, three stolen bases, and 12 runs scored during the 16-game stretch.”
Candy Crew rise up !!!
@jeimer24C // #NATITUDE pic.twitter.com/9dAACo5ujV
With the Nationals trailing 3-0 in the fourth last night, Candelario stepped in and hit an 87 MPH, 2-1 curve low and away 414 ft to center field in Nationals Park, for his 2nd HR in two games, and his 12th overall this season, 3-1.
• Davey Martinez’s club was 0 for 6 with runners in scoring position on the night before the Nationals got a big one-out hit from Keibert Ruiz in the sixth, with the catcher driving Jeimer Candelario in with a line drive to right after the Nats’ third baseman singled, and moved up on a single by Dom Smith and a line drive to center by Joey Meneses (off reliever Ian Gibaut who replaced the Reds’ starter after Smith’s hit). Ruiz hit an 0-2 fastball to right field for his 31st RBI of the season, 3-2 Reds after six.
“We chased a little bit,” Martinez said after the one-run loss in the series opener. “We got some balls in the zone, we hit some balls hard, like I said, with runners in scoring position was the big thing. We just got to not chase, get the ball in the zone, and understand that we should be the ones in control up there with the bat, and stay in the zone. We stay in the zone, we hit the ball hard, so we just got to, like I said, come back tomorrow and if we get those opportunities again, just hit the ball, stay in the middle of the field and hit the ball hard.”
Jordan Weems struck out three around a two-out HBP in the seventh, and returned to the hill in the eighth and he struck out a fourth batter in the eighth before Davey Martinez got lefty Joe La Sorsa out of the ‘pen. La Sorsa hit a batter, but got the second and third outs.
Amos Willingham gave up a single and a walk in the top of the ninth, but stranded both of the runners he had reach base to keep it a one-run game.
Members of the B-pen kept it a one-run game through eight and a half, but the offense did not come through in big spots, finishing the night 1 for 9 with six left on base.
“I talk about it all the time,” Davey Martinez said after the game, “… driving in that run from third with less than two outs, we got to find a way to do that. It’s a different ballgame if we do that, but I could talk about Jake, how well he did today, and then La Sorsa, Weems, and Willingham, all of them came in and did their jobs. So, we got to come back tomorrow and try to score some runs.”
Thaddeus Ward, 26, and a Rule 5 pick this past winter, who’s managed to stay in the majors to this point in spite of some spotty results, landed on the 10-Day IL on Monday with right shoulder inflammation after 20 appearances and 30 1⁄3 IP out of the bullpen (for the starter-turned-reliever) with the Nationals, who are trying to keep the 2018 5th Round draft pick by Boston’s Red Sox, and are using him out of the ‘pen to try to get him through the season so they don’t have to offer him back to the Sox as per the rules of the Rule 5 Draft.
Ward has a 7.12 ERA, a 6.95 FIP, 24 walks, 26 Ks, seven homers allowed, and a .234/.368/.451 line against thus far this season, but with Tommy John surgery in his past, the Nationals will not take any risks with his health/throwing arm.
“I talked to him and asked if he was okay,” manager Davey Martinez explained after Ward’s move to the IL was announced. “He did mention he felt a little stiff, more than usual. So to play it safe — he’s had arm issues before — we just said, ‘We’re just going to put you on the IL.’ He talked to [Nationals’ Director of Athletic Training] Paul [Lessard]. He’s got a little bit of inflammation in his right shoulder, so he’ll get some time to kind of rehab and get him going again.”
Asked if the issue might be a blessing in disguise, which gets Ward, who’s thrown a limited number of innings post-surgery (2020), a breather, and time to work on some of the things which have caused him issues thus far in 2023, Martinez said you never want anyone to go through an injury, but there is an opportunity.
“I don’t ever want anybody going on the IL, but we can use it to his advantage,” the skipper explained, “… and our advantage as well, to kind of get him going, get him right. And like I said, you can’t really know if it’s really affecting him until he has the time off, and he comes back and we see how he’s doing then. So we’re going to use this time wisely.
“We’ll strengthen him again, get him strong, get that shoulder strong and then build him up again.”
Ward, for his part, didn’t want to use the shoulder inflammation as an explanation for his so-far-sub-par results.
“I think the performance and the health are completely separate things,” Ward said, as quoted by MASN’s Mark Zuckerman on Monday afternoon.
“Everybody knows I haven’t been pitching well, but I think that’s totally separate from the shoulder inflammation that’s going on.”
He too said he would use the time off wisely, to make necessary adjustments and heal up.
“I took [Tommy John] as a positive to clean up a lot of other health stuff, like how I treated my body and eating the right way and all that kind of stuff,” he said, as quoted on MLB.com.
