2025 Washington Nationals season

Major League Baseball team season From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 2025 Washington Nationals season was the Nationals' 21st season as the Major League Baseball franchise in the District of Columbia, the 18th season at Nationals Park, and the 57th since the original team was started in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. [1][2] The Nationals were led by Dave Martinez, in his eighth year as manager, for the first half of the season. Martinez and President of Baseball Operations Mike Rizzo were both dismissed on July 6.[3]

Quick facts Washington Nationals, League ...
2025 Washington Nationals
LeagueNational League
DivisionEast
BallparkNationals Park
CityWashington, D.C.
Record66–96 (.407)
Divisional place5th
OwnersLerner Enterprises
General managersMike Rizzo (fired July 6)
Mike DeBartolo (interim)
ManagersDave Martinez (fired July 6)
Miguel Cairo (interim)
TelevisionMASN
(Bob Carpenter, Dan Kolko, Kevin Frandsen, Ryan Zimmerman)
Radio106.7 The Fan
Washington Nationals Radio Network
(Charlie Slowes, Dave Jageler)
 2024
2026 
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Previous season

The Nationals finished fourth in the National League East Division in the 2024 season, with a win-loss record of 71–91.

Offseason

Reliever Jacob Barnes and starting pitcher Patrick Corbin became free agents after the 2024 World Series.[4] They were soon joined in free agency by first baseman Joey Gallo, as the Nationals declined their end of a mutual option for the 2025 season,[5] as well as first baseman Joey Meneses, utilityman Ildemaro Vargas, and reliever Michael Rucker, whom the Nationals outrighted from the 40-man roster.[6] Additionally, the Nationals lost starting pitcher Thaddeus Ward to the Baltimore Orioles on a waiver claim on November 4. Ward did not appear in a game for the Nationals in 2024, after spending the 2023 season on Washington's roster as a Rule 5 draft pick.[7] Facing decisions on whether to extend new contract offers for the 2025 season to players eligible for arbitration, Washington declined to tender contracts to two longtime Nationals relievers: closer Kyle Finnegan and former closer Tanner Rainey.[8] Starting pitcher Trevor Williams tested free agency after spending the last two seasons with the Nationals, but he signed another two-year deal on December 31, 2024, to stay in Washington.[9] Finnegan also returned to the Nationals, belatedly accepting the reported $6 million salary the Nationals had offered to avoid arbitration earlier in the offseason.[10][11]

Washington chose to protect prospects Andry Lara and Robert Hassell III from the Rule 5 draft, adding them to the 40-man roster on November 19.[12] Hassell's promotion to the major league roster came two days after he helped lead the Salt River Rafters to the Arizona Fall League championship.[13] For the third year in a row, the Nationals made a selection in the Rule 5 draft themselves, acquiring Tampa Bay Rays minor league reliever Evan Reifert.[14]

On December 10, the Nationals won the draft lottery, giving them the first pick in the 2025 draft. Going into the lottery, Washington had the fourth best odds of winning the lottery.[15]

The Nationals signed their first major league free agent on December 19, 2024, inking right-handed pitcher Michael Soroka to a reported $9 million contract over one year.[16] Days later, they traded left-handed reliever Robert Garcia to the Texas Rangers for first baseman Nathaniel Lowe.[17] On January 5, the Nationals announced they had reunited with Josh Bell, their primary first baseman in the 2021 and 2022 seasons, on a reported $6 million one-year deal.[18] Washington signed infielder Amed Rosario on January 8 to a one-year contract reportedly valued at $2 million,[19] then inked reliever Jorge López to a $3 million one-year deal on January 11.[20] For the first time in franchise history, the Nationals signed a player posted from Nippon Professional Baseball to a major league contract: left-handed pitcher Shinnosuke Ogasawara, who agreed to a two-year deal to pitch for Washington on January 24.[21] The Nationals added infielder Paul DeJong on a one-year, $1 million contract on February 16.[22] With spring training underway, Washington added to its bullpen mix with a one-year signing of reliever Lucas Sims on February 19.[23]

