
Joshua-Douglas James Naylor Player Props: June 1, Diamondbacks vs. Nationals
After a multi-hit showing in his previous game (2 for 4 with a double, a home run and two RBIs), Joshua-Douglas James Naylor is looking for continued success on Sunday. The Arizona Diamondbacks take on the Washington Nationals, and will see starter Mitchell Parker, at 4:10 p.m. ET on ARID and MASN2.
Find odds, stats, and more below to make your Joshua-Douglas James Naylor player prop bets.
Josh Naylor has racked up a team-best batting average of .301. He has hit seven home runs and collected 37 RBI. Josh Naylor ranks 86th in homers and 21st in RBI among all batters in MLB. Josh Naylor takes a nine-game hitting streak into this game. During his last games he is batting .310 with two doubles, a triple, two home runs and eight RBIs.
Watch tonight's Diamondbacks game on Fubo!
Joshua-Douglas James Naylor Prop Bets and Odds
Hits Prop: 0.5 hits (Over odds: -238)
0.5 hits (Over odds: -238) Home Runs Prop: 0.5 home runs (Over odds: +575)
0.5 home runs (Over odds: +575) RBI Prop: 0.5 RBI (Over odds: +170)
0.5 RBI (Over odds: +170) Runs Prop: 0.5 runs (Over odds: +110)
0.5 runs (Over odds: +110) Total Bases Prop: 1.5 total bases (Over odds: +125)
1.5 total bases (Over odds: +125) Stolen Bases Prop: 0.5 stolen bases (Over odds: +950)
How to Watch Arizona Diamondbacks vs. Washington Nationals
Matchup: Arizona Diamondbacks vs. Washington Nationals
Arizona Diamondbacks vs. Washington Nationals Time: 4:10 p.m. ET
4:10 p.m. ET Date: Sunday, June 1, 2025
Sunday, June 1, 2025 TV Channel: ARID and MASN2
ARID and MASN2 Live Stream: Fubo (Watch now! - Regional restrictions may apply)
Joshua-Douglas James Naylor vs. Mitchell Parker
In his career against Mitchell Parker, Joshua-Douglas James Naylor is 0 for 5.
When matching up against Mitchell Parker this season, Joshua-Douglas James Naylor is 0 for 3.
Last season against Mitchell Parker, Joshua-Douglas James Naylor was 0 for 2 at the plate.
Joshua-Douglas James Naylor prop bet insights
In 77.2% of his games this season (44 of 57), Joshua-Douglas James Naylor has recorded a hit, and in 19 of those games (33.3%) he's recorded at least two base hits.
He has gone yard in 12.3% of his games this season (57 contests), leaving the ballpark in 2.9% of his trips to the plate.
Joshua-Douglas James Naylor has scored at least one run in 24 of 57 games this season (42.1%), with two or more runs scored in six of those contests (10.5%).
In 25 of 57 games this season (43.9%), he has picked up an RBI, and nine of those games (15.8%) included a performance that produced . He has also been responsible for three or more of his team's runs in two contests.
Joshua-Douglas James Naylor has struck out in 22 of 57 games this season, with multiple punchouts in six of them.
MLB odds courtesy of BetMGM Sportsbook. Odds updated Sunday at 1:26 p.m. ET. For a full list of sports betting odds, access USA TODAY Sports Betting Scores Odds Hub.
Joshua-Douglas James Naylor stats against the Nationals
Nationals starter: Mitchell Parker
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Forbes
13 minutes ago
- Forbes
Struggling Nationals Fire Manager Dave Martinez, GM Mike Rizzo
An 11-game losing streak in June sealed the fate of Washington manager Davey Martinez and GM Mike ... More Rizzo, both fired Sunday. (Photo by) Dave Martinez, who managed the Washington Nationals to a surprise world championship in 2019, found himself out of a job before the end of the Independence Day weekend. Both Martinez and general manager Mike Rizzo, both credited with resurrecting the moribund franchise by scouting and acquiring a selection of promising prospects, were let go by the Nats with just 10 days to go before the All-Star break. Martinez, a former outfielder, is the fourth manager fired this season, along with Derek Shelton of Pittsburgh, Brandon Hyde of Baltimore, and Bud Black of Colorado. His firing came on the same day two of the team's most promising young stars, outfielder James Wood and pitcher Mackenzie Gore, made the National League All-Star team for the first time. Gore and Wood were part of the team's haul when it decided to trade former NL batting champion Juan Soto to the San Diego Padres at the 2022 trade deadline. That deal also brought CJ Abrams, Robert Hassell III, and Jarlin Susana to the nation's capital. It followed by a year another payroll-slicing swap that sent Max Scherzer and Trea Turner to the Dodgers for Josiah Gray and Keibert Ruiz, among others. The Nationals finished the weekend last in the National League East with a 37-53 record, suggesting a losing season for the sixth straight year since the wild-card world championship of 2019. Two stars of that season, third baseman Anthony Rendon and starting pitcher Stephen Strasburg, made no further contributions when they hit free agency immediately after the World Series. Endless injuries prevented Washington ace Stephen Strasburg from delivering on his seven-year, $245 ... More million contract. (Photo by) They received matching seven-year, $245 million contracts – Rendon from the Angels and Strasburg from the Nationals. But the pitcher suffered a series of injuries and won only one more game in three succeeding seasons. In announcing the release of the Rizzo-Martinez tandem, principal owner Mark Lerner issued a statement thanking them for their service. 'On behalf of our family and the Washington Nationals organization, I first and foremost want to thank Mike and Davey for their contributions to our franchise and our city. Our family is eternally grateful for their years of dedication to the organization, including their roles in bringing a World Series trophy to Washington. 'While we are appreciative of their past successes, the on-field performance has not been where we or our fans expect it to be. This is a pivotal time for our club, and we believe a fresh approach and new energy is the best course of action for our team.' 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NBC Sports
