ATLANTA – The Nationals had just one game remaining on the road portion of the 2025 schedule. With a victory this afternoon, not only would they end this six-game losing streak to the Braves, but they would also finish with a road record that is one game better than last year’s.
Things have rarely been easy for the Nats this year. But with an overall solid pitching performance and three home runs from some big sluggers, this was as easy of a victory they’ve had in a while.
Andrew Alvarez had a solid start through 4 ⅓ innings, Josh Bell and James Wood combined for three homers, and the Nats held on for a 4-3 win over their division rivals in front of an announced crowd of 32,898 at Truist Park.
“It was nice to get a .500 road trip," interim manager Miguel Cairo said. "That was awesome to take two out of three against the Mets and 1-2 here. It was awesome. The guys fight. We put some barrels on the ball. Good pitching from the bullpen, from the starting pitcher. So it was a team win.”
Alvarez entered his fifth major league start looking to bounce back from his first tough outing last week in New York, when he gave up six runs (four earned) over 3 ⅓ innings against the Mets.
The Nationals are finalizing a deal to hire Paul Toboni from the Red Sox as their new head of baseball operations, ultimately choosing to bring in an up-and-coming outside voice to lead the organization rather than staying in-house.
The deal with Toboni is not done yet, but sources familiar with the move confirmed the 35-year-old has been selected by the Lerner family as the choice to replace Mike Rizzo, who was fired as president of baseball operations and general manager in July after 16 years in the position.
Still unclear is Toboni’s new title with the Nationals, whether he is named president of baseball operations, general manager or both, and whether he’ll have a GM as his second-in-command, whether that’s current interim GM Mike DeBartolo or someone else.
No official announcement has been planned yet, but the club has hoped all along to be able to introduce its new head of baseball operations just before or immediately after the season ends Sunday, with Major League Baseball discouraging teams from holding major press conferences during the postseason (which begins Tuesday).
Toboni was one of at least seven reported candidates for the job, joined by DeBartolo, fellow Red Sox assistant GM Eddie Romero, Dodgers senior vice president Josh Byrnes, Cubs GM Carter Hawkins, Guardians assistant GM Matt Forman and Diamondbacks assistant GM Amiel Sawdaye. From that group, only Byrnes (a D.C. native) had previously held a full-time job running a baseball operations department (both Arizona and San Diego).
ATLANTA – Julian Fernández was supposed to be on a 10 a.m. flight this morning back home to the Dominican Republic. Instead, he flew to Atlanta on Monday night to join the Nationals ahead of their second game against the Braves.
The right-handed reliever, who the Nats claimed off waivers from the Dodgers on Aug. 17, then found himself taking the mound at Truist Park in the bottom of the eighth inning, trying to keep it a 3-2 game against the heart of the Braves order and give his new team one more chance in the ninth.
Fernández proceeded to toss a perfect frame on a scant 13 pitches, striking out Ronald Acuña Jr. and Drake Baldwin with some high heat in the process.
It was a full-circle moment for the 28-year-old, who made his major league debut with the Rockies against the Braves in 2021, the first of only six appearances he would make that season before making just one this year with the Dodgers.
“I felt really good,” Fernández said, via interpreter Mauricio Ortiz. “I haven't pitched in a while, a couple of days. But I kept myself ready for this. Yesterday was really special because I made my debut against Atlanta back in '21. It's a great team and I was able to have a good performance.”
ATLANTA – The Nationals have lost six straight to the Braves. They’ve already lost the season series to their rivals, trailing 3-9 with one game to go. But a win in this afternoon’s finale would at least end the losing streak on a positive note. Plus, it would give the Nats a better road record than they had in 2024.
Andrew Alvarez has been impressive for most of his first stint in the majors. But he hit his first bump in his last start when he gave up six runs (four earned) in just 3 ⅓ innings against the Mets. The young left-hander will look to finish his season with a strong outing against a tough Braves lineup.
Meanwhile, Bryce Elder is 8-10 with a 5.36 ERA and 1.420 WHIP in 27 starts this season. He’s coming off seven innings of one-run ball and six strikeouts against the Tigers in Detroit. And the right-hander held the Nats to one run over six innings in D.C. back in May.