Transactions

  • November 4, 2024: The Nationals lost right-handed pitcher Thaddeus Ward on a waiver claim by the Baltimore Orioles and outrighted right-handed pitcher Michael Rucker, first baseman Joey Meneses, and third baseman Ildemaro Vargas to the minor leagues; they elected free agency.
  • November 19, 2024: The Nationals selected the contracts of right-handed pitcher Andry Lara and outfielder Robert Hassell III from the minor leagues.
  • November 22, 2024: The Nationals declined to tender new contracts to right-handed pitchers Kyle Finnegan and Tanner Rainey.
  • December 3, 2024: The Nationals signed left-handed pitcher Konnor Pilkington to a minor league contract with an invitation to spring training.
  • December 11, 2024: The Nationals selected right-handed pitcher Evan Reifert from the Tampa Bay Rays via the Rule 5 draft.
  • December 19, 2024: The Nationals signed right-handed pitcher Michael Soroka to a one-year major league contract.
  • December 22, 2024: The Nationals acquired first baseman Nathaniel Lowe from the Texas Rangers for left-handed pitcher Robert Garcia.
  • December 31, 2024: The Nationals signed starting pitcher Trevor Williams to a two-year major league contract.
  • January 5, 2025: The Nationals signed first baseman/designated hitter Josh Bell to a one-year major league contract.
  • January 6, 2025: The Nationals signed outfielder Franchy Cordero to a minor league contract.
  • January 8, 2025: The Nationals signed infielder Amed Rosario to a one-year major league contract and designated right-handed pitcher Joan Adon for assignment; he was outrighted to the minor leagues.
  • January 11, 2025: The Nationals signed right-handed pitcher Jorge López to a one-year major league contract and designated right-handed pitcher Amos Willingham for assignment; he was claimed off waivers by the Atlanta Braves.
  • January 17, 2025: The Nationals signed catcher Andrew Knizner to a minor league contract with an invitation to spring training.
  • January 24, 2025: The Nationals signed left-handed pitcher Shinnosuke Ogasawara to a two-year major league contract and released left-handed pitcher Joe La Sorsa.
  • February 16, 2025: The Nationals signed infielder Paul DeJong to a one-year major league contract and left-handed pitcher Colin Poche to a minor league contract with an invitation to spring training.
  • February 19, 2025: The Nationals signed right-handed pitcher Lucas Sims to a one-year major league contract.
  • February 27, 2025: The Nationals signed right-handed pitcher Kyle Finnegan to a one-year major league contract and designated outfielder Stone Garrett for assignment; he was outrighted to the minor leagues.
  • March 18, 2025: The Nationals returned right-handed pitcher Evan Reifert to the Tampa Bay Rays.
  • March 22, 2025: The Nationals selected the contract of left-handed pitcher Colin Poche from the minor leagues.
  • March 26, 2025: The Nationals selected the contract of right-handed pitcher Brad Lord from the minor leagues.

Spring training

The Nationals held their spring training at the Cacti Park of the Palm Beaches in West Palm Beach, Florida. They invited the following non-roster players to camp: left-handed pitchers Konnor Pilkington and Colin Poche; right-handed pitchers Daison Acosta, Joan Adon, Marquis Grissom Jr., Clay Helvey, Brad Lord, Jack Sinclair, Tyler Stuart, and Jarlin Susana; catchers Andrew Knizner, Caleb Lomavita, and Maxwell Romero Jr.; infielders Brady House, Yohandy Morales, and Cayden Wallace; and outfielders Daylen Lile and Andrew Pinckney.[24][25]

Outfielder James Wood was hampered early in camp by quadriceps tendinitis.[26] Reliever Zach Brzykcy was also sidelined with a quadriceps injury,[27] as were fellow relievers Jorge López with a hip injury[28] and Derek Law with arm soreness.[29] First baseman Andrés Chaparro suffered an oblique injury that ruled him out for Opening Day despite a strong spring performance.[30] Starting pitcher DJ Herz landed on the injured list at the end of spring training with a sprained left ulnar collateral ligament of the elbow, after demonstrating significantly lower velocity and control issues in games.[31][32] Both Brzykcy and Law were also assigned to the injured list, while López recovered in time to make the Opening Day roster.[33]

Toward the end of spring training, the Nationals returned reliever Evan Reifert to the Tampa Bay Rays after he struggled with command throughout preseason play, opening a spot on their 40-man roster[34] that the Nationals filled by selecting Poche's contract.[35] Herz was transferred to the 60-day injured list after he was reportedly recommended to undergo Tommy John surgery, with Washington selecting Lord to fill his roster spot.[33]

Regular season

Opening Day

The season kicked off at Nationals Park on March 27, 2025, against the Philadelphia Phillies. MacKenzie Gore was selected as the #1 Starting pitcher, and he answered the call by striking out 13 Phillies' batters over the course of six innings, only giving up one hit and zero walks, allowing zero runs during his time on the mound. His 13 strikeouts broke a team record for an Opening Day starting pitcher, last held by Max Scherzer, who pitched a 12 strikeout performance in 2019's Opening Day. Unfortunately, the Nationals' offense had trouble taking advantage of Gore's hot start, with only two hits (both by Keibert Ruiz) and one walk (taken by James Wood) throughout their first six innings, though one of Ruiz's hits was a home run, giving the team a 1-0 lead.

However, once both teams turned to their bullpen, the offense increased. Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber immediately smacked solo home runs against relief pitchers Lucas Sims and José A. Ferrer, respectively, giving the Phillies a 2-1 lead in the 7th inning. They added a run to their lead in the 8th on a wild pitch by Ferrer, going up 3-1. The Nats managed to put 2 runs across the plate in the 8th inning to tie up the game at 3-3, eventually sending the game into extra innings. However, despite holding strong at the Top of the 10th, Colin Poche was unable to get the 3rd out as the Phillies jumped back in the lead 5-3, and a dropped fly ball by Dylan Crews in right field led to a 7-3 score before Eduardo Salazar slammed the door shut. The Nats went down in order in the bottom of the inning, losing the opener by a 7-3 score despite a strong performance by Gore that earned him 0 ERA to start the season. Sims was credited with a blown save, and Poche with the official loss.

