Monday Watercooler

Monday’s Watercooler

It’s Monday again, DC, and if you were out living your life this weekend, you might’ve missed a few highlights, so here’s what you need to know about this weekend:

RG III is Football Jesus, or at least that’s what Redskins fans are saying about his performance Sunday. The rookie’s first start under center was nothing short of a massive success. His 320 yards and 2 TD, coupled with no interceptions, make it the best rookie debut in football.

Your takeaway: He’s the real deal. Don’t say: The Skins are going all the way (at least, not yet)

Union Market opened in the Florida Avenue Market area. The rebuilt marketplace building houses a number of vendors hawking upscale goods, and only one of two of the old vendors were able to come back. Before an October 2011 fire, this was a local neighborhood marketplace with family-run stalls. Now, it’s (lots) more upscale, and while a few old vendors are back, this is a transformation of the market.  On the plus side, A. Litteri has a sandwich stall in the new building, and their subs rival Arlington favorite The Italian Store, and coffee favorite Peregrine Espresso has a stall, too. On the down side, this place could be a bit local conflict object as the vendor choices are generally speaking “stuff white people like.” Still, worth a look.

Your takeaway: interesting and tasty food and foodstuffs in a part of town you might not usually get to. Don’t say: I can’t wait til they do that to the whole area.

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Weekend Flashback

Weekend Flashback September 7—9

What an incredible weekend, no? Last night, I slept with the windows open, the roar of the crickets and the smell of fall approaching. The Farmers’ markets have started the switchover from summer squash to winter squash, and the start of football is here (more on that later in the morning) with its attendant wonder.

Summer was tremendous, but Fall is probably my favorite season here, so I couldn’t be happier it’s on its way. What did you get up to? We’ve got a couple shots of your weekends below the cut.

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The Daily Feed

Nats End 8-3 Homestand with 8-0 Loss

Photo courtesy of afagen
Mike Stanton has the fly in sight
courtesy of afagen

Want to know how today’s game went for the Nationals? The Miami Marlins number nine spot batted five times and every one of those was taken by Ricky Nolasco. The Nationals sent three different number nine hitters to the plate. Edwin Jackson in the third, Corey Brown in the sixth, and Eury Perez in the ninth. Through six innings Nolasco had faced the minimum and allowed only two base runners in route to a four hit complete game shutout of the Nationals.

There is little to no good that can be taken from this game for the Nationals. In order to take any good out of this one would have to stretch their imaginations and look back to the Nats August 28 9-0 loss to Ricky Nolasco and the Marlins. What followed was a victory over the Marlins, three against the Cardinals, four against the Cubs, and one against the Marlins. In total over the Nats 11 games following their last beat down by the Marlins they went 9-2.

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The Daily Feed

Before the Storm the Nats Make it Close, After Win 7-6

Photo courtesy of Rukasu1
Derecho
courtesy of Rukasu1

Before the storm the Nats, for the second night in a row, fought and clawed their way back from an early deficit. Twice they cut the Marlins lead to one. Once in the fourth inning when Zimmerman led off with a single and eventually scored on a Danny Espinosa single. It was short lived though as the Marlins would push their lead back to three runs in the top of the fifth as Detwiler would walk the lead-off hitter, Solano, before Reyes bunted a ball fair and ran into it and Stanton lined out hard to Zimmerman. Carlos Lee would then walk and Ruggiano would ground a ball to LaRoche.

When a ball is headed towards LaRoche Nats fans have started to feel a bit of comfort. It has become an assumption that he will make the play, but this time he didn’t. The ball went between his legs and Solano was able to score. The next batter, John Buck, would then single in an additional run to push the Marlins lead back to three.

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Sports Fix

Nationals Shutdown Strasburg

Last night’s 3-inning outing isn’t the one Nats fans, or Strasburg himself, will want to remember as his last start of the 2012 season, but as of this morning, Davey Johnson announced that would be his last start of the year.  Trouble with fastball location was a problem last night, and when he was getting his heater over the plate, the Marlins were wrecking them. 

