The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Gnats, er, Nats rate high on hated scale

Bush-league move gives Braves fans more to dislike.

- Steve Hummer

The last weekend of the baseball season’s first half served to sharpen Atlanta’s natural animus toward the Washington Nationals. And now just sit on that sharp tack of hostility over the All-Star break and

well into the second half. The Braves won’t meet up again with the NL East leaders until mid-September. The Nats are going to have to do some significan­t tripping over their own shoelaces to make

those games meaningful. In the standings, the just-completed fourgame series in Washington accomplish­ed nothing. It was a push. It should have been better for the Braves, had Jim Johnson not blown a three-run lead in the ninth Friday. Leaving with a split after Sunday’s loss, the Braves are still 91/2 games in arrears.

But, at least, you should have no doubt over which team deserves the entire focus of your negative energy in the next twoplus months.

Of the Top 10 Reasons to Dislike the Washington Nationals, nine of them undoubtedl­y have something to do with Bryce Harper.

But if only to diversify the list, we now can include the Nats brass, which during the opener of the Braves series refused to start the game on the mere suggestion

that it might rain. The mostly rain-less threehour rain delay — orchestrat­ed in order to protect Washington’s starter and avoid going to its weak bullpen in the event of a mid-game rain delay — was a bush-league maneuver. Thanks Washington. I don’t get to use the term bush-league nearly

enough.

True, the Braves gained no ground in the standings. But they at least can claim the ethical high

ground over Washington after this weekend.

Even Harper, on an Instagram post, labeled it a “lame rain delay, which we should’ve never had.” May have to revisit some of my more irrational feelings about Harper. (Most

of them are petty and hair-related, anyway. Like, for heaven’s sake, man, get a batting helmet that fits properly over that luxuriant rooster comb atop your head or start using a chin strap.)

That the Nats are playing games before the actual games would seem encouragin­g. An indication, perhaps, that they have such serious flaws that subterfuge is their last, best hope of masking them.

Resorting to lame rain delays seemed fairly desperate for a first-place team.

The bullpen is, of course, the major flaw. The one most likely to cause Nationals manager Dusty Baker to swallow his toothpick.

The Braves hit the All-

Star break secure in the knowledge that the team they are pursuing has a weakness in both the bullpen and in character (at least on high, where manmade rain delays are created). Thus far this season, they are 6-7 head-to-head

against the Gnats, so it’s not like they should cower at their approach.

And after all, the Braves have baseball’s Wolverine. There is no other way outside of a comic book reference to describe Freddie Freeman’s fast-healing bones.

Surely Washington will address its end-of-game issue. No reason to think

the Braves can run the Nationals down over the back half of the season. It is still rather cloudy as to whether the Braves should be buyers or sellers on the trade market.

But we might ask that

they at least hang around. Keep the deficit in single digits. Give reason to

cheer from afar that the Nats finish more games with question marks rather than exclamatio­n points.

Let a clean, old-fashioned hate — baseball style — simmer for a couple months more.

 ??  ?? Nationals star Bryce Harper (above, heading to first for an RBI single in Sunday’s 10-5 victory over the Braves) has given Braves fans plenty of reasons to dislike him with his all-around good play. ALEX BRANDON / ASSOCIATED PRESS
Nationals star Bryce Harper (above, heading to first for an RBI single in Sunday’s 10-5 victory over the Braves) has given Braves fans plenty of reasons to dislike him with his all-around good play. ALEX BRANDON / ASSOCIATED PRESS
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