Baltimore Sun

Martinez stayed steady

Amid bad start, Nats manager positive, held team together

- By Howard Fendrich

WASHINGTON — Nationals manager Dave Martinez is an optimistic sort, a live-in-the-moment guy who loves his mantras and his mottos, whether it’s telling players to “go 1-0 today” or to “stay in the fight.”

Rough as things were when the Nationals were 19-31 and people were wondering whether Martinez was in over his head and might get fired, he never wavered. Just as important, neither did the support he received from GM Mike Rizzo and team ownership.

And worried as Martinez was when his heart acted up during a game in September, he’s able to laugh about it now. He jokes that each game qualifies as a cardiac stress test. He points out that he needs to try to avoid booze, on doctor’s orders, during all of those celebratio­ns NL wild-card Nationals have enjoyed on the way to the World Series.

So it made sense that this is what Martinez said when he was given a chance to address a full stadium and TV audience this week after a 7-4 win completed a sweep of the Cardinals in the NL Championsh­ip Series: “Often, bumpy roads lead to beautiful places, and this is a beautiful place.”

Moments later, referring to his players, Martinez added: “These guys cured my heart, and my heart feels great right now.”

For all of the players, and there are many, who deserve credit for contributi­ng to this season’s tremendous turnaround, including the current 16-2 run — the Nationals are the fourth club in major league history to go from 12 games under .500 to the Fall Classic — the 55-year-old called “Davey” by many gets his fair share of kudos for helping steer Max Scherzer, Stephen Strasburg, Anthony Rendon and everyone else from where they were in May to this point in October.

“I have had a lot of managers, and they all come into spring, and say they’re going to stay this way no matter what: ‘We’re going to be here for you. It’s going to be us. We don’t care what anyone says.’ And then as soon as stuff goes bad, every manager has pretty much kind of thrown that out the window and sort of gone into self-preservati­on mode, where Davey, honestly, has stayed the same way,” said Ryan Zimmerman, in his 15th season with the Nationals.

“He’s positive every day, his energy,” Zimmerman said. “He always trusts his players and has his players’ backs.”

Hired to replace Dusty Baker before last season after two NL East titles and immediate playoff exits, Martinez didn’t have a successful start.

First came his rookie year of 2018, with a much-mocked spring training visit by two camels — intended to help the Nationals “get over the hump” — and an 82-80 record. Then came early 2019.

“A lot of teams could’ve folded. A lot of teams would have been fractured,” Rizzo said. “But Davey held this thing together.”

Nationals owner Mark Lerner’s mindset after those first 50 games?

“Howcanyou not think the season was in trouble?” Lerner said. “But it never crossed my mind to make any changes with Davey or Mike. It just wasn’t going to happen. We have too much confidence in Davey and his intelligen­ce as a manager. We knew at some point he was going to shine. And he did.”

It began with a confidence and stay-inthe-moment steadiness.

It also included changes in the team’s preparatio­n.

“The first month and a half, we were bad defensivel­y ... bad on the bases ... giving away three or four outs a game. We were giving the other team three or four outs a game. It had to stop,” Rizzo said. “Davey made a mandate: We were taking mandatory BP, we were taking mandatory infield practice, until we got things together.”

And it peaked with Martinez’s all-theright-moves postseason so far: using starters in relief, picking the proper pinch hitters, making Zimmerman an everyday player.

During a Sept. 15 road game against the Braves, Martinez felt pain in his chest.

“Scary,” said Martinez, who played 16 years in the majors. “Real scary.”

But a few days after a heart procedure, he was back in the dugout, ready to go.

The biggest difference since returning? He spends more time sitting during games, trying to keep his heart rate down.

“They keep telling me how much they want to play for me,” Martinez said about his players. “And I tell them it’s not about me. It’s about us. Just play for us.”

 ?? JONATHAN NEWTON/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Manager Dave Martinez made changes to the Nats’ preparatio­n after a 19-31 start.
JONATHAN NEWTON/THE WASHINGTON POST Manager Dave Martinez made changes to the Nats’ preparatio­n after a 19-31 start.

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