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Cubs get physical with Nationals, can't avoid sweep

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Washington Nationals shortstop Ian Desmond is restrained Thursday by umpire Bill Miller when both benches and bullpens emptied onto the field during the sixth inning against the Cubs at Nationals Park in Washington. The Nationals won, 9-2. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

WASHINGTON – The Cubs finally put up a fight in Washington. Not the kind that could make much difference on the scoreboard, though.

Adam LaRoche added to his home run tear with a two-run shot, and the Nationals beat the struggling Cubs, 9-2, in a fight-filled game Thursday night to finish a lopsided four-game sweep.

The Cubs (51-86) have lost 17 of their last 18 road games and six in a row overall. They were outscored 31-9 in the series.

"It's probably one of the biggest butt-whippings I've ever gotten in my career, as a coach or player," manager Dale Sveum said. "I don't remember getting manhandled that bad in any kind of series I've been a part of."

The trouble started with a testy exchange between Cubs bench coach Jamie Quirk and Nationals third base coach Bo Porter in the fifth inning. Quirk shouted from the dugout toward third base and Porter walked over to the railing, jawing and pointing his finger.

Washington manager Davey Johnson said the Cubs were ticked off because Jayson Werth swung at a 3-0 pitch in the fifth.

Just to be clear, Johnson wasn't apologizing.

"If they get mad at my guys in the fifth inning swinging 3-0 or running, they better get used to it," he said.

The benches and bullpens emptied, but there was no pushing or shoving. Quirk was ejected before play resumed.

"It was the bench coach's frustration in us handing it to him for a couple days," Johnson said. "If they want to quit competing and forfeit, then fine. But we're going to keep competing."

In the sixth, Cubs reliever Lendy Castillo threw his first pitch of the inning near Bryce Harper's legs and the ball sailed all the way to the backstop.

"Castillo's a Rule 5 kid who's thrown a lot of them pitches today," Sveum said. "There was no intention to hit Bryce Harper or anything because of what happened."

Harper made a move toward the mound and was quickly intercepted by catcher Steve Clevenger. Both teams spilled onto the field again, and this time things got a little nasty.

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