March/April

(Top) Josh Bell, Nathaniel Lowe and CJ Abrams score in St.Louis.

The Nationals started off their season poorly, only notching one win in their first 7 games, a 5–1 win against the Phillies on March 30. Brad Lord made his MLB pitching debut in relief that game, but exited with an infinite ERA, having gotten no batters out but 2 walks and a hit that resulted in the Phillies' only run that game. Mitchell Parker notched his first win, and Kyle Finnegan his first save, of the Nats' 2025 season. Dylan Crews started off in a dramatic slump, not even recording his first hit of the season until an April 4th game against the Diamondbacks. In fact, after going 0-3 with a walk and a run scored in the season opener, Crews didn't even get on base until then, and flirted with matching an MLB record for most consecutive strikeouts (by a non-pitcher) over multiple games, ending it with 8 after hitting a groundout on his first at-bat against the Blue Jays on March 31. On the pitching side, the new acquisitions were even worse: Michael Soroka turned in a poor performance in his first 2025 start against the Blue Jays before immediately going on the IL. Meanwhile, Poche and Sims each accrued a double-digit ERA, struggling to get opposing batters out in multiple games. The team arguably reached their nadir on April 28, in a home game against the Mets. Despite putting up solid performances the previous three games, the Nats were decimated 19-5. The team's pitching was so awful that utility infielder Amed Rosario was tabbed to finish the game as a relief pitcher.

However, the Nationals also had some positive signs, rolling into a 4 game win streak split between series against the Diamondbacks and Dodgers between April 5-8. Lord, who had to make a spot start in Soroka's absence, pitched a solid 3 innings and allowed 0 runs while notching 4 strikeouts, 2 of them against the Dodgers' star player Shohei Ohtani. The Nats would win that game 8-2. Closer Kyle Finnegan went a perfect 9/9 in Save opportunities between March 30–April 23. Ruiz re-emerged as a solid hitter, maintaining a .300 or higher Batting Average throughout the month of April, and Wood emerged as a potential home run leader, having hit 9 from the start of the season through April. Following his strong performance on Opening Day, Gore tallied up several strikeouts over his next several starts, and led all MLB pitchers with 59 Ks by the end of April.

July

After a 37–53 start to the 2025 season, Mike Rizzo and Dave Martinez were fired on July 6, 2025. Mike Rizzo had 19 seasons with the organization. Dave Martinez had eight seasons with the team. At the time of the firings, the Nationals had not achieved a winning season since their World Series run in 2019. They promoted assistant general manager Mike DeBartolo to interim general manager. [36] Mike DeBartolo was with the Nationals since 2012. He started out as an intern, then worked his way up to become the assistant general manager over the past few years. DeBartolo has a background in analytics.[37]

On July 7, 2025, Cairo was named interim manager of the Nationals.[38] He won his first game as the Nationals manager in an 8-2 win against the St. Louis Cardinals on July 9, 2025.[39]

Regular season transactions

Major league debuts

Overall

Season standings

National League East
More information Team, W ...
NL East
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
Philadelphia Phillies 9666 .593 5526 4140
New York Mets 8379 .512 13 4932 3447
Miami Marlins 7983 .488 17 3843 4140
Atlanta Braves 7686 .469 20 3942 3744
Washington Nationals 6696 .407 30 3249 3447
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National League Wild Card
More information Team, W ...
Division leaders
Team W L Pct.
Milwaukee Brewers 9765 .599
Philadelphia Phillies 9666 .593
Los Angeles Dodgers 9369 .574
Close
More information Team, W ...
Wild Card teams
(Top 3 teams qualify for postseason)
Team W L Pct. GB
Chicago Cubs 9270 .568 +9
San Diego Padres 9072 .556 +7
Cincinnati Reds 8379 .512
New York Mets 8379 .512
San Francisco Giants 8181 .500 2
Arizona Diamondbacks 8082 .494 3
Miami Marlins 7983 .488 4
St. Louis Cardinals 7884 .481 5
Atlanta Braves 7686 .469 7
Pittsburgh Pirates 7191 .438 12
Washington Nationals 6696 .407 17
Colorado Rockies 43119 .265 40
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Record vs. opponents
Record vs. National League
More information Team, AZ ...

