go to MSN.com
  autos     money     sports     tech     more    
  MSN home  |  Mail  |  My MSN  | 

Nationals going deep next spring in Florida

by By Ben Goessling, THE WASHINGTON TIMES , The Washington Times


add this RSS print
The Washington Nationals' 2009 spring training schedule is set, stretching a week longer than usual and taking the team to parts of Florida it doesn't typically visit.

The slate includes 33 games (including an exhibition against Italy's World Baseball Classic team) in 37 days. Pitchers and catchers report Feb. 14, and the Nationals play their first game against Houston on Feb. 25.

Washington will break camp April 2 before a pair of exhibition games against the Baltimore Orioles - one in Norfolk, the home of Baltimore's Class AAA affiliate, on April 3. The Nationals finish their spring schedule April 4 at Nationals Park before heading back to Florida for the April 6 opener against the Marlins.

The Nationals also will make a pair of three-hour drives from their complex in Viera, Fla., at the end of camp to play the Toronto Blue Jays in Dunedin on April 1 and the World Series champion Philadelphia Phillies in Clearwater on April 2.

Tickets for the Nationals Park game will go on sale with the rest of the team's single-game tickets in February. Fans can purchase tickets for the rest of Washington's home games by visiting the Space Coast Stadium box office, visiting Nationals.com or calling 888/632-6287.

Copyright 2008 The Washington Times LLC All Rights Reserved
 
Terms & Conditions     Privacy
Copyright © 2009 LexisNexis, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Please note by clicking on "add a comment" you acknowledge that you have read the Terms of Use and the comment you are posting is in compliance with such terms. Be polite. Inappropriate posts may be removed by the moderator.

 advertisement

FOX SPORTS MLB VIDEO

Mauer Power
Twins slugger Joe Mauer reacts to winning his first MVP award. Mauer collected all but one first place vote to easily beat out Mark Teixeira for the honor.
Not so free agents
Former MLB GM Jim Bowden discusses the top available pitching free agents, where he thinks they'll end up and what it will take to sign them.

 advertisement

Statistical Information provided by: STATS LLC
© 2009 Fox Sports Interactive Media, LLC. All rights reserved.