The
Washington Nationals are a professional baseball team based in
Washington,
D.C.
The Nationals are a member of the
Eastern Division of the
National League of
Major League Baseball (MLB).
The team
moved into the newly-built Nationals Park
in 2008, after playing their first three seasons in
RFK Stadium
. The new park is located in Southeast
D.C.
near the Anacostia
River and with views of the Capitol
.
The Nationals name derives from the two former Washington baseball
teams which had the same name (used interchangeably with
Senators). Their
nickname is "the
Nats" — a shortened version that was also used by
the old D.C. teams.
An
expansion franchise, the club was founded in Montreal
, Quebec
in .
The
then-Montreal Expos
were the first major league team in Canada
.
They
played their home games at Jarry Park Stadium
and later in the Olympic
Stadium
. The Expos had its highest winning
percentage in the strike-shortened season of , when it had the best
record in baseball. The team's subsequent shedding of players
caused fan interest to drop off. After the 2001 season, MLB
considered revoking the team's franchise, along with either the
Minnesota Twins or the
Tampa Bay Devil Rays. After being purchased
by MLB in 2002, the team was moved before the season to Washington
and renamed the Nationals. This was the first complete name change
for a relocating team in MLB since , when the Washington Senators
left D.C. to become the
Texas
Rangers.
The franchise is one of three teams (along with the Rangers and
Seattle Mariners) never to have
played in a
World Series. As the
Montreal Expos, the team won a division championship, and advanced
to the
National
League Championship Series in their only playoff appearance
during the strike-shortened season.
Montreal Expos (1969–2004)
Bronfman era (1969–1990)
The Montreal Expos joined the
National
League in 1969, along with the
San
Diego Padres, with a majority share held by
Charles Bronfman, a major shareholder in
Seagram.
Named after the Expo
67 World's Fair, the Expos' initial
home was Jarry
Park
. Managed by
Gene
Mauch, the team lost 110 games in their first season, and
continued to struggle during their first decade with sub-.500
seasons. By
1976, they were back in
last place, losing 107 games.
Starting
in 1977, the team's home venue was Montreal's Olympic
Stadium
, built for the 1976
Summer Olympics. Two years later, the team won a
franchise-high 95 games, finishing second in the National League
East. The Expos began the 1980s with a core group of young players,
including catcher
Gary Carter,
outfielders
Tim Raines and
Andre Dawson, third baseman
Tim Wallach, and pitchers
Steve Rogers and
Bill Gullickson. The team won its only
division championship in the strike-shortened split season of
1981, ending its season with a 3
games to 2 loss to the
Los Angeles Dodgers in the
National League
Championship Series.
The team spent most of the 1980s in the middle of the NL East pack,
finishing in third or fourth place in eight out of nine seasons
from 1982–1990.
Buck Rodgers was hired
as manager before the
1985 season
and guided the Expos to a .500 or better record five times in six
years, with the highlight coming in
1987, when they won 91 games. They finished
third, but were just 4 games behind the division-winning
Cardinals.
Brochu era (1991–1999)
Bronfman sold the team to a consortium of owners in 1991, with
Claude Brochu as the managing general
partner.Rodgers, at that time second only to
Gene Mauch in number of Expos games managed, was
replaced partway through the
1991
season. In May
1992,
Felipe Alou, a member of the Expos organization
since 1976, was promoted to field manager, becoming the first
Dominican-born manager in
MLB
history. Alou would become the leader in Expos games managed, while
guiding the team to winning records, including
1994, when the Expos, led by a talented
group of players including
Larry
Walker,
Moisés Alou,
Marquis Grissom and
Pedro Martínez, had the best record in
the major leagues until the
1994 Major League Baseball
strike forced the cancellation of the remainder of the
season. After the
disappointment of 1994, Expos management began shedding its key
players, and the team's fan support dwindled.
Loria/MLB era (1999–2004)
Brochu sold control of the team to
Jeffrey
Loria in 1999,but Loria failed to close on a plan to build a
new downtown ballpark or to bring in additional investors as he had
promised. Loria also lost goodwill by failing to sign television
and English radio broadcast contracts for the 2000 season.