The final totals for Strasburg read as follows: 159.1 innings pitched, 15 wins, 6 losses, a 3.16 ERA, 197 strikeouts, 48 walks. 1.09 WHIP, 2.4 BB/9, 11.2 SO/9. He’s 4th in wins, 11th in ERA, 7th in Win-Loss ratio, and 1st in Strikeout per 9 innings, and 2nd in strikeouts. By all stretch of the imagination, it’s been a phenomenal season for the young pitcher, especially when you consider he’s still recovering from Tommy John surgery.

The shutdown has been contentious throughout the sports media, with many national sports media figures calling on the Nationals to ignore the doctors’ advice, pitch him through the limit set by his surgeon and doctor, and keep plowing right through.  Young pitchers don’t burn out, they say; they explode, they say. You only get one shot at the World Series, they say.

These are the striking voices of those who would ignore Stephen Strasburg’s future in exchange for a shot at a world series title. They are the myopic who can only see the next few games, the next month, instead of the future ahead.

Some would say that the Nationals were foolish to charge Strasburg out of the gate, instead looking to Atlanta for an alternative method of rehabbing from the difficult surgery. The Braves have said this week that hurler Kris Medlen will be available through the end of the year and into the playoffs.  Medlen and Strasburg were both operated on in August of 2010, but the Braves opted to prolong and slow his spring training period at the beginning of the year instead of putting him in the rotation out of the gate in April.

This should hardly mark the end of the effective season for the rest of the club, who only benefitted from Strasburg’s excellence every fifth game. The Nationals’s staff leads the NL in ERA (3.30), is third in strikeouts (1140), and has allowed the fewest number of earned runs (460), the fewest walks & hits per inning pitched (1.20 WHIP), and hits per 9 (7.8).  

If you need a defense of the Nationals’ incredible pitching staff, I point you to the Dean of DC Baseball writers Tom Boswell’s column from Labor Day

Look at the pitching hegemony the Nats would have brought to bear in the postseason when all teams use four starters. They’d have four of the top 15 in ERA among all starters in the NL. Only one NL team has more than one such pitcher (the Giants).

Also, the Nats would send out four of the top 15 NL starters in WHIP (walks and hits per inning), as well as four of the top 21 in lowest OPS (on-base-percentage plus slugging).

Finally, the Nats would have an overpowering staff with four of the top nine average-fastball-velocities in the NL. That’s almost insane.

Oh, I’m sorry. I seem to have made a minor mistake in my calculations. The team I have just described is the Nationals without Strasburg.

It will be frustrating, I’m sure, for the Nationals to be without their most dominant pitcher in the final road to the playoffs and to the World Series, but this will not be the death sentence that so many of the national media have made this into. It ignores incredible contributions from Edwin Jackson and Ross Detwiler, as well as two solid starts from the new fifth starter John Lannan in key positions this year.

This is just the start of a long career for Strasburg, and this shutdown will be good for his arm in the future, but I worry about the effect that this might have on the psyche of the pitcher. Davey Johnson indicated last night that he thought the shutdown might have been weighing heavy on the young pitcher, and that ended with him talking with Strasburg this morning and ending his season.

Instant analysis is hard in a business where the future is so unclear, and made cloudier by the sheer number of different variables facing the entirety of the situation. We shall see in the coming years if this handling of the future of the franchise’s pitching ace will have been the correct choice, or if the Atlanta model that they’ve chosen for Kris Medlen will have better results. I suspect this will be something that causes Nationals’ GM Mike Rizzo a few sleepless nights in the weeks to come. But Rizzo is playing the long game, taking the risks designed to make the franchise a contender for years to come, not win a quick title and ruin some arms along the way. \

Here’s hoping he’s right.

