2008 St. Louis Cardinals season

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2008  St. Louis Cardinals
St Louis Cardinals Cap Insignia.svg
League National League
Division Central
Ballpark Busch Stadium
City St. Louis, Missouri
Record86–76 (.531)
Divisional place4th
Owners William DeWitt, Jr., Fred Hanser
General managers John Mozeliak
Managers Tony La Russa
Television FSN Midwest
(Dan McLaughlin, Al Hrabosky)
KSDK (NBC 5)
(Jay Randolph, Rick Horton)
Radio KTRS
(Mike Shannon, John Rooney)
  2007 Seasons 2009  

The 2008 St. Louis Cardinals season was the 127th season for the St. Louis Cardinals, a Major League Baseball franchise in St. Louis, Missouri. It was the 117th season for the Cardinals in the National League and their 3rd at Busch Stadium III.

Contents

The Cardinals, coming off a 78–84 season in 2007 their worst since 1999, improved by eight games, going 86–76 in 2008. However, this was only good for fourth place in the National League Central, 11.5 games behind the division champion Chicago Cubs.

Offseason departures and acquisitions

Front office

Walt Jocketty, GM of the Cardinals for twelve years, was fired due to "tension mounting" that had "grown counterproductive ... with respect to some baseball issues." [1] Tony La Russa, however, signed a contract to return to manage the Cardinals for his 13th and 14th seasons. [2] John Mozeliak took Jocketty's place as GM. [3] John Abbamondi, former senior director of labor economics working for Major League Baseball in New York, joined the Cardinals as assistant GM.

On March 13, it was announced that Mark Lamping, president of the Cardinals for 13 years, resigned to become the CEO of the New Meadowlands Stadium Company. Bill DeWitt III, son of Cardinals chairman William DeWitt, Jr. and formerly the team's vice-president of business development, took Lamping's place as president. [4]

Hitters

A major offseason story for the Cardinals was the hostile relationship between manager Tony La Russa and third baseman Scott Rolen. LaRussa publicly criticized Rolen on December 5, [5] and Rolen requested a trade, but the team was unable to find a suitable offer at the winter meetings. [6] [7] [8] On January 12, the Cardinals reached a tentative agreement with the Toronto Blue Jays to trade Rolen for their third baseman, Troy Glaus, and the trade was finalized on January 14. [9] [10]

Center fielder Jim Edmonds, the most senior member of the Cardinals' roster, having been with the team since the 2000 season, was traded to the San Diego Padres for single-A third baseman David Freese and cash considerations on December 14, 2007. [11]

So Taguchi, backup outfielder and the only Japanese player in franchise history, was released by the Cardinals in December after six seasons with the organization. [12] The Cardinals declined to offer arbitration to shortstop David Eckstein [13] and acquired César Izturis as his replacement. [14] St. Louis acquired Jason LaRue to be the backup catcher, replacing Gary Bennett. [15] The Cardinals took outfielder Brian Barton from Cleveland on December 6 in the Rule 5 draft. [16]

Utility player Scott Spiezio was released by the Cardinals on February 27 after California authorities issued a warrant for his arrest on charges that included hit-and-run, drunk driving and assault. Spiezio had previously missed a month of the 2007 season to go on rehab for drug abuse problems. [17]

In spring training, LaRussa confirmed that he would continue to bat the pitcher eighth after the Cardinals adopted the unconventional lineup for the last two months of the 2007 season. [18] [19]

Pitchers

Starting pitcher Kip Wells, who posted a 5.70 ERA in 2007, departed via free agency. Starting pitcher Joel Piñeiro, effective for the Cardinals in 2007 after a late-season trade from Boston, signed a two-year deal to remain with the team. [20]

On January 3, St. Louis signed starting pitcher Matt Clement, a former All-Star who missed the entire 2007 season after undergoing shoulder surgery. [21] However, Clement's rehab went slowly and he was not ready for Opening Day.

Concerned over health issues in the rotation, with Clement not ready and Piñeiro suffering from shoulder pain, St. Louis signed another free agent, starting pitcher Kyle Lohse, to a one-year contract on March 14. [22]

Regular season

The Cardinals were 17-10-2 in Grapefruit League play with a .286 team batting average (5th in NL) and a 4.01 ERA (4th in NL). Attendance at Roger Dean Stadium was 92,465 in 16 home games (9-5-2) for an average home attendance of 5,779. In 13 road games (8-5-0), attendance 85,655; road average 6,589. [23] Their overall Spring training record was 19-11-2. [24] St. Louis started the season with three players--Brian Barton, Kyle McClellan, and Rico Washington – who were making their big-league debuts. Only nine players on the Opening Day roster – Yadier Molina, Albert Pujols, Chris Duncan, Aaron Miles, Randy Flores, Anthony Reyes, Adam Wainwright, Braden Looper and Brad Thompson – were on the roster of the 2006 World Series champion Cardinals. With a pitching rotation in flux and many long-time Cardinals off to other teams, and coming off a losing season, most experts picked St. Louis to play poorly again in 2008. [25] [26] [27]

April

Opening Day, scheduled for March 31, was postponed to April 1 due to rain after the Cards and Rockies had played 2½ innings. The rain wiped out an Albert Pujols home run. [28] In the make-up game, St. Louis lost 2-1, with a Yadier Molina home run the only offense. [29] After the opening loss the Cardinals won the other five games on their home stand; the 5-1 start marked the first time since 2006 that the Cardinals had been more than one game above .500. St. Louis finished the month of April with an 18-11 record and in sole possession of first place in the NL Central. Albert Pujols reached base safely in all 29 games for the month. Staff ace Adam Wainwright finished the month 3-1 with a 2.79 ERA. [30] Jason Isringhausen had nine saves in April. However, new third baseman Troy Glaus ended April hitting only .260 and had only one home run for the month.

May

May opened with St. Louis' first series of the year against their arch-rival and the preseason NL Central favorite Chicago Cubs, with the Cardinals winning two of three games to stay atop the NL Central standings. Pujols continued to get on base: on May 6 he reached base safely for the 34th consecutive game since the start of the season, the longest such streak in MLB since 1999. [31]

Jason Isringhausen struggled mightily as Cardinal closer in late April and early May, blowing four saves and taking three losses between April 25 and May 9. His ERA rose from 4.50 to 7.47 during that span. [32] After Isringhausen's fifth blown save of the season on May 9, LaRussa announced that Isringhausen would no longer be closing games and instead the Cardinals would be adopting a closer-by-committee approach. [33] Ryan Franklin received the first save opportunity after LaRussa's decision. [34] On May 16, Isringhausen was placed on the 15-day disabled list with a right hand laceration. Josh Kinney was transferred to the 60-day disabled list (from the 15-day list) to make room for highly touted prospect Chris Perez, who was called up from Memphis. [35] Finally, on May 17, Manager La Russa officially designated Ryan Franklin as his closer. [36]

Albert Pujols' on-base streak was snapped at 42 games when he failed to reach safely in a 3-1 loss to the Tampa Bay Rays on May 16. It was six games shy of his career-best 48 games in a row on base, set in his rookie season of 2001. [37] [38] The loss was the eighth in ten games for the Cardinals, a stretch that dropped them into second place behind the Cubs.