Contraction
In November 2001, MLB's owners voted 28–2 to contract MLB by two
teams — according to various sources, the Expos and the Minnesota
Twins, both of which reportedly voted against
contraction.Subsequently, the
Boston Red
Sox were sold to a partnership led by
John W. Henry,
owner of the
Florida Marlins.In
order to clear the way for Henry's group to assume ownership of the
Red Sox, Henry sold the Marlins to Loria, and MLB purchased the
Expos from Loria.However, as the Metropolitan Sports Facilities
Commission, operator of the Metrodome, won an injunction requiring
the Twins to play there in 2002, MLB was unable to revoke the Twins
franchise, and so had to keep the Twins and Expos as part of the
MLB schedule. In the collective bargaining agreement signed with
the
players association in August 2002,
contraction was prohibited through to the end of the contract in
2006.
Relocation to Washington
With contraction no longer an option for the immediate term,
MLB began looking for a
relocation site for the Expos.
Some of the choices included Oklahoma City
; Washington,
D.C.
; San Juan, Puerto Rico
; Monterrey, Mexico
; Portland,
Oregon
; Northern
Virginia; Norfolk,
Virginia
; New
Jersey
; and Charlotte, North Carolina
. In the decision-making process, Commissioner
Bud Selig added Las Vegas,
Nevada
to the list of potential Expos homes.
On September 29, 2004, MLB officially announced that the Expos
would move to Washington, D.C. in
2005.
The Expos played their final game on October
3, 2004 at Shea
Stadium
, losing by a score of 8–1 against the New York Mets, the same opponent that the
Expos first faced at its start, 35 years earlier. The move
was approved by the owners of the other teams in a 28–1 vote on
December 3 (
Baltimore Orioles
owner
Peter Angelos cast the sole
dissenting vote). In addition, on November 15, 2004, a lawsuit by
the former team owners against MLB and former majority owner
Jeffrey Loria was struck down by
arbitrators, ending legal moves to keep the Expos in
Montreal.
Washington Nationals (2005–present)
Washington baseball history revived
Numerous professional baseball teams have called Washington D.C.
home. The
Washington Senators, a
founding member of the
American
League, played in the nation's capital from 1901 to 1960.
These
Senators were founded and owned by Clark
Griffith and played in Griffith Stadium
. With notable stars including
Walter Johnson and
Joe
Cronin, the Senators won the
1924
World Series and pennants in
1925 and
1933, but were more often unsuccessful and
moved to Minnesota for the
1961 season. A second
Washington Senators
(1961–1971) had a winning record only once in their 11 years,
though bright spots, such as slugger
Frank Howard, earned the love
of fans. The second Senators moved to Arlington, Texas for the
1972 season and
changed their name to the Texas Rangers, and Washington spent the
next 33 years without a baseball team.
Although there was some sentiment to revive the name Senators,
political considerations factored into the choice of Nationals, a
revival of the first American League franchise's "official"
nickname used from
1905 to
1956. Politicians in the District of
Columbia objected to the name Senators because the District of
Columbia does not have
voting representation in
Congress. In addition, the Rangers still owned the rights to
the Senators name and MLB was unable to acquire those rights from
the team.
Fallout from the relocation
Opposition from the Orioles
The move was announced despite opposition from Peter Angelos, owner
of the nearby Baltimore Orioles. Since 1972, the Orioles had been
the only MLB franchise in the
Baltimore-Washington area, which he
considered a single market in spite of vastly different cultures
and populations in the two cities. Angelos contended that the
Orioles would suffer financially if another team were allowed to
enter the market. Critics objected that the Orioles and the
Washington Senators had shared the market successfully from 1954
through 1971. This reasoning disturbed many in Washington who
recalled that it was the Griffith family, owners of the Washington
Senators, who allowed the St. Louis Browns to move to Baltimore in
1954 in the first
place.
On March 31, 2005, Angelos and Major League Baseball struck a deal
to protect the Orioles against any financial harm the Nationals
might present.
Under the terms of the deal,
television and radio
broadcast rights to Nationals games are handled by the Orioles
franchise, who formed a new network (the
Mid-Atlantic Sports Network) to
produce and distribute the games for both franchises on both local
affiliates and cable/satellite systems. MASN was not, however,
immediately available on all cable providers, adding to the
frustration of Nationals fans. In fact, most in the DC area missed
almost the entirety of the Nationals first two seasons. The deal
with Angelos makes the Nationals the only major league baseball
team which does not own their own broadcast rights.