Entertainment, Interviews, Music, Night Life, People, The Features, We Love Music

Q&A with Volta Bureau

photo by Jonathan Luna

Volta Bureau is an electronic trio based in DC. The group is made up of DJs/producers/instrumentalists/vocalists Will Eastman, Miguel Lacsamana (Micah Vellian) and Bernard Farley (Outputmessage). Almost exactly a year ago I had the pleasure of asking Miguel a few questions as the group was just starting to play out. It’s been a busy year for Volta Bureau, with live performances, high-profile DJ sets, and worldwide acclaim for their tracks. They’re in full-force and ready to kick off the next year with more live shows, new recordings and remixes. Tonight you can experience their magic live as they take over the mainstage of Black Cat.
 
Alexia: Just a year ago you were playing your first show as a live act- so much has happened in the past year for you- what have been some personal high points?
 
Miguel:Hearing Pete Tong, Annie Mac and Toddla T talk about Alley Cat was pretty ace, but the fact that we are getting to do this at all is probably the biggest high point for me.
 
Will: Aw man, the year has passed really quickly. As Miguel mentioned, Pete Tong playing our track and shouting it out on BBC Radio 1 was really amazing and surreal after following his show for so long. Playing live at U Street Music Hall‘s second anniversary was a really special moment for me. It was a culmination of a lot of things I’d be working very hard on for awhile. Going to Miami and playing WMC with the guys and just having lots of good times being creative and laughing and playing music with my buds has been the best part.
 
Alexia: Volta Bureau has done a lot of appearances doing DJ sets- is there a plan to do more live shows in the future? Which do you prefer?
 
Miguel: We are definitely planning to do more live shows. 
 
Will: We originally conceived of Volta Bureau as a live band. We’re all three DJs and doing DJ sets is important to us, but the live performance is something we’ve put a lot of thought and planning into. We’ve wanted to refine it and practice a lot before rolling it out. I think we’re now at a stage where we’re ready to do more live shows outside of DC and we’re looking forward to making that a priority for 2013. Continue reading
Sports Fix

Week One Preview: Redskins at Saints

Photo courtesy of Homer McFanboy
Cowboys10
courtesy of Homer McFanboy

Reading through the season previews for the Redskins and I am struck by something. They are all over the place. There are writers like SI’s Peter King saying he wouldn’t be surprised if the Redskins win a playoff game, and then there are others like ESPN magazine predicting the Redskins to be worse than last season. The latter is as hard to envision as the former. The Redskins made monumental upgrades in the offense. Pierre Garcon and Josh Morgan add a depth to the receiving unit that wasn’t there in 2011, and while RGIII is a rookie he has so much more talent the Rex Grossman or John Beck that he would have to try to be worse than those two.

The big question with the Redskins is if the better level of talent will translate to on-field success. The Redskins in 2011 lost five games by seven points or less. With the improvements made to the receiving core and at the quaterback position they should be able to turn one or two of those close losses into wins. Make no mistake the Redskins are still a flawed team, and no unit has more issues than the secondary. Brandon Meriweather was supposed to step in and take the place of LaRon Landry, but he will start the season hurt. Reed Doughty is a gamer and a solid back-up, but has struggled in a starting role. Especially with the lack of talent the Redskins have across the secondary.

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Food and Drink, The Daily Feed

Gift Card Giveaway to Seasons 52


Courtesy of Seasons 52

Now and then it’s nice to have someone treat you to dinner, no? Well, maybe this next one will be on us.

Seasons 52 has provided We Love DC with two $52 gift cards to give to two lucky winners. Should you win, you’ll get to check out the restaurant’s new autumn menu which launches on September 18th. Or you can also take advantage of the “flight and flatbread promotion” through September 30th, which offers a personalized wine tasting/selection and flatbread for $15 per person until 6:30 PM daily. Seasons 52 has locations in North Bethesda and McLean.

Here’s how the giveaway works:
For a chance to win a gift card, leave a comment on this post using a valid e-mail address between 8 AM and 4 PM today. One entry per e-mail address. We’ll close the comments section at 4 PM and two winners will be randomly selected and notified by e-mail. If you’re chosen as a winner, you must respond to the e-mail within 24 hours or you will forfeit the gift card and we’ll select another winner. Good luck!