Source: MLB Standings Grid – 2025

Team AZ ATL CHC CIN COL LAD MIA MIL NYM PHI PIT SD SF STL WSH AL
Arizona 4–23–42–48–56–73–34–33–33–32–45–87–63–32–425–23
Atlanta 2–42–45–24–21–58–52–48–55–82–41–61–54–29–422–26
Chicago 4–34–25–85–14–34–27–62–42–410–33–31–58–53–330–18
Cincinnati 4–22–58–55–11–53–45–84–23–37–64–23–36–72–426–22
Colorado 5–82–41–51–52–113–32–40–60–72–43–102–114–24–312–36
Los Angeles 7–65–13–45–111–25–10–63–42–42–49–49–42–43–327–21
Miami 3–35–82–44–33–31–53–37–64–94–33–34–23–37–626–22
Milwaukee 3–44–26–78–54–26–03–34–24–210–32–42–57–66–028–20
New York 3–35–84–22–46–04–36–72–47–62–42–44–25–27–624–24
Philadelphia 3–38–54–23–37–04–29–42–46–73–33–33–42–48–531–17
Pittsburgh 4–24–23–106–74–24–23–43–104–23–31–54–27–64–317–31
San Diego 8–56–13–32–410–34–93–34–24–23–35–110–34–34–220–28
San Francisco 6–75–15–13–311–24–92–45–22–44–32–43–102–43–324–24
St. Louis 3–32–45–87–62–44–23–36–72–54–26–73–44–25–122–26
Washington 4–24–93–34–23–43–36–70–66–75–83–42–43–31–519–29
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Updated with the results of all games through September 28, 2025.

Record vs. American League
More information Team, ATH ...

Source: MLB Standings

Team ATH BAL BOS CWS CLE DET HOU KC LAA MIN NYY SEA TB TEX TOR
Arizona 2–12–12–12–12–10–30–31–21–22–12–13–01–24–21–2
Atlanta 1–20–33–32–13–03–01–21–21–23–01–21–21–20–31–2
Chicago 3–02–12–15–13–01–21–21–23–01–22–11–22–12–11–2
Cincinnati 0–32–11–21–25–12–11–22–12–12–12–11–23–01–21–2
Colorado 1–21–20–31–21–20–32–40–32–12–11–20–31–20–30–3
Los Angeles 2–11–21–23–02–13–00–32–10–62–12–13–02–12–12–1
Miami 1–22–11–21–21–22–11–22–12–12–13–01–23–33–01–2
Milwaukee 2–12–13–02–11–22–12–12–13–04–20–32–11–20–32–1
New York 2–11–21–22–10–32–11–22–13–01–23–32–10–31–23–0
Philadelphia 2–12–12–11–22–12–10–32–11–22–12–13–03–03–04–2
Pittsburgh 2–10–32–10–30–34–21–20–32–11–21–20–31–21–22–1
San Diego 2–10–32–12–13–01–21–22–12–11–21–21–50–32–10–3
San Francisco 5–12–12–11–21–20–33–01–21–20–32–13–01–22–10–3
St. Louis 2–12–10–33–03–01–22–13–31–23–00–30–31–21–20–3
Washington 1–25–10–31–21–22–11–21–22–12–10–32–10–31–20–3
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Updated with the results of all games through September 28, 2025.

