Senators Face Mounting Pressure As Richmond Tightens Its Grip

The Richmond Flying Squirrels aim to maintain their dominance over the struggling Harrisburg Senators in their upcoming rematch.

The Harrisburg Senators are back at FNB Field tonight, and the challenge in front of them is plain: slow down a Richmond Flying Squirrels team that has already had their number.

Richmond enters Game 2 of the series at 6-1 in the second half and 49-26 overall, the best record in the Eastern League. Harrisburg is sitting at 3-3 in the second half and 37-38 overall, coming in off two straight losses and a 4-6 stretch over its last 10.

The Senators have also dropped five of the seven games they’ve played against the Flying Squirrels. If Harrisburg wants to stay in the mix for the division race, it needs that trend to turn.

The bigger concern right now is the bat. The Senators have just four hits over their last 18 innings, and that kind of production has left them scrambling to keep up. They are trying to settle into the second half with some momentum, but the offense has not given them much room to breathe.

Tonight’s pitching matchup has RHP Yunior Marte going for Richmond against Alex Clemmey for Harrisburg. Marte comes in at 0-1 with a 4.76 ERA, while Clemmey is 3-5 with a 4.81 ERA. First pitch is set for 6:35 PM on City Island.

Last night, the Senators got a strong outing from Josh Randall and still couldn’t turn it into a win. Randall opened with back-to-back 1-2-3 innings and retired nine of the first 10 hitters he faced.

Richmond finally broke through in the fourth, when Parks Harber doubled off the wall in left and Charlie Szykowny followed by launching a first-pitch homer to right. The only real question was whether it stayed fair, and home plate umpire Drew Boffeli ruled that it barely did.

Randall went seven innings and allowed 3R, 6H, 1BB, and 7Ks on 89 pitches. He’s scheduled to take the ball again in Game 6 of the series.

Harrisburg’s offense never found much of a rhythm. The Senators managed only three hits, two from Cayden Wallace and one from Caleb Lomavita.

They left five runners on base and went 0-8 with runners in scoring position. Johnathan Thomas reached third as the tying run before the game ended, but he was stranded there.

For Harrisburg, the rest of this series is another chance to show whether the second half can look different from the first. First up is Game 2, Wednesday night baseball on City Island.

Looking ahead, the Senators are set to send Issac Lyon to the mound for Thursday’s Game 3. Lyon has been sharp lately, with his last two starts standing out as his best of his brief AA career.

He picked up his first win two weeks ago against the Erie SeaWolves and has cut his ERA by more than three points over his last several starts. Richmond will counter with LHP Cesar Perdomo, who faced Harrisburg twice in the previous series.

He shut the lineup down in one start, and the Senators got to him for three home runs in the other. First pitch Thursday is scheduled for 6:30 PM.

In Other News...

Cade Cavalli Apologizes As Nationals Face An Ugly New Controversy

Cade Cavalli spent Sunday trying to put out a fire that had nothing to do with his pitching line, apologizing for a phrase he used during a game against the Red Sox that carried historically racist connotations. The Nationals right-hander said he did not intend to cause harm and said he would not use the phrase again, while club officials decided not to discipline him after concluding there was no intent to demean.

The aftermath still hung over the series, with Boston interim manager Chad Tracy describing the moment as immediately alarming and suggesting Major League Baseball should review it further given the camera angles available. Willson Contreras also addressed the incident, though he declined to elaborate publicly, leaving Washington to move on while the broader controversy remained very much unresolved. [Read more 🡒]

Nationals System Shakeup Raises New Questions About Health And Depth

The latest round of minor league action for the Nationals system came with the usual mix of box scores and lineup shuffling, but the movement between stops was just as notable as the results on the field. Rochester, Harrisburg, Wilmington, Fredericksburg, the FCL Nationals and DSL Nationals all factored into a busy stretch that also included rehab work, reassigned arms and a few fresh looks across the organization.

For a farm system that is often asked to absorb health-related detours and keep innings moving, the roster churn is the bigger storyline right now. Alex Youngs rehab path has taken him from Harrisburg to Rochester after he worked the opener, while Connor Van Scoyoc, Riley Maddox and others have shifted levels as the club tries to balance development with immediate coverage. Branden Boissieres rehab assignment moving to Fredericksburg adds another layer to that picture, and Harrisburgs mix has been altered again with Jhancarlos Lara landing on the Developmental List. [Read more 🡒]

Nationals May Already Be Leaning One Way On CJ Abrams

CJ Abrams has become one of the Nationals more important long-term questions, and for now the answer may be patience. He has been producing at a high level this season, giving Washington a legitimate centerpiece to build around while the front office sorts through what comes next.

Bob Nightengale recently suggested the Nationals are unlikely to trade Abrams this season, pointing to the public relations hit such a move could bring and the fact that the shortstop remains under club control through 2028. That gives Washington time to weigh a trade or a contract extension later on, with the decision potentially pushed toward the 2028 deadline or offseason. [Read more 🡒]