The Kevin Sheehan Show - Dan Quinn
Episode Date: February 12, 2026Kevin opened with a few interesting comments from Commanders' new OC David Blough yesterday and then Head Coach Dan Quinn jumped on the show. Quinn explained why the team parted ways with Kliff Kingsb...ury, why he decided on two inexperienced coordinators, why Blough was elevated so quickly, and lots more. Kevin finished up the show talking Nats' Spring Training with Mark Zuckerman from West Palm where pitchers and catchers reported today. For all your football betting needs: DCRELOAD at MyBookie for a 50% Deposit Match Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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The Kevin Sheehan Show.
Here's Kevin.
Two guests on the show with me today, including the head coach, Dan Quinn,
who will jump on in the next segment.
I won't make you wait long for that.
We'll get to that pretty quickly.
Following the coach, Mark Zuckerman will be a guest from Nat's spring training,
where pitchers and catchers have reported.
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This from Benjamin in Silver Spring.
Benjamin writes Kevin,
I still don't understand Quinn going with two unproven coordinators in a year
that seems like an important one for him.
I understand getting a proven defensive coordinator would have been hard,
given the lack of talent, but it seems crazy that he went with Blow
when Jaden Daniels is a quarterback.
anyone would have wanted to work with.
Thanks for that, Benjamin.
First of all, I recorded the interview with the coach a little earlier,
and he describes going the route of two first-time coordinators.
In a very interesting way and in a way that I think many of you would describe it as well.
You'll actually hear me, Benjamin, follow up with kind of the idea that many thought,
after a five and 12 season and heading into a season that seems like a big one for him,
that maybe the safer route would have been to go with two experienced coordinators.
So you'll hear him answer that as well.
But I promise you, Benjamin, that the Blau hire was different than the Durante Jones hire.
Blow's been in their building for two years, and they and everybody else knew that this was going to happen with him.
They knew he was going to get this chance sooner rather than later.
Listen to David Blow, talk about the opportunity that he's getting after just two seasons of being a position coach.
This was from the Next Man Up podcast, which is one of the teams' podcasts on their website, commanders.com.
But listen to Blow, describe this opportunity that came pretty quickly, given his experience.
Man, to me, it starts with DQ and just his kind of intentional vision for my growth.
Since my first day here, man, he has just poured into my development.
And really the reason I'm sitting in the chair is because he has probably seen for me bigger than I could even see for myself.
And, you know, I'll keep just driving at home.
But it's been every step of the way.
It's opportunities to present in front of the team as the assistant quarterback coach was uncommon.
It's opportunities to call plays and practices
as the assistant quarterback coach, which is uncommon.
But he has saw this vision for me for a long time.
So it's been an opportunity for me to prove to him.
You know, it's like I'm counting on him, counting on me.
You know, like, you know.
And so I'm able to kind of help bring his vision to life in that way.
Blow's been part of the plan, guys, from the jump.
You know, the opportunities that he just described that he got,
during these two years as an assistant quarterbacks coach is not typical for an assistant
quarterbacks coach. And that's something that the head coach wanted. And by the way, the
offensive coordinator Cliff Kingsbury participated in and encouraged. I think he saw a lot in
blouse as well. And look, I think on the offensive side, you know, when Quinn got hired,
there was kind of a succession plan because there was an idea that,
Cliff wasn't going to be around for very long, maybe for a different reason,
like he was going to get a head coaching job after a year or two years.
But guys like Tevita Pritchard, but especially David Blow, have been O.C. and waiting in many ways.
And you'll hear Quinn talk about why David Blow was kind of labeled as the next big thing,
as this up-and-comer that wasn't going to have to wait long to get this opportunity.
There was something else from Blow during this interview, again, on the next man-up podcast on the team's website that I wanted you to hear.
It was a little bit more, I think, detailed in terms of what he envisions the offense looking like.
Here's what he said.
They're going to see a play style that is just recognizable across the NFL.
That's one thing that I want to come to life.
It's DQ's vision, the speed and violence that our offense is going to run off the football with, loading their stance and run.
I think they're going to see a competitive and creative group that, you know, I like to use the phrase, we're going to make the same things look different and different things look the same that, you know, can cause a little bit of stress for a defense.
So I think there's some cornerstones and some benchmarks that will hit along the way. But, you know, I've got a vision in mind and our offensive staff is coming along beside me and us collectively are trying to build it exactly how we're.
see it. So two things he said that I think are interesting to focus in on. When he said early in the
answer, you know, when you turn on the tape, you're going to see a play style that is recognizable
around the league. More on that in a moment. But when he said, make the same things look different
and different things look the same, if that sounds familiar, it definitely is. That is something
that Sean McVey, Ben Johnson, probably Kyle Shanahan.
