This isn’t just a Matt Williams problem but an organizational problem. Matt is just the ugly focus of the problem.
It was the Marlins who played this game like they had dying playoff hopes and have to win every game just to keep those hopes alive. They are a team that’s 20 games under 500 but they are the team that brought their closer in for a four out save! They cared enough about winning this game that they brought their closer in early. From the Marlins perspective, that’s bizarre. From the Nationals perspective, it’s embarrassing, that the team that’s 20 games under 500 is more desperate to win the game than they are.
This next part, though, is a Matt Williams is a terrible manager problem. The fifth inning was the start of Roark’s 3rd time through the Marlins lineup. That tends to be a bad time for pitchers, especially shaky ones like Roark (who’s been shaky all season, tbh) and especially when the offense isn’t scoring. They can’t hit Cosart for some reason….even though they faced him last week and tonight. It looked like it was the first time they’d ever seen him. That’s the Jim Zorn in Matt Williams. Complete and inexplicable lack of preparation by his team.
Getting back to the 3rd time through the lineup, the Marlins faced Roark last week so they had information from that start plus tonight’s game and Roark only last 4 2/3 innings in that last start. Why would Williams try to get more from him in this start? If Williams has just pulled Roark from the game after he’d gone through the lineup twice, he’d just given up 2 runs (with a runner on 3rd and one out) Instead, Matt kept him in the game…for four more batters and 4 more runs allowed and the game was essentially over. Remember the bottom of the 6th? That was the Nationals' 3rd time through the lineup against Cosart and they started to hit him but the Marlins manager had more leeway because the Marlins were leading by those four runs that Roark gave up on his 3rd time through their lineup. The Nationals ended up not scoring (SHOCK!!!) and Cosart was out for the next inning.