Game log

More information Legend ...
Legend
 Nationals win
 Nationals loss
 Postponement
 Eliminated from playoff spot
BoldNationals team member
Close
More information #, Date ...
2025 Game Log: 66–96 (Home: 32–49; Away: 34–47)
March/April: 13–18 (Home: 9–7; Away: 4–11)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecordStreak
1March 27Phillies3–7 (10)Alvarado (1–0)Poche (0–1)41,2310–1L1
2March 29Phillies6–11Luzardo (1–0)Poche (0–2)38,4460–2L2
3March 30Phillies5–1Parker (1–0)Nola (0–1)Finnegan (1)28,0751–2W1
4March 31@ Blue Jays2–5Francis (1–0)Soroka (0–1)García (1)20,1371–3L1
5April 1@ Blue Jays3–5Green (1–0)Ferrer (0–1)Hoffman (2)21,8451–4L2
6April 2@ Blue Jays2–4Lucas (1–0)Gore (0–1)Hoffman (3)20,1041–5L3
7April 4Diamondbacks4–6Pfaadt (1–1)Ferrer (0–2)Martínez (1)18,9741–6L4
8April 5Diamondbacks4–3Parker (2–0)Rodríguez (0–1)Finnegan (2)25,9162–6W1
9April 6Diamondbacks5–4Williams (1–0)Burnes (0–1)Finnegan (3)14,5283–6W2
10April 7Dodgers6–4Gore (1–1)May (0–1)Finnegan (4)22,5464–6W3
11April 8Dodgers8–2Poche (1–2)Wrobleski (0–1)24,8475–6W4
12April 9Dodgers5–6Yates (1–0)Salazar (0–1)Treinen (2)21,0145–7L1
13April 11@ Marlins7–4Sims (1–0)Bender (1–1)Finnegan (5)9,0946–7W1
14April 12@ Marlins6–7Alcántara (2–0)Williams (1–1)Faucher (1)18,4696–8L1
15April 13@ Marlins4–11Henríquez (1–0)Gore (1–2)13,9696–9L2
16April 14@ Pirates3–10Skenes (2–1)Lord (0–1)10,4026–10L3
17April 15@ Pirates3–0Irvin (1–0)Keller (1–2)Finnegan (6)8,3407–10W1
18April 16@ Pirates1–6Falter (1–2)Parker (2–1)8,5297–11L1
19April 17@ Pirates0–1Heaney (1–1)Williams (1–2)Santana (2)12,7487–12L2
April 18@ RockiesPostponed (snow); Makeup: April 20
20April 19@ Rockies12–11Gore (2–2)Dollander (1–2)Finnegan (7)24,6068–12W1
21April 20 (1)@ Rockies3–2Irvin (2–0)Freeland (0–4)Finnegan (8)24,1769–12W2
22April 20 (2)@ Rockies1–3Senzatela (1–3)Lord (0–2)Kinley (1)18,7039–13L1
23April 22Orioles7–0Parker (3–1)Kremer (2–3)29,50410–13W1
24April 23Orioles4–3López (1–0)Soto (0–1)Finnegan (9)22,24611–13W1
25April 24Orioles1–2Povich (2–1)Gore (2–3)Bautista (3)23,05811–14L1
26April 25Mets5–4López (2–0)Stanek (0–1)30,27712–14W1
27April 26Mets0–2Holmes (3–1)Lord (0–3)Díaz (7)33,86712–15L1
28April 27Mets8–7López (3–0)Stanek (0–2)30,76313–15W1
29April 28Mets5–19Canning (4–1)Williams (1–3)Ureña (1)14,01113–16L1
30April 29@ Phillies6–7Kerkering (3–1)Finnegan (0–1)38,38713–17L2
31April 30@ Phillies2–7Sánchez (3–1)Irvin (2–1)37,71313–18L3
May: 14–12 (Home: 4–7; Away: 10–5)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecordBox/Streak
32May 1@ Phillies4–2Lord (1–3)Walker (1–3)Finnegan (10)37,06914–18W1
33May 2@ Reds1–6Greene (4–2)Parker (3–2)19,50914–19L1
34May 3@ Reds11–5Williams (2–3)Lodolo (3–3)26,22415–19W1
35May 4@ Reds4–1López (4–0)Ashcraft (2–3)Finnegan (11)23,49416–19W2
May 5GuardiansPostponed (rain); Makeup: May 6
36May 6 (1)Guardians10–9López (5–0)Smith (1–1)Finnegan (12)see 2nd game17–19W3
37May 6 (2)Guardians1–9Lively (2–2)Lord (1–4)21,94817–20L1
38May 7Guardians6–8Cantillo (1–0)Soroka (0–2)Clase (8)19,89617–21L2
39May 9Cardinals0–10Fedde (3–3)Parker (3–3)27,84917–22L3
40May 10Cardinals2–4Pallante (3–2)Williams (2–4)Helsley (7)37,79617–23L4
41May 11Cardinals1–6Mikolas (2–2)Gore (2–4)20,58517–24L5
42May 12@ Braves3–4Iglesias (3–3)Rutledge (0–1)32,69617–25L6
43May 13@ Braves2–5Schwellenbach (2–3)Lord (1–5)Johnson (1)32,72517–26L7
44May 14@ Braves5–4Ferrer (1–2)De Los Santos (1–2)Finnegan (13)37,13418–26W1
45May 15@ Braves2–5Shawver (3–2)Williams (2–5)Iglesias (7)34,07418–27L1
46May 16@ Orioles5–4López (6–0)Bautista (0–1)Finnegan (14)21,17119–27W2
47May 17@ Orioles10–6Irvin (3–1)Gibson (0–3)28,20820–27W3
48May 18@ Orioles10–4Soroka (1–2)Eflin (3–2)37,26421–27W4
49May 20Braves5–3Parker (4–3)Strider (0–2)Finnegan (15)26,51722–27W5
May 21BravesPostponed (rain); Makeup: September 16
50May 22Braves8–7 (10)Rutledge (1–1)Lee (1–2)16,90723–27W6
