"What (reporters) and what the fans see as a consistent effort or a consistent (sub-par) performance on the field is different than the way we see it," Desmond said. "We're playing better, we're giving better at-bats. Right now, it's not resulting in wins, but we're taking steps in the right direction. I've been saying it for weeks. We're continuing to get better. We're moving in the right direction. Eventually the wins will come, but we've got to give ourselves a chance to come into our own this year and kind of forget about last year. "I think if we continue to play clean games like we are, not making mistakes, not giving away outs, not giving away at-bats, it'll all start to kind of unfold. We're searching for the secret. We're waiting for Superman. But we have a good enough team. We have a very good team, with the pieces we have right now. We're totally capable of winning. We just have to do it." Not only did Desmond have this conversation about the Nats lacking an identity with Johnson, he also had it before yesterday's game with Werth, who concurred with what his teammate was saying. Werth saw the same loose, fun, free-swinging Nats team last season that Desmond did, and he agreed that this group might be trying to recreate what it was last year. But he feels that all can change if the Nats string together a few wins and get some momentum going. "I think (Desmond's) onto something there," Werth said. "Maybe we've kind of lacked an identity as a team. But you know, I think as you start winning games and you start playing and you go on a roll or you rally or whatever it is you do, you kind of create an identity. We just haven't hit stride as far as that goes. How many times have we rallied this year? How many winning streaks have we gone on? We just haven't hit stride yet. Hopefully soon." Desmond's point about the Nats lacking a group mentality or personality might have some truth to it. Only the Nats know for sure. Guys might not yet have an idea of whether this team should be battling deep into at-bats or swinging early in counts. They might not know whether this is the type of team that will live by the three-run homer or the type of team that needs to play more situational type ball to push runs across. The bottom line, however, is that there are certain simple things that all successful teams do well from an offensive perspective: They find a way to get on base and score runs. You don't need an identity to work a walk or smack a two-out double to the gap or score a run with a ground ball. You just need to produce. The Nats haven't done enough producing when in the batter's box this season. Finding an identity might help solve that problem. It might help in a big way. But on top of that, it's also on each guy to perform to his own level and push this team to more wins.