Sports Fix

Nationals sweep Cubs, go bananas

After a 4-game sweep that had the Nationals embarrassing the Cubs by a collective 31-9, Davey Johnson had a message for the Cubs and the whole of baseball after tonight’s game: “If they’re getting mad at my guys in the 5th inning [for] swinging 3-0 or running, they better get used to it.”

And mad the Cubs were in the third base dugout, as two separate benches-and-bullpen clearing incidents occurred in the 5th and 6th inning that lead to three Cubs ejections (Bench Coach Jamie Quirk, Catcher Steve Clevenger and Pitcher Manny Corpas) and the ejection of Nationals pitcher Michael Gonzalez. What began with words between Nationals third base coach Bo Porter and the Cubs’ Jamie Quirk in the fifth quickly escalated into a fracas that cleared the pens and resulted in blows.

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We Love Weekends

We Love Weekends – Sep 7 – 9

Marissa: After a bunch of time out of town, I’m ready to get reacquainted with the district. I’ll be browsing through what’s showing this weekend in the DC Shorts Film Festival, and then finding some time to stop by the freshly opened Union Market. Come Sunday, some friends and I are planning on checking out the sights and sounds at the annual Adams Morgan Day Festival. If I’m lucky, I’ll sneak a good brunch in there somewhere.

Tom: Weekend again?! Already?! Awesome!! After last weekend’s successful group of parties for the Doctor Who premiere and Labor Day Weekend, look for a low-and-slow sort of weekend. Part of me is thinking it might be good to try out last year’s course for the WABA 50 States ride or maybe start looking at The Seagull Century as a potential longer rides to stretch my legs. I’m also looking forward to some time at either American Ice Company or Boundary Stone DC to enjoy my favorite spots in the city. My beloved 49ers start the season this weekend, also, so look for me out at one DC’s finer sports bars with my Jerry Rice jersey on.

Nicole: I’ll be in Chicago this weekend for a wedding (including attending my first-ever bachelorette party), but I’ll tell you exactly what I would do if I were here in DC. I would definitely not miss Fashion’s Night Out in Georgetown. There’s so much free food it’s like college all over again, only with more tiny cupcakes. Fewer tiny cupcakes but still awesome? The new American Trail exhibit at the National Zoo. Between that and the cheetah cubs, I would definitely be planning a visit this weekend. Oh, and I would hang the pictures I said I was going to hang last weekend. Sue me.

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All Politics is Local

Why the District got dissed at the DNC

The big news on Tuesday had everything to do with both Mayor Gray and House Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton when a DC Statehood Rally planned for the downtown of Charlotte went afoul of some other unrelated protestors, who ended up occupying the street near their protest and got the whole thing shutdown. Meanwhile, neither Delegate Norton nor Mayor Gray will find themselves anywhere near the stage or the podium during the four-day DNC lovefest ahead of the acceptance speech from President Barack Obama tonight.

The word from John Stanton of Buzzfeed is that the DC Democratic State Committee (DSC) has one of the worst seats in the house in Charlotte, and shows off the view from their wretched seats, and says that the District has found itself off the speakers’ roster, off the platform list (statehood got the boot), and that’s left party politicos in DC quite upset with the national body.  Michael Brown said to the Washington Informer: “We all love the Democrats, they stand behind us. But they need to stand in front of us, you know.”

It’s no small wonder that the DNC is keeping their distance from the DC DSC, though, given the quantity of scandal that its elected members in the District have racked up just this year. Between Mayor Gray’s apparent shadow campaign and its attendant convictions, and former Chairman Kwame Brown’s felony bank fraud, and former Councilman Tommy Thomas’ in-progress prison sentence for stealing money from youth sports programs and getting kickbacks to throw a 2009 Inaugural Ball, well, I’d keep us as far as humanly possible from the action, too.

One could look at the star treatment that DC GOP got at the RNC this year as a potential contrast. State School Board member Patrick Mara represented the DC GOP amongst others this year and sent dispatches back to DCist, including this floor shoot near the very front of the stage.

