logo
Washington Nationals' unwillingness to adapt, evolve after 2019 World Series led to firings of Mike Rizzo, Davey Martinez

Washington Nationals' unwillingness to adapt, evolve after 2019 World Series led to firings of Mike Rizzo, Davey Martinez

Yahoo07-07-2025
Mike Rizzo didn't wear his 2019 World Series ring on a regular basis. He didn't need to.
The shine from that Nationals' championship, the only one in franchise history, followed the now-former general manager everywhere he went. Occasionally, he would slide the 23.2-carat ring on for special occasions — Opening Day, a high-profile press conference — but mostly, Rizzo's reputation carried the day. It was as if 'World Series Champion' trailed his name in invisible ink, the well-deserved accolade unspoken yet omnipresent.
Advertisement
But the glory of that champagne-soaked October became a double-edged sword.
The job security and institutional clout that Rizzo earned in 2019 calcified into a dangerous sense of complacency. In the years since then, baseball evolved. The Nationals didn't. That inflexibility trickled down to manager Davey Martinez, the big-league coaching staff and various other pockets of the organization. As other franchises embraced baseball's technological arms race, Washington stayed relatively stuck in its ways. It's no surprise, then, that in the five-and-a-half seasons since their World Series title, the Nationals have racked up the second-most losses in Major League Baseball.
On Sunday, following an embarrassing home sweep defeat to the Boston Red Sox that dropped the Nats to 37-53, change finally arrived. The team, via managing principal owner Mark Lerner, announced that Rizzo and Martinez had been relieved of their duties.
The shocking news marks the end of an era. Martinez had skippered the club since 2018. Rizzo was a team employee starting in 2006 and assumed GM responsibilities in 2009. In many ways, the Nationals — who relocated to D.C. just a year before Rizzo's arrival — were built in his image. For years, that was a good thing. Rizzo's eye for talent and aggressiveness in free agency led to a perennial contender. But as the game changed and Rizzo didn't, things devolved.
Advertisement
As the team embarked on a rebuild, key pieces from the 2019 team departed via free agency. Others, such as Max Scherzer, Trea Turner and Juan Soto, were dealt away in blockbusters for a haul of prospects. Some of those young players, including James Wood, CJ Abrams and MacKenzie Gore (all of whom came via the Soto deal), have become difference-makers and franchise cornerstones.
But in the main, Rizzo failed to replenish his farm system via the draft and international market. In fact, over the past 13 years, no team has been less successful than the Nats at drafting and developing homegrown talent. Rizzo is considered a great evaluator of talent, but the on-field results, or lack thereof, speak for themselves.
That the Nationals are here, mired in the muck, stuck in this aimless hamster wheel of a rebuild, is not solely Rizzo's fault. The team's dysfunctional ownership group, the Lerner family, also deserves a large share of the blame. Since Mark Lerner assumed control from his father, Ted, the beloved self-made patriarch, in 2018, the family's stewardship of the club has grown increasingly disjointed, distant and indecisive.
That was best evidenced in April 2022, when the Lerners put their franchise on the market, only for the sale process to quietly fizzle out over the ensuing year and a half. All the while, the family grew less willing to invest in the club than they were during the 2010s, something that frustrated Rizzo, who felt handcuffed by what he saw as an insufficient budget. The Lerners, on the other hand, surely wanted to see the fruits of Rizzo's rebuild before committing big money to free agents.
Advertisement
In the end, the family's lack of oversight, it seems, let Rizzo's reign deteriorate, unmonitored, past its expiration date.
Meanwhile, in the dugout, Martinez struck an even more obstinate figure. His traditionalism worked wonders with the veteran 2019 team, but it failed to translate once Washington's roster became younger and less experienced.
After star shortstop CJ Abrams admired a homer at Yankee Stadium in August 2023, Martinez pulled him aside in the dugout and told the youngster to tone down the showboating. The moment felt somewhat symbolic, an old-school skipper clinging too tightly to a bygone era, trying and failing, in an overtly public setting, to instill a sense of stuffy decorum in a game that has long since embraced individuality.
Advertisement
Earlier this season, Martinez entangled himself in a self-inflicted kerfuffle that might become the lasting image of his downfall. When the skipper was asked how much responsibility for his team's struggles lay with the coaching staff, Martinez was unapologetic, choosing to strike an adversarial tone.
'It's never on coaching,' he said. 'Coaches work their asses off every single day. We're not going to finger-point here and say it's coaches. It's never on the coaches.'
The implication — that his underlings were infallible and the failures rested entirely with the players — ruffled feathers inside a clubhouse already frustrated with the lack of actionable insight available at the big-league level. Despite a disastrous 71-91 2024 season, no changes were made over the offseason to a staff that, in some areas, was considered outdated and unqualified to succeed in the modern game. In some instances, according to multiple sources, players began to intentionally tune out instruction from certain coaches altogether.
On Monday, bench coach Miguel Cairo was named interim manager in Martinez's place. Whether the Nats will make any other changes to their big-league staff was unclear as of Monday afternoon.
Advertisement
The timing of this news caught many in the baseball world off-guard. It's a particularly busy stretch of the MLB calendar. Rizzo was fired exactly one week before this year's MLB Draft, in which Washington holds the No. 1 pick. That decision, the most consequential one this organization has had to make since the Juan Soto trade, is made all the more interesting by the lack of a consensus top prospect.
On Sunday, the team announced that Mike DeBartolo, the senior vice president and assistant general manager of baseball operations, is now the interim GM. That means DeBartolo will oversee the upcoming draft, alongside vice president of amateur scouting Danny Haas and senior director of amateur scouting Brad Ciolek, both of whom have been with the Nats only since the fall of 2023.
Advertisement
How Rizzo's sudden departure will impact the team's draft strategy is — and might always be — unclear. But if ownership no longer felt confident in his ability to lead, firing him before such a crucial, franchise-defining draft makes some sense. It is, at least, better than canning him after he sketches a new blueprint for the organization's future.
That future is now in the hands of the Lerner family and, to a lesser extent, DeBartolo. He is a relative unknown, but people around the game describe him as a perfectly qualified, analytically inclined, modern baseball exec. The job in front of him — or whoever is tasked with refurbishing the Nats — is daunting. Whether he will be entrusted with the reins full-time remains to be seen.
In time, Rizzo and Martinez will likely be remembered as franchise icons, the characters who brought a World Series to D.C. for the first time since 1924. They deserve credit for all the good — the dogpiles, the celebrations, the parade, the flags that fly forever, the ring on Rizzo's finger.
But for the Nationals to return to that stage, change was not just inevitable. It was necessary.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Red Sox at Cubs prediction: Odds, expert picks, starting pitchers, betting trends, and stats for July 18
Red Sox at Cubs prediction: Odds, expert picks, starting pitchers, betting trends, and stats for July 18