WASHINGTON NATIONALS at ATLANTA BRAVES
Where: Truist Park
Gametime: 12:15 p.m. EDT
TV: MASN, MLBN (out-of-market only), MLB.tv
Radio: 106.7 The Fan, DC 87.7 (Spanish), MLB.com
Weather: Partly cloudy, 85 degrees, wind 6 mph in from right field
NATIONALS
DH James Wood
SS CJ Abrams
1B Josh Bell
LF Daylen Lile
RF Dylan Crews
2B Luis García Jr.
C Jorge Alfaro
CF Robert Hassell III
3B Paul DeJong
ATLANTA – No matter how this final week finishes, Brad Lord has already entrenched himself as one of the Nationals’ best storylines in an otherwise disappointing 2025 season.
The former 18th-round pick out of the University of South Florida spent last offseason working at Home Depot before getting himself ready for what he thought was going to be another season grinding through the minor leagues. Instead, the 25-year-old broke camp with the Nats and spent the entire season in the majors.
Even while going back and forth between the starting rotation and bullpen, Lord has been one of the most consistent pitchers for the Nats. And that stayed true tonight despite him suffering a tough-luck 3-2 loss to the Braves in front of 37,322 fans at Truist Park.
Lord also faced off against fellow rookie Hurston Waldrep last week. And although he was credited with a no-decision, the Nats fell 9-4 after Lord departed the game with 3-0 lead in the sixth.
Tonight was a similar game, although this time Lord was saddled with the loss despite once again holding the Braves mostly in check.
ATLANTA – The Nationals ended the season for two more pitchers this afternoon, placing MacKenzie Gore and Mason Thompson on the 15-day injured list with only five games to go.
Gore landed on the IL with a right ankle impingement after it came about during his start last week on a rainy, cold Tuesday night at Nationals Park. He started last night’s series opener against the Braves, but only lasted two-plus innings. After allowing the first two batters in the third inning to reach while reaching 71 total pitches, interim manager Miguel Cairo thought that was enough for the 26-year-old left-hander, who had mentioned the ankle was still bothering him.
“It happened the last game when it was wet over there at home,” Cairo said during his pregame media session. “He felt it a little bit. He went through it. He toughened (through it) a little bit. And we didn't want to risk anything. It's not worth it right now. He had a really good season. Now it's time for him to just chill out and make sure this is fine. Just look forward to the offseason and have a great offseason, work hard and come back ready. He did really amazing things this year.”
Gore finishes the year 5-15 with a 4.17 ERA, 185 strikeouts, 1.353 WHIP and 10.4 strikeouts per nine innings in 159 ⅔ innings over 30 starts. He was named an All-Star for the first time in his career after going 4-8 with a 3.02 ERA, 1.196 WHIP and 11.3 strikeouts per nine innings over his first 19 starts. But he ended the year 1-7 with a 6.75 ERA, 1.703 WHIP and 8.6 K/9 over his last 11 outings.
“He had a great year,” Cairo said. “Everyone goes through the ups and downs of the season. He had a really good first half. He went to the All-Star Game, pitched really well and came back. They all get a little tired and they go to rough spots, but he pitched unbelievable.”
ATLANTA – The Nationals and Braves will square off with another pitching rematch from last week in the second game of this three-game set. Brad Lord and Hurston Waldrep will take the mound again as they did in the Wednesday's finale of a four-game series at Nationals Park.
Lord held the Braves to two runs on six hits and one walk and notched four strikeouts over 5 ⅓ innings that day. He departed that game with a 3-0 lead in the sixth, but the bullpen collapsed behind him in the Nats’ eventual 9-4 loss to complete the four-game sweep on their home field. The Nats will hope the rookie right-hander can keep them in the game again and that they can hold onto a lead if they get one.
Something to look out for in what could be Lord’s last start of the season: If he can complete 5 ⅔ shutout innings, he would become just the second Nationals rookie pitcher to complete 120 innings with an ERA less than 4.00, joining John Lannan in 2008 (3.91).
Meanwhile, Waldrep was charged with three runs on five hits last week. But he did strike out eight over his five innings, so the Nats will look to be more patient against the right-hander and get him in the zone tonight.
The Nats also made some pregame roster moves. They placed MacKenzie Gore (right ankle impingement) and Mason Thompson (right biceps tendinitis, retroactive to Sept. 20) on the 15-day injured list, ending both their seasons. They recalled right-handers Julian Fernandez and Orlando Ribalta to take their roster spots.