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The Daily Feed

Nats Clobber Cubs 9-1

Photo courtesy of Matthew Straubmuller
Phillies vs Nationals 8/1/12
courtesy of Matthew Straubmuller

A night after hitting six homers for the first time in Washington, D.C. the Nationals did it again. This time getting homers from Bernadina, Harper, LaRoche, Desmond, Espinosa, and Harper again. With this two homer game Bryce Harper has passed Ken Griffey Jr. on the list for must homers by a 19 year old. Harper now stands alone in third behind Mel Ott and Tony Conigliaro. As impressive as Harper was this game belonged to Gio.

Through the first two innings Gio was perfect until a grounder was hit to Desmond and he made a low throw that LaRoche was unable to pick. After that Gio continued the no-hitter until the sixth inning when Darwin Barney led it off with a single. In total Gio Gonzalez would through seven innings of shutout ball allowing three hits with nine strikeouts and no walks. It was an impressive performance and earned Gio his 18th win on the season.

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Featured Photo

Featured Photo

One day two of Muggy Hazefest+Sweat I could nor resist picking Christopher Killman’s photo-painting of the Lincoln Memorial. This sense of warm fuzz surrounding everything perfectly describes my feelings about this weather. The lovely orange glow of the sun also gives a sensation of warmth that pushes the damp into an almost-toasty sense of being enfolded.

The Daily Feed

Nats Set A New D.C. Home Run Record, Beat Cubs 11-5

Photo courtesy of Keith Allison
Adam LaRoche
courtesy of Keith Allison

The Washington Nationals took advantage of a young, less-than-mediocre Cubs pitching staff on Tuesday night when the team went on to beat Chicago 11-5. Manager Davey Johnson’s offensive lineup hit a franchise record six home runs off the Cubs, which is the most homeruns in a single home game by any Washington-based ballclub in baseball history.

Starting pitcher, right-hander Edwin Jackson also had quite the night on both sides of the game. He earned his ninth win of the year having pitched five and two-thirds innings. Jackson gave up seven hits, four earned runs, one walk, and struck out eight on 93 pitches (62 for strikes). Jackson also got in on the hitting action going 2-for-4 including a hit off Cubs rookie starter Chris Rusin. Continue reading

The Features

Something New to Love

Photo courtesy of leonshishman
Two if by Sea
courtesy of leonshishman

This post is by Tom Bridge and WLDC Alum Dave Levy

Tom: We started We Love DC because we didn’t see enough of ourselves in the writing that was happening in our city. There were some fine blogs, some fine news outlets, but none of them represented us. So we set out to start writing one of our own.

Dave: Learning what it is to have a voice – a unique voice – in a city that has so many opinions was one of my favorite experiences of living down in the DMV. The opportunity to first read the great perspective at We Love DC and then eventually be given a chance to contribute helped me love my DC experience. Over the last year and change since I moved away from the region back to my hometown in Boston, I’ve missed that for sure.

Tom: When Dave came to talk to me about starting something new in Boston, something like We Love DC, I jumped at the chance. The narrative opportunities in a city like Boston, rich in history, rich in culture, and steeped in local milieu, well, they’re every writer’s dream.

Dave: To be fair, Boston doesn’t have the same local blog scene as DC, for reasons we won’t get into here. There are plenty of cool voices, but we thought it was missing one: The “We Love” attitude of featuring the best parts about our city from the point of view of people who love it. Fellow WLDC alum Dan Rowinski and dueling pianist/returning Jeopardy! champion Jarret Izzo were keen on the idea, too, and we found a group of amazing writers who are ready to talk about what in Boston drives them.

Tom: We saw in Dan, Dave and Jarret a chance to do the same for another city that is underserved by its online writers, and we can’t wait to see what they do. We’ve got a preview of what they’re up to, and safe to say, it’s up to our standards.

Dave: Thanks to the truly incredible support of the We Love DC team, we have something new to for you to love. Especially if you love Beantown.

Join us, won’t you? We Love Beantown is open for business at the fancy new WeLoveBeantown.com, on Twitter at @WeLoveBeantown and with its own community photo group (that you are free to join!) on Flickr.