Coming off a division title and a postseason run that ended in a disappointing loss to the St. Louis Cardinals in the NLDS, the 2013 Washington Nationals had high expectations.
A disappointing start, an 11-16 July and a 48-47 first half put them in a hole, however, which eventually proved too much to recover from despite finishing strong, going 32-16 over the final 48 games.
The Nationals finished ten games out in the National League East and four games out in the wild card standings.
"I don't feel too good," manager Davey Johnson told reporters after the Nationals were mathematically eliminated from contention.
"We gave it a good fight, we've just come up short. It was going to be a tough haul, but I'm proud of the guys."
"No doubt about it," Johnson said when asked if the slow start to the season doomed the Nationals.
"We dug our own hole and we just couldn't dig out of it. We didn't do the things we were capable of early. ... We came back strong, but that's baseball. I love those guys. Great talent. Great makeup. We just didn't get it done."
"It would be tough to put your finger on it," Jayson Werth told reporters that winter, after an impressive .318/.398/.532 campaign in which he hit 24 doubles and 25 home runs in 129 games and 532 plate appearances.
"I've thought about it a lot. It wasn't just one thing. It was the perfect storm of events just led to us being too far back coming down the stretch.
"I always knew that we were going to make a run. It just took us a little too long to get there. All-in-all, you look at the way we played coming down the stretch, and if we get into the postseason - which we only missed by a couple games even though as bad as we played in the first-half - if we get in, I think we're the best team in baseball at the time and I think it was ours to lose. You can't have a first-half like that.
"But I think just the mentality going into the season might not have been in the right spot. Coming through what we went through the year before and the age of some of the guys and the inexperience, I think this year we're kind of further along and down the road from all that, so hopefully we can start good and put all that stuff behind us and have the season I think we're capable of having."
The Nationals took the division again in 2014, winning 96 games and taking the NL East by 17 games, but the season ended in another NLDS loss, this time to the San Francisco Giants.
Washington entered the 2015 campaign with high expectations, but once again, a "perfect storm" of events has put them in a difficult position.
The Nationals' 48-39 first half had them in first place in the NL East at the All-Star break, but a 12-17 August and a 19-26 second half so far has left them six games behind the division-leading New York Mets as of this morning.
Werth missed significant time after a hit-by-pitch fractured bones in his left wrist, but after a slow start upon his return the lineup, th -36-year-old outfielder has come on strong in the last few weeks after a move to the leadoff spot.
Ryan Zimmerman got over his issues with plantar fasciitis in his left foot and got his rhythm and timing back at the plate. Over his last 35 games, the 30-year-old first baseman has gone on a run that's reminded everyone what sort of numbers he's capable of producing.
But Denard Span's been in and out of the lineup all year and is done for the season. Anthony Rendon missed significant time with a string of injuries. Wilson Ramos has struggled offensively.
Ian Desmond started slow but has turned things on in the second half, putting up the sort of numbers that he's put up over the last few seasons.
Stephen Strasburg has had an up-and-down season that has him momentarily out of action again right now. Max Scherzer is struggling right now after a first half that had him in the Cy Young race.
The Nationals are making a run, but will the hole they dug for themselves be too much to overcome once again?
They have 29 games left, six of them with the Mets. It's going to be fun watching them try.
Patrick Reddington blogs about the Nationals for Federal Baseball and appears here as part of MASNsports.com's season-long initiative of welcoming guest bloggers to our pages. Follow him on Twitter: @federalbaseball. All opinions expressed are those of the guest bloggers, who are not employed by MASNsports.com but are just as passionate about their baseball as our roster of writers.
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