In recognition of their outstanding 2025 seasons, the Washington Nationals named the following players their 2025 Minor League Players of the Year. Washington will recognize the winners as a part of a pregame ceremony on Friday, Sept. 26, and the players will take part in a Season Plan Holder autograph session during batting practice. Nationals Interim General Manager Mike DeBartolo and Vice President and Assistant General Manager, Player Development & Administration Eddie Longosz selected the following players as this year’s award winners.
- Hitter of the Year – Infielder/Outfielder Phillip Glasser
- Pitcher of the Year – Right-Handed Pitcher Riley Cornelio
- Defensive Player of the Year – Outfielder Cristhian Vaquero
- Baserunner of the Year – Infielder Seaver King
- Nationals Way Award – Outfielder Andrew Pinckney
Glasser, 25, led Washington’s Minor League system in average (.302), on-base percentage (.389) and hits (143). He also ranked in OPS (2nd, .793), walks (2nd, 60), stolen bases (T3rd, 32), runs (4th, 71) total bases (5th, 191), slugging percentage (5th, .404), triples (T6th, 4) and doubles (T7th, 19). The 143 hits were the most by a Nationals Minor Leaguer since Andrew Stevenson recorded 152 in 2022. Glasser finished the season slashing .302/.389/.404 with 19 doubles, seven home runs, four triples, 49 RBI, 60 walks, 62 strikeouts and 71 runs scored in 124 games between Double-A Harrisburg and Triple-A Rochester.
Glasser opened the season with Harrisburg before being promoted to Rochester on Sept. 8. He hit .400 (34-for-85) with a .452 on-base percentage and a .529 slugging percentage with seven walks and just five strikeouts through the first 22 games of the season. From June 17-July 3, he hit safely in 15 straight games. During the streak, he hit .365 (23-for-63) with five doubles, two home runs, one triple, 11 RBI, two walks, three stolen bases and seven runs scored. He also hit safely in 11 of his 12 games with Triple-A Rochester, including in nine straight, to cap the 2025 season.
The former 10th-round pick in the 2023 First-Year Player Draft appeared in left field (91 G), designated hitter (20 G), second base (11 G) and right field (3 G) in his third professional season.
Cornelio, 25, paced Washington’s Minor League system in ERA (3.28), opponents average. (.205) and starts (26) and ranked second in strikeouts (135), WHIP (1.15) and innings (134.1). He went 6-7 with a 3.28 ERA, 135 strikeouts and 55 walks in 134.1 innings across 27 games (26 starts) between High-A Wilmington, Double-A Harrisburg and Triple-A Rochester, setting career marks in nearly every category in his fourth professional season.
ATLANTA – When the Nationals made Nasim Nuñez the No. 5 overall selection in the 2023 Rule 5 Draft, they knew what they were getting. The infielder was the best defensive prospect in the Marlins system with very little offensive upside. Any production they got from the switch-hitter at the plate would be a bonus.
Nuñez spent all of last season with the Nationals at the major league level as part of his Rule 5 status. He appeared in 51 games, mostly as a defensive replacement or pinch-runner, and made only 78 plate appearances. He collected one RBI on 15 hits, with only one going for extra bases.
This year, Nuñez was able to be optioned down to the minors. He appeared in 23 major league games between April and June, this time collecting five RBIs on eight hits, two for extra bases.
But when Nuñez came back up to the majors at the beginning of the month when rosters expanded to 28 players, no one expected to see this power surge the 25 year old has put on over his last 12 games.
He hit his first two major league home runs in his first game back on Sept. 3 against his former team. He hit what would end up being the game-winning home run Sunday against the Mets, a two-run shot in the third inning, in the city where he was born. And then he led off last night’s series opener against the Braves in what he considers his actual hometown by hitting a first-pitch homer off the reigning Cy Young Award winner.
ATLANTA – It is usually meaningless to try to compare two opposing starting pitchers. With the universal designated hitter, they don’t face each other in the batter’s box anymore. And opposing lineups are constructed differently with different approaches.
But after the level of pitching MacKenzie Gore and Chris Sale put on display in the nightcap of Tuesday’s doubleheader at Nationals Park – 13 ⅓ scoreless innings with 14 strikeouts between the left-handers – it was hard not to make comparisons between the two ahead of tonight’s rematch.
Unfortunately for Gore, there weren’t too many comparisons to be made between him and the reigning National League Cy Young Award winner after this 11-5 loss to open the Nats’ final road series of the 2025 season.