I know I've heard Sean say that before, make the same things look different and different
things look the same.
And that is we're going to stretch outside zone handoff to Chris Rodriguez on one play,
and then we're going to come back and it's going to look like the exact same outside
zone.
But Jaden this time is going play action or he's going bootleg.
and we got a big explosive or we got a big play on what they call quarterback keeper,
what we've often referred to as a bootleg,
where Jaden's now going in the other direction,
and you've got two or three receivers at different levels that are wide open.
And if they're not, Jaden with his legs runs at 8, 9, 10 yards and gets out of bounds.
Make the same things look different and different things look the same.
That is marrying run to pass.
and I think more so to play action pass and bootleg or quarterback keeper.
And when he said a play style that is recognizable around the league,
I think what he's really referring to is we're going to see more under center.
We're going to see more marrying run to pass, more play action pass,
something that Cliff didn't do.
Washington was dead last in 25 in under center snaps,
and Washington was 27th in the league in play action pass attempts.
This is what is, you know, what's more recognizable around the league,
certainly after this year, is more under center.
And this year, 12 of the 14 playoff teams finished in the top half of the league
in under center snaps.
Now, let me just point out, as I have before, last year, 24,
three of the final four teams, Kansas City,
Philadelphia, and yes, Washington.
The other team was Buffalo in the AFC title game against Kansas City,
but the Chiefs, the Eagles, and the skins were three of the least under center-snapped teams in the league.
So there are lots of different ways to do it, but Quinn prefers this way and Blow with his background,
with Ben Johnson, with Kevin O'Connell, et cetera, is going to deliver on that look,
on that style of offense.
I still think there will be elements of Cliff's offense without question.
And, you know, David Blow was highly complimentary of Cliff Kingsbury
during his presser yesterday.
But, yeah, make the same things look different and different things look the same.
That has been uttered by Shanahan Tree Guys and Ben Johnson.
And we're going to see a lot of that.
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Washington, by the way, 60 to 1 Super Bowl odds for next year.
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By the way, Mike Tannenbaum, former.
general manager of the New York Jets, Miami Dolphins,
on an ESPN.com story about next year predicted two Washington things.
Number one, that they would win the Super Bowl over Buffalo, 45 to 42.
It doesn't sound like a defense that improved very much.
And he predicted that Jaden Daniels would be the MVP next year.
Jaden Daniels' MVP odds.
I've seen them out in various places.
They're like, you know, of the players that are listed, he's like 13th or 14th, somewhere around there.
Last year he was more like 6th or 7th in terms of his odds.
So he's gone back, you know, seven spots or so.
Every year's different, man.
Just stay healthy and I think we'll have a good season from number 5.
All right.
Let's get to Dan Quinn.
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All right.
Joining me right now is our head coach, Dan Quinn.
So I want to start with this.
You know, coming off and dealing with the aftermath of the season that you just went through.
First of all, it's not been something that you've experienced much in your career as a head coach.
But here you are, following five and 12.
How have you been absorbing it?
How have you been dealing with it?
How's it going?
you know, in the wake of what happened in 2025?
Yeah, you know what?
You learn.
And that's what you want to dig into first, Kevin.
Say, all right, you know, this sucked.
What do we learn from it?
How are we going to apply it?
And so, like, all right, full stop, 2025.
It's time to move forward now and apply the things that we need to.
Change is difficult.
It's difficult with coaches, difficult with players.
You build bonds and relationships.
And there's also new energy that comes in with new people.
and new ideas. So there's an element of excitement that goes into that when you are building,
you know, an offense or a defense or, you know, a new scheme or, you know, different things that you
attack each offseason. And so I enjoy the building process. I enjoy connecting with the people.
I enjoy, you know, taking it to that next spot to the next level. And that's especially true
with players who are going from year one to year two, taking it further. And that type of leadership
and development, like all of that is this big off-season that makes it, and that's why
it makes it a lot of fun, too.
So my next question requires a little bit of a preface, and the preface is this.
I understand that injuries aren't something coaches and GMs like to talk about.
You know, I understand that, you know, you guys who are in the arena, in the fight, aren't
in the business of using injuries as an excuse for anything.
at the same time as an observer of the league that you coach in for a little bit anyway,
I know that injuries aren't necessarily an excuse.
They are a reality in the sport, and they impact games, and they impact seasons.
So I'm not asking you to make excuses, but the ask is this, given how many players you lost,
and more importantly, how many of your best players were lost for parts of, if not most of the season,
How do you and Adam and everybody else out there go about the process of legitimately evaluating what happened this year?
I think it's a great way that you framed it also, and you may have heard me say that it's not an excuse, but there is part of the reason.
And, you know, the silver lining is that you found out about some other players that you may not have in the same way, playing time, et cetera.
you found out what roles people can handle, what they can do.