The ballpark controversy
The
team's relocation to Washington was contingent on a financing plan
for the Nationals' new
stadium
—this plan quickly became the subject of much debate
on the D.C. Council.
Three Council members who supported Mayor
Anthony Williams's plan were ousted in
September 2004's Democratic party primary. In addition, an opinion
poll conducted by the
Washington
Post during the peak of the controversy found that
approximately two-thirds of District residents opposed the mayor's
stadium plan.
Much of
the controversy centered on the fact that the city would be helping
finance a $581 million stadium without state or county support,
despite the fact that a large portion of the team's fan base would
be drawn from the surrounding Maryland
and Virginia
suburbs. (The District of Columbia is not
part of any state or county; the city is administered as a
territory directly by the United States federal government, with
the city council serving as the territorial legislature.)
During December 2004, the move to Washington itself was called into
doubt when the D.C. Council sought to change details of the
stadium's financing. When the Council voted on December 14 to
require 50 percent private financing for any new stadium, MLB
ceased promotional activities for the Nationals and announced that
they would consider looking for a new market.
Eventually, the council passed an amended plan on December 21, 2004
that proved slightly more financially favorable to the city, while
remaining acceptable to MLB. Mayor Williams signed the stadium
financing package on December 30.
During the
2005
season, a private financing plan for construction of the
stadium was negotiated between the city and a syndicate of bankers
led by
Deutsche Bank. The negotiations
of the details ran into another problem in November 2005. The
bankers requested a
letter of
credit or other financial guarantee of $24 million US, $6
million for each of four years, ensuring payment of lease revenues
against various risks including poor attendance and terrorism. The
city requested that Major League Baseball provide this guarantee,
which they were unwilling to do.
On December 22, 2005, the
Post reported that Major League
Baseball had specifically instructed prospective owners not to
offer to pay cost overruns on the stadium if they were selected as
the owners. Bidders were also told not to communicate with the
press about these issues.
In February 2006, the DC City Council imposed a $611 million cap on
the stadium.
Finally, on March 5, Major League Baseball signed a lease for a new
ballpark, agreeing to the city's $611 million cap. MLB also agreed
to contribute $20 million toward the cost of the stadium, although
it did not agree to cover stadium overruns. Further, MLB added the
condition that excess ballpark tax revenue earmarked for debt
service for the bonds to be available for cost overruns. Two days
later, on March 7 the DC City Council, by a vote of 9–4, approved a
construction contract for a state-of-the-art stadium with a
contemporary glass-and-stone facade, seats for 41,000 fans and a
view of the U.S. Capitol, and affirmed its demand that public
spending on the project be limited to $611 million. The votes were
the final actions needed to satisfy the terms of the deal struck in
September 2004, paving the way for the sale of the team.
Major League Baseball had agreed at the time that the franchise was
moved to Washington, DC, to sell the team to an owner or ownership
syndicate. Several dates for sale of the team were set and missed
due to the legal wrangling regarding the building of the stadium.
The delay was harshly criticized by city residents and leaders as
reported in the
Washington Post.
Selecting from a finalized group of three potential ownership
syndicates, Major League Baseball announced in July 2006 that it
had chosen the
Lerner Enterprises
group, led by billionaire real-estate developer
Theodore N. Lerner. The final sale price of the team
was $450 million and the transfer of ownership was completed July
24, 2006. In late September 2006,
Comcast
finally agreed to broadcast the Nationals games.
Notable firsts from the 2005 season

- On April 4, 2005, Brad Wilkerson
(after being the last player to ever wear a Montreal Expo jersey)
had the honor of being the first batter for the Washington Nationals and he
promptly responded with the first hit
for the new Washington incarnation of the team. However, Philly
Kenny Lofton hit a three-run homer and
Jon Lieber pitched 5 2/3 effective
innings, leading the home team Philadelphia Phillies to
an 8–4 victory over the new Nationals at Citizens
Bank Park
. (Lieber was credited with the win for the
Phillies and would also score a win for Philadelphia in the last
game of the 2005 Nationals season.) Outfielder Terrmel Sledge hit the Nationals' first home
run in the April 4 contest.