Gore lasted only two-plus innings tonight as the Braves drove up his pitch count by fouling balls off and drawing walks.
“He fell behind," interim manager Miguel Cairo said. "They take good pitches. And they fouled off a lot of pitches, so the pitch count went a little too high. And hey, they were able to lay off his good pitches. But they battled against him today."
ATLANTA – The Nationals get the unfortunate pleasure of facing Chris Sale for the second time in less than a week as they start their last road series of the season tonight at Truist Park. The reigning National League Cy Young Award winner shut out the Nats over eight innings with three hits, no walks and nine strikeouts in the nightcap of Tuesday’s split doubleheader back in D.C.
So interim manager Miguel Cairo made some tweaks to his lineup Monday, some due to injuries and some due to the matchup against Sale.
Daylen Lile and James Wood (both left-handed hitters) are sitting to start tonight’s opener against the Braves, while CJ Abrams returns to the lineup as the designated hitter.
Lile suffered a left knee contusion yesterday while sliding into the wall in the left field corner at Citi Field attempting to catch a fly ball. The rookie outfielder was able to walk off the field under his own power and didn’t even require an X-ray when he returned to the clubhouse. But Cairo wants to make sure Lile feels better before playing him again.
“He's feeling fine. He said a little sore,” Cairo said during his pregame media session. “I just want to make sure he has a day and make sure he's fine. But he's doing well.”
ATLANTA – The Nationals’ last road trip of the 2025 season got off to an exciting start, when they won two of three against the Mets over the weekend in Queens to knock their division rivals out of a playoff spot. This final away series doesn’t carry as much importance – as both the Nats and Braves are out of the postseason hunt – but it may be a meaningful chance at revenge for the visitors after Atlanta swept a four-games-in-three-days series in D.C. last week.
This series will start with a rematch from last week of an intriguing pitching matchup between two left-handed All-Stars on the bump. When MacKenzie Gore and Chris Sale faced off in the nightcap of Tuesday’s doubleheader at Nats Park, the two starting southpaws dominated their respective opposing lineups.
Gore held the Braves scoreless with two hits, three walks and five strikeouts over 5 ⅓ innings, while Sale shut out the Nats over eight innings with three hits, no walks and nine strikeouts. But in the end, neither had a say in the final score as the Braves put up five runs in the 10th inning for a 5-0 victory.
How will this rematch shape out?
WASHINGTON NATIONALS at ATLANTA BRAVES
Where: Truist Park
Gametime: 7:15 p.m. EDT
TV: MASN, MLBN (out-of-market only), MLB.tv
Radio: 106.7 The Fan, DC 87.7 (Spanish), MLB.com
Weather: Partly cloudy, 82 degrees, wind 6 mph in from left field
NEW YORK – The circus catch in the bottom of the fifth was going to be the highlight of Jacob Young’s day. Shoot, the highlight of his season.
Until the Nationals center fielder found a way to make an even more meaningful catch in the bottom of the ninth.
Maybe the degree of difficulty wasn’t as high, but the magnitude of the moment far exceeded the previous one when Young leaped at the center field wall at Citi Field and robbed Francisco Alvarez of what would’ve been a game-tying homer, helping secure the Nats’ 3-2 victory over the Mets on Sunday afternoon.
“JY shows why he’s the most exciting center fielder in the game,” teammate Jake Irvin said.
On a day in which there was zero margin for error, Young twice saved the Nationals with his glove and twice crushed the souls of the Mets and their sellout crowd.
And we’re back! The Nationals will try to put this afternoon’s 6-3 loss to the Braves behind them and earn a split in this doubleheader with a victory tonight.
To do that, though, they’ll have to fare much better against another left-handed Atlanta starting pitcher. José Suarez held the Nats to two runs on five hits and two walks with nine strikeouts over seven innings earlier today. The task only gets harder against Chris Sale in the nightcap.
Sale has followed up his 2024 National League Cy Young Award with another stellar campaign, posting a 5-5 record, 2.52 ERA, 1.121 WHIP and 11.9 strikeouts per nine innings over 18 starts in his ninth All-Star season. He missed time between mid-June and late August with a fractured rib cage, but he has a 2.55 ERA over his three starts since returning from the injured list.