“This is just another opportunity to kind of work on a lot of different things and kind of clean up some things that need to be worked on.”
Davey Martinez on Josiah Gray actually being shocked to be named an All-Star:
“He was genuinely shocked, he really was. And as I always do, I had him address the team, and he got really emotional, and he thanked his teammates. Without them — he said, ‘Without you guys, this probably wouldn’t be possible.’ He said, ‘I represent all you guys,’ so it’s awesome.”
Josiah Gray is an All-Star.
@JGrayy_ pic.twitter.com/HbUmKOkkGj
Washington’s 6-3 road trip to San Diego, Seattle, and Philadelphia got the club within one game of .500 away from home this season (20-21). Taking 2 of 3 in Philly got the Nationals their third straight series win, something they hadn’t done since 2021, and something they hadn’t done on the road since 2017.
Now, however, Davey Martinez was back in the nation’s capital, where they were 14 games under .500 so far in 2023 at 13-27.
“We played hard this whole trip, so let’s play a little bit better at home,” the club’s sixth-year skipper said after the finale with the Phillies on Sunday afternoon. “I asked them that. If we play a little bit better at home, we’ll do some good things. But like I said, they’re playing hard. It shows character what they did today, [after yesterday’s 19-4 loss], come back and keep plugging away, and come back and win in a game like this against a really good team.
“That group is special, it really is,” he added. “We’re going to keep fighting, we’re going to keep playing hard and come back tomorrow and try to go 1-0.”
The fact that they won three straight series on the road wasn’t lost on the relatively young ballclub.
“They were jacked up after the game,” Martinez said. “They kind of calmed down a little bit right now, but they were really excited, they really were. Like I said, we’re going to play hard. That’s the only thing I asked those guys, to play hard for 27 outs, and we’ll see how they end up at the end and they’ve been doing that.”
How does he make sense of the club’s home/road split so far this season?
“If I knew the answer to that, then we’d be playing a lot better at home,” Martinez said.
“We’ve got to get home and start playing better at home. I don’t know the reason for that, because these guys are the same at home as they are on the road.
“But we definitely have to play better at home.”
The goal going into this homestand, the manager said, is to finish strong before the All-Star Break.
“I just want them to compete and play hard. They’ve done it so far this [season], so don’t let up now,” he said. “I know we’re getting closer to this All-Star Break, but let’s finish up strong before the break … and then go have a few days, and get ready to come back and get going and have a better second half.”
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Boxing News: Early Results from Verona, NY » September 25, 2023 – Fight News
By Boxing Bob Newman at ringside
In a highly skilled and very tactical fight, Junior Lightweights Abraham “Super” Nova and Adam “Blu Nose” Lopez lived up to the predictions that they might deliver the fight of the night. After three tactical rounds, things heated up in the fourth with a nice toe to toe exchange late in the round. In the fifth, a beautiful right-left-right combination deposited Lopez hard on his back. As Nova tried to cut off the ring and follow up on his advantage, he could be heard saying, “It’s my birthday…I got to get this win,” to a retreating Lopez. (It is in fact Nova’s 29th birthday). Nova was credited with another knockdown in the sixth, as Lopez tried to hold on after being raked along the ropes and stumbled to the canvas when he couldn’t keep his grip on a backpedaling Nova. Lopez managed to gather himself in the seventh and actually appeared to take the eighth, snapping Nova’s head with some beautiful combinations at the end of the round.
Nova was able to hop on his bicycle in the ninth and hold off a charging Lopez with his jab. The tenth and final round was something out of the movies. Both men teed off on each other seemingly non-Stop for easily two out of the three minutes that the round lasted. It was amazing that nobody went down, but Nova capped the round and the fight off by staggering Lopez with the final blows of the fight. Even though 2023 is only 14 days old, it will take some doing to pass this is the round of the year! The final scores were 97-91 and 98-90 twice, all for Nova who comes back with a hard fought win after his loss to Robeisy Ramirez last year, raising his record to 22-1 15 KOs. The hard luck Lopez falls to 16-4, KOs.
Photos: Bob Newman
_
Other Results…
Jr. Lightweight prospect Haven Brady, Jr. had a tougher than expected task in Colombian Ruben Cervera. While Brady looked to pick his shots, Cervera was landing a few of his own, bloodying Brady’s lower lip by the end of the second. It became a game of single shots where Brady would vocalize with each blow he threw. Seconds before the end of the fifth, Cervera nailed Brady with an overhand right that stunned him. Cervera tries to follow up and one of his blows did land after the bell, prompting a warning from referee Benjy Esteves, Jr. It appeared that Brady was a bit busier each in each round and really capped it off in the eighth and final round by controlling the ring and dictating the action to the final bell. The final tally read: 78-74, 79-73 and 80-72, all for Brady, Jr. who moves to 9-0, 4 KOs. Cervera slides to 13-4, 11 KOs.
