With the Washington Nationals' season on the line in San Francisco on Tuesday night, manager Matt Williams managed like it was, well, any other game.
In a 2-2 game in the bottom of the seventh inning, Williams put the fate of his team in the hands of left-handed reliever Matt Thornton and right-handed Aaron Barrett, who, to Williams' credit, had impressive regular seasons.
But this was no regular season game. And Drew Storen, Tyler Clippard, and Stephen Strasburg - available in relief in an emergency - watched from the bullpen as it all fell apart, the Nationals losing 3-2, and the series 3-1, their National League East-winning season coming to another premature end.
Here's Williams explaining his decisions after the game:
The full Matt Williams explanation re: bullpen use. pic.twitter.com/Ddv4Zj6CDb
— Erik Malinowski (@erikmal) October 8, 2014
When asked about why he didn't go with Strasburg, Williams was almost philosophical.
"It's irrelevant. It doesn't matter," he said.
Much like the Nationals' 96 regular-season wins, right?
It was a tough series for Williams, whose decision to pull Jordan Zimmermann in Game 2, with the starter one out away from a shutout and leading 1-0, and at exactly 100 pitches, was roundly questioned and criticized. The Nationals would go on to lose in 18 innings, falling into a 2-0 series hole they weren't able to crawl out of.
Gonna be weird when Giants douse Matt Williams with champagne, name him series MVP.
— Marc Carig (@MarcCarig) October 8, 2014
Williams can take solace in the fact he wasn't the only manager making curious decisions Tuesday with his team's back up against the wall:
Dodgers eliminated in a one-run game without Puig or Jansen. Nats eliminated in a one-run game without Storen, Clippard, or Strasburg. Well.
— Ben Lindbergh (@BenLindbergh) October 8, 2014
Managers: Can't live with 'em, can't live without 'em.