Ready for October
Jordan Zimmermann, seen here with teammate Jayson Werth at Citi Field on September 11th, served up a spectacular end to the regular season with a no-hitter against the Marlins. It was the first for Nationals since they moved to DC -- and the first no-hitter thrown by a Washington pitcher on their home turf since 1931!
How impressive was the 28 year Wisconsin native? Out of 104 pitches thrown, only 25 were balls. Zimmermann struck out 10 and walked just one. And keep in mind, he was working with virtually no margin for error -- Ian Desmond's solo homer gave the Nationals their only run. And let's not overlook Steven Souza's leaping catch to nail down the final out.
Even on an off-day, as seen above, you can see the confidence he exudes.
Quite a way to ring down the curtain -- where, under rookie manager Matt Williams, the Nats had the best regular season record in the league, and will hold home field advantage in the NLDS (against the Wild Card survivor) and NLCS.
How impressive was the 28 year Wisconsin native? Out of 104 pitches thrown, only 25 were balls. Zimmermann struck out 10 and walked just one. And keep in mind, he was working with virtually no margin for error -- Ian Desmond's solo homer gave the Nationals their only run. And let's not overlook Steven Souza's leaping catch to nail down the final out.
Even on an off-day, as seen above, you can see the confidence he exudes.
Quite a way to ring down the curtain -- where, under rookie manager Matt Williams, the Nats had the best regular season record in the league, and will hold home field advantage in the NLDS (against the Wild Card survivor) and NLCS.
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