NLCS left with Nats vs. Cards

Washington third baseman Anthony Rendon (middle) said the Nationals have kept fighting all season. “We just wanted to keep believing in ourselves and not worry about what people outside of our locker room were saying, that maybe we might not make it or maybe we need to trade everybody away. We kept on believing in ourselves and just kept on playing ball,” Rendon said.
Washington third baseman Anthony Rendon (middle) said the Nationals have kept fighting all season. “We just wanted to keep believing in ourselves and not worry about what people outside of our locker room were saying, that maybe we might not make it or maybe we need to trade everybody away. We kept on believing in ourselves and just kept on playing ball,” Rendon said.

With the top teams out of the mix, it's on to a most unlikely matchup in the NL Championship Series.

The St. Louis Cardinals are back in the NLCS for the first time since 2014 after a stunner of an inning in Atlanta.

They'll face the Washington Nationals, who dispatched their playoff demons with an upset of the 106-win Los Angeles Dodgers.

"We know we can beat anyone at this point," St. Louis second baseman Kolten Wong said.

The best-of-seven series begins tonight at Busch Stadium. This was the first time since 2015 that both of a league's top seeds were eliminated in the division series.

St. Louis was within four outs of elimination against the Braves in Game 4, but bounced back for a 10th-inning victory.

The deciding game in Atlanta was over not long after it started.

The Cardinals became the first team in baseball history to score 10 runs in the opening inning of a postseason game and went on to a 13-1 victory.

"It felt like we blinked and the next thing you know, it's 10-0," third baseman Matt Carpenter said.

Washington's run to the NLCS has been truly improbable, especially for a franchise that had won only one playoff series, in 1981 during its previous incarnation as the Montreal Expos. In four postseason appearances since moving to the nation's capital in 2005, the Nats came up short every time -- usually in excruciating fashion.

Just making the playoffs didn't seem likely after Washington lost star slugger Bryce Harper in free agency and then got off to a 19-31 start.

But the Nationals went 74-38 the rest of the way to claim a playoff spot, rallied from three runs down to beat Milwaukee 4-3 in the wild-card game, and then pulled off another escape job against the mighty Dodgers in the NLDS.

After again falling behind 3-0, Anthony Rendon and Juan Soto tied it with back-to-back homers off Clayton Kershaw. The Nationals won it in the 10th on Howie Kendrick's grand slam, becoming the first team to rally from three-run deficits in a pair of deciding games during the same postseason.

The year of the comeback, indeed.

"Oh, man, keep fighting," said Rendon, who finished the NLDS by hitting .412 (7 of 17) with one home run and five RBI. "We just wanted to keep believing in ourselves and not worry about what people outside of our locker room were saying, that maybe we might not make it or maybe we need to trade everybody away. We kept on believing in ourselves and just kept on playing ball."

Stephen Strasburg (18-6, 3.22), Patrick Corbin (14-7, 3.25) and Max Scherzer (11-7, 2.92) give Washington a formidable trio for a possible seven-game series.

Then there's the Washington bullpen. In both the wild-card game and the best-of-five NLDS, the Nationals used Strasburg, Scherzer and Corbin in relief to cover for a relieving corps that had the worst ERA in the big leagues during the regular season (5.66).

That may not be an option in the NLCS, which will put the heat on pitchers such as Sean Doolittle (29 saves but a 4.05 ERA) and Daniel Hudson (six saves and a 1.44 ERA after being acquired from Toronto at the trade deadline).

So far in the postseason, Washington's regular relievers have allowed eight runs and 15 hits in 13 innings, an ERA of 5.54 that is pretty much right in line with their struggles over 162 games.

The Cardinals' rotation is not as deep as Washington's, but they do have Jack Flaherty.

The 23-year-old right-hander produced one of the greatest second halves in baseball history, going 7-2 with a 0.91 ERA in 15 starts after the All-Star break. That minuscule ERA was surpassed only by Jake Arietta (0.75) of the Cubs in 2015 and Greg Maddux (0.87) of the Braves in 1994.

Flaherty got the win in the clinching game at Atlanta and finished the NLDS with 16 strikeouts in 13 innings, all while following the mantra "Don't Think."

He displays that philosophy on T-shirts, on his cleats, and all over his social media accounts.

"You kind of get in that zone. You don't know how to explain it. You don't know really what's going on. You don't know what it is, but you're there and you're locked in and you're focused and you're there in every moment," Flaherty said. "It's letting my instincts take over, letting my actions take over."

Sports on 10/11/2019

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