Preview: Nationals (39-33) at Phillies (26-48)
Game: 1
Venue: Citizens Bank Park
Date: June 26, 2015 7:05 PM EDT
A Cy Young Award winner and the owner of four straight 15-win seasons, Max Scherzer still strives to better himself.
Considering how dominant he's been over his last two starts, Scherzer might have what it takes to be perfect as he follows up his no-hitter by trying to help the visiting Washington Nationals to a season-high seventh consecutive victory Friday night against the Philadelphia Phillies.
Fresh from signing a seven-year, $210 million deal, Scherzer (8-5, 1.76 ERA) spoke in spring training of how he wanted to justify that payday from his new team.
"It's a never-ending process," he told MLB's official website this spring. "You're always looking for ways to get better."
There haven't been many better of late than Scherzer, who has allowed one hit, struck out 26 and walked one while retiring 54 of 57 batters to go the distance in his last two outings. His only blemish during Saturday's 6-0 win over Pittsburgh came when Jose Tabata appeared to lean into a pitch with two outs in the ninth.
"My last two starts, this is some of the best baseball I've thrown, best pitching I've done," said the right-hander, whose only hit allowed in those two came during the seventh inning of a 4-0 win at Milwaukee on June 14.
"I just feel like I'm executing all of my pitches. I just continue to keep getting better."
Opponents are hitting a major league-low .181 against Scherzer, who also has the lowest WHIP in baseball at 0.80.
"He's nasty. He's perfected his craft," teammate Denard Span said. "He knows what he wants to do. He's our horse. I've never seen any other pitcher work (as hard) as he does. ... He's working with a purpose. That's why he's so confident."
In position to be the first to throw consecutive no-hitters since Johnny Vander Meer in 1938, Scherzer also can become the first pitcher since Cliff Lee in June 2011 to record three straight shutouts.
He's 2-0 with a 1.23 ERA in three starts versus Philadelphia (26-48) this season, and can extend Washington's franchise-record streak of 41 1-3 scoreless innings by its starters after Doug Fister contributed seven in Thursday's 7-0 victory over Atlanta. It's the longest run since Cleveland's starters went 44 1-3 innings in 2008.
"There's a lot been written,' said Nationals manager Matt Williams, whose team owns a 31-5 run advantage during its win streak. "But they've got to out and pitch well, and we've got to score runs behind them to get them to this point."
Paced by Scherzer, Nationals starters have a 2.22 ERA while the club's won six of 10 from Philadelphia this season.
Bryce Harper, meanwhile, has hit four of his 24 home runs against the Phillies. He's 10 for 22 with one homer versus Aaron Harang (4-9, 3.41).
Mired in a career-high six-start losing streak, Harang has a 7.61 ERA in four June outings after allowing a three-run homer and one other run over six innings of Saturday's 10-1 loss to St. Louis.
'Sometimes when you're going out there, you're trying to executive that perfect pitch and you try to put too much pressure on yourself,' the right-hander said. "That's where it hurts.'
Harang's posted a 3.75 ERA while splitting his two starts versus Washington in 2015.
Ryan Howard is 1 for 10 with seven strikeouts versus Scherzer, but he doubled twice in Wednesday's 10-2 loss to the New York Yankees that snapped Philadelphia's three-game winning streak.
SERIES AT A GLANCE
GAME 1
Nationals at Phillies
Fri, Jun 26 - 7:05PM EDT
GAME 2
Nationals at Phillies
Sat, Jun 27 - 3:05PM EDT
GAME 3
Nationals at Phillies
Sun, Jun 28 - 1:35PM EDT