51May 23Giants0–4Roupp (3–3)Gore (2–5)19,19523–28L1
52May 24Giants3–0Irvin (4–1)Harrison (0–1)López (1)36,87324–28W1
53May 25Giants2–3Ray (7–0)Soroka (1–3)Walker (10)31,58124–29L1
54May 27@ Mariners1–9Evans (3–1)Parker (4–4)19,86124–30L2
55May 28@ Mariners9–0Williams (3–5)Kirby (0–2)19,47525–30W1
56May 29@ Mariners9–3 (10)Ferrer (2–2)Snider (1–1)19,59926–30W2
57May 30@ Diamondbacks9–7Irvin (5–1)Morillo (0–1)Finnegan (16)29,43527–30W3
58May 31@ Diamondbacks11–7Soroka (2–3)Pfaadt (7–4)29,43428–30W4
June: 7–19 (Home: 3–10; Away: 4–9)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecordBox/Streak
59June 1@ Diamondbacks1–3Mena (1–0)Parker (4–5)Martínez (4)29,66428–31L1
60June 3Cubs3–8Horton (3–0)Williams (3–6)27,70228–32L2
61June 4Cubs2–0Gore (3–5)Boyd (5–3)Finnegan (17)21,96529–32W1
62June 5Cubs1–7Rea (4–2)Irvin (5–2)30,40229–33L1
63June 6Rangers2–0Soroka (3–3)Corbin (3–5)Finnegan (18)27,16030–33W1
64June 7Rangers0–5deGrom (6–2)Parker (4–6)22,67030–34L1
65June 8Rangers2–4Webb (3–3)Williams (3–7)Garcia (4)24,89730–35L2
66June 10@ Mets4–5 (10)Garrett (2–2)Henry (0–1)38,47230–36L3
67June 11@ Mets0–5Peterson (5–2)Irvin (5–3)40,68130–37L4
68June 12@ Mets3–4Senga (7–3)Soroka (3–4)Díaz (15)38,77930–38L5
69June 13Marlins9–11Phillips (1–0)Parker (4–7)Faucher (6)31,09830–39L6
70June 14Marlins3–4Junk (1–0)Williams (3–8)Faucher (7)21,12930–40L7
71June 15Marlins1–3Bachar (3–0)Gore (3–6)Tarnok (1)28,29330–41L8
72June 16Rockies4–6Vodnik (2–2)Finnegan (0–2)Halvorsen (4)11,37030–42L9
73June 17Rockies6–10Senzatela (2–10)Soroka (3–5)17,23230–43L10
74June 18Rockies1–3Márquez (3–8)Parker (4–8)Halvorsen (5)20,36630–44L11
75June 19Rockies4–3 (11)Loutos (1–0)Halvorsen (1–2)21,85031–44W1
76June 20@ Dodgers5–6Kershaw (3–0)Gore (3–7)Scott (15)46,55831–45L1
77June 21@ Dodgers7–3Irvin (6–3)May (4–5)54,15432–45W1
78June 22@ Dodgers7–13Casparius (6–1)Ferrer (2–3)48,17732–46L1
79June 23@ Padres10–6Parker (5–8)Kolek (3–3)44,07433–46W1
80June 24@ Padres3–4Adam (6–3)Williams (3–9)Suárez (22)41,22933–47L1
81June 25@ Padres0–1Pivetta (8–2)Gore (3–8)Morejón (2)40,53233–48L2
82June 27@ Angels15–9Lord (2–5)Bachman (1–1)34,28934–48W1
83June 28@ Angels2–8Zeferjahn (5–1)Brzykcy (0–1)39,62334–49L1
84June 29@ Angels7–4 (11)Finnegan (1–2)Brogdon (1–1)33,66135–49W1
July: 9–15 (Home: 5–7; Away: 4–8)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecordBox/Streak
July 1TigersPostponed (rain); Makeup: July 2
85July 2 (1)Tigers2–11Smith (1–0)Williams (3–10)13,99435–50L1
86July 2 (2)Tigers9–4Henry (1–1)Kahnle (0–1)16,09536–50W1
87July 3Tigers11–7Irvin (7–3)Enns (1–1)31,59937–50W2
88July 4Red Sox2–11Giolito (5–1)Soroka (3–6)37,35537–51L1
89July 5Red Sox3–10Buehler (6–6)Parker (5–9)34,31937–52L2
90July 6Red Sox4–6Crochet (9–4)Ogasawara (0–1)Hicks (1)26,77137–53L3
91July 8@ Cardinals2–4Gray (9–3)Irvin (7–4)Helsley (18)20,65837–54L4
92July 9@ Cardinals8–2Gore (4–8)Pallante (5–5)20,95638–54W1
93July 10@ Cardinals1–8Mikolas (5–6)Soroka (3–7)21,14138–55L1
94July 11@ Brewers3–8Priester (7–2)Parker (5–10)35,05738–56L2
95July 12@ Brewers5–6Anderson (2–3)Finnegan (1–3)35,01538–57L3
96July 13@ Brewers1–8Peralta (11–4)Irvin (7–5)32,13538–58L4
All–Star Break (July 14–17)
97July 18Padres2–7Peralta (4–1)Finnegan (1–4)22,31638–59L5
98July 19Padres4–2Parker (6–10)Darvish (0–2)Finnegan (19)31,13639–59W1
99July 20Padres1–8Pivetta (10–2)Gore (4–9)21,99639–60L1
100July 21Reds10–8Chafin (1–0)Singer (7–8)15,55840–60W1
101July 22Reds6–1Pilkington (1–0)Burns (0–2)29,07141–60W2
102July 23Reds0–5Lodolo (8–6)Soroka (3–8)21,56741–61L1
103July 25@ Twins0–1Matthews (2–2)Gore (4–10)Durán (16)27,73641–62L2
104July 26@ Twins9–3Parker (7–10)Ryan (10–5)26,92842–62W1
105July 27@ Twins7–2Irvin (8–5)Adams (1–1)20,37443–62W2
106July 28@ Astros2–1Pilkington (2–0)King (3–2)Finnegan (20)28,78644–62W3
107July 29@ Astros4–7Sousa (5–0)Chafin (1–1)Hader (28)35,74144–63L1
108July 30@ Astros1–9Gusto (7–4)Gore (4–11)31,35744–64L2