And so there's a lot that goes into a Kev, but you're right to say that this was more
certainly than I've been a part of during all my years in the NFL for one season.
But you also adapt.
You say, okay, why and how do you look at things differently?
What needs to change?
What needs to stay the same?
And so those are all part of like a big overview of the program.
and it allows you to dig deeper and to go further.
And that's exactly what we're doing right now to make sure that, like,
I would never put ourselves in this space again.
Well, that leads to this.
Like, is there a way to kind of look at it and say,
was there a reason that we were the most injured team in the league?
Was it training?
Was it practice time?
Was it something else?
Or is it just one of those years that happens every once in a while to every team?
you want to look at the types of injuries and how they happened and did we have more soft tissue
injuries than most or you know what types of injuries are to have you know multiple ACLs a broken leg
or broken ankle those are unusual to have that type of volume so yeah exactly you wanted to
dig in to say the what's and the wise and you know keep layering into that obviously looked at
everything from practice time to training camp moments and all of that and so for us to be at our best
we know like the practice is a very big piece of that.
But we're still putting some of that together, Kevin,
as we're going through the entire program,
and you customize it by player and what the injuries were.
And then you want to make sure you make the modifications to say,
all right, like I said, we don't want to be in this space again.
So let's not make sure it's just rinse and repeat in any way.
What are the tweaks, what are the adjustments, things that must be done differently,
better, all of those things to make sure, like, we don't find ourselves into that space.
You mentioned that, I guess, one of the silver linings is you got a chance to see a lot of players,
and a lot of players you weren't expecting to see, because some of them weren't even on the roster.
Was there a player that either wasn't on the roster or was on the roster,
but you didn't have super high expectations for that ended up surprising you more than anybody else?
Yeah, I think there's a few, and some of them are new players that you're wanting to see.
if Eckler doesn't get hurt, does Bill Crossley-Gamara have the same amount of reps?
And you can kind of go into other spaces with people for a receiver to see Jaylin Lane,
not just as a returner, but make an impact into those spaces.
So we played a lot of people at receiver.
We played a lot of people at defensive end, that corner.
And so to see some of those guys into that spot, like Jake Martin was one that I thought,
came in as a first-year player here, all right, showed, you know, he could handle bigger parts
of that role.
Offensive line until the end of the season was one of our spots that we did stay healthy
and have good spots.
But all of those ones, they might be one-offs here and there, but to see guys step
into roles, how did Jeremy Reeves was one when we lost Will Harris, stepped in and certainly
made some plays.
We had seen that on special teams easily, and so to see that carry over onto the defensive
side, that was a big deal.
And I would say Jordan McGee at linebacker was one.
that I thought showed the speed, the violence that we're looking for from the spot.
So those are a few that come to mind when you ask that.
You know, Jacob Martin watching him this year just, it struck me that this is a guy that you probably love in terms of the motor and the competitiveness and the kind of relentless way that he played all season.
True.
That's the, you know, like the first pillar of here of being relentless, competitive and how you're going about things.
And so he had captured that right from the beginning to say, okay, here's one that's ready to take the next base and go for it at the highest level.
So I'm excited to see people make the jump from year one to year two, but I'm also excited to see some of the players make the jump from year two in the year three.
And some of those players, I think as you're heading into 26, you're going to say, man, okay, Dan talked about that.
We see that when coming.
Players like Newton and McGee and to mothers like, okay, they got playing time.
They got rolling.
They're about to take on bigger roles.
And those people going in from two to three or from one to two, I'm anticipating them making those big jumps that we expect.
Let's talk about some of the changes.
And let's start with offense.
So why did you move on from Cliff Kingsbury?
No.
change at play calling is difficult.
But when we see we want to make sure, number one,
what's the best option for the team of how we want to move forward?
And Cliffs an excellent coach.
And so sometimes even the right fit sometimes can be off track and off space.
And so for him, it just felt like we needed to change moving forward,
although difficult, just knowing, hey, this was the right space for the team.
We were fortunate to have David here.
He's been part of this pipeline that we're building with Jaden.
He's a big part, obviously, of what we do and how we do it.
And we just wanted to make sure that we set ourselves up in the very best ways to go do that.
Simplifying it.
Is it what you described yesterday?
Because you didn't speak to it in great detail.
But you did say more under center, more balanced attack, more play action passes,
that that's what you wanted, and that's not necessarily.
what Cliff does.
Is it as simple as saying you preferred that and that's not what you were getting?
You're close.
I would say I wanted to make sure that as we're going through it,
we are looking to play it aggressive to have alignment of how we want to have a balanced
attack.
That really fits for the entire team.
We were excited about Bill Kroski-Mirrit and Chris Rodriguez and some others in the
running game.