- On April 6, 2005, the Washington Nationals recorded their
first-ever regular season win by beating the Phillies, 7–3. The win
came in their second game of the season and was highlighted by
Wilkerson hitting for the
cycle.
- On April 14, 2005, the Washington Nationals won their first
regular season home game at RFK Stadium in Washington, D.C, by a
score of 5–3 against the Arizona Diamondbacks.
President George W. Bush kept up a tradition of sitting U.S.
Presidents by throwing out the ceremonial first pitch on opening day
in Washington, exactly 95 years after William Howard Taft started the
tradition at Griffith Stadium. There were 45,596 fans in
attendance, including former Senators players and Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig. Liván Hernández threw eight
shutout innings, and Vinny Castilla was denied the chance to
hit for the cycle when
Diamondback reliever Lance Cormier hit
him with a pitch in the bottom of the eighth; Castilla needed only
a single to complete the cycle. Chad
Cordero recorded the save for Washington.
- On August 4, 2005, Brad Wilkerson became the first Washington
Nationals player to ever hit a grand slam, against then Los Angeles Dodgers relief
pitcher, Duaner Sanchez. The
Nationals won the game 7–0, on a four-hit complete game shutout by John Patterson.
- During his August-September callup, Ryan Zimmerman recorded 23 hits in 58 at
bats. He thus became the first member of the Washington Nationals
to complete the season with a batting average of at least .300 in
at least 50 at bats.
- The Nationals led all National
League teams in interleague
play in 2005, recording 12 wins.
- At the halfway mark of the season, the Nationals were in first
place in the National League East division, with a record of
50–31.
Notable moments from the 2006 season
- On Father's Day, June 18, 2006, the
paid attendance was 45,157, the second-largest ever to see a single
baseball game in the history of RFK stadium. In that game, the
Nationals beat the
New York Yankees 3–2 on
a two-run walk-off home run by rookie Ryan Zimmerman. A 1962 doubleheader drew
more spectators, as did the Nationals' first-ever home game with
Arizona.
- September 2, 2006, the Nationals rally from three runs down in
the first game and from five runs down in the second game to take a
day–night doubleheader sweep from the Arizona Diamondbacks, the
first day-night doubleheader as part of the team's history in
Washington.
- On Labor Day, September 4, 2006
Ramon Ortiz takes a no-hitter into the
ninth inning vs. the St.
Louis Cardinals, yet gives up a single to Aaron Miles on his
2nd pitch in the 9th to break up his no-hitter. Then he gave up a
home run to Albert Pujols, which ended
his chance to get his second ever career shutout. Ortiz himself
also hit a home run in the 8th inning into the bullpen beyond the
left-field fence at RFK. The Nationals won 5–2.
- September 16, 2006, Alfonso
Soriano becomes the fourth player to hit
40 home runs and steal 40 bases in a season when he steals his
40th base in the first inning of a game vs. the Milwaukee Brewers. The other
three are José Canseco of the
Oakland Athletics in
1988, Barry Bonds of the San Francisco Giants in
1996, and Alex Rodriguez of the
Seattle Mariners in
1998. Soriano follows that feat on September 22 by hitting his 40th
double vs. the New York Mets, becoming the first member of the
"40–40 Club" to also hit 40 doubles in the same season.
2007 season
After losing four starters (Liván Hernández, Tony Armas, Ramon
Ortiz and Pedro Astacio) from the prior year, the Nationals invited
an extraordinary 36 pitchers to spring training.On Opening Day, the
Nationals lost their starting shortstop (
Cristian Guzman, hamstring) and center
fielder (
Nook Logan) for five weeks. At
the end of April, one of their starters,
Jerome Williams hurt his ankle
while batting and was placed on the 15-day disabled list. Then, in
the space of just 10 days in May,
Shawn
Hill,
John
Patterson, and
Jason Bergmann
went on the disabled list. Jerome Williams returned, pitched one
game, and went back on the DL with a shoulder injury. The
Washington Post's wrote: "Almost everything that could sink a
team's attitude has befallen the Nationals. They started the year
1–8, then they lost eight in a row to drop to 9-25."
