Yardbarker
Yardbarker
x
Nationals need manager change after Dave Martinez's comments
Washington Nationals manager Dave Martinez (4) makes a pitching change against the Atlanta Braves in the seventh inning at Truist Park. Brett Davis-Imagn Images

Nationals need manager change after Dave Martinez's comments

Dave Martinez has managed the Washington Nationals for eight years and helped bring the franchise its only World Series win in 2019. Now it might be time for him and the organization to part ways. Especially following his post-game comments on Saturday, where he refused to take any accountability for the team's offensive struggles, and instead put everybody else on blast. 

Martinez was asked how much of the struggles are on the players, and how much of it is on the coaching. 

He was not shy about his answer, refusing to put any blame on himself and his coaching staff and shifting it all to the players. 

"It's never on coaching," Martinez said. "It's never on coaching. Coaches work their a**** off every single day. We're not going to finger-point here and say it's on the coaches. They work hard."

After saying he had played the game a long time and never blamed a coach, he continued defending the team's coaching staff and put the blame on the players.

"Sometimes you got to put the onus on the players," Martinez said. "They got to go out there and they got to play the game. And play the game the right way. We can't hit for them. We can't catch the balls for them. We can't pitch for them. We can't throw strikes for them. They got to do that."

There is a lot to unpack from all of that.

First, nobody was actually putting the blame on the coaches. It was a simple question from a reporter as to whether it should be on the players or the coaches. Martinez then turned it into a passionate defense of the coaching staff, while throwing the players under the bus (after saying they were not going to point fingers).

Second, Martinez isn't entirely wrong with what he's saying.

It does come down to the players. The coaches can't pitch, hit or field for them. But even if that is the case, it's not something a manager can say out loud. It's not something a manager can say out loud when the team is 30-40 and when the team (under this current manager) has not had a winning season in six years. 

It's a matter of accountability. 

And a manager who is not willing to take any responsibility and is instead more than happy to throw his players under the bus is a manager who is quickly going to lose the respect of his locker room. 

If he hasn't already.

It's not just that he put the onus on the players to play better. That alone could be acceptable. It's the big leagues and everybody is highly compensated and open to criticism, especially when they are not performing. It's that he put the onus on the players and absolutely refused to put any on his coaching staff or himself, and instead backed them up completely. 

The Nationals' roster is not particularly good right now, and there probably is not a manager who is going to turn that group of players into a winner. That also has to fall on the general manager and front office for assembling such a flawed and bad roster. 

When you are a team as bad as the Nationals, nobody gets to escape blame for it. That's not the view of Martinez, where everybody else gets the blame except for him and his coaching staff, just because they work hard. 

Adam Gretz

Adam Gretz is a freelance writer based in Pittsburgh. He covers the NHL, NFL, MLB and NBA. Baseball is his favorite sport -- he is nearly halfway through his goal of seeing a game in every MLB ballpark. Catch him on Twitter @AGretz

More must-reads:

Customize Your Newsletter

Yardbarker +

Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!

TODAY'S BEST

Yankees Rookie Benched for Third Straight Game Amid Playoff Push
MLB

Yankees Rookie Benched for Third Straight Game Amid Playoff Push

For the first time all season, Jasson Dominguez is watching from the dugout for a third consecutive game. The Yankees’ 22-year-old rookie hasn’t started since Sunday, sitting out the entire series against the Minnesota Twins. Yankees manager Aaron Boone told reporters that Dominguez is simply the odd man out and is not injured. Dominguez entered Wednesday hitting .253/.330/.389 with nine home runs, 37 RBIs, and 19 stolen bases in 99 games. He’s played in 376 plate appearances, posting a 10.1% walk rate and 27.4% strikeout rate, with a wRC+ of 102 and 0.6 WAR according to FanGraphs. Over the past month, his line sits at .262/.319/.393 with three homers, but his last week has been a struggle; he’s hitting just 1-for-15 at the plate. Advanced metrics show a mixed picture of his rookie campaign. Baseball Savant tracks his average exit velocity at 90.7 mph and Hard-Hit Rate at 50.2%, numbers that rank among the better marks for first-year players. However, his barrel rate (6.9%) and xwOBA (.313) suggest there’s room to grow when it comes to maximizing contact quality. Defensively, his Outs Above Average sits at -7, a number the Yankees will want to see improve if he’s going to stick in center field long term. The missed games raise questions only because of Dominguez’s importance to the Yankees’ lineup and his standing among this year’s rookies. MLB.com’s most recent AL Rookie of the Year poll ranked him fifth, and Baseball America’s midseason rookie list had him sixth. His blend of power, speed, and on-base ability, plus the fact he’s already swiped 19 bags, makes him a rare bright spot in an otherwise inconsistent offense. Given the Yankees’ push to lock down a postseason berth, getting Dominguez’s bat and legs back in the mix will be a priority. For now, the “Martian” is grounded and it raises questions about the future.

