Win #33 on Father’s Day of 2019

Photo by Andrew Lang for TalkNats

Click here to watch Nats win #33 on June 16th on MASN via MLB.TV at 6:30 pm tonight with the rest of us. Just a quick reminder of what we are doing if this is your first time: As a group, we are going to be re-watching all 105 wins from the Nats 2019 season in chronological order at 6:30 pm each night. We will all try to sync up to the same point in the game, and this is a work in progress to maneuver to the same point in the game. Feel free to ask in the comments section where everyone is in the game so you can sync up. Many people are joining in at different points, and most people are not commenting — rather just following along.

The MLB.TV library is unlocked and free to everyone for the 2018-2019 season courtesy of MLB. This win #33 came in the 71st game in the 2019 season, and the Nats took the a 32-38 record into this game. This is where manager Dave Martinez started preaching “Go 1-0 every game” and eventually the Nats turned a losing record into a winning record. It took the Nats until June 28th to reach a winning record and they got to 12 games above .500 on August 21st. They dug themselves a deep hole and it took much longer to dig out of it. 

It was an early Father’s Day in the ballpark for this game in mid-June of last year as the Nationals clobbered the Arizona Diamondback in Nats Park.

Baseball as we saw in the movie “Field of Dreams” brings many fathers together with their children, sons and daughters. For the Nationals, Anibal Sanchez took the mound on this Father’s Day wearing that “baby blue” cap to celebrate a day that has a meaning for him beyond baseball. Sure, Sanchez has a young daughter Anabella with wife Ana and their son Anibal Jr., but he also mourns the loss and memorializes his baby son who died in 2007.  Alan Sanchez was bit by a mosquito in his native Venezuela and contracted dengue fever and passed away. 

That day was a bittersweet for the 35 year old veteran of well over a dozen years in baseball — some great, and some awful. The low point of his life was losing Alan, but he has taken that pain to put his life in perspective especially when he has endured injuries. Sanchez has also been a player who believes in giving back. Sanchez and his wife Ana have hosted hundreds of families over the years to bring smiles to others, especially children. They have given their time and their money to families in need. When their daughter Anabella was born, she had a cleft lip and palate which led the Sanchez family to create even more charitable efforts especially in the Children’s Hospital networks in cities where he has played in Miami and Detroit.

For Sanchez, his son Alan was born on the exact one-year anniversary of the day he threw his rookie no-hitter on September 6, 2006 against Arizona. While his career started off so well, he tore his labrum in the following Spring Training in 2007 which many times ends a pitcher’s career. Sanchez worked his way back and the incision marks from that labrum surgery are also a reminder on the same shoulder as the tattoo image of Alan Sanchez. From adversity can also bring great strength.

 “Every day I pitch, my son is with me,” Sanchez said.

We all know what a talented baseball player that Anibal Sanchez is, and his family and friends will tell you that he is a better person and father. As a baseball player today, Sanchez has to help his team get a win today and split this four-game series with the Diamondbacks. Sanchez will pull some extra strength today.

The Nationals have had a history of some memorable Father’s Day games, but none like June 18, 2006 when the legend of Ryan Zimmerman started as Mr. Walk-off. On that Father’s Day, Zim smashed the walk-off two-run home run to come-from-behind and beat the New York Yankees. It was the greatest pitching performance of Mike O’Connor‘s career as he held the Yankees to just one-run over 7.0 innings while facing Derek JeterAlex RodriguezJohnny DamonJason GiambiRobinson CanoJorge Posada, and Johnny Damon. The attendance on that day was 45,157. That game ranks in the top-10 of Nationals greatest games.

Arizona will start former right-handed starting pitcher Archie Bradley out of their bullpen to replace the injured Jon Dulplantier. Bradley will go as long as he can in this game and hand the rest of the game over to his bullpen mates.


Arizona Diamondbacks at Washington Nationals
Stadium:   Nationals Park, Washington, D.C.

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