They pressed journeymen
Mike Bacsik,
Micah Bowie (a relief pitcher),
Tim Redding, and
Jason Simontacchi, along with rookie
reliever
Levale Speigner into the
starting rotation, amidst predictions that the 2007 Nationals might
equal the
1962 Mets'
record of futility of 120 losses in one season.. The Nationals were
also able to top the worst record in the
American League set by the
2003 Detroit Tigers of 43 wins
and 119 losses during the same predictions on the season. But the
Nationals bounced back, going 24–18 in their next 42 games through
June 25. But on that day, a day in which Bergman made his first
start off the DL, the Nationals received the news that shortstop
Cristian Guzman, their leadoff
hitter (and second on the team with a .329 batting average) was
lost for the rest of the season due to a thumb injury he received
the day before tagging out a runner.
The Nationals finished the
2007 season 73–89,
improving their record by two more wins than in 2006. In September,
the Nationals won five out of six games with the
New York Mets, contributing to the
Mets' collapse out of first place.
Notable moments from the 2007 season
- On
April 17, 2007, one day after the shootings on the campus of
Virginia Tech
where 33 faculty and students were murdered in the
largest mass
shooting in US history
, the Nationals wore Virginia Tech baseball hats as
they hosted the Atlanta Braves. The idea was e-mailed to
team President Stan Kasten by Nats fan Dave Lanham following the
shootings. One of these hats was sent to the National
Baseball Hall of Fame
to be displayed.
- On May 12, 2007, the Nationals hosted the Florida Marlins. Tied 3–3 in the
bottom of the ninth Marlins pitcher Jorge Julio faced Ryan
Zimmerman with the bases loaded and two outs. Zimmerman hit the 2-2
pitch over the right-center field wall for the walk-off grand
slam.. Also during this game, right fielder Austin Kearns hit the Nationals' first
inside-the-park home run. The game is further notable for ending at
1:42AM after two separate extended rain delays.
- On August 7, 2007, Washington Nationals pitcher Mike Bacsik allowed
Barry Bonds' 756th career home run,
giving him first place on the career home run list. However, the
Nationals won the game 8–6.
- On September 23, 2007, the Nationals played their final game at
RFK, a 5–3 victory over the Philadelphia
Phillies.
Notable moments from the 2008 season

Nationals 2008 team during warm
up
- On
March 30, 2008, the Nationals held the grand opening of their new
ballpark, Nationals
Park
, with a rare one game series against the Atlanta Braves. Continuing
the tradition, President George W.
Bush threw out the ceremonial first
pitch to Nationals manager
Manny Acta. The Nationals beat the Braves
in dramatic fashion when, with two out in the bottom of the 9th
inning, Ryan Zimmerman hit a solo
walk-off home run off of pitcher Peter Moylan.
This gave the Nationals a 3–2 victory. For the record, the first
hit was recorded by Cristian Guzman,
the first RBI was recorded by Nick
Johnson, the first run scored was recorded by Cristian Guzman,
the first home run was recorded by the Braves' Chipper Jones, and the first starting pitchers
were Odalis Perez for the Nationals and
Tim Hudson for the Braves. President Bush
was in the ESPN television booth at the time of
Jones' homer and was the one who called it.
Notable moments from the 2009 season
- In April 2009, Ryan Zimmerman and
Adam Dunn wore jerseys that improperly
spelled the team's name as Natinals. They later switched to
properly spelled jerseys in the 3rd inning. Majestic Athletic, the uniform supplier
for MLB later apologized. This spawned a rash of jokes both on the
internet and on television regarding Nationals and futility.
- On July 27, 2009, Josh
Willingham hit 2 grand
slams in a game against the Milwaukee Brewers. The first grand slam
was hit against Jeff Suppan and the
second against Mark DiFelice.
Willingham became the 13th player in MLB history to accomplish the
feat.
- On September 30, Justin Maxwell
hit a two-out full count walk off grand slam off of Francisco Rodriguez of the New York Mets on Fan Appreciation Day, the
Nationals' last home game of the season.
