Washington’s top prospect, 20-year-old outfielder Victor Robles, got the call to come up to the majors in the aftermath of an update on injured outfielder Brian Goodwin, who had a setback which cast doubt as to whether the center fielder will be able to return to the Nationals this season.

“Doug Harris was the one that told me, and I just couldn’t get any words out of my mouth, it was just hard to talk at all.” - Victor Robles on getting the call

“This is definitely what I worked for,” Robles said, through an interpreter, after he got the call.

“And I definitely was surprised to get called up so young at 20 years old, but I think I have the ability to help the team out and hopefully I’ll help them out any way I can with my ability.”

Dusty Baker told reporters at the time that if Goodwin is in fact unavailable, and other reports have suggested he could, potentially, make it back, the Nationals would face a tough decision on could back Michael A. Taylor up in center field.

“Do we need speed?” Baker asked rhetorically, as quoted by Washington Post writer Jorge Castillo.

“Do we need defense? Do we need a bat? You try to put all these things into the computer in your head and factor all the possibilities that I might need over the course of a game.”

Baker told reporters that he would prefer to have “bonafide” outfielder on the roster behind Taylor for the postseason, when asked about possibly using Wilmer Difo in the outfield after some experiments with that this season. So who is it going to be?

The likely options? Alejandro De Aza, Rafael Bautista, Andrew Stevenson, or Robles?

The Nats’ skipper discussed the possibility of keeping Robles on the postseason roster, but wondered if it would be the right decision.

“We got to see what we have,” Baker said. “I hear his youth is prone to mistakes, which you can’t make those mistakes in the postseason. It’s not fair to maybe put him in that situation.”

While expressing reservations, Baker has also talked about the maturity he’s seen from Robles, who connected for his first hit in the majors during Sunday’s finale with the Philadelphia Phillies, lining what was ruled a double off the out-of-town scoreboard in right before he was thrown out trying to stretch it into a triple when he slid past and lost contact with the bag.

Baker’s been impressed.

“What I’ve seen from him -- I liked him in Spring Training,” Baker told MLB Network Radio hosts Casey Stern and Cliff Floyd on Monday afternoon.

“This is definitely what I worked for, and I definitely was surprised to get called up so young at 20 years old, but I think I have the ability to help the team out...” - Victor Robles

“I liked his calmness, plus I liked — he’s the kid of the lot, but he’s kind of the leader of the young Dominicans, which showed me a lot, showed me his maturity, showed me his intellect, for others to kind of look up to him, but he’s very humble in how he carries himself. Matter of fact, he had told one of the guys on the team that he wanted to hit a triple as his first hit, and that’s what he hit, and I was like, ‘Kid, what else can you predict?’ you know what I mean?

“I’ve heard about his talent,” Baker continued, explaining that seeing Robles come up has brought him back to the start of his own playing days.

“Like I was looking at him, I was like, man, I was a September call-up at 19, and I was just looking at him and just thinking about all the years that have transpired and wondering how his career is going to go. We’re not going to try to rush him, but we’re getting a good look at him. I’m going to get him in there when I can.”

Baker said he’s explained the situation to Robles and all the young players who have been called up to the majors in the last few weeks. He’ll get them in when he can if they can help the team, but the Nationals want to keep winning down the stretch.

“We all remember what it was like to come up and every time the manager looks down the dugout, all the young heads pop out.” - Dusty Baker

“I tell all of them, I said, ‘Hey, I’ll get you in there,’ because we all remember what it was like to come up and every time the manager looks down the dugout, all the young heads pop out.

“Those guys give us energy, and it’s nice to have those young players around.”

Will Baker keep Robles around when it comes time to make decisions for the Nationals’ postseason roster?

Veteran Washington Post columnist Thomas Boswell in his weekly, Q&A with readers, was asked what it would take for Robles to make the postseason roster?

“It wouldn't take anything. I'd put him on the playoff roster as the 25th man if he just keeps playing the way he is so far. Goodwin is out. You'll need an OFer. “They put [Pedro] Severino on the post-season last year and he did fine. ([Wilmer] Difo, too.) Robles has a ton of poise. He roped a ball off the very top of the scoreboard in right-center on Sunday to drive in a run and he made it to third even though the ball bounced right back to a Phil. Most fast players don't even come close to a triple [off] that. But he slid a couple of inches PAST third and was called out -- so only a double. But one which showed his opposite-field power, his explosiveness and aggression. He also got hit by a pitch -- something that happens to him about 35 times per 600 AB. That's a long-term worry. But if he still looks like he's kept his timing, and Goodwin doesn't get back, I'd lean toward Robles on the roster. “Yes, he's only 20. One note: Taylor is playing so well in CF that I wouldn't even consider anybody else for that job in '18. I'd just give it to Taylor for '18-'19-'20 unless/until he plays himself out of it over a big data sample. “By '19, I suspect the [outfield] will be [Adam] Eaton LF, Taylor CF and Robles RF. Might be the best defensive OF you'd see in DC in a 50-[year] period. Kinda reminds me of speedsters Sam Rice and Goose Goslin in the same OF back in 1924. (Oh, sorry, momentary hallucination.)”

Just ignore that last paragraph of the answer, which seems to suggest Boswell doesn’t expect Bryce Harper to still be with the Nationals after 2018.

Harper is another one of the question marks for this year’s postseason roster, though he, GM Mike Rizzo, and Baker continue to say they expect the 24-year-old outfielder will make it back from his “significant” bone bruise and left ankle sprain for [late September and] October.

Dusty Baker and the Nationals have a few weeks to sort things out and make some tough decisions in advance of the NLDS. But picking between bullpen options and a number of outfielders for the 25th man on the bench isn’t the worst position to be in.