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.)

Thursday, June 19, 2014

June 18, 2014 – Nationals 6, Astros 5 – Nationals Park



Umpires: HP: Larry Vanover. 1B: Angel Hernandez. 2B: Adrian Johnson. 3B: Paul Nauert.
Weather: 94 degrees, partly cloudy.
Wind: 5 mph, In from RF.
T: 3:42.
Att: 25,453.

The Nats started their two-game miniseries with Houston on Tuesday night with a 6-5 victory that took 3:41 to play. On Wednesday, they again won 6-5, in a game that actually took one minute longer to complete.

Other than that, the scripts were not particularly similar. On Tuesday, the Nats took a 6-1 lead into the eighth and then survived a 4-run implosion by Tyler Clippard. Starter Tanner Roark didn’t have his best stuff and only lasted five innings, but pitched out of a bases-loaded-no-out jam in the fourth inning, only allowing one run to score.

On Wednesday, the Nats successfully played small ball to score single runs in the first and third without the benefit of an extra base hit, relying on walks, singles, a sac fly by Adam LaRoche, and stolen bases. (Over the first five innings, the Nats swiped five bags without being caught off the Feldman-Castro Houston battery.)

Gio Gonzalez, making his first start since returning from the DL, walked the leadoff batter in each of the first two innings (and, after I silently complained about that, allowed a double to the first batter in the top of the third). He managed to survive unscathed so far, thanks in part to a first-inning double play and a second-inning caught stealing, but was not so fortunate in the fourth. He walked the leadoff batter again, and wound up with the same bases-loaded-no-outs situation that Roark faced the previous evening. Gonzalez, however, managed to allow 4 runs before the inning ended – the Astros second 4-run frame of the series. He allowed the leadoff man to reach again in the fifth, but got out of the inning before Matt Williams mercifully pulled the plug.

The Nats cut the lead in half in the bottom of the sixth on Espinosa’s second bunt single of the night, a successful sacrifice by Ross Detweiler, and a double by Denard Span, who unfortunately made the final out trying to stretch the hit into a triple. They gave the run right back in the top of the seventh, however, as Detweiler walked the leadoff hitter (*&%$@#!), who eventually scored on a wild pitch.

Perhaps inspired by the 7th-inning-stretch rendition of “Dancing in the Streets” (so whatever happened to “Take on Me”?), the Nats dented three Houston relievers to take the lead for good in the bottom of the inning, starting with a Rendon home run and ending with a pinch-hit sac fly by Nate McLouth. Clippard redeemed himself with a 1-2-3 eighth, and Soriano again took care of business in the ninth for his 15th save. By that time, however, the crowd had really dwindled – our section was about as empty as I’ve ever seen it during a game.

Our upper-deck seats weren’t too uncomfortable despite the heat, especially after the sun went down. I took advantage of the “Dollar Dogs” special for dinner, and later bought a lemonade after finishing my bottle of water. Metro did not distinguish themselves in the afternoon; there were fewer inbound Red Line trains than usual (I did overhear a garbled announcement about a medical emergency somewhere), so from Dupont Circle on my car was so packed that I don’t think anyone was actually able to get on at Metro Center. I just missed a Green Line train at Gallery Place, and the schedule sign indicated that the next one wouldn’t arrive for another 10 minutes, with 3 intervening Yellow Line trains. Needless to say, the second leg of my trip was sardine-like as well. I just breathed a sigh of relief that the pressure of those trying to get on at L’Enfant Plaza or Waterfront didn’t force them to offload the train. Fortunately, the trip back was relatively uneventful, although due to the molasses-like pace of the game I didn’t arrive at Shady Grove until midnight.

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