In late May, Piñeiro went to the DL and rookie Mike Parisi took his spot in the rotation. [39] Chris Duncan, slumping all year after offseason hernia surgery, followed him to the DL, with Joe Mather getting the callup. [40] Parisi and Mather were the fifth and sixth players to make their big-league debut with the 2008 Cardinals, following Brian Barton, Kyle McClellan, Rico Washington and Chris Perez. After slumping in the middle of the month, the Cardinals got hot at the end of May, going 15-13 for the month. They remained in second place behind the Cubs. Todd Wellemeyer was named NL Pitcher of the Month after going 4-0 with a 2.19 ERA in May. [41]

June

On June 1, pitcher Mark Worrell got called up; he became the seventh rookie to make his MLB debut with the Cardinals in 2008. [42] On June 5, Worrell hit a home run in his first big-league at-bat, the eight Cardinal in franchise history to do so. [43] On June 6, Mitchell Boggs followed Worrell to the big leagues as the eighth rookie to make his debut with the 2008 Cardinals; fellow rookie Parisi was sent down to make room. [44]

Troy Glaus began to find his power stroke, hitting four home runs between May 31 and June 5 after hitting only two in the first two months of the season. Ryan Ludwick, who never hit more than 14 home runs in a season prior to 2008, hit his 15th home run on June 10.

The Cardinals suffered a serious setback on June 9, when staff ace Adam Wainwright went to the DL with a sprained finger. [45] The injury situation became even worse on June 10, when Albert Pujols strained his left calf muscle running from home on a ground ball, sending him to the disabled list for only the second time in his eight-year career. [46] [47] Meanwhile, former closer Jason Isringhausen made his return from the disabled list on June 14, with the club intending to use him in middle relief. [48]

On June 20 the Cardinals traveled to Boston for a three-game set with the Red Sox; it was St. Louis' first trip to Fenway since the 2004 World Series. They won two of three in Boston. Nick Stavinoha, called up on June 22 after Izturis went on the DL, became the ninth player to make his big-league debut with the 2008 Cardinals. [49]

Albert Pujols was activated from the disabled list on June 26. The Cardinals went 6-7 in his absence. In Pujols' first game back he got four hits, but the Cardinals lost 3-2 to the Tigers after closer Franklin blew the save in the bottom of the 9th and Mike Parisi issued a bases-loaded walk in the bottom of the 10th. [50] The loss was part of a season-long trend of bullpen failures and blowups. It was the 19th blown save and 18th loss for Cardinal relievers, as opposed to 11 blown saves and 12 losses for the bullpen in all of 2007. [51]

Mark Mulder, who had pitched only sporadically for the Cardinals since undergoing shoulder surgery in 2006, was activated on June 27 and sent to the bullpen. [52] In his first appearance, on June 30, he threw a scoreless ninth inning against the New York Mets.

Despite Pujols (June 11–25) and Wainwright (June 9-?) both going on the DL in June, the Cardinals went 15-12 for the month.

July

The Fourth of July weekend brought a showdown series in St. Louis between the Cardinals (49-38) and Cubs (51-35) with the Cardinals 2.5 games behind Chicago. It was the first meeting between the teams since the first week of May. On July 4, Albert Pujols (aged 28 years, 170 days), became the fifth-youngest player to hit his 300th home run, but the Cardinals lost 2-1. [53] On July 5, a crowd of 46,865, the biggest ever in the short history of the new Busch Stadium, saw St. Louis score three in the bottom of the 9th against ace closer Kerry Wood to beat Chicago 5-4. [54] It was the first time in 33 games in 2008 where the Cardinals had won a game when trailing after eight innings. [55] The Cubs won the rubber game 7-1 to take a 3½ game lead in the Central Division. The three-game series set a new attendance record of 140,067 at the new Busch Stadium.

On July 6, Albert Pujols and Ryan Ludwick were named as the Cardinal representatives to the National League All-Star Team. [56] Ludwick, who had never hit more than 14 home runs in a season before 2008, entered the break with 21 homers, leading the team.

Mark Mulder's comeback ended when, in his first start since September 2007, he suffered pain in his throwing shoulder on July 9 and had to leave the game after only 16 pitches against the Philadelphia Phillies. [57] He was replaced on the roster by Jaime García, who debuted against the Pittsburgh Pirates on July 11, and became the 10th rookie to make his big-league debut with the 2008 Cardinals, [58] the most since 13 rookies made their debut in 1997.

St. Louis entered the All-Star break with a 53-43 record, in second place in the NL Central and one-half game ahead of Milwaukee for the NL Wild Card. This was the second-best record in the National League, but it was also the product of St. Louis playing .500 baseball after reaching ten games over .500 in early May, at 22-12.

In their first series after the break, the Cardinals swept the Padres in four games to reach a season-high 14 games over .500 (57-43). They promptly were then swept by the Milwaukee Brewers in four games (Jul. 21–24) to return to only 10 games over .500 (57-47). Cardinal relief pitchers took the losses in all four games against Milwaukee, part of a season-long trend of ineffective to disastrous performances by the bullpen, then leading all of MLB in 23 games lost by the bullpen and 24 blown saves.

In a game against the NY Mets on July 26, the Cardinals snapped a five-game losing streak by winning 10-8 in 14 innings. Albert Pujols' game-winning home run was his first since he hit his 300th on July 4. Skip Schumaker had six singles in seven at-bats; he became the first Cardinal since Terry Moore in 1935 to have six base hits in one game. Pujols and Schumaker, meanwhile, were the first Cardinals' teammates with five or more hits apiece in a game since Charley Gelbert and Taylor Douthit each had five against the Cubs on May 16, 1930. [59] The extra-inning affair was made necessary by Ryan Franklin's blown save, his second blown save in a row and third consecutive appearance with a home run allowed. On July 28, LaRussa gave the closer's job back to Isringhausen, who lost it to Franklin earlier in the year. [60]

On July 30, 2005 Cy Young Award winner Chris Carpenter was re-activated from the 60-day disabled list, and started versus the Atlanta Braves, his first start since April 1, 2007. [61] Operating on a pitch count not to exceed 80, Carpenter threw 67 pitches (36 for strikes) in four innings, and gave up one run and five hits (all singles), while walking two and striking out two. [62]

The Cardinals made no trades at the July 31 non-waiver trading deadline. They went 13-14 in July, their first losing month of the season. They ended July (61-50), a fraction of a percentage point behind the Milwaukee Brewers for the NL Wild card spot.