Yahoo

time10 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Red Sox at Cubs prediction: Odds, expert picks, starting pitchers, betting trends, and stats for July 18

Friday, July 18, the Boston Red Sox (53-45) open a series in Chicago at Wrigley Field against the Cubs (57-39). Lucas Giolito is slated to take the mound for Boston against Colin Rea for Chicago. There is no hotter team in baseball than the Red Sox who have ripped off ten straight wins. As a result, Boston is back in the race in the American League East trailing Toronto by three games. No question the return of Alex Bregman has only added to the team's recent momentum. The Cubs continue to set the pace in the National League Central. They lead the Brewers by one game. Pete Crow-Armstrong (25 HRs) and Kyle Tucker (100 Hits) pace what has been a lethal offense to this point this season. Only the Dodgers (518) have scored more runs than the Cubs (512) this season. Lets dive into the matchup and find a sweat or two. We've got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on the how to catch tipoff, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts. Follow Rotoworld Player News for the latest fantasy and betting player news and analysis all season long. Game details & how to watch Red Sox at Cubs Date: Friday, July 18, 2025 Time: 2:20PM EST Site: Wrigley Field City: Chicago, IL Network/Streaming: NESN, MARQ, MLBN Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out. Odds for the Red Sox at the Cubs The latest odds as of Friday: Moneyline: Red Sox (+108), Cubs (-128) Spread: Cubs -1.5 Total: 8.0 runs Probable starting pitchers for Red Sox at Cubs Pitching matchup for July 18, 2025: Lucas Giolito vs. Colin Rea Red Sox: Lucas Giolito (6-1, 3.36 ERA)Last outing: July 9 vs. Colorado - 7.2IP, 1ER, 4H, 3BB, 7Ks Cubs: Colin Rea (7-3, 3.91 ERA)Last outing: July 10 vs. St. Louis - 6.2IP, 1ER, 2H, 2BB, 4Ks Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type! Top betting trends & insights to know ahead of Red Sox at Cubs The Red Sox have a losing road record this season (21-25) but have won their last 3 games 8 of the Cubs' last 10 home games have gone over the Total The Red Sox have covered the Run Line in 3 straight road games Ronan Anthony is 15-44 (.341) in July Alex Bregman is 2-8 (.250) since returning from the disabled list If you're looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our MLB Top Trends tool on NBC Sports! Expert picks & predictions for Friday's game between the Red Sox and the Cubs Rotoworld Best Bet Please bet responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, call the National Gambling Helpline at 1-800-522-4700. Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts. Once the model is finished running, we put its projection next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager. Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Friday's game between the Red Sox and the Cubs: Moneyline: NBC Sports Bet is staying away from a play on the Moneyline. Spread: NBC Sports Bet is leaning towards a play ATS on the Boston Red Sox at +1.5. Total: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the over on the Game Total of 8.0. Want even more MLB best bets and predictions from our expert staff & tools? Check out the Expert MLB Predictions page from NBC Follow our experts on socials to keep up with all the latest content from the staff: Jay Croucher (@croucherJD) Drew Dinsick (@whale_capper) Vaughn Dalzell (@VmoneySports) Brad Thomas (@MrBradThomas)

Here are the biggest college football quarterback competitions ahead of the 2025 season
Here are the biggest college football quarterback competitions ahead of the 2025 season

Yahoo

time10 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Here are the biggest college football quarterback competitions ahead of the 2025 season

