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The Washington Nationals and San Francisco Giants face off in a series, with the Nationals currently outperforming the Giants despite both teams struggling. The Nationals are in a transition period with a new front office, while the Giants are experiencing a disappointing start to the season.
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The Washington Nationals have had their best start since 2019, currently showing improvement despite being in a transition period.
The San Francisco Giants are struggling with a 7-12 record, marking one of their worst starts in decades.
The Nationals have revamped their front office, replacing the previous regime to shift their organizational philosophy after six consecutive losing seasons.
This series is significant as it highlights the contrasting organizational philosophies, with the Nationals embracing modern data usage while the Giants may be reverting to traditional methods.

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âIn this league, you have to throw strikes,â general manager Mike Rizzo said. âI didnât want to be a smart ass and put that up, but I think with one of the youngest teams in the league like we have and a young pitching staff, I wanted them to know that is important to the guy making the decisions on whoâs making the team. Throw the ball over the plate. You have to get guys out.â SF native, St. Ignatius & Cal alum Paul Toboni is now the President of Baseball Operations, and heâs brought aboard former McCovey Chronicles commenter prospect Anirudh Kilambi (garbanzo24) to be the GM. Theyâve gone in the opposite direction of both the Nationals *and* the Giants (which proudly threw out the computers that had invaded their clubhouse) and the players have reacted positively. This Nats culture/vibes shift article for The Athletic by Spencer Nusbaum mentions several key details, but basically the coaching staffâs use of data in real time has helped the players more. âHaving the different resources that we have in the bullpen, cameras, TVs, TrackMan â like, weâve had this stuff to an extent in the past,â [SP Jake] Irvin said. âBut now weâre getting data in real time, and I think that thatâs been a huge help.â Itâs led to their best start since 2019. Meanwhile, the Giants are 7-12 to start a season for just the second time this century and third time in 40 years. The last time this happened (2004), they had Barry Bonds on the team. The Giants do have all or most of the same technology as the Nationals, but just given the results and the way the Giants have stumbled into those results, itâs worth wondering if said technology is being utilized in much the same way as the previous Nationals regime utilized their meager tech. If the Giants really are oversteering away from the Farhan Zaidi days to a more âtraditionalâ and âold schoolâ manner of what is today losing baseball, then that will be quite distressing to watch, and this series might provide us with a glimpse of what computers vs. gut is going to look like going forward. The Giants absolutely have the superior talent on both sides of the ball, but the Nationals might have the edge just by being willing to optimize what talent they do have. Or do they? The easiest thing to optimize with modern baseball technology is pitching, and yet the Nationals have *THE WORST* pitching staff in the sport (-2.3 fWAR!!!) with a team ERA of 5.91 (5.95 FIP). The Giants are slightly better (+1.1 fWAR â 21st) with a 4.17 ERA (4.11 FIP). Itâs on the hitting side where thereâs a wide, wide gap in results in this 19-game sample size: Washingtonâs offense is ranked 5th heading into the series: +3.3 fWAR on a 112 wRC+ from a triple slash of .262/.338/.411. Theyâre tied with the Astros for most runs scored in the sport right now (107). Their 20 stolen bases is 6th in MLB, too. On paper, theyâve had a tough start to the season: @ Cubs (2-1), @ Phillies (1-2), Dodgers (0-3), Cardinals (1-2), @ Brewers (3-0), @ Pirates (2-2). Is it simply that the Cubs, Brewers, and Phillies are having a slow start to their seasons, too, or do the Nationals have a little magic? Guess weâll find out. If the Giants donât win this series, theyâll be tied with the 2017, 2019, and 2020 teams starts OR be off to their worst start since the 100-loss 1985 season.
