"He pitched better the next time. But I thought he threw the ball good. He had some bloop hits and stuff, but just that one guy. I thought he threw the ball well." The reason Strasburg never really had much of a shot at his 10th win of the season was Drew Pomeranz, a 23-year-old left-handed rookie that the Rockies sent to the mound. Pomeranz recorded his first win of the season by holding the Nationals scoreless over 6 1/3 innings, allowing just one hit in that time. Strangely enough, he got by with basically just one pitch - his fastball. Of the 81 pitches Pomeranz delivered, 74 were heaters. "He got us out strictly on fastballs," Johnson said. "A little fastball, a little cutter. He was wild enough. We chased out of the zone. Again, that's a little inexperience. Danny (Espinosa) is a good fastball hitter, but he went after pitches out of his happy area. That's just being a little anxious to make something happen. He's basically a thrower, and you've got to make him come to you. Everybody in the ballpark knew he couldn't get his breaking ball over from the first inning on. And it was just fastball, cutter. "Even the veteran hitters, we didn't get the head out on the fastball in. Sometimes when you know what's coming, you're a little overly aggressive, and you're swinging at pitches that you can't really center on that well. He had a good live fastball, but when that's the only thing you're throwing ..." Given that the Nats just earned a three-game sweep over the Giants, one of the top teams in baseball, it's a bit of a surprise to see them get pushed around by a Rockies team which entered tonight tied for the worst record in the majors. Johnson feels the Giants series might have factored into his team's performance tonight. "We might have had a little bit of a letdown," Johnson said. "We had a big series with San Francisco. But that's the kind of guy, when you get a little more experience, that you should hit."