* * *
Local darling Bryce Mills, fighting in front of hometown fans for the first time in his young career put on a solid, workman like performance over tough Margarito Hernandez. Mills displayed excellent skills, footwork and angles in systematically controlling Hernandez over the six rounds. At the end of the second, referee Charlie Fitch called in the doctor to check for bleeding from the left ear of Hernandez, which turned out to be a cut just inside the ear and not internal bleeding from the eardrum. Try as he might Mills could not stop or even drop Hernandez and he did take a few shots from the gritty Washingtonian. In the end, all three judges saw it 60-54 for Mills 11-1, 4KOs. Hernandez slips under .500 at 3-4-1.
* * *
Rising welterweight knockout artist Brian Norman, Jr. tried to blitz Rodrigo Coria in the opening round and almost pulled off the trick. Coria appeared out on his feet seconds into the about, the bottom strand of rope in the neutral corner holding him up, but referee Mark Nelson let matters continue when Coria fought back. Norman Jr. appeared to tire and then paced himself for the rest of the round, letting Coria off the hook. The pace slowed markedly the second, then Norman picked things up a little bit more in the third, but Coria did back Norman to the ropes with some good body work. Coria controlled the fourth with good jabs and body work again along the ropes.
The fifth round saw both men doing good work, each taking a turn controlling pieces of the action. In the seventh, Coria landed some telling headshots in rapid succession, buckling Norman’s knees and having him groggy along the ropes. Norman was able to escape and survive the round but the crowd was now revved up! Seconds into the eighth and final round, Norman had Coria in a neutral corner when he himself was clipped and buckled again. He quickly recovered encountered cleanly, dropping Coria to his knees and bringing the crowd to its feet. It wasn’t over though as Coria fought back and stunned Norman again along the ropes. There would be no knockout. The scores were 79-72 and 77-74 twice, all for Norman, Jr. who moves to 23-0, 19 KOs, while the gallant Coria falls to 10-5, 2 KOs.
* * *
In the second fight of the night, featherweight prospect Bruce “Shu Shu” Carrington controlled Juan Antonio Lopez over 6 pedestrian rounds for a 60-54 sweep on all three judges’ scorecards. Lopez talked almost as much as he threw punches, trying to psych out the highly touted prospect Carrington. Neither fighter was hurt along the way. “Shu Shu” moves to 6-0, 3 KOs, while Lopez falls to 17-13-1, 7 KOs.
* * *
In a rare battle of novice unbeatens, Dante Benjamin, Jr. took on Emmanueal Austin in a scheduled six round light heavyweight opener. After a half round of feeling each other out, Benjamin shook Austin with a combination, finally dropping him near his own corner. A follow-up barrage had Austin reeling, forcing referee Mark Nelson to stop matters at 2:50 of the opening stanza. Benjamin Jr is now 5-0, 3KOs, while Austin loses his first at 6-1, 6KO.
That’s a great win for Nova coming off a blowout loss.
I absolutely HATE when they put another sport on right before the fight because you know it’s going to run over. It’s worst when it’s baseball, but with all those timeouts at the end of close basketball games, those things can run on and on and on.
Let’s see him step it up now
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One Brutal Scene of Edward Norton's Hulk That Makes Him Way … – FandomWire
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The Marvel Cinematic Universe keeps its movies PG-13 for a reason. Kids as well as adults enjoy these superhero movies but the MCU has broken the rule several times. Edward Norton portrayed the character of Hulk in 2008’s The Incredible Hulk quite more brutally than Mark Ruffalo.
Talking about the movie that wasn’t much of a success, fans were reminded of what the early MCU used to look like. In a brutal scene in the movie, people around the world were quit shocked when Edward Norton’s Hulk kicks Tim Roth’s Abomination into a tree with a little blood splattering on-screen!
Admittedly, the MCU hadn’t fully established itself as a cinematic universe when The Incredible Hulk was released back in 2008 the Hulk was still a part of the Marvel comics. Edward Norton, from the Fight Club fame, decided to join in for the ride by portraying the role of Bruce Banner in the movie.
Also read: “This ain’t gonna work”: Matt Damon Made a Life Changing Decision With Ben Affleck After Edward Norton Schooled Him in an Audition For an Oscar Worthy Role
Although the movie did not meet people’s expectations, the film had its fair share of iconic scenes and clips. One of the notable scenes was the Hulk fighting against Tim Roth’s Emil Blonsky. Being a fearless soldier tasked with killing Bruce Banner, Tim Roth had an exceptional fight scene with the Hulk.
