So it was a pleasant surprise Saturday afternoon when the skies remained clear and the sun was warm, creating a perfect setting for an imperfect celebration of the championship that altered this city’s baseball history.
It was imperfect because it was, in some ways, painful.
The Nationals scheduled the celebration to coincide with a visit by the Houston Astros, whom they beat in that 2019 World Series. The Astros have fared much better than the Nationals since losing that Series, playing in two more and winning in 2022. Several of their key stars from 2019 remain in Houston uniforms. Their presence at Nationals Park on Saturday was a reminder of just how good the Nationals had to be to beat them. But it also offered a reminder that the Nationals’ decline was not a natural byproduct of their success.
The celebration also was imperfect because it was incomplete.
Had they been able to celebrate their title fully in 2020, most key members of the 2019 team still would have been in Nationals uniforms and could have participated. But most stars from that team were playing elsewhere Saturday. Those who could return were the retired ones — Adam Eaton, Brian Dozier, Aníbal Sánchez, Kurt Suzuki, Howie Kendrick, Javy Guerra — or current team employees Ryan Zimmerman, Sean Doolittle and Gerardo Parra, who are now focused on the Nationals’ next generation.
“I think everyone [missed out], even around the city and stuff. You win the World Series, and all of a sudden everything is shut down,” Dozier said. “That affected a lot of things around the stadium, season tickets, everything.”
Stephen Strasburg was not in attendance, either. He just recently agreed to the terms of his retirement after a lengthy dispute with the team. The Nationals invited him to Saturday’s celebration, according to team officials. They said the World Series MVP chose not to attend.
“I think the guy should be celebrated and thought of as an icon and a legend around here. I think he is. I think most people still think that way about him. They should,” Zimmerman said. “So hopefully, now that this is all resolved, we can properly celebrate him at some point. That’s above my pay grade, though.”
And like Strasburg, whose legacy changed forever because of that World Series run, the members of the 2019 Nationals in attendance Saturday offered reminders of why that title is worth celebrating now and always. To varying degrees, it changed their lives forever.
Dozier, for example — the dancing, shirtless heart of the 2019 Nationals — has had three kids in the five years since the title. The reunion gave them a chance to see parts of their father’s life that they did not get a chance to experience. And the World Series, he said, gave him the freedom to experience parts of their lives he might not have experienced otherwise.
He remembered signing with the New York Mets for the covid-shortened 2020 season in which his family could not be with him. When he got home, Dozier’s daughter asked him never to leave again. So even though he had an offer to play for the Toronto Blue Jays in 2021, he decided to retire. He had done what he wanted to do.
“We got to experience the ’19 season,” he said. “So I hung ’em up early.”
Zimmerman had done almost everything he could for the Nationals by the time they made the World Series. But now, as he paces the clubhouse and mingles with front-office members in his new role as an adviser, he does so…
This article was originally published by a www.washingtonpost.com . Read the Original article here. .