32 minutes ago
- NBC Sports
USMNT 1-2 Mexico: El Tri come back to defend Gold Cup crown
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New York Times
33 minutes ago
- New York Times
Firing Mike Rizzo and Dave Martinez makes some sense for the Nationals, but the timing doesn't
Indifferent. Apathetic. Disconnected. All of those words seemed to apply in recent seasons to the Washington Nationals ownership group headed by Mark Lerner. Well, wonder of wonders, ownership just snapped out of it, at just about the oddest time imaginable – one week before the Nats will make the No. 1 pick in baseball's amateur draft, and less than a month before the trade deadline. Advertisement The timing of the Nationals' dismissals of president of baseball operations Mike Rizzo and manager Davey Martinez on Sunday was so sudden, ownership did not even appear fully prepared. Lerner named a successor for Rizzo, assistant GM Mike DeBartolo, but held off announcing Martinez's replacement until Monday. Bench coach Miguel Cairo and Triple-A manager Matthew LeCroy would appear the most logical candidates. If Lerner and Co. were desperate to draw attention away from themselves, a theory advanced by one former team executive, they sure had an odd way of going about it. Not that Rizzo, the game's second-longest tenured head of baseball operations, and Martinez, the manager who led the franchise to its only World Series title in 2019, necessarily deserved to keep their jobs. The Nationals' 37-53 record is the fourth-worst in the majors. More telling, the Nats since 2019 rank second in the majors in losses, ahead of only the Colorado Rockies. True, ownership needed to decide this month on 2026 options for both Rizzo and Martinez. But general managers almost never get fired before the deadline. The last time it happened, as far as I can tell, was when the Minnesota Twins dumped Terry Ryan on July 18, 2016. Ryan, at least, got to oversee the Twins' draft that year. In 2021, the draft moved from June to July. So in dumping Rizzo, the Nationals are leaving both the draft and deadline to DeBartolo, the new interim GM. 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Rizzo, of course, made one of the best deadline trades in recent memory in 2022, acquiring two players who were named National League All-Stars on Sunday, left-hander MacKenzie Gore and left fielder James Wood, as well as a third who was a strong candidate to make the team, shortstop CJ Abrams. That deal, as I wrote on May 27, could mask only so much. The Nationals' failures in player development, as well as in amateur and international scouting, go back more than a decade. Rizzo made changes to scouting and player development at the end of 2023. But they might have been too little, too late. Lerner, in announcing the moves Sunday, resorted to standard ownership speak, citing a need for a 'fresh approach and new energy.' Which, in a vacuum, is not an unfair analysis. But ownership previously extended Rizzo on several occasions, in part because they could not seem to imagine anyone else leading the organization. If anything, the dismissal of Martinez was more surprising. As The Athletic's Britt Ghiroli wrote last month, Martinez was well-liked by ownership. He signed his last contract before Rizzo agreed to his. Perhaps ownership decided it had enough of Rizzo's strong personality. And perhaps Martinez's comments after a loss to the Miami Marlins on June 14 marked a turning point in how ownership viewed him. 'We're not going to finger point here and say it's on the coaches. It's never on the coaches. Sometimes you've got to put the onus on the players, they've got to go out there and they've got to play the game.' Advertisement Martinez later backtracked, saying of his players, 'It wasn't on them. My comments (were) nothing about them. They know that.' But it's never a good look when a manager blames his players. Lerner's statement, naturally, made no mention of ownership's own culpability. The Nationals had a top-10 payroll seven of eight seasons between 2014 and '21. In the past three years, however, they've averaged in the bottom 10. And Rizzo seemed to take a shot at Lerner and Co. on the way out, telling Barry Svrluga of the Washington Post that he 'navigated that ownership group for almost 20 years.' The fallout from all this is coming soon, first with the draft, then at the deadline. If ownership allows, perhaps DeBartolo will take an aggressive approach with trades, entertaining offers on players who are under club control beyond this season. The boldest thing he could do would be to listen on Gore, who is at the same level of service Soto was when the Nats traded him in 2022. An extension for Gore is unlikely. Like Soto, he is represented by Scott Boras, who generally prefers his clients to establish their values on the open market. For a pitcher of Gore's quality, one who is available for three pennant races, the Nationals perhaps could acquire three or four building blocks. Of course, such a move would require the type of vision Nationals ownership rarely shows. Firing a losing head of president of baseball operations is defensible as long as ownership has a plan. When ownership makes such a move just before two of the biggest transactional days on the baseball calendar, it's fair to question what that plan might be. (Top photo of Martinez, Rizzo and Lerner in 2022: Jonathan Newton/The Washington Post via Getty Images)