WASHINGTON — Stephen Strasburg had hitters flailing at curveballs for seven scoreless innings. The pitch got him all eight of his strikeouts. One batter even had his helmet fly off while trying to chase a low-and-away bender.
It was another gem of a performance gone to waste for the Washington Nationals ace. Strasburg said afterward he no longer wanted to hear about the lack of run support, but the only people who can stop the talk are his own teammates, who failed him again Tuesday night in a 4-0 loss to the Milwaukee Brewers.
"You know, I'm tired of talking about that," he said. "These guys battle every single day, just like I do, and it just didn't work out for us tonight. But I'd like to get over that. I'd like to stop answering questions about run support."
Strasburg's ERA dropped to 2.24 and nearly overshadowed the game's actual outcome. He was done after seven innings and 105 pitches, and Juan Francisco's two-run double in the eighth started a scoring spree off Drew Storen (2-2) as the Brewers snapped a six-game losing streak.
"That's the first time I've really seen him live — so explosive fastball, really ridiculous curveball," said Brewers manager Ron Roenicke, giving his Strasburg review. "You don't see too many curveballs like that."
The Nationals had scored 23 runs in their previous two games, but they've now been shut out nine times this season. To get an idea of the their lack of support for Strasburg, here is the running tally of earned runs he's allowed in his last nine starts: 0, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 0. His record during that stretch? Just 3-2.
"I think when a guy throws like that, he should be able to win," Nationals left fielder Bryce Harper said.
But he didn't. Francisco got the big hit off Storen and scored when Martin Maldonado hit a warning track fly ball that popped out of Harper's glove. It was ruled a double but Harper said simply: "I dropped it."