We know that the play action coming off of Undercenter is
something that we can, you know, add to. But there'll be a lot of things that fans and people
that watch us will look familiar as well. So it's a, you know, blend of things that we've done well
and things that we're adding to the program. But yes, that will include, you know, being under center
more, both in the run game and for the play action, run action passes that come off of that.
We're fortunate with Jayden, like he'd be a good player in any system. And so allow that accuracy,
you know, off of play action, that'll be a big piece for us.
Was there a moment, Dan, or was it gradual, that you kind of came to feel that this is how you
wanted to do it and how you wanted to see the offense called, that it was something different
than what was happening? Was it a moment, or was it sort of a gradual build to coming to that
conclusion? It was a gradual build to make sure of that, because I didn't want to, you know,
look at injuries who was here, who was.
here, how would we feature the guy? So it was more gradual than that. And those are the tough
decisions, but that's as a head coach, that's what we have to do and make sure the themes that we
put in, the scheme that we have. We've got two really thoughtful teachers in Blau and Durante.
And I'm looking forward for the players to feel that, that type of execution together. And so
definitely gradual would have been our mindset on that. Why Blow and why Blow
quickly?
Well, I think first being part of the system here and knowing Jaden and how we're doing
things.
And so if you've been around him, you'd understand, man, this guy is a true heavy hitter.
So when he was done playing a few years ago, he came here and we took a tour around to say,
how would we develop you?
You could feel his football acumen right away.
He had been playing, but really as a backup quarterback, he'd already been, you know, almost
a half vision of a lens as an assistant.
to see him grow, you know, over the last two years, that's when it became really clear that
although this trajectory was going to happen, it just so happened that he was able to speed up
the process more quickly and get the chance to be, you know, around somebody every day for two years.
You get a real sense and a vision for that, and David certainly has that.
You know, he's been a guy that we've all known his name, and that's unusual with a position coach
when you're a fan or even somebody in the media.
And the reason for that is he's kind of had this label as a real up-and-comer,
you know, for the last few years and someone who many thought would be an OC much sooner rather than later.
You've talked a little bit about it, but just explain what it is about him
that made people feel that way without him having much experience.
Yeah, I think from a coaching standpoint, you want to say,
feel somebody's vision. That's the teaching element and the best teachers you've had through the
years. Those are the ones from a coaching standpoint. They can get that vision across, how to do it,
what's it going to look like. And now when you can do that to an entire group, that's a really
big deal because it's scheme and it's play style and its attitude and it's a way that you attack.
And so for those things, it really is part of how he thinks on a regular basis. And he's known
when he was headed down this path, even when he was a ball player, knowing that coaching was going
to be in his future. But you're right, people would be around him to say, man, this guy is going to be
a heavy hitter. And we knew it was only going to be a matter of time before, you know, him
becoming a play caller was going to be a reality. So we're excited for him to do that here.
Obviously, having the knowledge of our program, what we stand for over the last two years, Kevin,
that's important. He's not going to start from the beginning on some of those reasons.
relationships of what a player can and can't do.
So there's some real advantages when you can build up from within
and build that pipeline from within.
And so we're really pumped about it.
We really are.
Given your relationship with Mike McDaniel,
did you have a conversation with him about his availability?
I talked to a lot of guys,
Mike being one that was included into that.
And when you go through a whole process with coaches and where are you going?
So offensively, defensively,
I met with a lot of guys, and sometimes I'll visit with friends like Mike on just their point of view or their opinion on something.
Sometimes just check it in after going through a tough experience like he did in Miami.
I want to check it on the man, not the coach.
And so you got to talk to he and other coaches that I'm close with often, and sometimes it's football related.
Other times not.
for someone who's had the success that you've had as a defensive head coach and a defensive coordinator,
what was the most frustrating or disappointing part of this past season defensively?
There's a lot, but I would say the play style and the speed and violence that I love when we play with,
the most disappointing part was does not see that on our consistent basis.
And so when you do that, when you play with that type of energy,
and connection and joy, and it's takeaways and great tackling and all that can bring.
And so that's at the top of the pile for us to recapture that and put that into full effect.
At times, you can feel like you're punching off the back foot and not, you know,
hitting them to the right spot and you can be just a little off course and you're not quite there.
You're not same energy to the ball, the same pursuit to it.
Some overthinking to go.
So I'd say that would have been the thing that when you are a,
fans or myself or my family and friends watch us, they didn't play in that same type of energy
that, you know, like Dan Quinn defense would have. And so that was probably the one that I know
we're capable of more and the things that keep you up at night the most.
Right, just a few more, and I appreciate the time as always. So, you know, when the season ended,
I think a lot of us guessed, and I think you almost implied shortly after when you and Adam had
the season-ending press conference that somebody experienced,
as a defensive coordinator was probably the way to go.