*Who:*San Francisco Giants (7-12) at Washington Nationals (9-10) *Where:*Nationals Park | Washington, D.C. *When:*Friday at 3:45pm PT, Saturday at 1:05pm PT, Sunday at 10:35am PT *National broadcasts:*None. **Projected starters** Friday: Logan Webb (1-2, 5.25 ERA) vs. Zack Littell (0-1, 4.20 ERA) Saturday: Adrian Houser (0-2, 5.06 ERA) vs. Cade Cavalli (RHP 0-1, 4.60 ERA) Sunday: Robbie Ray (2-2, 2.42 ERA) vs. Miles Mikolas (RHP 0-3, 11.49 ERA)
***CJ Abrams:*** The Giants tried to trade for the shortstop/second baseman in the offseason and maybe itâs because they saw in him what the new Nats front office does. The bloom had come off the rose for this player, with the industry being down on him for off the field matters plus perceived underperformance at the play. His prior three seasons have seen just a 101 wRC+ from the speedy lefty 25-year old. This year, heâs off to a white hot start: .371/.481/.710 in 77 PA (224 wRC+). Abrams is the best player on the Nats roster right now, even leading them in home runs (6). At the game level, heâs 6-for-8 on the first pitch this season with a home run and has been doing damage even later in the count, but itâs all such a small sample that the Giants can only hope he regresses to the mean during this series. ***James Wood:*** The second-best player in the lineup right now whose .256/.376/.526 in 93 PA is *only* 50% better than the league average (150 wRC+) and has *only* hit 5 home runs (4 fewer than the Giants as a team). The outfielder went just 3-for-16 in the recently completed 4-game series in Pittsburgh, but in the prior homestand and 3 in Milwaukee, he was 14-for-35 with 4 homers. Is home cooking just what he needs? ***Joey Wiemer:*** The Giants briefly had him this offseason and now with the Nats, heâs hitting .351/.442/.595 in a bench role (43 PA), which will almost certainly become a platoon role soon enough. Technically, the outfielder has had 1 more PA against RHP (19) than LHP (18), but the statistical separation is stark: .596 OPS vs. RHP and 1.490 against LHP.
***Jerar Encarnacion:*** If heâs not designated for assignment before I post this article, then I would have to imagine his role on the roster is tenuous at best right now. Heâs 6-for-24 in very limited action, but thereâs also the matter of his poor baserunning â oh! and his bad defense (when he remembers to bring his mitt to the field). Sure, the guys who get the big bucks need to step up and produce, but on road trips, sometimes the role players need to play a winning role. ***Logan Webb:*** Heâll probably wind up having a typical season, but it sure doesnât feel like it right now. A great start against a team heâs done okay against for his career (4-1, 4.25 ERA) would go a long way towards calming down some negative perceptionof the team. The Nats might have different ideas, though. Webb has given up 10 runs in 3 starts (13.2 IP) at Nationals Park, though he pitched great there last time (2024: 5.2 IP 1 ER). In that game, he was called for the *only* balk of his career! ***Ryan Walker & Erik Miller:*** Millerâs save in yesterdayâs finale was fun to see as was Ryan Walkerâs clean inning. If the 7th, 8th, and 9th are shaping into a Walker-Winn-Miller beast, that seems like one that most of us can get behind. Millerâs walk issues and Walkerâs control issues are definitely things to keep an eye on, but this might be the best trio of options available to Tony Vitello for now. The Nationalsâ batting average by inning so far makes the idea of the bullpen being âsettledâ very premature: 1st: .337 2nd: .167 3rd: .203 4th: .297 5th: .233 6th: .232 ***7th: .329 8th: .286 9th: .269***
Why are the Giant struggling with their preparation? Itâs not just the sloppy defense or lack of in-game substitutions, itâs also Jerar Encarnacion losing his glove and Tony Vitello arguing with an umpire against a clearly out Jerar Encarnacion or him not challenging an obvious dropped fly ball in yesterdayâs game. Obviously, thatâs on the players to an extent and the video room coaches â assuming the Giants still have one! They have taken great pride in de-technologizing the team! â but at the same time, every ârookie mistakeâ youâd expect of a guy who has never coached a major league game before March 2026 is being made. Itâd be an unacceptable spate of missteps so early in the season under any other sort of manager. That the Giants are generally playing poorly in addition to it only makes matters worse. Anyway, letâs see what happens when he manages against an actual computer.
The Giants will manage to win a game in this series, I think. Or⊠letâs hope.