- On October 4th, the Nationals's last game of the season, the
Nationals won after 15 innings, the longest game for the team as
part of its Washington history. The Nationals also became the first
team in MLB to start the season losing 7 in a row and close the
season winning 7 in a row.
New ownership and "The Plan"
When Ted Lerner took over the club in mid- , he hired Stan Kasten
as team president. Kasten was widely known as the architect of the
Atlanta Braves before and during
their run of 14 division titles.
Kasten was also the general manager or
president of many other Atlanta
-area sports teams, such as the Atlanta Thrashers. "The Plan," as
it became known, was a long-range rebuilding and restructuring of
the team from the ground up. This plan included investing in the
farm system and draft picks, and having a suitable team to go along
with their new stadium.
At the end of the 2006 season, the Nationals did not re-sign free
agent and star OF
Alfonso Soriano.
Soriano signed a $136 million contract with the Cubs, and
Washington received two draft picks in return. OF
Jose Guillen was also allowed to depart via
free agency, and another high draft pick was obtained. Another high
priced player, 2B/DH
Jose Vidro, was
traded to the Seattle Mariners for prospects OF
Chris Snelling and RHP
Emiliano Fruto. In mid-2006, the Nationals
received OF
Austin Kearns, 2B/SS
Felipe López, and RHP
Ryan Wagner from the Reds, giving up LHP
Gary Majewski, LHP
Bill Bray, SS
Royce
Clayton, 2B
Brendan Harris and
RHP
Daryl Thompson. In August they
traded RHP
Liván Hernández
to the
Arizona Diamondbacks for
prospects LHP
Matt Chico and RHP
Garrett Mock. Other players traded or let go
from the 2005 season were OF
Preston
Wilson, RHP
Hector Carrasco, IF
Jamey Carroll, and OF
Terrmel Sledge. The team also acquired
pitching prospects
Luis Atilano from
Atlanta,
Shairon Martis from San
Francisco and
Jhonny Nunez from the
Dodgers. In 2006, they had two first-round draft picks, OF
Chris Marrero, and RHP
Colten Williams, and signed them both to
developmental contracts. The Nationals also signed a 16-year-old
Dominican shortstop,
Esmailyn
Gonzalez, for $1.4 million. Gonzalez was later revealed to be
20 years old at the time of his signing.
In the front office, the Nationals hired the well-respected former
Arizona scouting director
Mike
Rizzo to be the vice president of baseball operations, second
in charge under then-general manager Jim Bowden.
As for their farm system, the Nationals had a lot of work to do. By
the spring of 2007,
Baseball America had ranked the
Nationals organization as dead last twice in four years in terms of
minor league talent.
The Nationals had five of the first seventy picks in the 2007
first-year player draft: their own two, and three compensation
picks (two from losing Soriano, and one for Guillen). The team
selected players that many considered to be four of the top 30
players available. Overall, the Nationals signed all of their top
twenty draft picks. One of them, a first-round supplemental pick,
Michael Burgess, was, by the end of the year, picked by
Baseball America as the top prospect for the entire
Gulf Coast League. Their rookie
team,
Vermont, sent three
starting pitchers
Colton Willems,
Glenn Gibson, and
Adrian Alaniz, and two position players,
first baseman Bill Rhinehart, and
outfielder Aaron Seuss
to the
New York-Penn League
All-Star Game. By the end of the season, three Vermont pitchers
landed in the Top 20 prospects for the New York-Penn League:
- 2007 second-round Jordan Zimmermann was ranked #5
- 2006 fourth round LHP Glenn Gibson (later traded to the Tampa
Bay Rays for Elijah Dukes) was ranked #9
- 2006 first round RHP Colton Willems was ranked #11.
In the low-A
South Atlantic
League Top 20, two players made the list:
- Chris Marrero was ranked #5
- Justin Maxwell, who played a few
games with the Nationals during September, was ranked at #18.
In addition, after having no teams in the Dominican Summer League,
the Nationals fielded two clubs in 2007, one of which won the DSL
Championships.