August: 9–19 (Home: 5–11; Away: 5–8)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecordBox/Streak
109August 1Brewers9–16Quintana (8–4)Parker (7–11)25,19444–65L3
110August 2Brewers2–8Woodruff (3–0)Irvin (8–6)28,86944–66L4
111August 3Brewers3–14Ashby (2–1)Lord (2–6)20,06644–67L5
112August 5Athletics7–16Severino (6–11)Gore (4–12)21,63644–68L6
113August 6Athletics2–1Ferrer (3–3)Kelly (2–1)14,98045–68W1
114August 7Athletics0–6Lopez (5–6)Parker (7–12)14,51945–69L1
115August 8@ Giants0–5Teng (1–1)Irvin (8–7)38,67945–70L2
116August 9@ Giants4–2Lord (3–6)Whisenhunt (1–1)Ferrer (1)38,74246–70W1
117August 10@ Giants8–0Gore (5–12)Verlander (1–9)40,08947–70L1
118August 11@ Royals4–7Lynch IV (4–2)Rutledge (1–2)Estévez (30)17,56847–71L2
119August 12@ Royals5–8Wacha (7–9)Parker (7–13)Erceg (2)19,33347–72L3
120August 13@ Royals8–7Ferrer (4–3)Estévez (4–5)13,66948–72W1
121August 14Phillies3–2Ogasawara (1–1)Luzardo (11–6)Henry (1)21,60949–72W2
122August 15Phillies2–6Banks (4–2)Beeter (0–2)35,14349–73L1
123August 16Phillies2–0Cavalli (1–0)Walker (4–6)Ferrer (2)36,04250–73W1
124August 17Phillies9–11Banks (5–2)Poulin (0–1)Durán (21)26,24350–74L1
125August 19Mets1–8Peterson (8–5)Irvin (8–8)23,98950–75L2
126August 20Mets5–4Lord (4–6)Senga (7–5)Ferrer (3)19,56551–75W1
127August 21Mets9–3Rutledge (2–2)Manaea (1–2)Ferrer (4)20,12752–75W2
128August 22@ Phillies5–4Poulin (1–1)Durán (6–5)44,75753–75W3
129August 23@ Phillies4–6Nola (2–7)Parker (7–14)Durán (23)44,77153–76L1
130August 24@ Phillies2–3Suárez (10–6)Irvin (8–9)Kerkering (4)42,58053–77L2
131August 25@ Yankees5–10Schlittler (2–2)Lord (4–7)36,93953–78L3
132August 26@ Yankees1–5Gil (2–1)Gore (5–13)35,53153–79L4
133August 27@ Yankees2–11Fried (14–5)Cavalli (1–1)35,50153–80L5
134August 29Rays1–4Van Belle (1–0)Parker (7–15)Fairbanks (23)27,35853–81L6
135August 30Rays1–4Pepiot (10–10)Irvin (8–10)Baker (3)26,14953–82L7
136August 31Rays4–7Seymour (3–0)Lord (4–8)Fairbanks (24)19,43653–83L8
September: 13–13 (Home: 6–7; Away: 7–6)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecordBox/Streak
137September 1Marlins2–0Alvarez (1–0)Bachar (5–2)Ferrer (5)13,83554–83W1
138September 2Marlins5–2Cavalli (2–1)Mazur (0–2)Ferrer (6)12,37255–83W2
139September 3Marlins10–5Rutledge (3–2)Pérez (6–5)11,19056–83W3
140September 5@ Cubs5–11Assad (2–1)Irvin (8–11)32,32056–84L1
141September 6@ Cubs2–1Lord (5–8)Boyd (12–8)Henry (2)38,01157–84W1
142September 7@ Cubs6–3Thompson (1–0)Palencia (1–6)Ferrer (7)33,34358–84W2
143September 8@ Marlins15–7Cavalli (3–1)Junk (6–3)7,99259–84W3
144September 9@ Marlins7–5Parker (8–15)Mazur (0–3)Ferrer (8)8,63460–84W4
145September 10@ Marlins3–8Bachar (6–2)Irvin (8–12)9,03860–85L1
146September 11@ Marlins0–5Weathers (2–1)Gore (5–14)10,11060–86L2
147September 12Pirates6–5Poulin (2–1)Nicolas (1–2)Ferrer (9)18,02161–86W1
148September 13 Pirates1–5 Mlodzinski (4–8) Henry (1–2)29,88761–87L1
149September 14Pirates4–3Rutledge (4–2)Mattson (3–3)Beeter (1)20,20862–87W1
150September 15Braves3–11Strider (6–13)Parker (8–16)13,97962–88L1
151September 16 (1)Braves3–6Suárez (2–0)Irvin (8–13)Iglesias (26)15,58462–89L2
152September 16 (2)Braves0–5 (10)Kinley (6–3)Thompson (1–1)19,21662–90L3
153September 17Braves4–9Waldrep (5–1)Beeter (0–3)14,42062–91L4
154September 19@ Mets6–12Raley (2–0)Alvarez (1–1)39,48462–92L5
155September 20@ Mets5–3 (11)Lao (1–0)Rogers (4–6)Poulin (1)43,41263–92W1
156September 21@ Mets3–2Irvin (9–13)Manaea (2–4)Parker (1)42,96064–92W2
157September 22@ Braves5–11Sale (6–5)Gore (5–15)35,24864–93L1
158September 23@ Braves2–3Waldrep (6–1)Lord (5–9)Iglesias (28)37,32264–94L2
159September 24@ Braves4–3Parker (9–16)Elder (8–11)Ferrer (10)32,89865–94W1
160September 26White Sox9–10Ellard (1–2)Ferrer (4–4)Taylor (6)33,93865–95L1
161September 27White Sox6–5Fernández (1–0)Eisert (3–8)Ferrer (11)24,36066–95W1
162September 28White Sox0–8Smith (7–8)Lord (5–10)22,47366–96L1
Close