After the fight is over, Blonsky walks up to Norton in his Hulk form and asks “Is that it? Is that all you got?”. This results in the Hulk getting angrier and kicking Blonsky so hard that he flies a few feet away. The scene depicts Blonsky hitting the ground and rolling towards a tree stump. With a hard thud, the character lands face-first into the tree stump and his body sinks to the ground.
Although the focus is on General Ross during that scene, the out-of-focus face of Blonsky shows quite a significant amount of bleeding. The scene is intense and terrifying at the same time which showcased the fact that Edward Norton’s Hulk was indeed more devastating and chaotic compared to Mark Ruffalo’s Hulk in the MCU.
Suggested: ‘The Godfather’ Director Chose Matt Damon Over Marvel Star Edward Norton Because of Damon’s $100 Million War Movie With Denzel Washington
Related: “I didn’t feel that it was honored”: Breaking Bad Star Bryan Cranston Revealed He Would Never Work With Director Who Clashed With Edward Norton During Their $20M Movie
It could have been a very likely possibility that the scene mentioned above was written by Edward Norton himself. According to film trivia, Tim Roth (who got kicked in the face) stated that Norton used to re-write his scenes every day while on the sets of The Incredible Hulk.
The Fight Club actor and Liv Tyler also used to sit down every day and talk for hours before filming would start. As per the trivia, the duo would discuss their character’s lives especially before Bruce Banner became the Hulk which helped with the bonding between them. The Incredible Hulk received a rating of 6.6/10 on IMDB and 67% on Rotten Tomatoes and wasn’t much of a success. The 2008 film is available to stream on Disney+.
Source: ScreenRant, IMDB
Visarg Acharya joined FandomWire in 2022 as a Content Writer. Along with a penchant for writing, Visarg claims that words are the only true language made for him. Currently pursuing his B.Sc in Physics, the combination of Physics and Marvel make up for an interesting talk. Visarg Acharya has authored over 500 articles and reads books in his spare time along with an occasional series to accompany him.
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Computers have moved on, but sons can still put dads in their place… – The Guardian
My son has started coding. He’s only five and I reckon we may have to expand the definition of coding a little, but he has joined something called Coding Club at his school. It involves him and his classmates sitting at computers and, well, I’m not sure what happens after that, since he observes a Fight Club-style omertà when it comes to anything he does at school.
He is familiar with computers and often joins me in my office – his baby sister’s bedroom – while I work on these very articles. It would be charming if I could say he’s helped much in their writing, perhaps offered a paragraph or two you’ve enjoyed – but this has not been the case. He mostly enjoys opening a new document and using the keyboard to write the longest, rudest words he can spell (‘poo-trampoline’ being a favourite) and I am left to do the grunt work myself.
I read that Coding Club uses a game-based platform that enables students to ‘code sprites to move around in different environments’ in which they make ‘rockets, trucks, spiders and even Cinderella!’ It sounds impressive, so I look online to find the module and try it myself. I am presented with a cheery little penguin suspended in the void. As I move said bird, a readout displays his grid coordinates. There are dozens of toolbars and dropdown tabs which, I presume, allow you to do magnificent things with this penguin, but after about four minutes I realise I have no idea what I’m doing and return to my oppressive deadlines.
My own instruction in computing was mostly at home. I was lucky in that my dad was an early adopter, who first caught the tech bug in the 90s. As a civil engineer, his job had little to do with computers, but his fondness for anything square, beige and bleeping meant he was drafted as an ad-hoc IT department for his office and our garage soon became an angular graveyard of discarded CPUs, printers, scanners and servers, with which he would mess, fiddle and, occasionally, perform resurrections. It was here that my little brother and I spent a large part of our childhood, setting up battered servers and mounting local area networks to play Doom on salvaged PCs. We repaid our dad by telling him, ‘You’re doing it wrong’ the second our skills overpassed his own.
The instruction I received in school was paltry in comparison. I did my GCSE in ICT in 2002, a year before the curriculum was updated, working from decade-old textbooks that referred exclusively to ‘electronic mail’ and mentioned the internet only briefly by saying ‘as many as 4 million people may soon be on the world wide web’. An accurate number for 2002 would have been 560m, it’s now almost 6bn, my son among them.
I won’t have him falling behind. When he comes in from school, I show him I have the module right here at home and wiggle the little penguin around for his edification. ‘Daddy,’ he says, ‘you’re doing it wrong,’ and something inside me dies.
Did Ye Hear Mammy Died? by Séamas O’Reilly is out now (Little, Brown, £16.99). Buy a copy from guardianbookshop at £14.78
Follow Séamas on Twitter @shockproofbeats
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