So why an inexperienced defensive coordinator in Durante Jones?
Yeah, I'm looking forward to you feeling that answer
because it's easy for me on the other side of the call to tell you.
But when I sent somebody teaching and their acumen and the vision for it,
and it becomes so clear, then some of the guidelines that you may have had say,
okay, this is the best option.
I've been on my first call with him, maybe two and a half or three hours,
and it felt like we've been on an hour.
And so even yesterday, as a presser went on for him,
I'd heard from some other people.
I get it now, you know, and meaning the language,
the alignment of how to coach of what it would look like and feel like,
it just connected easily.
And so this one, although that may have been the best plan at that time
to get started. Once I went through a full process of meeting with a lot of people,
then it became clear that Durante was been the one here. And, you know, like sometimes those
plans have to shift and adjust. And that's what coaching is, man, like what you thought maybe
at the start of it before visiting with anybody, then you meet somebody. You know what, man,
this dude right here is the one, he's a heavy hitter that we need. And this is how we, you know,
can get them here. So you go for it. And I've made a lot more success being bold than my decision
making and, you know, we're sitting back about not enough experience or play calling. And so
I'd much rather be bold and aggressive on people that are hungry and willing to go take their
shot. And so guys like Blow and Durante, man, they are in those spaces and those moments.
And I absolutely love that. Interesting way that you just described the two hires. Hearing you
describe the two hires as bold is the way I think many observers of the team and observers of you in
particular would describe those two hires as well. You know, Dan, after a five and 12 season,
regardless of the reasons for it, and I personally think the reasons were obvious, and it was
mostly about the players you didn't have playing for you this year. But that aside, in this day
and age, there's going to be a feeling from the outside after a five and 12 season that next
season is a big one for you. And because of that, I think a lot of people would have guessed,
he's going to go hire experienced
resume play callers
you know coordinators especially in a year
that's going to be big for him
does it make sense to you that people
would feel that way
I can see from the outside
you know why that would be a narrative
or a story but I'd also
you know like I love the support
that we were going to put around these two men
and a lot of coaches and talking about
the players and how to feature that
and quite honestly that's part of
my wheelhouse too to make sure
the leading in that way is on point and together.
And so when you blend everybody's strengths and how you feature them onto a team,
that's when the good stuff happens.
And so I'm looking forward, very much looking forward to supporting these guys,
you know, from a leadership position.
I'm looking forward to them getting this vision out to the players.
And when you do that together with great support from assistance,
the play style right from the players,
I think there'll be a lot for us to be proud of the way.
that we're going to attack it.
All right.
Last one, because the next, you know, phase is free agency
and doing stuff with your own players, potentially, who are free agents.
But if I said that you get one wish granted from a personnel standpoint for a new player,
not asking you to name the player, but what type of player,
what position would that player play?
That's a great question.
Yeah, you want somebody that's going to make.
like a significant impact on the team. And so the offense side, that's generally somebody that's
putting up points, you know, that's scoring on the defensive side. That's somebody that can affect the
QB or single on a receiver to, you know, eliminate this player. So those are the ones to me, if you're
making the biggest impact, one that can put points on the board or the rusher or the corner that can
take points off the board by the style and the attitude that we play. But whoever that player is, I want
them to have swagger of a commander, intensity, toughness. And when people watch us play,
to say, hey, man, like, man, does that dude an absolute baller, by the way, he attacks it?
And so those are things that I know when, and those would be the traits I was looking for.
If it was offensively, you know, it's adding touchdowns and defensively, the rusher that
affects the QB, knowing, like, you got to go after the head of the snake, or, you know,
a defensive player that can really guard people tight in the moment of truth throws,
third down, two minutes into those spaces.
So those would be the three most important factors to make head into it.
Well, not that you should care about what anybody on the outside thinks,
but I think there are a lot of people that are nodding.
Yes, yes, and yes.
In that the conversations that they're having are conversations like,
we've got to get ourselves an impact pass rusher.
we got to get more speed on offense. We need a playmaker who can score from anywhere on the field.
And I think you added corner in there as well. So anyway, thanks for doing this as always.
It's much appreciated. Wish you the best of luck in the offseason. Take care. Thanks, Dan.
Yeah, man, it's awesome, John, with you. I love our fan base, what we stand for.
And so I can't wait to get rolling with everybody, free agency, and the draft and throwing an off season.
that we're really pumped about, just getting rolling for.
So let's go hit it hard.
Yep, good luck. Thanks again.
Yeah, I'll talk you soon, but.
Dan Quinn, everybody.
Up next, Mark Zuckerman will jump on with us.
Nats, pitchers and catchers have reported.
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All right, spring training.
