L-Millz on Top

Lastings to be Nats' lead-off hitter

Since the team came to town, the Nats have been trying to shoehorn their center-fielder in the lead-off role.  After fighting through Endy Chavez, Nook Logan and a cast of thousands, the Nats appear to have found their guy: Lastings Milledge.

Manny Acta likes Milledge's patience.  He doesn't walk 100 times a season, but he's not a completely free swinger.  More than many Nats, he's good about waiting for a decent pitch to hit.

Most of the projections systems -- owing to his age and the likely improvements young players make -- think he can put up a .345-.350 on-base percentage.  That's not great, but it's acceptable out of the slot.

The more he's on base, the more three-run homers (or bases-loaded strikeouts) Adam Dunn'll have.

The other reason Acta wants him at top is for his speed. He was a pretty effective base stealer last season, going 24-9.

Nats Journal says that he's been working with instructor Cesar Cedeno (who was a great base stealer for the Astros in the '70s) on timing his attempts with a stopwatch.

By figuring out how long it takes the pitcher to get to the plate, and how long it takes for the catcher to make the throw, the Nats can have a more qualitative assessment of their chances of success, instead of relying on the old gut feel.

But stealing, in general, is a bit overrated if you're not doing it at a 80%-plus success rate.  That's especially true with Dunn -- and his homer potential -- lurking a few batters behind.  Why risk the out when you're automatically in scoring position with Dunn at the plate?

Perhaps just as important, it gives Milledge a role.  He's been a player that seems hard to motivate.  Giving him a clear objective -- get on base and score runs! -- might help him focus on the things he needs to do to improve as a player.

Little benchmarks -- like the little gold stars you got in 3rd grade -- can be an awfully powerful motivating force.  We'll see if it works with L-Millz.

Chris Needham used to write Capitol Punishment.  He misses the iced animal crackers his teachers used to hand out.

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