"(Strasburg) got a little out of sorts, I thought, early in the ballgame but he came back and started really going after them," Johnson said. "I was looking that maybe I was going to have to hold him to five, and there's no way I'm hooking him with the bases loaded. I don't care what his pitch count was. I was going to have to fight ownership if I let him go too long, but I didn't want to have to fight Stras if I went and took him out. It was just a great effort." Was Strasburg aware that his final pitch count (119) was as high as it was? "I mean, I knew it was up there," Strasburg said, "but I had so much adrenaline being in Fenway for the first time, it didn't really matter." Strasburg got 20 swings and misses today, the most in any start over his career. His fastball command was exceptional, he had the changeup working and, thanks to some recent tips from outfielder Rick Ankiel (a former pitcher), Strasburg found a better feel for his curveball. "I think I have a tendency to almost try and throw it down in the zone, like throw a two-strike curveball in the dirt, and not really trust it," Strasburg said. "I think that's just something that's slowly getting back coming off of (Tommy John) surgery. It's starting to feel a lot better, a lot more like what it used to. I was able to just throw it, and the velocity started to come up with it a little bit too." Harper, meanwhile, got off to a rough start tonight, striking out swinging in his first at-bat, taking a cut at all five pitches he saw from lefty Felix Doubront and going down on a big, breaking curveball. From there, he dominated, smoking a double to right-center in the third, crushing a two-run homer in the fourth and singling in another run in the sixth. "I think I just got a little overwhelmed with the atmosphere (in the first at-bat)," Harper said. "It was just a great atmosphere. I think I was just a little too anxious and tried to do a little too much. The crowd's going crazy and whatnot. It was a little bit different, that first one, really than all the rest." This was just another case of a 19-year-old making adjustments on the fly and showing the baseball intellect of someone with far more major league experience. In Harper's first at-bat of a game, he's slugging .433. In his second at-bat, he's now slugging .833. A first-place team beat a last-place team at Fenway Park tonight. But thanks to their two young stars, the Nats were the ones who were victorious and stay seated atop the National League East.