There are more than a few high-profile programs who haven't officially decided on a starting quarterback ahead of the 2025 season. And that includes the two teams that played for the national title in January. Both Ohio State and Notre Dame need to replace their starters from the national championship game, while programs like Alabama and Colorado are looking for successors for their 2025 NFL Draft picks and Michigan is simply wanting adequate QB play this season. Here's a look at the biggest quarterback competitions ahead of fall practices. Ohio State Lincoln Kienholz vs. Julian Sayin The Buckeyes will defend their national title with a third different starting QB in the past three seasons. Will Howard transferred from Kansas State ahead of the 2024 season after Kyle McCord was the team's starter in 2023. Howard was excellent in the College Football Playoff as Ohio State defeated Notre Dame for the national title. Kienholz is a redshirt sophomore who got playing time in the Cotton Bowl at the end of the 2023 season following McCord's departure. Sayin is a former five-star recruit who originally signed with Alabama in the 2023 early signing period. He transferred to Ohio State following Nick Saban's retirement. Buckeyes coach Ryan Day hasn't tipped his hand about a favorite just yet, either. Whoever wins the job will make his first start at home against Texas in one of the biggest games of the 2025 season. Alabama Austin Mack vs. Keelon Russell vs. Ty Simpson Ty Simpson is the clear frontrunner to start for the Crimson Tide at the moment. Coach Kalen DeBoer hasn't officially named Simpson his starter but has been clear in recent weeks that Simpson is currently in the pole position. 'We did make it known at the end of spring if we played a game at that point — wouldn't have changed it at this point because there's nothing that's happened as far as practicing — Ty Simpson would be the guy that would take the first snaps and be our starter,' DeBoer said at SEC media days. 'Challenged all of them at that time that they have to continue to take the strides, they got to continue in their own ways to improve. They've really worked hard to do that. Excited to see that progress two weeks from [Wednesday].' Simpson has been with Alabama the longest and was Jalen Milroe's backup in 2024. Mack initially signed with Washington when DeBoer was still with the Huskies and came to Tuscaloosa after DeBoer replaced Nick Saban. He was a four-star recruit in the class of 2023. Russell was a five-star recruit and the top player in the class of 2025. He flipped to Alabama over the summer of 2024 after initially committing to SMU. Michigan Bryce Underwood vs. Mikey Keene Michigan needs much better quarterback play if it's going to contend in the Big Ten and make the College Football Playoff. The passing game was downright disastrous for the Wolverines in 2024. Michigan QBs threw just 11 TDs against 13 interceptions while averaging fewer than 129 passing yards per game. Underwood is a Michigan native who initially committed to LSU before flipping his commitment to Michigan in the fall of 2024. He was a five-star recruit and the No. 3 player in the class of 2025. He's set high goals for himself with the Wolverines and was coached in high school by Connor Stalions, the infamous man at the center of the Wolverines' alleged advanced scouting scheme. Michigan is Keene's third school after he spent two seasons at UCF and two seasons at Fresno State. He's been productive throughout his college career and has completed over 67% of his passes in each of the past three seasons. In his two seasons with the Bulldogs, Keene was 560-of-815 passing for 5,868 yards with 42 TDs and 21 interceptions. Notre Dame CJ Carr vs. Kenny Minchey The player who many believed would start for the Fighting Irish in 2025 is now at Syracuse. Steve Angeli spent the 2024 season as Riley Leonard's backup but transferred during the spring. His move to replace Kyle McCord at Syracuse whittled the Notre Dame quarterback competition down to two. Carr is the grandson of former Michigan QB Lloyd Carr and was a four-star recruit in the class of 2024 as the top player in the state of Michigan. Minchey signed with Notre Dame a year earlier and was also a four-star recruit. Neither player threw a pass in 2024 for the Fighting Irish and whoever wins the job will make his first start on the road against a Miami team that has serious hopes of making the College Football Playoff. Tennessee Joey Aguilar vs. George MacIntyre vs. Jake Merklinger The Volunteers have a quarterback competition in the wake of Nico Iamaleava's spring transfer to UCLA. And Tennessee coach Josh Heupel didn't even wait for questions at SEC media days before talking about his team's quarterback situation. 