August

On August 1, Isringhausen got his first save since May 5, as the Cardinals beat the Phillies, 6-3. On August 2, Matt Clement, signed in the offseason to fill out the rotation but unable to complete a comeback from injury, was released by the Cardinals without ever pitching for them. [63]

Ryan Ludwick was named 'NL Player of the Week' for the week ending August 3, as he led the league with a .538 batting average, 14 hits, a .613 on-base percentage, 8 RBI and 27 total bases. He also hit four home runs and recorded a 1.038 slugging percentage.

On August 5, Brendan Ryan was optioned to (AAA) Memphis and the Cardinals signed free agent infielder Felipe López, who was released by the Washington Nationals on July 31. [64]

Bullpen issues continued to dog St. Louis. On August 5, the Cardinals took a 4-0 lead into the top of ninth inning, only to have Villone, Isringhausen and Franklin combine to give up four runs to the Dodgers. It was the 27th blown save of the season for the Cardinal bullpen, worst in MLB. (The Cardinals eventually salvaged a 6-4 win when Ryan Ludwick hit a walk-off homer in extra innings.) After the game, the Cardinals announced that Isringhausen was again being removed from the closer's role. [65] Chris Perez returned from the minor leagues and got the first save of his career; a five-out save as the Cardinals beat L.A. 9-6 on August 6. [66]

Rick Ankiel was limited to pinch-hitting for 14 games at the end of July and the beginning of August due to an abdominal strain. [67] Chris Carpenter suffered a physical setback with a strain in his right triceps and had to be removed after only 5.1 innings, trailing 1-0 against the Cubs on August 10. The Cardinals lost the game and two of three in the series. [68] [69] On August 15 Carpenter returned to the DL, diagnosed with a strained muscle in his shoulder. [70] Brad Thompson started in Carpenter's place and won, while Chris Perez picked up his fourth save in four chances. August ended with the Astros sweeping the Cardinals in three at Houston, dropping them to 13-13 for the month and 74-63 for the season and leaving St. Louis a full six games behind Milwaukee in the loss column.

Jason Isringhausen's frustrating season came to a disappointing finish when he was diagnosed on August 19 with elbow tendinitis and a partially torn tendon. [71] Meanwhile, staff ace Adam Wainwright, out since June 7 with a right middle finger sprain, made a triumphant return for the Cardinals on August 22, giving up only one run and five hits in six innings – and going 3-for-5 at the plate with an RBI, as St. Louis thrashed Atlanta 18-3 with 26 hits – 21 of them singles (5 doubles).

A crucial two-game series with Milwaukee August 26–27 ended in a split and with the Cardinals still four losses behind the Brewers in the race for the NL Wild Card. It ended the season series with the Brewers, which Milwaukee won 10 games to 5. August ended with the Astros sweeping the Cardinals in three in Houston. The Cardinals went 13-13 for the month and ended August six games behind Milwaukee in the loss column.

September

September opened on a particularly unpleasant note as the Cardinals blew a 5-1 lead against the Diamondbacks on September 1, losing 8-6. Stephen Drew of the D-backs hit for the cycle. The next day St. Louis promoted six players from Memphis as part of September call-ups. Included in the call-ups was Jason Motte, the 11th player to make his debut with the 2008 Cardinals. [72]

A loss to the Cubs on September 10 dropped them into fourth place behind the surging Astros. That loss was the start of a season-high seven-game losing streak that saw the Cardinals officially eliminated in the NL Central race and fall out of wild-card contention. The losing streak was finally snapped on September 18 versus Cincinnati with the first save of Jason Motte's career. Rick Ankiel, slowed by a sports hernia, was shut down for the year on September 13. [73]

The Cardinals finished the year on a high note, winning six in a row (their longest winning streak of the year) against Arizona and Cincinnati. They ended the season with an 86-76 record.

Season standings

NL Central
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
Chicago Cubs 9764.60255264238
Milwaukee Brewers 9072.55649324140
Houston Astros 8675.5341147333942
St. Louis Cardinals 8676.53111½46354041
Cincinnati Reds 7488.45723½43383150
Pittsburgh Pirates 6795.41430½39422853

Record vs. opponents


Source: MLB Standings Grid – 2009
TeamAZATLCHCCINCOLFLAHOULADMILNYMPHIPITSDSFSTLWSHAL
Arizona 3–44-21–57-115–35–47-112–55–21–56–111-75-132–41–55–10
Atlanta 4–34–23–64–48-103-34–33–313–510-83–43–33–44–210-87–8
Chicago 2-42–410-52–44–311–63–510-73-31–510-44–54-26-105–26–9
Cincinnati 5-16-35-100-73-312-41-58-72-42-513-51-63-38-83-46-9
Colorado 11-74-44-27-02-42-54-146-03-42-46-310-88-106-16-011-4
Florida 3-510-83-43-34-24–33-33-411-79-92-44-23-43-312-610-8
Houston 4–53-36-114-125-23-44–35-101-56-210-56-12-46-93-36-9
Los Angeles 11-73-45-35-114-43-33-43–35-14-34-310-811-72-53-29-9
Milwaukee 5-23-37-107-80-64-310-53-33-34-39-52-44-59-95-35-10
New York 2-55-133-34-24-37-115-11-53-36-124-32-55-34-510-85–10
Philadelphia 5-18-105-15-24-29-92-63-43-412-64-25-23-44-115-36-12
Pittsburgh 1-64-34-105-133-64-25-103-45-93-42-43-42-45-105-38–7
San Diego 7-113-35-46-18-102-41-68-104-25-22-54-310-81-64-25–10
San Francisco 13-54–32–43–310-84–34–27-115-43–54–34–28-104–34–29–6
St. Louis 4-22-410-68-81-63-39-65-29-95-41-410-56-13-46–19–6
Washington 5-18-102-54-30-66-123-32-33-58-103-153-52-42-41-67–11

