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June 17, 2009: The Nationals sent Mike O'Connor to the San Diego Padres as part of a conditional deal. [6] June 28, 2009: The Nationals traded Ryan Langerhans to the Seattle Mariners for Michael Morse. [7] June 30, 2009: The Nationals traded Joel Hanrahan and Lastings Milledge to the Pittsburgh Pirates for Sean Burnett and Nyjer Morgan. [8]
All-time Washington Nationals regular season record (2005–2024) 19 17 .528 All-time Washington Nationals postseason record (2005–2024) 1529 1643 .482 All-time combined Washington Nationals regular and postseason record (2005–2024) 4265 4569 .483 All-time combined franchise regular season record (1969–2024) 24 22 .522
On October 4, 2009, the Nationals' 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 history to start the season losing seven in a row and close the season winning seven in a row.
Before the Nationals 2009 home opener on April 13, 2009, at 3 pm, longtime Philadelphia Phillies announcer Harry Kalas was found unconscious in the Nationals Park press box at 12:20 pm. Kalas was rushed to George Washington University Hospital and pronounced dead at 1:20 pm. [29] [30] A moment of silence was held before the game, followed by ...
The Expos-Nationals franchise has been affiliated with the Double-A Harrisburg Senators of the Eastern League since 1991, making it the longest-running affiliation in the organization among teams not owned by the Nationals. Washington's newest affiliates are the Triple-A Rochester Red Wings of the International League and the High-A Wilmington ...
Rich Bickle, who has stepped away from racing several times, plans one more run in the Nationals that coincides with his most familiar car number, 45. Bickle, 63, won the Nationals in 1992, ’ 96 ...
The Royals’ offense is coming out of a funk, but the pitching has been unbelievable of late.
On August 10, 2010, the Nationals unveiled a "Ring of Honor" [note 3] at Nationals Park to honor National Baseball Hall of Fame members who had played "significant years" for the Washington Nationals, original Washington Senators (1901–1960), expansion Washington Senators (1961–1971), Homestead Grays, or Montreal Expos.