'I know when I open it up for questions, the first one will be about our quarterback situation,' Heupel said. "So I'm going to touch on that a little bit here as I get started. We will have a competition at the quarterback position. The three guys inside of that room, really proud of what they've done.' Aguilar came over from UCLA after Iamaleava arrived in Westwood. He had transferred to UCLA himself during the spring from Appalachian State and was the Bruins' presumed starter before Iamaleava left Tennessee. Merklinger spent the 2024 season as Iamaleava's backup while MacIntyre was a four-star recruit in the class of 2025 and the No. 4 player in the state of Tennessee. Colorado Julian Lewis vs. Kaidon Salter Colorado coach Deion Sanders was very clear at Big 12 media day that he did not know who his starting quarterback was going to be. Both Salter and Lewis were among the Buffaloes' player representatives for the team's media session and Sanders explained why in his news conference. 'We brought both of them because I don't know which one is going to start,' Sanders said. Salter is a transfer from Liberty who had a down season in 2024 as the Flames couldn't match the success they had in 2023. Salter threw for over 2,800 yards and rushed for over 1,000 two seasons ago as Liberty went undefeated in the regular season. Last year, he failed to crack 2,000 yards passing and had just 579 rushing yards. Lewis is a five-star recruit who committed to the Buffaloes in the early signing period over a host of other teams. He's the best QB prospect Colorado has signed in Sanders' tenure by far and the clear quarterback of the future as Salter has just one season of eligibility left. Can he win the job right away? Or will Salter's experience give him the edge to be the Week 1 starter? BYU Bear Bachmeier vs. Treyson Bourget vs. McCae Hillstead The Cougars are looking for a new starter following Jake Retzlaff's recent departure. Retzlaff won the starting job ahead of the 2024 season and played well as BYU finished in a tie for first in the Big 12. But he recently withdrew from school in the wake of a civil suit against him for an alleged sexual assault in October of 2023. The suit was dismissed on June 30 — Retzlaff contended that he and his accuser had consensual sex — but Retzlaff's admission that the two had sex was an honor code violation and he was facing a suspension during the 2025 season. Without Retzlaff on the roster, BYU's likely 2025 starter won't have played a game in 2024. Bachmeier is a transfer from Stanford, while neither Hillstead or Bourget played a season ago for the Cougars. Bachmeier is also the brother of former Boise State, Louisiana Tech and Wake Forest QB Hank Bachmeier, while Bourget is the brother of former Arizona State quarterback Trenton Bourget. North Carolina Max Johnson vs. Gio Lopez One of Bill Belichick's first big decisions at North Carolina will be his starting quarterback. Johnson opened the 2024 season as UNC's starter but suffered a season-ending leg injury in Week 1 against Minnesota. He announced in January he was returning to Chapel Hill for a sixth season of college football. The son of former NFL QB Brad Johnson spent the first two years of his college career at LSU and then was at Texas A&M for two seasons. Overall, he's played in 31 games over five seasons and has completed 61% of his passes with 47 TDs and 13 interceptions. Lopez started at South Alabama in 2024 and was very efficient. He was 206-of-312 passing for 2,559 yards and 18 TDs to just five interceptions. He also rushed 83 times for 463 yards and seven touchdowns. North Carolina hosts TCU in Week 1. The Horned Frogs finished the 2024 season at 9-4 after winning six of their last seven games.