The Nats will counter with their own All-Star southpaw starter: MacKenzie Gore. In his return from the IL with left shoulder inflammation, Gore held the Marlins to two runs over five solid innings in a tough-luck loss last week. This will be his first start of the season against the Braves.
You’ll notice Miguel Cairo’s lineup for the second game looks very different from the usual. CJ Abrams and James Wood (who struck out four times in the first game to have 209 on the season) are on the bench, while Nasim Nuñez plays shortstop and hits leadoff (yes, leadoff!) and Dylan Crews gets bumped up to the No. 2 spot.
NEW YORK – On a day that saw Daylen Lile suffer a scary-looking knee injury, Nasim Nuñez homer, Jacob Young make one of the craziest circus catches in team history and Jake Irvin author his best start in two months, the Nationals ultimately had to ask the unlikeliest of relievers to close out a one-run victory over an opponent fighting for its playoff life.
Mitchell Parker, demoted to the bullpen after posting the highest ERA among all qualified major league starters, made his relief debut in a high-leverage situation in the bottom of the sixth, wriggled out of it and then kept on pitching until the Nats had eked out a 3-2 win over the reeling Mets at stunned Citi Field. With Young pulling off another defensive gem in the bottom of the ninth for good measure.
With most of the usual bullpen arms – especially closer Jose A. Ferrer – taxed from Saturday’s 11-inning win, interim manager Miguel Cairo instead turned to Parker for the final 3 2/3 innings. The 25-year-old responded with the poise of a seasoned late-inning reliever, retiring 11 of the 13 batters he faced, with zero margin for error.
"It was a different feeling, but it was a cool one," said Parker, who wound up with the longest save in Nationals history. "A different part of the game, the energy's a little higher, a close game, a big ballpark ... it was all awesome."
As a sellout crowd of 42,960 pleaded with the home team to mount a rally, Parker calmly closed it out in the ninth, with Young robbing Francisco Alvarez of a potential game-tying homer at the center field wall for the first out (this after an even wilder catch three innings earlier).
NEW YORK – Lost in the shuffle of Saturday night’s dramatic win was the play that nearly cost the Nationals the game.
Moments before Daylen Lile hit his go-ahead, inside-the-park homer in the top of the 11th, CJ Abrams was tagged out trying to advance to third base on Andrés Chaparro’s grounder to the left side of the infield. It was a potentially killer mistake on the basepaths, one the Nats were grateful didn’t end up costing them, thanks to Lile’s subsequent heroics.
It also left Abrams with a banged-up right shoulder that forced him from the game and is keeping him out of the lineup for today’s series finale against the Mets.
“He kind of jammed his shoulder,” interim manager Miguel Cairo said. “He told me he was fine, but he was a little sore. So we’re just giving him the day. But he’s going to be ready to pinch-hit if we need to. Just a precaution.”
Abrams was the Nationals’ automatic runner at second base to begin the 11th after making the final out of the 10th, representing the go-ahead run in a tie game. And when Chaparro immediately hit a routine grounder to third baseman Ronny Mauricio, the traditional move for the runner would’ve been to retreat and keep himself in scoring position for the next batter.
NEW YORK – Has everybody caught their breath since the end of Saturday’s game? Whew, what a finish for the Nationals, who blew a three-run lead in the eighth and ninth, only to win it in the 11th on Daylen Lile’s inside-the-park home run. Just like that, the Nats had perhaps their signature win of the season while the Mets saw their lead in the National League Wild Card race drop to one game over the Reds, two games over the Diamondbacks.
The series concludes this afternoon, with Jake Irvin on the mound hoping to right his ship and come up with a quality start in this big game. The right-hander hasn’t actually delivered a quality start in nearly two months, not since his July 27 gem in his hometown of Minneapolis. As always, the two keys for Irvin are getting through the first inning with a zero on the board and keeping the ball in the yard. He has surrendered 35 homers, most in the majors and three shy of Josiah Gray’s single-season club record.
The Mets are going with a bit of an unconventional pitching plan in this one. Veteran left-hander Sean Manaea will make the start and go as far as he can. He’ll then be replaced by veteran right-hander Clay Holmes, who in theory could go the rest of the way and give the entire bullpen the day off. We’ll see if that plan actually works or not. The Nationals actually did a good job each of the last two nights making a rookie Mets starter work and preventing him from pitching deep into the game. Can they take a similar approach with Manaea and Holmes and have success?