We are here and it would be a nice place to be,
even though it has warmed up.
around here. But Mark Zuckerman is joining me right now. He will be covering spring training,
but for a new outlet, Mark is no longer with Masson. He has ventured out on to his own,
and I actually think it will work out very well for him, because I think he's excellent at what he
does. So tell everybody, before we get started talking about our baseball team, what you're doing
and how people can read you. Yes, thank you, Kevin, for that.
So I think as most people know now, the National left Massen after 21 seasons with them and decided to take their own TV rights to themselves.
And that's, you know, they're right and their ability to do that.
And I think it's made best for them.
Unfortunately, it led to me losing my job because Masson no longer covers the National.
But just this week on Monday, I decided to go out on my own and I launched Natsjournal.com.
It's through the substack platform, but you can access it just at Natsjournal.com.
And it's essentially just a place where I am going to continue covering the team every day,
just as I always have with written content.
It links to the Natchat podcast that I've already been doing with Al Galdi and Tim Schovers.
It's kind of one-stop shopping for written nationals coverage, which, let's be honest,
there is very much a dearth of right now, given what happened at Mass and sadly what happened
at the Washington Post.
And so it is a subscription-based site.
Not everything is behind a paywall, but the majority of the articles are behind it.
That's how I'm going to sustain myself, hopefully, be able to be here at spring training and make road trips during the season.
But it's a new adventure, but it's kind of similar to what I've always done, just in a new format and new forum.
Well, you've always been great at covering the team.
I'm so glad you're going to continue to do it.
I've always enjoyed our conversations, and I'm glad we're going to be able to have them moving forward with your
new gig. I have to start with this because we haven't talked in a while, but just give me your
reaction to the off-season trade of McKenzie Gore. It was disappointing for a lot of people,
obviously, and frustrating for a lot of people. The reaction that you saw from the fan base was,
in a lot of ways, anger. And I get it. When you are trading away one of the key pieces from the
Juan Soto trade, one of the key core young players that you got back in that.
that one from a generation trade.
And you're trading him away before this team's ever even had any success on the field with
him.
That's a hard sell to your fan base to say, hey, yeah, I know you've been rebuilding through
the last few years, but guess what?
It's going to take even longer now.
We're maybe even taking a step back before we finally take a step forward.
So it was certainly not well received among the fan base, but I do think there is logic
behind it.
But you have to understand here is Paul Toboni, the new president of baseball operas.
His task is not to finish the rebuild that Mike Rizzo started.
His task is to embark on his own, rebuild because clearly the previous one didn't work the way it was supposed to.
And so as much as he didn't want to necessarily give up a promising young pitcher, he's looking at this and saying,
this team is not going to be in a position to win in the next two years that we have McGenzie Gore under club control.
I don't want to risk losing him to free agency and never getting anything out of him to help this team win.
Now is the time to move him, get more in return, and position this team potentially to have success in the longer run.
It's his right to do that.
It's probably the right thing for him to do that.
It's just hard for fans who've already been through this repealed, I think, to accept and understand that it's going to be a little while longer.
This is not a continuation of the rebuild of Mike Rism.
Yeah, I get what you're saying to a certain degree.
obviously you've got a young general manager.
He's not tied to the past.
But man, you know, 2022, the Soto Trade, that was the initiation of what felt like, you know,
a rebuild that was supposed to be over by now.
And so now it's part two of rebuilding.
And I think that's just a really tough thing to sell.
Yeah, no, and that's the problem.
And, you know, if Toboni and all these new guys had come in in 2022 and started this,
everybody would be on board and say, yes, let's do it.
we're ready to embark on this.
The problem is that they came in in 2026 after we've already all experienced this,
and that World Series in 2019 feels like such a distant memory now.
But, you know, Paul has said it himself, and he's right.
He feels for the fan base.
He definitely understands what they've all gone through, but he can't really worry
about what happened prior to him getting here.
He was hired for a reason because whatever was here previously didn't work out for whatever
reason. And so he's got to build this in the way that he believes is going to work. And let's
be clear, it's a very different program that they've got going on here. Very young, a lot of new
personnel in the front office, across the coaching staffs, across the minor league. There's a lot
of new technology that they've added to everything. Now, they haven't spent on major league players,
not at this point yet. But they're really focused on revamping this entire organization and focusing
on player development in a way that perhaps the previous administration didn't, because they
believe that that's the only way to have true sustained success. And you can't just have a team
full of veterans and try to win a World Series. Yes, you can do that, but you can't sustain
that as we saw with the previous version of the national. I didn't ask an obvious follow-up
question to the trade, and that is, how do you think the team did? How did Toboni do in his first
big move? Well, I mean, the initial reports that were all good on these guys, but I think four out
the five prospects they got in return are like single A or lower.
So you're talking about guys who are going to be further away.