Detroit Tigers linked to Cy Young caliber closer from Cleveland
Detroit Tigers linked to Cy Young caliber closer from Cleveland

Yahoo

time10 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Detroit Tigers linked to Cy Young caliber closer from Cleveland

The Detroit Tigers are ready for the second half of the 2025 MLB season, but there is still more work on the horizon. Detroit needs to solidify its bullpen before the MLB trade deadline on July 31, with the most notable need being an elite closer. The Tigers' bullpen has struggled lately, specifically against the Seattle Mariners, and reinforcements are needed. Several players, such as David Bednar and Aroldis Chapman, have been mentioned as possible trade targets. However, could Detroit pull off a stunning in-division trade that features a Cy Young caliber closer from the Cleveland Guardians? According to the Detroit Free Press' Evan Petzold on his podcast Days of Roar, Cleveland closer Emmanuel Clase would be an elite option for the Tigers to solidify the back end of their bullpen for a run to the World Series. Clase, 27, has been mentioned in trade rumors and could bring a massive haul to Cleveland. Emmanuel Clase mentioned as possible target for Detroit Tigers The 27-year-old closer is under team control through the 2028 season, and despite the dip in numbers, he's still performing well. However, what did Petzold specifically say about the Tigers' need for an elite reliever? 'You still have another couple of weeks until the July 31st trade deadline to assess the situation, check out what you have internally, and then make trades,' Petzold said. 'Like if the [Detroit Tigers] were in a division race, maybe we'd be talking about how they need to make a trade right now. But they're going to win the AL Central. But when the July 31st trade deadline rolls around, I think Tigers fans should expect an all-star caliber reliever.' 'I'm talking Emmanuel Clase of the Cleveland Guardians, Jhoan Duran of the Minnesota Twins, Mason Miller of the Athletics, David Bednar of the Pittsburgh Pirates, Felix Bautista of the Baltimore Orioles, Ryan Helsley of the St. Louis Cardinals, Aroldis Chapman of the Boston Red Sox. You can't expect to win the World Series without one of those guys. So if the expectation is to win the World Series, then it's fair to expect the Tigers to trade for one of those names I just mentioned.' Clase would be a hard get as Cleveland would have to play against him in Detroit for the next several years, but a hefty trade package could do the job. The Tigers need to find a way to acquire an elite closer to elevate their chances of winning a World Series, and Clase would be the perfect pitcher to push all the chips to the middle of the Headlines Micah Parsons: Blame Dallas Cowboys for Lack of Contract Progress Former Philadelphia Eagles Super Bowl Champ LB Dead At 38 6 Game Changer Relievers the Mets Should Target Before Trade Deadline, Including Emmanuel Clase Last Stand: Five NFL Quarterbacks Fighting for Their Futures in 2025

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store