People of note
Baseball Hall of Famers
Broadcasters
Current roster
Retired numbers
With the exception of 42, retired for all MLB teams to honor
Jackie Robinson, the Nationals have
no retired numbers. The Montreal Expos retired the number 8 for
Gary Carter, the number 10 for both
Rusty Staub and
Andre Dawson, and the number 30 for
Tim Raines. The Nationals returned these numbers
to circulation: In the 2006 season, number 8 was worn by second
baseman
Marlon Anderson and was worn
by
Aaron Boone, number 10 was formerly
worn by shortstop
Royce Clayton and
catcher
Brandon Harper and is
currently worn by infielder
Ronnie
Belliard, and number 30 was worn by reliever
Mike Stanton and pitcher
Chris Booker.
The retired numbers
for the Expos are now displayed at the Bell Centre
in Montreal, Quebec, home of the Montreal Canadiens of the National Hockey League.
Washington Hall of Stars
RFK Stadium had a series of banners displaying a
Washington Hall of
Stars above its right-field fence. A newer version hangs on the
facing of one of the parking garages near the center-field entrance
to Nationals Park.
Figures from all of sport, including sportswriters, are eligible,
but, as yet, no Nationals figures have been honored. The following
Washington Senators are so honored:
- Walter Johnson, P, 1907-27; MGR,
1929–32
- Clark Griffith, P, 1912-14; MGR,
1912–20; Owner 1920–55
- Joe Judge, 1B, 1915-32
- 10 Sam Rice , RF, 1915-1933
- 37 Bucky Harris, 2B, 1919–28; MGR,
1924–28, 1935–42, 1950–54 (wore 37 as Manager)
- 5 Goose Goslin, LF, 1921–29, 1933,
1938
- 7 Ossie Bluege, 3B, 1922–39; MGR,
1943–47
- 4 Joe Cronin, SS, 1928–34; MGR,
1933–34
- 5 Cecil Travis, SS-3B, 1933–41,
1945–47
- 6 George Case, LF-RF, 1937–45,
1947
- 3 Mickey Vernon, 1B, 1939–48,
1951–55; MGR 1961–63
- 26 Early Wynn, P, 1939–48
- 1 Eddie Yost, 3B, 1944–58; MGR,
1963
- 2 Roy Sievers, LF, 1954–59,
1964–65
- 3 Harmon Killebrew, 3B,
1954–60
- 32 Chuck Hinton, LF-RF,
1961–64
- George Selkirk, team vice
president, 1962–69
- 14 Gil Hodges, MGR, 1963–67
- 33 Frank Howard,
LF, 1965–71
Sievers (the second time around), Hinton and Howard played for the
"New Senators" who became the Rangers; Vernon, Yost and Hodges
managed the new Senators and Selkirk was an executive for the
second franchise. All others either played for or managed the "Old
Senators" who became the Twins.
Neither the Twins nor the Rangers ever
retired any numbers while they were the Washington Senators, nor
have they so honored any former Senators since their moves, with
the exception of Harmon Killebrew, whose number 3 was retired by
the Twins on his election to the Hall of Fame
.
Josh Gibson and
Buck Leonard are also listed on the Hall of
Stars banner, honoring their contributions playing for the
Homestead Grays of the
Negro Leagues.
Both are in the Baseball
Hall of Fame
, as are Johnson, Griffith, Goslin, Cronin, Harris,
Rice, Wynn and Killebrew.
Season standings
The following is the previous five seasons of the franchise:
>
Franchise records
Minor league affiliations
Radio and television
The
Nationals' flagship radio station is WFED
, "Federal
News Radio" at 1500 & 820 AM, which is owned by Bonneville International.
Charlie Slowes and
Dave Jageler are the
play-by-play announcers.
Nationals' telecasts are predominantly on
Mid-Atlantic Sports
Network (MASN), with a handful of games simulcast on WDCW
,
"DC50." Bob
Carpenter is the TV play-by-play announcer while
Rob Dibble is the new
color analyst.
The team has struggled to attract fans with attendance averaging in
the middle of the league in the team's second year in Washington.
Local TV ratings have declined to the lowest in the league by a
significant margin.
Quick facts
- Team Mottos:
- Official Television
Stations: MASN,
WDCW
(CW
50)
- Official Radio Stations: WWWT
- Spring Training Facility:
Viera,
FL

- Mascot: Screech (apparently representing an
American Bald Eagle)
See also
Footnotes