Nationals Cardinals

Nationals vs

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Cardinals

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・March 6, 2025 March 06 Mar 06
Cardinals could be in worse shape, Nationals have left 10 runners on base
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Roger Dean Stadium
Roger Dean Stadium, Jupiter, FL
Mitchell Parker - Throws bullpen session Parker (neck) threw a bullpen session Friday, Andrew Golden of The Washington Post reports.
Impact Parker had to be scratched from a scheduled appearance in Wednesday's Grapefruit League against the Marlins due to neck stiffness. However, he appears to be feeling better and should be cleared to return to game action soon. Parker is competing for a spot in the Nationals' rotation.
MARCH 7 • ROTOWIRE
Jordan Walker - Progressing well Cardinals manager Oliver Marmol said that Walker (knee) was able to take some dry swings and play catch Friday, John Denton of MLB.com reports.
Impact Marmol described Walker's progress two days after being diagnosed with inflammation in his left knee as "a little ahead of what I expected," adding that he's "super encouraged" with how the outfielder is feeling. Walker will be held out of Grapefruit League action for a few more days but is tracking toward avoiding a stint on the injured list.
MARCH 7 • ROTOWIRE
Albert Pujols: Look back at the MLB legend Albert Pujols began his career winning Rookie of the Year in 2001 with the St. Louis Cardinals and retired in 2022 with 703 home runs.
MARCH 7 • USATODAY.COM
Tink Hence - Sent to Double-A The Cardinals optioned Hence to Double-A Springfield on Friday.
Impact The right-hander is one of the organizations top prospects and was added to the 40-man roster in November in order to protect him from the Rule 5 Draft. Hence was limited to 79.2 innings last season at Springfield due to back and lat discomfort, but he was dominant when available with a 2.82 ERA, 1.07 WHIP and 109:26 K:BB. Returning to the Double-A level is a bit of a surprise, and it shouldn't be long before he's bumped up to Triple-A Memphis.
MARCH 7 • ROTOWIRE
Keibert Ruiz - Launches two homers Thursday Ruiz went 2-for-4 with two home runs and three RBI in Thursday's Grapefruit League game against the Cardinals.
Impact Neither blast came against a particularly noteworthy pitcher -- he took Tekoah Roby deep for a two-run shot in the fourth inning before lofting a solo homer off Leonardo Taveras in the sixth -- but it was still a strong showing from Ruiz. The 26-year-old backstop may have worn down last season, stumbling to a .229/.260/.359 slash line with 13 homers in 127 regular-season games, but the Nats made no move to add a backup in the offseason who could potentially take some of the workload off him.
MARCH 7 • ROTOWIRE
Michael Soroka - Sharp in Thursday's outing Soroka gave up one run on four hits over four innings in Thursday's Grapefruit League game against the Cardinals. He struck out six without walking a batter.
Impact The right-hander built up to 61 pitches (37 strikes) as he faced a number of St. Louis regulars, including Nolan Arenado, Lars Nootbaar and Masyn Winn. Injuries looked like they had completely derailed Soroka's career, but he found some success last season in the bullpen for the White Sox and he's now in camp with the Nats looking to prove he still has something to offer as a starter. So far so good for Soroka, who's delivered a 9:1 K:BB through his first seven spring innings.
MARCH 7 • ROTOWIRE
CJ Abrams - Focusing on swing decisions Abrams' slow start to spring training isn't a concern yet for the Nationals, Bobby Blanco of MASN Sports reports.
Impact The shortstop's issues on and off the field late last season, which prompted a demotion to Triple-A Rochester, have put a spotlight on his performance early in camp. So far Abrams has struggled, going 3-for-19 (.158) through six Grapefruit League appearances with zero strikeouts or walks, but it's the latter the team wants him to focus on. "We know he's got some power. We want to make sure that it doesn't transpire into just him trying to hit home runs all the time," manager Dave Martinez said this week. "We need him to get on base for us. If he's going to lead off, he's got to be able to get on base, accept his walks. Right now, he's really trying to work on staying on the ball and work on his timing a little bit. But he's been really good." Abrams was slashing .283/.344/.513 at the end of June last year prior to his second-half struggles, and the Nats still believe he can provide that level of production on a consistent basis.
MARCH 7 • ROTOWIRE