The sweep might have been a statement about this year's Nationals and what could be to come, but it also showed just how far this organization has advanced from the cellar-dwelling seasons of years past. In 2006, the Nats finished 20 games under .500. They had just 30 wins on the road and ended the season 26 games back in the division. Around this exact time six years ago, Frank Robinson's Nationals went into Fenway Park to play the Red Sox, and got absolutely demolished. They were outscored 26-9, outhit 46-22 and saw their starting pitching trio of Tony Armas, Livan Hernandez and Shawn Hill pitch to a 14.72 ERA in those three games. It was another embarrassing series sweep, one of many over a rough five-season run. This time, the Fenway experience was a bit different. The Nats outscored the Red Sox 15-9, got clutch hitting and saw Stephen Strasburg, Gio Gonzalez and Jordan Zimmermann strike out 25 hitters in 19 1/3 strong innings. "There's a lot of places I felt embarrassed," said Ryan Zimmerman, the lone member of these Nationals who was on the team during that '06 season. "Not just (Boston). That's just the way it was. We've come a long way. We got swept a lot of places in '06. Or '07. We weren't very good then. We were rebuilding still. Now it's a different story. We've got a long ways to go, still. I think a lot of things have changed since then. "I think the organization's come a long way in six years." Entering this series, the Nationals/Expos organization had never won in Boston. They'd gone 0-9 in Beantown in franchise history, including that awful three-game sweep in 2006. Now, not only are they in the win column in Boston, they have a three-game sweep to be proud of. "We were overdue," manager Davey Johnson said. "This is a whole new ballclub. Great makeup, great talent on this ball club. And it's only going to get better."