Game log

2008 Game Log
March
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
--March 31 Rockies Postponed (rain) Rescheduled for April 1
April   (18-11)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
1April 1 Rockies 2 – 1 Buchholz (1-0) Franklin (0-1) Corpas (1)45,9960-1
2April 2 Rockies 8 – 3 Wellemeyer (1-0) Cook (0-1)39,9151-1
3April 3 Rockies 3 – 0 Thompson (1-0) Jiménez (0-1) Isringhausen (1)33,7482-1
4April 4 Nationals 5 – 4 Looper (1-0) Pérez (0-1) Isringhausen (2)37,1913-1
5April 5 Nationals 5 – 4 Wainwright (1-0) Chico (0-1) Flores (1)41,4634-1
6April 6 Nationals 3 – 0 Lohse (1-0) Lannan (0-1) Isringhausen (3)41,9125-1
7April 7@ Astros 5 – 3 Valverde (2-0) McClellan (0-1)43,4835-2
8April 8@ Astros 5 – 3 Reyes (1-0) Geary (0-1) Isringhausen (4)30,1846-2
9April 9@ Astros 6 – 4 Looper (2-0) Sampson (0-1) Isringhausen (5)29,1877-2
10April 10@ Giants 5 – 1 Correia (1-1) Wainwright (1-1) Wilson (2)30,3337-3
11April 11@ Giants 8 – 2 Lohse (2-0) Zito (0-3)33,9548-3
12April 12@ Giants 8 – 7 (10) Isringhausen (1-0) Threets (0-1 Reyes (1)35,7179-3
13April 13@ Giants 7 – 4 Lincecum (2-0) Piñeiro (0-1) Wilson (3)37,1959-4
14April 15 Brewers 6 – 1 Looper (3-0) Bush (0-3)39,43810-4
15April 16 Brewers 5 – 4 Wainwright (2-1) Villanueva (1-2) Isringhausen (6)40,71211-4
16April 17 Brewers 5 – 3 (10) Shouse (1-0) Thompson (1-1) Gagné (4)36,85011-5
17April 18 Giants 11 – 1 Wellemeyer (2-0) Cain (0-2)40,68412-5
18April 19 Giants 3 – 0 Lincecum (3-0) Piñeiro (0-2) Wilson (5)41,70712-6
19April 20 Giants 8 – 2 Sánchez (1-1) Looper (3-1)41,12712-7
20April 21@ Brewers 4 – 3 Franklin (1-1) Turnbow (0-1) Isringhausen (7)31,24013-7
21April 22@ Brewers 9 – 8 (12) McClung (1-0) Isringhausen (1-1)23,47813-8
22April 23@ Pirates 7 – 4 Marte (1-0) Reyes (1-1) Capps (6)10,48713-9
23April 24@ Pirates 6 – 2 Piñeiro (1-2) Gorzelanny (1-3) Isringhausen (8)9,54414-9
24April 25 Astros 3 – 2 Wright (3-0) Isringhausen (1-2) Valverde (4)41,19314-10
25April 26 Astros 4 – 3 Wainwright (3-1) Borkowski (0-1)43,04015-10
26April 27 Astros 5 – 1 Lohse (3-0) Backe (1-3) McClellan (1)44,22216-10
27April 28 Reds 4 – 3 Arroyo (1-3) Wellemeyer (2-1) Cordero (4)37,22916-11
28April 29 Reds 7 – 2 Piñeiro (2-2) Cueto (1-3)35,35617-11
29April 30 Reds 5 – 2 Looper (4-1) Harang (1-4) Isringhausen (9)40,62918-11
May   (15-13)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
30May 2 Cubs 5 – 3 (11) Villone (1-0) Fox (0-1)45,07719-11
31May 3 Cubs (FOX)9 – 3 Lilly (2-4) Lohse (3-1)46,79219-12
32May 4 Cubs (ESPN) 5 – 3 Wellemeyer (3-1) Marquis (1-2) Isringhausen (10)44,96920-12
33May 5@ Rockies 6 – 5 Flores (1-0) Fuentes (0-2) Isringhausen (11)28,18321-12
34May 6@ Rockies 6 – 5 Looper (5-1) Redman (2-3) Franklin (1)25,46022-12
35May 7@ Rockies 4 – 3 Speier (1-1) Isringhausen (1-3) Fuentes (3)25.43222-13
36May 8@ Rockies 9 – 3 de la Rosa (1-1) Lohse (3-2)25,37622-14
37May 9@ Brewers 4 – 3 Shouse (3-0) Isringhausen (1-4)42,70522-15
38May 10@ Brewers 5 – 3 Springer (1-0) Gagné (1-2) Franklin (2)43,38223-15
39May 11@ Brewers 5 – 3 Suppan (2-2) Looper (5-2) Shouse (1)41,19723-16
40May 12@ Brewers 8 – 3 Bush (1-4) Wainwright (3-2) Mota (1)25,75723-17
41May 13 Pirates 8 – 4 (10) Salas (1-0) Villone (1-1)38,80023-18
42May 14 Pirates 5 – 1 Wellemeyer (4-1) Maholm (2-4)38,72024-18
43May 15 Pirates 11-5 Grabow (3-1) Isringhausen (1-5)41,24424-19
44May 16 Rays 3 – 1 Sonnanstine (6-1) Looper (5-3) Percival (11)43,13624-20
45May 17 Rays 9 – 8 (10) Franklin (2-1) Wheeler (0-3)43,90725-20
46May 18 Rays 5 – 4 Perez (1-0) Glover (0-2)46,39226-20
47May 19@ Padres 8 – 2 Wellemeyer (5-1) Ledezma (0-1)22,63827-20
48May 20@ Padres 3 – 2 Corey (1-0) Piñeiro (2-3) Hoffman (9)27,18127-21
49May 21@ Padres 11 – 3 Looper (6-3) Young (4-4)21,01128-21
50May 23@ Dodgers 2 – 1 Wainwright (4-2) Lowe (2-5) Franklin (3)52,28129-21
51May 24@ Dodgers 4 – 0 Lohse (4-2) Penny (5-5)44,78530-21
52May 25@ Dodgers 4 – 3 (10) Saito (3-1) Parisi (0-1)46,56630-22
53May 27 Astros 8 – 2 Chacón (2-0) Looper (6-4)41,10430-23
54May 28 Astros 6 – 1 Wainwright (5-2) Rodríguez (1-1)41,11531-23
