As a fan of a wide variety of popular (and not-so-popular) music from the 1950s (and sometimes even earlier) up through the present, one of my bucket list projects for years has been to put together a list of my 100 favorite songs of all time. At some point I decided that, once I got around to figuring that out, I could put it out on a blog, for the infinitesimally small proportion of the Internet world that might be interested. So, here we are. While the Top 100 will be a major focus, I also plan to post on a variety of other musical (and occasionally non-musical) topics, in which you may or may not be interested. (If a particular posting doesn’t ring your bell, you’re only a few clicks away from a dancing cat video on YouTube.)

Monday, April 7, 2014

April 6, 2014 – Nationals 2, Braves 1 – Nationals Park



Weather: 50 degrees, sunny.
Wind: 7 mph, Out to LF.
T: 2:44.
Att: 34,327.
Umpires: HP: Doug Eddings. 1B: Marvin Hudson. 2B: Cory Blaser. 3B: Jim Joyce.

Section 416, Row C, Seat 1 (in our regular seats for the first time)

First “normal” trip to Nats Park, following the rained-out exhibition game vs. the Tigers and the home opener on Friday the 4th. The drive down was uneventful and took the predictable 35 minutes, with the former “HH” lot off South Capitol St. under the freeway still in operation and still $10. (The lot was originally operated by the Nationals, but taken over by a different operator starting last year.) Walked down to Subway and, instead of my usual roast beef, picked up the “$5 Footlong of the Month” (Turkey Breast and Black Forest Ham). Sunny, but colder than I had expected – really wished I had brought gloves (for warmth, not for catching foul balls).

Our friend Jeff was back, heckling the umpires and leading a couple of Charges. Don’t think he made his traditional announcement of the elapsed time of the National Anthem, however.

No line for the men’s room today, but there was a fairly long line for pretzel bites – naturally, there is no eCash express line at the Pretzel stand. Was happy that the Nats featured a video montage to Pharrell Williams’s “Happy” in the middle of the sixth and again in the middle of the eighth. (Would make a great postgame victory song as well …)

By Sunday, the euphoria generated by the season-opening sweep of the Mets had pretty much vanished. The two losses to the Braves featured almost no Nats offense, a shaky Strasburg start on Saturday, and a “lost at the plate” Bryce Harper. Worse, Zim’s sore shoulder and throwing woes had resurfaced, contributing to the Saturday loss and keeping him out of the Sunday game. Topping things off, Hairston went on the DL with a strained oblique.

Sunday turned out to be another pitcher’s duel, mirroring the Friday game. Nats scratched out a run in the top of first on a Rendon bunt single, a single by Kevin Frandsen (starting in LF for the first time in seven years), and a Dan Uggla throwing error, but their offense was silent against Alex Wood for the next 5 innings. Meanwhile, Taylor Jordan pitched an excellent game against the Braves, throwing groundballs all over the place, getting out of a bases-loaded jam in the 4th and allowing only one run in the 6th after the inning started with Braves on second and third with no outs. First base ump Marvin Hudson was in the middle of close calls all day – Williams challenged his out call on Desmond in the bottom of the first, but Hudson’s ruling was upheld on replay.

The Nats took the lead for good leading off the bottom of the seventh, when Wood served up a hittable first-pitch fastball to exactly the wrong guy, and Desmond deposited it deep into the left-field stands. Blevins and Clippard took care of the Braves in the eighth. Things got a little uncomfortable in the bottom of the ninth with consecutive two-out infield singles, but Soriano finally fanned Heyward to send most of the crowd home happy.

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