The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

After missing opening day, Nationals start season against Braves

- By Howard Fendrich

As the Washington Nationals, and their opponents, the Atlanta Braves, lined up for pregame introducti­ons Tuesday, they stood near “OPENING WEEK” stencils in white paint beside the green-as-can-be grass along the baselines.

Who could have known it would take nearly a full week into the 2021 regular season before the coronaviru­s-hit Nationals would play?

And who could have imagined that the stadium announcer’s enthusiast­ic shout to spectators — yes, 5,000 were permitted, socially distanced, after being banned last season — presenting “Your 2021 Washington Nationals!” would be rather misleading, because more than a third of what was supposed to be the 26-man roster was absent?

The Nationals finally got started five days later than they were supposed to, delayed because of an outbreak in which four players tested positive for COVID-19 and seven others were told to quarantine after contact tracing deemed they potentiall­y were exposed to the illness.

“Obviously they want to be here and they want to be with the team. That’s a struggle for them,” manager Dave Martinez said. “But overall, they’re in good shape. They feel good. They can’t wait to be back.”

The fans on hand clearly were thrilled, finding any excuse to clap or cheer, whether when a flag noting the team’s 2019 World Series title was raised on the concourse beyond left field — it originally was lifted in July 2020, without anyone in the stands to see it — or when Max Scherzer walked from the dugout to right field to begin his pre-start routine.

“Oh, man, it’s been a long time coming,” Martinez said. “It’s good for us. It’s good for baseball. And it’s good for the city.”

Previously shuttered concession stands were open, selling hot dogs and the rest — with sign-of-the-times touchless condiment machines nearby. Team store mannequins were decked out in Nationals jerseys, caps — and sign-of-the-times masks emblazoned with the team name.

On the field, though, this was not the full version of the Nationals that GM Mike Rizzo assembled in an attempt to move past a tied-for-last finish in 2020.

Among the missing: two members of the vaunted rotation — Jon Lester and Patrick Corbin — new closer Brad Hand, and four starting position players: left fielder Kyle Schwarber, first baseman Josh Bell, second baseman Josh Harrison and catcher Yan Gomes.

“When we get these guys back, we’ll be ready,” Martinez said. “For right now, I feel like we’re going to be able to compete, even with the guys we’ve got.”

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