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When Rizzo and the team's owners met with Werth in California in late November to make their pitch, they made a point of explaining that the team is prepared to take steps to improve.
Werth said such assurances were important.
"I had a presentation of what we're going to do, what our roadmap is to success," Rizzo said, "and mapped out what we're going to do next week, next month, next year, three years from now and five years from now, who we have coming up and who his prospective teammates in the future are going to be."
That would include the past two No. 1 overall picks in the amateur draft: Stephen Strasburg and Bryce Harper, who both were represented by Boras during negotiations with Rizzo.
Of immediate concern for Rizzo now: finding a first baseman to replace Dunn, who signed as a free agent with the Chicago White Sox; and adding starting pitching.
Werth's deal could help with recruiting going forward. Boras said he heard from other clients via phone or e-mail after Werth's contract was done.
"When Jayson signed, the first thing they all asked me: 'Oh, so Washington's stepping up? They're taking those steps? They're looking to win now?' All those things. In the player community, when you gain that kind of street credit, you have taken a huge step, as far as what players will look at your organization and how they'll look at it differently."
Werth knows he needs help.
"We've got holes to fill, and pieces of the puzzle to fit," Werth said, standing in the Nationals clubhouse, "and I'm kind of in an architect-type situation, and I'm looking to build."
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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