Nats make overnight contract moves, part ways with Dunn

Photo courtesy of
‘Adam Dunn’
courtesy of ‘Max Cook’

Yesterday evening at midnight was the end of season deadline for the Nationals to agree to contracts with their arbitration-eligible players, and the Nats let Chien-Ming Wang, Wil Nieves (Who?) and Joel Peralta go without a contract.  The Nats did agree to contracts to Jesus Flores and Alberto Gonzalez for the 2011 season.  The other five players that will participate in binding arbitration are John Lannan, Josh Willingham, Sean Burnett, Michael Morse and Doug Slaten.  Of these deals, the biggest departure is Peralta, who had an excellent second half of 2010 after his promotion from Syracuse.


Additionally, late yesterday the White Sox agreed to contract terms with Adam Dunn in a reported 4-year, $56M deal.  The sticking point between the Nats and Dunn was believed to be the 4th year in the contract, which the Nats didn’t want to give Dunn.

Ben Goessling’s conversation with Ryan Zimmerman late yesterday has a lot of telling remarks about the state of the franchise, especially this particularly damning quote: “Knowing that we had one of the three top free agents on our team and we didn’t want to resign him, it’s frustrating for us as players.”

It’s frustrating to watch the Nationals struggle each and every off-season to do the right thing when it comes to contracts and acquisitions, and it seems that 2011 will be like each of the previous years: disappointing.  The Nats have practically zero chance at signing Cliff Lee, and of the remaining free agents, there will be significant high-dollar competition, something the Nats have been averse to in the past, and given the result of Dunn in Chicago, I wouldn’t expect that to be changing.

So who will play first base for the Nationals in 2011?  Some say Carlos Pena, while most of us are just shrugging and saying, “Damned if I could tell you.”  The Nationals are not deep at the position, and don’t have an every-day first baseman at the Major League level, but could convert someone to the position.  Derek Jeter’s still looking for work, and it’s always possible that if the Yankees don’t agree to a contract with their captain, he could find work just a bit further south and across the diamond here in Washington.

A fella could dream.

I live and work in the District of Columbia. I write at We Love DC, a blog I helped start, I work at Technolutionary, a company I helped start, and I’m happy doing both. I enjoy watching baseball, cooking, and gardening. I grow a mean pepper, keep a clean scorebook, and wash the dishes when I’m done. Read Why I Love DC.

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