Roster

2025 Washington Nationals
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders Managers

Coaches

Player stats

= Indicates team leader
= Indicates league leader

Batting

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; R = Runs scored; H = Hits; 2B = Doubles; 3B = Triples; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; SB = Stolen bases; BB = Walks; AVG = Batting average; SLG = Slugging average

More information Player, G ...
Player G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB BB AVG SLG
James Wood1575988715338031941585.256.475
CJ Abrams1445809214935519603137.257.433
Luis García Jr.1394886712328116661427.252.412
Josh Bell140468541121712263057.239.421
Nathaniel Lowe11944050951721668147.216.373
Jacob Young12032434751012311527.231.287
Daylen Lile9132151961511941821.299.498
Dylan Crews8529343618210271724.208.352
Riley Adams83263294980824118.186.308
Brady House73261266111042958.234.322
Keibert Ruiz68255196312022508.247.318
Robert Hassell III7019722449031848.223.315
Alex Call72197305492326126.274.386
Paul DeJong571931844100623411.228.373
José Tena501521937132016315.243.355
Amed Rosario4614819408051817.270.426
Nasim Nuñez398213192041398.232.402
Andrés Chaparro3466412201505.182.258
Drew Millas1849615510724.306.449
Jorge Alfaro1439310200310.256.308
Trey Lipscomb3412000000.500.500
C.J. Stubbs1300000000.000.000
Shinnosuke Ogasawara1100000000.000.000
Totals1625422687131425928161657132443.242.390
Close

Source:Baseball Reference

Pitching

Note: W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; SV = Saves; IP = Innings pitched; H = Hits allowed; R = Runs allowed; ER = Earned runs allowed; BB = Walks allowed; SO = Strikeouts

Player W L ERA G GS SV IP H R ER BB SO
Jake Irvin9135.7033330180.019512011462124
Mitchell Parker9165.6833301164.217811610458103
MacKenzie Gore5154.1730300159.2152757464185
Brad Lord5104.3448190130.2126656343108
Trevor Williams3106.211717082.210659572165
Michael Soroka384.871616081.16844442487
José A. Ferrer444.487201176.18141381671
Jackson Rutledge425.77630073.18749472465
Cole Henry124.27570252.24327253252
Cade Cavalli314.251010048.25728231540
Kyle Finnegan144.384002039.03621191432
Shinnosuke Ogasawara116.98232038.24330301730
Eduardo Salazar018.38300029.04729271623
Konnor Pilkington204.45320028.12216141734
PJ Poulin213.65280124.22310101327
Jorge López606.57260124.2251818717
Orlando Ribalta007.03220024.12819191725
Andrew Alvarez112.3155023.116861020
Zach Brzykcy019.00260023.02823231224
Clayton Beeter022.49240121.28661432
Andrew Chafin112.70260020.020861218
Andry Lara008.7990014.1271514810
Lucas Sims1013.86180012.11419191413
Mason Thompson1111.81140010.21616141211
Luis García000.90100010.051127
Ryan Loutos1012.0010009.016161266
Colin Poche1211.4213008.21012111210
Sauryn Lao103.526007.283315
Julián Fernández103.003003.011114
Amed Rosario0036.001001.054420
Totals66965.35162162371423.114918998465661248

Source:Baseball Reference

Farm system

References

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