Washington, D.C
José Tena's walk-off single in Washington debut sends Nationals past Angels 5-4 in 10 innings
WASHINGTON — WASHINGTON (AP) — José Tena hit a game-winning RBI single in the 10th inning hours after being called up from the minor leagues, and the Washington Nationals defeated the Los Angeles Angels 5-4 on Saturday night to earn their second walk-off victory in as many days.
James Wood homered and Alex Call had his fifth consecutive multi-hit game for Washington, which has won back-to-back games since sinking to a season-high 12 games under .500 on Thursday.
Tena’s second RBI hit of the night capped the Nationals’ third walk-off victory and 31st come-from-behind win of the year.
“I told him he wasn’t going to bunt,” Washington manager Dave Martinez said. “I said, ‘I want you to drive this run in and try to stay in the middle of the field.’ And he drove it. He’s got a nice swing.”
Zach Neto smashed his 17th home run of the season as part of a three-hit night for the Angels.
CJ Abrams, serving as the automatic runner while pinch-running for catcher Keibert Ruiz, moved up to third when Roansy Contreras (2-2) opened the 10th with a wild pitch. Tena, who Washington acquired from Cleveland as part of a package for Lane Thomas last month and was making his debut with the Nationals, ripped the next pitch off the wall in left-center to win it.
“The manager had told me I was going to win the game for us,” Tena said through a team interpreter. “Once I realized the hit was going to be the game-winning one, I turned around and gave him a little grin.”
Derek Law (7-2) pitched two innings of one-hit ball and lowered his ERA to 2.91. Law is tied for second in the majors with 59 appearances, and Saturday was the 15th time he pitched at least two innings.
“What he’s done for us not just tonight but the whole year, this guy just takes the ball,” Martinez said. “We talked the other day about how you never to have to ask whether he’ll pitch or not. If you call his name out, he’ll be ready to pitch.”
Four Nationals relievers combined to give up two hits and a walk in six scoreless innings.
The Angels were 1 for 14 with runners in scoring position on Saturday and are 2 for 27 for the series.
“That’s not too good,” manager Ron Washington said. “I don’t know if you give credit to their pitchers over there to shut us down like that or we just didn’t have good at-bats.”
The Nationals tied it in the seventh, 4-4, against Angels starter Griffin Canning. Wood doubled in Juan Yepez with none out, then came around when Tena swatted a single to left.
Canning matched a season high with seven innings, yielding four runs and eight hits without a walk or a strikeout.
Washington opened the scoring on Wood’s opposite-field homer into the visitor’s bullpen in left-center to lead off the second and took a 2-1 lead on Call’s sharp single through a drawn-in infield with one out in the third.
The Angels went ahead 3-2 on Neto’s leadoff homer in the fifth off Patrick Corbin. After Logan O’Hoppe walked, Kevin Pillar drove him in with a double to right-center that ended Corbin’s night.
Brandon Drury drove in Los Angeles’ first two runs against the left-hander with a sacrifice fly in the second and an RBI single in the fourth.
Corbin allowed four runs and eight hits in four-plus innings. He is 0-3 with a 9.45 ERA in four attempts to earn his 100th career victory since defeating Cincinnati on July 19.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Angels: Los Angeles placed RHP José Marte (viral infection) on the 15-day injured list.
Nationals: Abrams (upper back spasms) was out of the lineup for the second day in a row. … Washington recalled Tena from Triple-A Rochester, activated RHP Jordan Weems (shin splints) from the 15-day injured list and optioned RHP Joan Adon and INF Trey Lipscomb to Rochester.
UP NEXT
LHP MacKenzie Gore (7-9, 4.66 ERA) starts for Washington as the three-game series concludes. RHP Jack Kochanowicz (0-2, 14.14), who was recalled Saturday from Double-A Rocket City, will make his third major league start for Los Angeles.
___
AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb
Washington, D.C
How Lawmakers Are Responding to the Shutdown
The government shutdown is now the longest in history. Panelists joined Washington Week With The Atlantic to discuss how voters and lawmakers are responding, and more.
Three weeks before Thanksgiving, “the administration has chosen to not find money to fund the food-assistance program for some 42 million Americans,” Jeff Zeleny, the chief national-affairs correspondent at CNN, said last night. “But they have found money for military payments and ICE officers and others. That choice, he added, “is beginning to catch up with the administration and Republicans.”
Meanwhile, “Democrats seem to be much more dug in than they were before Tuesday,” Atlantic staff writer Mark Leibovich noted. “I think they seem emboldened by Tuesday’s elections.”