55May 29 Astros 3 – 2 Lohse (5-2) Oswalt (4-5) Franklin (4)41,78632-23
56May 30 Pirates 5 – 4 Wellemeyer (6-1) Duke (2-4) Franklin (5)42,79133-23
57May 31 Pirates 14 – 4 Maholm (3-5) Parisi (0-2)44,30233-24
June   (15-12)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
58June 1 Pirates 7 – 4 Looper (7-4) Snell (2-5) Franklin (6)43,46234-24
59June 2 Pirates 5 – 4 Osoria (3-1) Wainwright (5-3) Capps (11)42,12934-25
60June 3@ Nationals 6 – 1 Lohse (6-2) Pérez (2-5)26,87535-25
--June 4@ Nationals Postponed (rain) Rescheduled for June 5
61June 5@ Nationals 4 – 1 Wellemeyer (7-1) Lannan (4-6) Franklin (7)27,26436-25
62June 5@ Nationals 10 – 9 (10) Sanches (2-0) Franklin (2-2)32,35736-26
63June 6@ Astros 6 – 1 Moehler (3-2) Looper (7-5)38,59636-27
64June 7@ Astros 8 – 4 Wainwright (6-3) Chacón (2-2)39,81137-27
65June 8@ Astros 5 – 4 Lohse (7-2) Rodríguez (2-2) Franklin (8)39,92338-27
66June 10@ Reds 7 – 2 Boggs (1-0) Bailey (0-2)34,23439-27
67June 11@ Reds 10 – 0 Looper (8-5) Cueto (5-6)19,85140-27
68June 12@ Reds 6 – 2 Burton (3-1) Worrell (0-1)22,12140-28
69June 13 Phillies 20 – 2 Kendrick (6-2) Wellemeyer (7-2)44,37640-29
70June 14 Phillies (FOX)3 – 2 Lohse (8-2) Eaton (2-4) Franklin (9)45,08941-29
71June 15 Phillies 7 – 6 (10) Reyes (2-1) Gordon (5-4)45,39142-29
72June 17 Royals 2 – 1 Davies (3-0) Villone (1-2) Soria (16)44,050 *42-30
73June 18 Royals 3 – 2 Bannister (6-6) McClellan (0-2) Soria (17)43,81042-31
74June 19 Royals 4 – 1 Greinke (6-4) Thompson (1-2) Soria (18)44,27742-32
75June 20@ Red Sox 5 – 4 Lohse (9-2) Wakefield (4-5) Franklin (10)37,67143-32
76June 21@ Red Sox (FOX)9 – 3 Boggs (2-0) Matsuzaka (8-1)37,22744-32
77June 22@ Red Sox 5 – 3 (13) Lopez (2-0) Parisi (0-3)37,08544-33
78June 24@ Tigers 8 – 4 Looper (9-5) Rogers (5-5)44,44645-33
79June 25@ Tigers 8 – 7 Jones (3-0) McClellan (0-3)40,09145-34
80June 26@ Tigers 3 – 2 (10) Seay (1-1) Parisi (0-4)41,02245-35
81June 27@ Royals 7 – 2 Meche (6-8) Piñeiro (2-4)36,36045-36
82June 28@ Royals 5 – 1 Boggs (3-0) Davies (3-1)37,53746-36
83June 29@ Royals 9 – 6 Perez (2-0) Bannister (7-7) Franklin (11)31,80347-36
84June 30 Mets (ESPN)7 – 1 Lohse (10-2) Maine (8-6)42,20648-36
July   (13-14)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
85July 1 Mets 7 – 4 Armas (1-0) Wellemeyer (7-3) Wagner (19)42,42548-37
86July 2 Mets 8 – 7 Franklin (3-2) Muñiz (0-1)40,99549-37
87July 3 Mets 11 – 1 Pelfrey (6-6) Boggs (3-1)43,09949-38
88July 4 Cubs 2 – 1 Zambrano (9-3) Looper (9-6) Wood (22)46,45049-39
89July 5 Cubs (FOX)5 – 4 McClellan (1-3) Wood (4-2)46,865 **50-39
90July 6 Cubs (TBS)7 – 1 Marshall (1-2) Wellemeyer (7-4)46,75250-40
91July 8@ Phillies 2 – 0 Piñeiro (3-4) Hamels (9-6) Franklin (12)41,51951-40
92July 9@ Phillies 4 – 2 Condrey (2-1) McClellan (1-4) Lidge (20)44,95151-41
93July 10@ Phillies 4 – 1 Moyer (8-6) Looper (9-7) Romero (1)44,24151-42
94July 11@ Pirates 6 – 0 Lohse (11-2) Duke (4-6)37,11352-42
95July 12@ Pirates 12 – 11 (10) Bautista (3-2) Perez (2-1)29,38752-43
96July 13@ Pirates 11 – 6 Springer (2-0) Osoria (3-3)21,05253-43
--July 15 All-Star Game American League 4, National League 3 (15) 
97July 17 Padres 4 – 3 Lohse (12-2) Peavy (7-6) Franklin (13)42,14854-43
98July 18 Padres 11 – 7 McClellan (2-4) Bell (6-4)44,39855-43
99July 19 Padres (FOX)6 – 5 Wellemeyer (8-4) Wolf (6-10) Franklin (14)45,39956-43
100July 20 Padres 9 – 5 Thompson (2-2) Corey (1-2)44,21457-43
101July 21 Brewers (ESPN)6 – 3 (10) Torres (5-2) Franklin (3-3)41,00657-44
102July 22 Brewers 4 – 3 Shouse (4-1) McClellan (2-5) Torres (18)41,95557-45
103July 23 Brewers 3 – 0 Sabathia (10-8) Looper (9-8)41,51357-46
104July 24 Brewers 4 – 3 Gagné (3-2) Franklin (3-4) Torres (19)41,23357-47
105July 25@ Mets 7 – 2 Pelfrey (9-6) Boggs (3-2)55,37257-48
106July 26@ Mets 10 – 8 (14) Thompson (3-2) Heilman (1-4)53,79958-48
107July 27@ Mets 9 – 1 Santana (9-7) Lohse (12-3)53,69158-49
108July 28@ Braves 12 – 3 Looper (10-8) Morton (2-4)28,70559-49
109July 29@ Braves 8 – 3 Franklin (4-4) Soriano (0-1)29,54160-49
