Cade Cavalli's Tough Follow-Up Start Raises New Questions For Nationals

Amid sweltering heat and a lingering controversy, Cade Cavalli's on-field struggles reveal the mental and physical challenges athletes face.

WASHINGTON - Cade Cavalli tried to treat Sunday like any other start. Same white binder.

Same red beanie. Same gray wireless headphones.

Same pregame routine he leans on every time he takes the mound.

The result, though, was anything but routine.

Five days after the most productive outing of his young MLB career and the flashpoint that followed it, the Washington Nationals right-hander was pulled after 2 1/3 innings in an 11-5 loss to the Pittsburgh Pirates. Cavalli gave up four runs, three earned, and manager Blake Butera said the 94-degree heat played a major role in the unraveling.

“You can think about (the past week), but I always say when I get out there, I’m out there,” Cavalli said. “So whatever’s happened in the week doesn’t really matter.

I for sure had less sleep than normal this week. But that’s no excuse.”

The week leading into the start had been anything but ordinary. On Tuesday against the Boston Red Sox, first baseman Willson Contreras brushed by Cavalli at the end of the first inning.

Cavalli later yelled, “Sit down, boy” in the fourth, a phrase with historically racist connotations. Cavalli said the next day he did not know that and later vowed to remove the word from his vocabulary.

The exchange sparked a scuffle that ended with four ejections and four suspensions.

According to a league source briefed on the decision, MLB considered Cavalli’s comment inappropriate and worthy of discipline. The league is still reviewing his appeal of the seven-game suspension, along with the appeals from the other three suspended players.

For Cavalli, the off-field fallout has been every bit as significant as anything he’s done on the mound. He has said multiple times since the incident that he felt heartbroken and lost sleep over how his words were received. And with the Nationals sitting at 46-45 and hanging around an unexpected postseason race, the attention on their Opening Day starter has only intensified.

That has left Cavalli trying to find the right balance he’s been chasing since returning to MLB last year: channeling emotion without letting it take over.

“I’m not necessarily compartmentalizing,” Cavalli said. “I use all the emotions in a positive way.

I’ve felt a lot of love and support over the week as well, compared to all the negativity that’s been thrown this way. But I just want to use the positive stuff, and, like I said, I want to just go out there and get outs.

“It was a tough day, and I’m ready to get back after it the next time I get a chance to.”

There were signs before first pitch that this one might be different. Cavalli had been scheduled to work on six days’ rest, but the start came on five.

He was coming off a career-high 100 pitches and a career-high 13 strikeouts. And even before the first inning was over, the heat was already starting to wear on him.

His stuff looked sharp early, Butera said, but faded as the afternoon dragged on. Cavalli said he had a headache that wouldn’t go away. After a pitch in the second inning, he began to feel light-headed.

He tried to manage it quietly. He went to the tunnel between innings to get cold.

He drank extra fluids and rested as best he could in the days before the game. Still, something was off.

Usually, the 27-year-old works with a visible edge, slapping his glove and feeding off adrenaline. This time, he was noticeably more subdued.

Grounders that slipped through the infield drew little reaction. After he made a two-base error on a pickoff attempt in the second inning that led to a run, he steadied himself with a few deep breaths.

Even after Bryan Reynolds launched a changeup over the wall in right-center in the third, his response was muted aside from a soft slap of the glove.

Later in that inning, after Cavalli left a slow curveball up in the zone, head athletic trainer Dale Gilbert and Butera went to check on him. Cavalli kept insisting he was fine, rubbing his palm into the dirt as he had all afternoon to signal that sweat was the issue.

His last fastball was 93 mph. His final curveball ended up in the dirt. One more pitch outside, and his day was over.

“It was a really weird feeling that I was having,” Cavalli said. “But it’s no excuse for how I threw the ball.”

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