In Strasburg's last five outings, three have been tremendous. The other two, not so much. According to the guys around him, the issue in Strasburg's sub-par outings hasn't necessarily been that his stuff wasn't there or his location was terrible. He often times, they say, tends to overthink things instead of just trusting his stuff, relying on his fastball and having faith in the game plan, even if he gives up a few hits. "I've told him that," Adam LaRoche said. "I've said, 'Stras, these are big league hitters. Occasionally, they're going to run into a 98 mile-an-hour fastball.' Don't look at it like, 'OK, I don't have it today.' We're paid to do a job, too. I said, 'Just because somebody turns on one, stick with your game plan.' "Nobody's ever come down to first (base) and said it's a comfortable at-bat (against him). Every hitter I've ever talked to down there is not comfortable in the box. That's the best thing a pitcher can ask for. So he just needs to believe it every start, to work off that fastball. He's getting there." Strasburg is so competitive on days that he pitches that Johnson says, "You don't really wanna get close to him, because he's very cognizant of every little thing that doesn't go how he plans." If he gives up a couple hits early or falls behind, he can be overly hard on himself, which might negatively affect how Strasburg approaches hitters later on. "They could be lucky and run into it," LaRoche said. "Don't all of a sudden abort that pitch for the next couple innings because someone hit it. Don't change and fall into their game plan. Stick with yours. "I haven't pitched in a long time, but I remember when I did. When I did get in trouble, it was just overthinking stuff. When you throw 98 with three unbelievable pitches ... they'll hit it once in a while. Blow the next guy away."