110July 30@ Braves 7 – 2 Thompson (4-2) Jurrjens (10-6)35,25761-49
111July 31@ Braves 9 – 4 Bennett (2-4) Piñeiro (3-5)40,65361-50
August   (13-13)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
112August 1 Phillies 6 – 3 Lohse (13-3) Hamels (9-7) Isringhausen (12)44,23462-50
113August 2 Phillies 2 – 1 Blanton (6-12) Looper (10-9) Lidge (27)45,45062-51
114August 3 Phillies (ESPN)5 – 4 Durbin (4-2) García (0-1) Lidge (28)44,65562-52
115August 5 Dodgers 6 – 4 (11) García (1-1) Johnson (1-1)40,77363-52
116August 6 Dodgers 9 – 6 Piñeiro (4-5) Lowe (8-10) Perez (1)42,58164-52
117August 7 Dodgers 4 – 1 Kershaw (2-3) Lohse (13-4) Broxton (6)40,50064-53
118August 8@ Cubs 3 – 2 (11) Howry (5-4) Franklin (4-5)41,53964-54
119August 9@ Cubs (FOX)12 – 3 Wellemeyer (9-4) Zambrano (12-5)41,43665-54
120August 10@ Cubs (ESPN)6 – 2 Dempster (13-5) Carpenter (0-1)41,26865-55
121August 11@ Marlins 4 – 2 Piñeiro (5-5) Sánchez (1-2) Perez (2)13,41966-55
122August 12@ Marlins 4 – 3 Volstad (4-2) Lohse (13-5) Gregg (26)14,21166-56
123August 13@ Marlins 6 – 4 Looper (11-9) Pinto (2-4) Perez (3)15,23367-56
124August 14@ Marlins 3 – 0 Wellemeyer (10-4) Olsen (6-8)15,60968-56
125August 15@ Reds 5 – 3 Thompson (5-2) Arroyo (10-10) Perez (4)26,23469-56
126August 16@ Reds 9 – 3 Piñeiro (6-5) Harang (3-13)30,71370-56
127August 17@ Reds 7 – 3 Vólquez (15-5) Lohse (13-6)37,46870-57
128August 19 Pirates 4 – 1 Snell (5-10) Looper (11-10) Beam (1)39,50270-58
129August 20 Pirates 11 – 2 Wellemeyer (11-4) Davis (1-3)37,26971-58
130August 22 Braves 18 – 3 Wainwright (7-3) Morton (3-8) Piñeiro (1)43,92672-58
131August 23 Braves (FOX)8 – 4 Carlyle (1-0) McClellan (2-6) Gonzalez (6)44,07472-59
132August 24 Braves 6 – 3 Looper (12-10) Reyes (3-10) Perez (5)43,36173-59
133August 26 Brewers 12 – 0 Sheets (12-7) Wellemeyer (11-5)41,12173-60
134August 27 Brewers 5 – 3 Franklin (5-5) Riske (1-2) Perez (6)41,43374-60
135August 29@ Astros 3 – 2 Brocail (6-5) Springer (2-1)33,34774-61
136August 30@ Astros 8 – 5 Moehler (10-5) Looper (12-11) Valverde (36)37,56974-62
137August 31@ Astros 3 – 0 Rodríguez (8-6) Wellemeyer (11-6) Valverde (37)35,63874-63
September   (12-13)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
138September 1@ D-backs 8 – 6 Qualls (3-8) McClellan (2-7) Lyon (26)35,07574-64
139September 2@ D-backs 8 – 2 Wainwright (8-3) Petit (3-4)27,56875-64
140September 3@ D-backs 4 – 3 Qualls (4-8) Perez (2-2)24,35075-65
141September 5 Marlins 4 – 1 (11) Rhodes (2-0) Franklin (5-6) Lindstrom (1)42,63375-66
142September 6 Marlins 5 – 3 Wellemeyer (12-6) Olsen (6-10) Franklin (15)42,81476-66
143September 7 Marlins 3 – 1 Wainwright (9-3) Johnson (4-1) Perez (7)46,04577-66
144September 9 Cubs 4 – 3 Perez (3-2) Mármol (2-4)43,80678-66
145September 10 Cubs 4 – 3 Lilly (14-9) Looper (12-12) Wood (29)43,95578-67
146September 11 Cubs 3 – 2 Harden (5-1) Wellemeyer (12-7) Wood (30)44,15578-68
147September 12@ Pirates 10 – 2 Maholm (9-8) Piñeiro (6-6)14,90378-69
148September 13@ Pirates 7 – 6 (12) Hansen (1-3) Perez (3-3)17,13278-70
149September 14@ Pirates 7 – 2 Beam (2-1) Thompson (5-3)18,99478-71
150September 16@ Reds 7 – 2 Arroyo (15-10) Looper (12-13)19,70878-72
151September 17@ Reds 3 – 0 Harang (5-16) Wellemeyer (12-8)14,85078-73
152September 18@ Reds 5 – 4 Lohse (14-6) Vólquez (16-6) Motte (1)14,04179-73
153September 19@ Cubs 12 – 6 Wainwright (10-3) Zambrano (14-6)40,97280-73
154September 20@ Cubs 5 – 4 Lilly (16-9) Piñeiro (6-7) Wood (32)41,59780-74
155September 21@ Cubs 5 – 1 Dempster (17-6) Looper (12-14)40,55180-75
156September 22 D-backs 4 – 2 Webb (22-7) Wellemeyer (12-9) Qualls (7)40,34980-76
157September 23 D-backs 7 – 4 Lohse (15-6) Johnson (10-10) Franklin (16)40,01381-76
158September 24 D-backs 4 – 2 Wainwright (11-3) Scherzer (0-4) Franklin (17)40,02982-76
159September 25 D-backs 12 – 3 Piñeiro (7-7) Rosales (1-1)40,50283-76
160September 26 Reds 7 – 6 Franklin (6-6) Bray (2-2)44,70984-76
161September 27 Reds 8 – 5 Wellemeyer (13-9) Harang (6-17)43,68285-76
162September 28 Reds 11 – 4 Thompson (6-3) Pettyjohn (0-1)43,30086-76