Joining the editor in chief of The Atlantic, Jeffrey Goldberg, to discuss this and more: Leigh Ann Caldwell, the chief Washington correspondent at Puck; David Ignatius, a foreign-affairs columnist at The Washington Post; Mark Leibovich, a staff writer at The Atlantic; and Jeff Zeleny, the chief national-affairs correspondent at CNN.
Watch the full episode here.
Washington, D.C
DC Mayor Bowser is not the target of Justice Department investigation, officials say
WASHINGTON — The Justice Department is scrutinizing a trip that Washington, D.C., Mayor Muriel Bowser took to Qatar, but the mayor is not a target of the investigation, a person familiar with the matter told The Associated Press on Friday.
The probe into a trip Bowser took with staff in 2023 is focused on a lobbyist tied to the Democratic mayor, according to the person, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the investigation.
The New York Times reported Thursday that federal prosecutors in Washington had opened a corruption investigation into Bowser and were looking into potential violations of bribery or campaign finance laws related to the trip.
But Washington’s top federal prosecutor, U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro, said in a statement Friday that the mayor is “not under investigation, nor is she the target of any investigation.” A spokesperson for Pirro declined to further comment.
Asked about the investigation at a press conference Friday, Bowser said she had not been contacted by any federal officials and had not received any subpoenas, nor a target letter.
“I have checked our lawyers, and we have a regular kind of chain of who talks to who and we have not been contacted, not related to me or to anybody else as I’m aware,” Bowser said.
The trip in question included a stop in Doha, where the mayor met with international leaders on the issues of infrastructure, sports and education. She also promoted Washington as a destination for investment and tourism. Qatar donated $60,000 to help cover the cost of the trip for the mayor and members of her party.
Bowser told reporters Friday that it was “a business trip, a publicly noticed trip to promote Washington, D.C., in Qatar.”
“That’s what we did and we don’t have any bones about saying it,” she said. The mayor credited the trip with helping the city to keep two of its professional sports teams in the downtown area.
The scrutiny of the trip comes a time when the mayor is deciding whether to seek a fourth term.
It also comes at a critical moment when the city is responding to a government shutdown that has impacted businesses and a federal workforce as well as a continuing deployment of National Guard troops on the street through at least February 2026.
Washington, D.C
Conflicting reports about DOJ investigating Mayor Bowser’s foreign trip
The New York Times reported Thursday evening that the Department of Justice is investigating D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser over a foreign trip she took that was at least partially paid for by Qatar, but a report from Axios later disputed the New York Times report.
Axios first reported a senior Trump administration official says Bowser’s “name was mentioned in something,” but that she is not under federal investigation. Axios says the unnamed official blamed the rumor of the investigation on a disgruntled fired FBI agent.
A Trump administration official later told News4 Investigative Reporter Ted Oberg that Bowser is not the target of a federal investigation.
The mayor’s office said Bowser did not have anything to say about the Times report Thursday night but will be taking questions Friday at an event already on her calendar.
Bowser went to Dubai in late 2023 with four executive staff members for a United Nations conference on climate change, the Times reported.
The investigation started after the mayor’s office incorrectly told reporters the Chamber of Conference paid for the trip.
Her office told News4 that after the trip they became aware of a “staff error,” which led to the lack of a standard donation agreement for travel expenses. That paperwork has since been correctly submitted, Bowser’s office said. They said they have a letter from Qatar confirming they paid tens of thousands of dollars for the trip for Bowser and her staffers.
It’s not unusual for outside organizations or governments to pay for such trips, but it appears the mayor’s office didn’t handle the reporting properly in the beginning.
D.C. Code requires city officials to file proper reporting paperwork for gifts and donations such as a trip.
The mayor’s office said they heard about an investigation when the Times called Thursday afternoon for comment.
“We have checked with our lawyers, and the District has not been notified of any investigation,” the mayor’s office said in a statement. “This was a business trip; DC representatives regularly travel to promote Washington as a destination for investment and growth.”
“In some cases, economic development funds are used for the business travel; in other cases, the host or organizer cover the expenses,” the statement said. “All proper paperwork for this standard donation is on file.”
Bowser previously has been asked about who paid for a trip to the Masters golf tournament – questions that have never fully been answered.
The investigation comes after the federal takeover of D.C. — and looming threat of another one — and as Bowser considers running for a fourth term.
Bowser was scheduled to attend a gala Thursday night where she was to receive an award for her work in the redevelopment of the RFK Stadium site.
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