I think the frustrating part, it's a lot easier to sell that if you said, okay, yes, we made this
trade, and we've already got two of the prospects are going to be on the team this year in
prominent role.
And that's kind of what the photo trade was, because you had C.J. Abrams and McKenzie Gore
pretty much right away, and then James Wood, not too far behind that.
You're not going to have that here.
It's going to be several years until you see, really, the,
the prominent players that they got back.
But I think it's also a reminder,
McKenzie Gore, good young pitcher, sure,
but he wasn't one photo,
and he's not truly established at this point
as a perennial
all-star that's going to command,
you know, a gigantic return
in terms of prospects.
There are some exciting parts
of the lineup. I mean, we get to
watch James Wood continue
to develop, Dylan Cruz,
et cetera. But let's
just look at what you think we're going to see,
opening day when we get there a month and a half from now or whatever it is. What are the
strengths of this team and where are they obviously weak? I do think this lineup has a chance
to be pretty successful and right away. Not necessarily something we have to wait around for it to
develop. James Wood is already a potential superstar. His first half last year was phenomenal.
Now he fell off a cliff somewhat in the second half. A lot of the guys did. C.J. Abrams did.
as well. And I do feel like
some of that, once they
fired Rizzo and Davy Martinez in July,
and they went with the interim
GM and interim manager,
I think the mood for everyone
just kind of dropped and everybody understood,
okay, we're just playing out the string. It's a lame
duck season the rest of the way.
And you could see it in their performance
the rest of the way. That doesn't excuse it.
And I do think one of the issues they had is that
there weren't any veteran leaders in that
clubhouse who could kind of keep everyone going
and remind them, hey, this is a 162 game.
season, you play all the way to the finish line no matter of the record.
So I'll be interested, the challenge of this new staff, how they keep these guys going
for six full months.
But if they can do that and get through to them, James Wood, C.J. Abrams, Dylan Cruz,
who should be healthy and finally be able to take off.
Dailan Lyle was such a huge pleasant surprise for them, the second half of last year,
as well.
Luis Garcia turned into a pretty good hitter.
Brady House has potential at third base.
I mean, they have pretty much at every position around the field, maybe except for first base,
you have a young, promising player who could be a part of this thing for a long time.
And so that's a lot to, it's a great starting point for them.
And I think by the end of the year, you may say, hey, this actually turned in to a good productive lineup.
The concerns, I think, are more so on the pitching side.
Even with McKenzie Gore, this was a rotation that was very thin on experience.
Without him, it's almost lacking entirely.
I don't know who the opening day starter is.
Maybe it's Cade Ciavalley.
who's finally healthy, but he's only made like 10 big league starts.
You know, Jake Irvin, Josiah Gray finally coming back two years after he had his elbow
surgery.
The only free agent they signed of any consequence was a guy named Foster Griffin who was successful
the last three years, but in Japan, not in the major leagues.
We don't know how that's going to translate here.
So there are a lot of questions about the pitching staff, and I do worry that we may be in
for some, you know, eight, seven kind of marathon games that they may end up on the wrong side of.
they're going to have to figure out something on that end to stay competitive.
But I do think the lineup has a potential to actually look good and be something they can build around.
I mean, I'm looking at some of the relievers.
I mean, these are names that I'm not even familiar with.
Tell me who, you know, is the closer.
Who's, you know, the first, you know, couple of relievers that we'll see, you know, in the early portion of the season.
Honestly, these are names that are very unfamiliar.
You're not wrong about that.
the closer would have been Jose A. Ferrer, who we saw late last year,
really step up into that role after Kyle Fingan was traded.
What happened?
Well, they traded him now to Seattle this winner for Young Catcher named Harry Ford,
who is a top 100 prospect and may wind up their catcher of the future,
maybe even as soon as opening day.
But you traded away a promising young closer when you don't have a bullpen with anybody else
with any experience in that role.
If the season started day, I'm guessing it's some combination of Clayton Beater,
and Cole Henry, who we saw in the second half last year.
And they're promising they have, you know, they had their moments,
but these are not household names.
Beyond that, there's a lefty named PJ Poolin, who, you know,
they picked up off waivers last summer.
He looked decent.
They've signed a bunch of guys on waiver claims and minor league deals,
and you hope you can piece it together.
We know that Mike Rizzo, really one of his Achilles' heels was bullpen construction.
And often that he went out and tried to get veterans,
and spend a little bit of money on some of them.
And in a lot of cases, they didn't work out.
So what you're seeing here is a complete opposite
and saying, we're going to just find promising young arms,
put them together, throw them to the wolves
and hope that it works out.
I have concerns about whether it's going to actually work out,
but I think the feeling there was
it's not worth spending money on a bullpen
if you have a team that already looks like
it may not be a contender to begin with.
And that position is so volatile year-to-year,
you don't really know what you're going to get.