* June 17, originally 43,793 reported.
** July 5, largest ever at Busch Stadium.

Players

Roster

2008 St. Louis Cardinals
Roster
PitchersCatchers

Infielders

OutfieldersManager

Coaches

Scoring by inning

INNING1234567891011121314TOTAL
CARDINALS1178210393758180805754002779
OPPONENTS726685987876698177154220725

Player stats

Batting

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; R = Runs; H = Hits; 2B= Doubles; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; BB = Walks; SO = Strikeouts; Avg. = Batting average; OBP = On-base Percentage; SLG = Slugging percentage

Cardinals Hitting Statistics [ dead link ]

Sortable TEAM hitting stats [ dead link ]

PlayerGABRH2BHRRBIBBSOAvg.OBPSLG
Albert Pujols ( MVP )148524 (49)100 (14)187 (3)44 (4)37 (4)116 (4)104 (2)54.357 (2).462 (2).653 (1)
Ryan Ludwick 152538 (43)104 (10)161 (30)40 (13)37 (4)113 (6)62 (31)146 (7).299 (15).375 (17).591 (2)
Troy Glaus 151544 (38)69147 (47)33 (34)27 (20)99 (15)87 (10)104 (40).270.372 (20).483 (30)
Rick Ankiel [9/10]120413651092125 (25)71 (46)42100 (49).264.337 (50).506 (21)
Skip Schumaker 153540 (39)87 (26)163 (25)228464760.302 (10).359 (31).406
Felipe López 14348184136286464382.283.343.387
Yadier Molina 12444437135187563229.304 * (10).349 (38).392
César Izturis 13541450109101242926.263.319.309
Aaron Miles 13437949120154312337.317.355.398
Adam Kennedy 1153394295172362143.280.321.372
Chris Duncan 76222265586273452.248.321.372
Brendan Ryan 80197304890101831.244.307.289
Jason LaRue 61164173584211520.213.296.348
Brian Barton 82153234192131939.268.354.392
Joe Mather 54133203278181232.241.306.474
Nick Stavinoha 2957411104211.193.217.211
Josh Phelps 193449101211.265.306.294
Rico Washington 14192320336.158.273.263
Mark Johnson 10171500212.294.333.294
Brian Barden 990200104.222.222.222
Kyle Lohse (P)316317105020.111.111.127
Braden Looper (P)4063516304421.254.299.333
Adam Wainwright (P)2560516216220.267.286.350
Todd Wellemeyer (P)325829005129.155.167.155
Joel Piñeiro (P)305135304335.098.148.157
Brad Thompson (P)26122300226.250.357.250
(Other Pitchers)--3312115319.061.132.182
TOTAL1625,636 (1)779 (4)1,585 (1)283 (11)174 (6)744 (4)577 (6)985 (16).281 (1).350 (2).433 (3)

* not eligible for batting average title (NL ranking)

Starting pitchers

Note: GS = Games started; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Loss; ERA = Earned run average; WHIP = (Walks + Hits) per inning pitched; HBP = Hit by pitch; BF = Batters faced; O-AVG = Opponent Batting Ave.; O-SLG = Opponent Slugging Ave.; R support avg = Average Runs support from his team per Games Started

Cardinals Pitching Statistics [ dead link ]

Sortable TEAM pitching stats [ dead link ]

PlayerGSIPWLERAHHRBBSOWHIPHBPBFO-AVGO-SLGR support avg
Chris Carpenter (n/a)314.1011.88140461.26058.275.3145.0
Adam Wainwright 20132.01133.201221234911.183544.245.3945.8
Braden Looper 33199.012144.1621625451081.3111842.278.4364.4
Brad Thompson 629.1324.913327171.362124.297.4594.5
Todd Wellemeyer 32192.21393.7117824601331.247807.245.4154.8
Kyle Lohse 33200.01563.7821118491191.303839.272.4184.2
Mark Mulder *+10.1000.0000216.060  3.000.0002.0
Joel Piñeiro 25145.2775.131752234801.432630.299.5055.1
Mike Parisi *+26.20117.54180733.750  46.500.6676.5
Mitchell Boggs +626.2327.5537421131.872151.294.4925.2
Jaime García *+15.0005.4052141.200  20.263.5799.0
TOTAL162955.064454.201,0091092645751.33304,064.272.4374.8

* now, a reliever
+ not on 25-man active roster
on 15-day or 60-day disabled list
(n/a) not available to pitch

Relief pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; HLD = Holds; H = Hits allowed; R = Runs allowed; ER = Earned run average; BB = Walks allowed; SO = Strikeouts; WHIP = (Walks + hits) per inning pitched; O-Avg = Opponent batting average


PlayerGIPWLSVHLDHRERHRERABBSOWHIPO-AVG
Jason Isringhausen *† (8/16)4242.21512248282755.7022361.64.279
Ryan Franklin (9/28)7478.2661713863431103.5530511.47.277
Russ Springer (9/28)7050.12101739141342.3218451.13.212
Randy Flores (9/14) *4325.21011634161525.2620172.10.315
Anthony Reyes * (+ 7/26)1014.22112168824.913101.30.276
Ron Villone (9/28)7450.01211645272644.6837501.64.239
Kyle McClellan (9/21)6774.22713278363373.9825591.38.268
Mike Parisi (6/26) *1016.10300198824.418101.65.284
Chris Perez (9/27)4141.2337634181753.6722421.34.227
Mark Worrell (6/13) *45.2010085515.67442.12.364
Jaime García (8/26) *911.0110397725.73741.45.220
Mark Mulder (7/2) *†21.10000422013.50013.00.571
Kelvin Jiménez (9/28)1524.0000128151555.6315111.79.295
Joel Piñeiro (8/22)13.0001052206.00112.00.357
Brad Thompson (9/22)2035.1311139212135.3512151.44.287
Chris Carpenter (9/2) n/a11.0000020000.00012.00.400
Josh Kinney (9/27)77.0000130000.00180.57.125
Jason Motte (9/28)1211.0001452100.823160.73.139
TOTAL Relief160495.0223143114503244232524.222293811.48.263
TOTAL PITCHING1621,454.0 (12)86 (5)7642 (6)106 (1)1,517 (4)725 (10)677 (10)163 (7)4.19 (7)496 (13)957 (16)1.38 (8).270 (13)

TOTAL PITCHING: O-OBP .332 (9), O-SLG .431 (12)

Pitchers: Last date pitched in ( )
TOTAL PITCHING: (NL rank)

TOTAL Relief (through 9/27) St. Louis Cardinals GAME NOTES [ permanent dead link ]

Sv/SvOpp: 43/73 (59%)
1st batter/retired: 491/331 (67%)
Inherited runners/scored: 228/67 (29%)

* not on 25-man active roster
on 15-day disabled list
+ traded away

Cardinals Record When

Home   46-35
Away   40-41

Scoring more than 3 runs   78-18
    Scoring 3 runs        6-18
Scoring fewer than 3 runs   2-40

Leading after 7 innings     73-14
    Tied after 7 innings     8- 11
Trailing after 7 innings      5-51

Leading after 8 innings     75-6
    Tied after 8 innings    10- 9
Trailing after 8 innings     1-61

Blown Saves by bullpen: 31 (1st in NL)
Games lost by bullpen:   31 (2nd in NL to San Diego Padres)

Extra innings    6-12
Shutouts       7-5

One-run games   24-28

Out-hit opponents      60-18
Same hits as opponents 9-9
Out-hit by opponents    17-49