Oregon suspends former five-star WR recruit indefinitely
College Football

Oregon suspends former five-star WR recruit indefinitely

Oregon wide receiver Jurrion Dickey has struggled to live up to expectations in his first two seasons with the Ducks, and he is now in a terrible position heading into 2025 as well. Dickey has been suspended indefinitely by Oregon, head coach Dan Lanning announced on Tuesday. Lanning also suggested that Dickey may not play for the Ducks again. "We have two team rules; that’s respectful, be on time,” Lanning said, via James Crepea of The Oregonian. “There’s some pieces of that where I felt like he needed a break from us and we needed a break from that so we could focus on what’s in front of us right now. "Wishing him nothing but the best, as far as success and want to see him get back to where he can be a contributor somewhere; that might be here that might be somewhere else.” Dickey was a five-star recruit and rated as one of the top wide receivers in the country when he came out of Menlo-Atherton High School in Atherton, California, in 2023. He suffered an injury in his senior year in high school and redshirted as a freshman at Oregon. Dickey has two catches for 14 years during his time with the Ducks. Oregon went 13-1 in Lanning's third season with the program last season. The Ducks lost to eventual national champion Ohio State in the College Football Playoff quarterfinals.

Even Mike Macdonald couldn't rattle Sam Darnold, Seahawks insider reports
NFL

Even Mike Macdonald couldn't rattle Sam Darnold, Seahawks insider reports

With so much riding on Sam Darnold, the Seattle Seahawks are doing everything they can to make sure he's ready for the season itself. In such cases, having a defensive mastermind like Mike Macdonald as a head coach comes in handy. Gregg Bell of the Tacoma News Tribune detailed how Macdonald has tested Darnold throughout training camp with various pressures and coverages. While Macdonald's defense gave Darnold trouble early on, but the quarterback has adjusted and is now throwing the ball with ease. Sam Darnold figuring out Mike Macdonald's complex defense "Darnold has gotten accustomed to Macdonald’s tricks along the defensive front," Bell wrote. "The quarterback is now anticipating rookie safety Nick Emmanwori really being an outside linebacker off the edge, about to blitz him. Darnold is figuring out Macdonald’s shifting of defensive backs, from what looks like man-to-man coverage at the snap to what is in fact zone, and vice versa. "Darnold is acing it. After a spate of interceptions early in camp, he hasn’t thrown one in practice since Monday, Aug. 4, an overthrow that landed into the arms of safety D’Anthony Bell. He’s looking more like the quarterback who went 14-3 with 4,300 yards passing and 35 touchdowns in a breakout 2024 season with Minnesota. He’s looking more like the QB the Seahawks traded Geno Smith to get." Even Macdonald conceded that Darnold has figured out his defense, noting how his quick release is giving the unit trouble. “It’s a pain in the butt to pressure you, because the ball’s out and you’re making (quick throws)," Macdonald told Darnold during Sunday's practice. “It’s hard to get to you.” What version of Darnold the Seahawks are going to get is crucial for their season as a whole. Will they get the version that excelled last season with the Minnesota Vikings, or will they get the career journeyman he was before that? Only time will tell for sure, but they're doing everything they can to bring out the best version of him. “I thought we’ve had a really good few weeks,” Darnold said. “Just awesome to see where the team has come from the beginning of training camp.”

Celtics' sale comes with significant and surprising twists
NBA

Celtics' sale comes with significant and surprising twists

The sale of the Celtics to an investor group led by William Chisholm has received unanimous approval from the NBA’s Board of Governors, the league announced. The results of the vote were never really in doubt, but it’s significant that there was no opposition to Chisholm’s purchase. The league states that the deal is expected to be finalized soon. Chisholm, a Massachusetts native and lifelong Celtics fan, reached a tentative agreement in March to purchase the franchise for $6.1 billion, which set a record at the time as the largest amount ever paid for a North American sports team. That number has since been exceeded by the sale of the Lakers for $10 billion. Chisholm submitted the highest offer among four groups that were bidding for the team. According to Brian Robb of MassLive, his other stakeholders include Aditya Mittal, Robert Hale and Bruce A. Beal Jr., along with Sixth Street, a private investment firm. Chisholm’s group will obtain a 51% stake in the team from the Grousbeck family in the first phase of the sale and will purchase the remaining shares in 2028. When the sale was first announced, Wyc Grousbeck intended to remain in his role as the team’s governor through the 2027-28 season. However, in a surprising twist, a report on Tuesday indicates that’s no longer possible because Grousbeck will control less than the 15% minimum stake that the NBA requires for the person who holds that position. Instead, Chisholm will become lead governor as soon as the sale is official with Grousbeck serving as alternate governor and CEO through the 2027-28 season. Chisholm will take over the Celtics during a time of transition after years of being one of the NBA’s elite teams. Jayson Tatum‘s Achilles injury coupled with a second-round playoff exit have placed an emphasis on cost-cutting measures to lower the team’s tax bill and escape second-apron restrictions. Jrue Holiday, Kristaps Porzingis and Luke Kornet are already gone from last year’s roster, and more money-saving moves may take place before the new season begins.