WASHINGTON NATIONALS at NEW YORK METS
Where: Citi Field
Gametime: 1:40 p.m. EDT
TV: MASN2, MLB.tv
Radio: 106.7 FM, 87.7 FM (Spanish), MLB.com
Weather: Mostly sunny, 71 degrees, wind 9 mph in from right field
NATIONALS
DH James Wood
RF Dylan Crews
1B Josh Bell
LF Daylen Lile
2B Paul DeJong
C Jorge Alfaro
3B Brady House
SS Nasim Nuñez
CF Jacob Young
NEW YORK – The Nationals looked defeated, having just squandered Cade Cavalli’s five scoreless innings when Jose A. Ferrer surrendered three runs in search of a six-out save that was not to be. Citi Field was rocking, the Mets just needed to push across one more run to move one step closer to a playoff berth and the Nats were out of reliable relievers.
And then Daylen Lile decided to step up and turn an already remarkable September into something even more remarkable.
With an 11th-inning inside-the-park home run, Lile gave the Nationals the lead back in stunning fashion, then watched as PJ Poulin finished it off in the bottom of the inning for a most unlikely 5-3 victory to deal the Mets’ playoff hopes a serious blow.
"I keep saying it, but this team has a lot of fight in it," Lile said. "We're young. And I feel like we're opening a lot of eyes."
Lile, who on Friday night tied the club’s single-season record with his 11th triple, ripped a line drive off the wall in deep left-center off sidearm reliever Tyler Rogers. That guaranteed automatic runner Andres Chaparro would score the go-ahead run, and it seemed to guarantee Lile had just broken Denard Span’s triples record set in 2013.
NEW YORK – Josiah Gray has made it through his prescribed rehab program healthy. Now the Nationals must decide if they want to activate the right-hander to make one final game appearance in the big leagues before season’s end, fully completing his return from last summer’s Tommy John surgery.
Gray threw 45 pitches Friday night for Triple-A Rochester, tossing 2 2/3 scoreless and hitless innings while walking three and striking out two. That was his third rehab start across three levels of the minor leagues, a stint that ended with zero runs allowed across 6 2/3 total innings, with four hits, five walks and five strikeouts.
With the minor league season ending Sunday, there’s nowhere left for Gray to pitch, unless the Nats believe he’s ready to be activated off the 60-day injured list and pitch for them during next weekend’s final series against the White Sox. The club has not yet made that decision, according to interim manager Miguel Cairo.
“We’re seeing what we’re going to do,” Cairo said this afternoon. “We’ll wait to see. And as soon as I know, I will let you know.”
The Nationals don’t believe a big league start is necessary for Gray before he heads into the offseason, eventually building his arm back up for spring training. But they remained open to the idea if they believed it was worthwhile and wanted to wait until after he made his final rehab start to make that decision.
NEW YORK – Game one of this weekend series didn’t go so well for the Nationals, who took an early 4-1 lead over the Mets but ultimately lost 12-6 behind poor pitching and poor defense. New York, in the process, maintained its two-game lead over the victorious Reds for the final wild card berth in the National League with eight games to go.
They’ll be back at it this afternoon, with another matchup of rookie pitchers on the mound.
Cade Cavalli makes his ninth start, his first against the Mets. The right-hander has allowed three or fewer in six of his first eight outings, an encouraging development overall. Because he’s been held to five innings for the most part, though, Cavalli’s ERA is a bit inflated at 4.76. He also has struck out only three total batters over his last two starts, low by his standards. We’ll see how he fares in this one against a Mets lineup that ranks second in the NL in homers and eighth in strikeouts.
Nolan McLean is yet another New York rookie who has burst onto the scene over the last month, opening his career 4-1 with a 1.19 ERA. The 2023 draft pick has reached the sixth inning in each of his previous six starts, averaging nearly seven strikeouts per outing. He has a deep arsenal that features a mid-90s sinker and a mid-80s sweeper. The Nats did a nice job Friday night of figuring out fellow rookie Brandon Sproat as the game progressed. Perhaps they can do the same against McLean.
WASHINGTON NATIONALS at NEW YORK METS
Where: Citi Field
Gametime: 4:10 p.m. EDT
TV: MASN2, MLB.tv
Radio: 106.7 FM, 87.7 FM (Spanish), MLB.com
Weather: Sunny, 75 degrees, wind 8 mph in from right field