Rodriguez then fell apart in the 10th. He walked Evan Gattis, the first batter he saw, on four pitches, all of which were fastballs between 101-102 mph that missed by a good margin. Two batters later, Rodriguez allowed pinch-runner Jordan Schafter to steal second base with ease. The Nats have been working with Rodriguez on trying to vary his times to the plate with runners on, but Schafer swiped second without catcher Kurt Suzuki even getting much of a chance to think about making a throw. "He can't do it," Johnson said of Rodriguez. "It's one thing holding the guy on, but not throwing strikes. You can't walk them. He didn't even come close on the first guy." After the stolen base, Rodriguez walked Dan Uggla to put two runners on with one out, and Upton, hitting .153 on the season, then lifted a 1-0 fastball into shallow right to bring in the game-winning run and set off a mob scene on the infield. Johnson had already used Drew Storen and Fernando Abad in relief, he was holding Rafael Soriano in case of a save situation, and Tyler Clippard and Craig Stammen were both unavailable after heavy workloads last night. Rodriguez was one of Johnson's few options in the 10th. "He's been doing fairly good," Johnson said. "If not him, then I'm going with (Erik) Davis and then I've got to go to my long man. I've got to stay off Clip, 30 pitches last night. There's not a lot of choices. "(Rodriguez) just tried to do too much. Didn't trust his stuff, didn't go right after them." Gio Gonzalez pitched brilliantly, holding the Braves to one run on three hits over his seven innings of work. "Gio pitched great," Johnson said. "Outstanding." Just another disappointing, frustrating conclusion to a ballgame that was there for the taking. "We had the opportunities, we had the right guys out there, we just didn't get it done," Johnson said. "We've got to get it done. We'll get it going."