So throw a lot of arms out there and see which ones stick and which ones actually make it and prove themselves we worthy of sticking around.
Who are the minor leaguers we should know about?
Is Ford one of them?
Yeah, although, like I said, he may be in the big leagues right to start.
He's going to compete with Cabo Ruiz for the job.
Now, we'll see if they think he's ready or if they'd have him at AAA, but we'll be seeing him in the big leagues at some point at here.
He really was Seattle's like one of their top prospects.
Unfortunately, it was blocked behind a guy named Cal Raleigh, who had a bit of a breakout season.
last year. So that could take advantage of that. I think the other names, last year's number one
pick, Eli Willis. Number one in the country. He's only 18. So he's not going to be up here this
year. But the early returns, he's played a little bit at the end of the year in Fredericksburg
at Single A and had no problem. There was really good. I'm guessing he'll start the year there,
maybe move up to High A in Wilmington. He talked about wanting to reach the big leagues by age 20.
So that's within two years.
You know, he's got to prove at each level,
but the sense is that he is the real deal
and that even though this group that's now in charge here
wasn't in charge for the draft last year,
they all in their own scouting for their former teams
viewed Willits as the number one pick anyways
and would have taken them themselves.
So I think that's an encouraging sign.
But they believe that.
There's two young pitchers, Travis Sikor, and Harley Sousana,
who in a perfect world would have been ready
and a big part of this is on a part of that Soto trade.
Susana was, yes
He was the last of the five
Big Prospects.
He's the big, he's the big dude
that they were really excited about.
Yes, throws 102 with regularity.
And unfortunately,
they both suffered some pretty significant injuries
last year.
Cicora had Tommy Johnson,
he's going to miss this whole year.
He is here in Bigley Camp.
Susana had a torn lap muscle.
He's here, he's probably further along.
We don't really know a timeline yet for him.
He won't be ready opening day,
and he still needs some minor league, you know,
experience first, but we could see him
maybe before the end of the year. But really
for next year, those might be two names to watch
because they're both flame throwers
who are, you know,
potential number one starters in the big leagues.
If you were to add them to Kate Cavali
who's already here, you know, we're talking down
the road now, but those are the guys to keep an eye on.
All right. Lastly, tell me
about the youngest skipper in
the big leagues. Our guy, Blake
Boutera, 33 years old. What are you
expecting in year one?
So, I mean, you see him. You don't look at
this guy and immediately think major league manager.
You think he's a play.
You think he's like a utility infielder,
like a 33-year-old middle infielder.
Now, that said, he comes with a good resume,
given his age and lack of experience.
I know he never played or managed above single A,
but what he did do for the Tampa Bay raised over the last decade,
as a minor league manager and as a farm director for them,
really kind of punched above his weight.
And people in that organization were really,
upset when Paul Toboni called to say they wanted to interview him because they thought he was a rising star in the industry.
And so maybe the Nats got him before the rest of the world kind of figured that out.
The challenge is when you're that young and that inexperienced, you've got to win over your group of major league players.
And I know there aren't a lot of veterans here to begin with, but you've got to convince these guys that, yeah, I know I'm young.
I know I never played anywhere close to this level, but you can trust me, I know what I'm talking about.
And the earlier turns, and you know, it's only a few days, although most of these guys have been here for weeks now.
Blake's been down here for a month now.
Pretty much across the board,
everybody's been very impressed with him.
And I think the way Toboni puts it is,
within a couple of weeks,
you forget about his age,
and what you just come to the realization
is that this guy knows what he's doing.
Now, he's got to prove it,
and he's got to prove not just
in early spring training,
but as the season goes on,
and if they have a losing record like you all expect,
that's where the real test is.
Can he keep them together?
Can he keep him going in the right direction?
I think that's what I'm most
fascinated to see. But if this all works out, and it's a big if, but if it works out, they may have
found this guy before the rest of the baseball world knew who he was and put him into this
spot and we'll see if he can kind of grow with the teeth. All right. We'll check back in with you
before the season begins to get your, you know, your guess on total number of wins. I'm not going
to put you on the spot today. We've got a long way to go before the opener. But at Marlowe's
I don't think it's going to start with an eight. No. I don't think it's going to start with
No. I haven't even looked at the over-under. I'm going to guess it's in the high 50s, low 60s, somewhere around there.
At Mark Zuckerman on X. That'll link. You'll see the pinned tweet, the link to where you can go get his content, gnatsjournal.com.
Plus, he's been doing the podcast with Galdi and with Tim Schovers, the Nats Chat podcast. You can find that anywhere you get a podcast.
Thank you for doing this. Best of luck.
Thank you. I really appreciate Kevin.
Mark Zuckerman, everybody.
That'll do it for the day back tomorrow with Tommy.