Runs via HR      279
Opp. Runs via HR 247

By Day

Mon. 6- 7
Tue. 13-12
Wed. 15- 9
Thu.   8-14
Fri.   14-12
Sat. 17- 9
Sun. 13-13

By Opponent

        HOME   ROAD   TOTAL

Division

NL Central   20-19   16-22   36-41
NL East     12-7    10-7   22-14
NL West    12-5     9-8   21-13
AL East     2-1     2-1     4-2
AL Central   0-3     3-3     3-6

TOTALS   46-35   40-41    86-76
(Interleague 7-8)

Busch Stadium (Indexes)

2008  (100 = Neutral Park, > 100 Ballpark favors, < 100 Ballpark inhibits
  81 G; Cardinals: 2,731 AB;   Opponents: 2,847 AB)

BA 98   R 94   H 96   2B 88   3B 102   HR 93   BB 99   SO 97   E 94   E-inf. 93   LHB-BA 97   LHB-HR 105   RHB-BA 98   RHB-HR 87  

2006–2008 Index (3-yr. composite)

242 G; Cardinals: 8,143 AB;   Opponents: 8,506 AB)

BA 99   R 94   H 99   2B 91   3B 92   HR 84   BB 99   SO 94   E 108   E-inf. 106   LHB-BA 98   LHB-HR 86   RHB-BA 99   RHB-HR 83   [74]

Draft picks

St. Louis' picks at the 2008 Major League Baseball draft in Lake Buena Vista, Florida on June 5, 2008. [75] [76]

Round#PlayerPositionClass, Bats/Throws, Ht/Wt., birthdate (birthplace)College
1 13 Brett Wallace 3B / 1BJunior, L/R, 6' 2" / 235 lbs., Aug 26, 1986 (Sonoma, California) Arizona State University
Comp A 39 Lance Lynn SPJunior, R/R, 6' 5" / 250 lbs., May 12, 1987 (Brownsburg, Indiana) University of Mississippi
2 59 Shane Peterson OF / 1BJunior, L/L, 6' 0" / 195 lbs., Feb 11, 1988 (Temecula, California) Cal State Longbeach
3 91 Ernest Vasquez SSHigh School, R/R, 5' 11" / 175 lbs., Feb 26, 1989 (Las Vegas, Nevada) Durango High School (Nevada)
4125 Scott Gorgen SPJunior, R/R, 5' 10" / 190 lbs., Jan 27, 1987 (Concord, California) University of California, Irvine
5155 Jermaine Curtis 3BJunior, R/R, 5' 11" / 190 lbs., Jul 10, 1987 (Fontana, California) UCLA
6185 Eric Fornataro SPHigh School, R/R, 6' 1" / 195 lbs., Jan 2, 1988 (Richmond, Virginia) Miami Dade College (South)
7215 Anthony Ferrara SPHigh School, R/L, 6' 1" / 175 lbs., Sep 9, 1989 (Riverview, Florida)Riverview HS (FL)
8245Ryan KulikSPSenior, L/L, 5' 11" / 205 lbs., Dec 3, 1985 Rowan University
9275Aaron LunaLFJunior, R/R, 5' 11" / 200 lbs., Mar 28, 1987 Rice University
10305Alejandro Castellanos2BSophomore, R/R, 5' 11" / 180 lbs., Aug 4, 1986 Belmont Abbey College
11335Devin ShepherdRFJunior, R/R, 6' 3" / 180 lbs., Sep 9, 1987 College of Southern Nevada
12365Michael SwinsonCFHigh School, L/R, 6' 2" / 185 lbs., Sep 24, 1989Coffee HS (GA)
13395Mitchell HarrisRHPSenior, R/R, 6' 4" / 215 lbs., Nov 7, 1985 United States Naval Academy
14425Charles CutlerCJunior, L/R, 6' 0" / 200 lbs., Jul 29, 1986 California
15455Scott McGregorRHPJunior, R/R, 6' 2" / 193 lbs., Dec 19, 1986 Memphis
16485Miguel FloresRHPJunior, R/R, 6' 0" / ? lbs., Jan 2, 1988 Cerritos College

Farm system

LevelTeamLeagueManager
AAA Memphis Redbirds Pacific Coast League Chris Maloney
AA Springfield Cardinals Texas League Ron Warner
A Palm Beach Cardinals Florida State League Gaylen Pitts
A Quad Cities River Bandits Midwest League Steve Dillard
A-Short Season Batavia Muckdogs New York–Penn League Mark DeJohn
Rookie Johnson City Cardinals Appalachian League Joe Almaraz
Rookie GCL Cardinals Gulf Coast League Enrique Brito

LEAGUE CHAMPIONS: Batavia

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The 2011 World Series was the championship series of Major League Baseball's (MLB) 2011 season. The 107th edition of the World Series, it was a best-of-seven playoff played between the American League (AL) champion Texas Rangers and the National League (NL) champion St. Louis Cardinals; the Cardinals defeated the Rangers in seven games to win their 11th World Series championship and their second in six seasons.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2011 St. Louis Cardinals season</span> Major League Baseball season

The 2011 St. Louis Cardinals season was the 130th season for the St. Louis Cardinals, a Major League Baseball franchise in St. Louis, Missouri. It was the 120th season for the Cardinals in the National League and their 6th at Busch Stadium III.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2012 St. Louis Cardinals season</span> Major League Baseball season

The 2012 St. Louis Cardinals season was the 131st season for the St. Louis Cardinals, a Major League Baseball franchise in St. Louis, Missouri. It was the 121st season for the Cardinals in the National League and their 7th at Busch Stadium III.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2013 St. Louis Cardinals season</span> Major League Baseball season

The 2013 St. Louis Cardinals season was the 132nd for the baseball team in St. Louis, Missouri, the 122nd season in the National League (NL), and the eighth at Busch Stadium III. On Opening Day, April 1, the St. Louis Cardinals played the 20,000th game in franchise history against the Arizona Diamondbacks, dating back to the start of their American Association (AA) play in 1882. Heading into the 2013 season, St. Louis had an all-time winning percentage of .518.

The St. Louis Cardinals, a professional baseball franchise based in St. Louis, Missouri, compete in the National League (NL) of Major League Baseball (MLB). Brewing magnate Gussie Busch's 37-year-long ownership of the club ended with his death in 1989, and his brewery, Anheuser-Busch (AB) took over. In 1995, an investment group led by Drew Baur and William DeWitt, Jr., purchased the team and have owned the club since. Shortstop Ozzie Smith – nicknamed "The Wizard" – collected a staggering array of defensive records and awards while performing acrobatic spectacles such as somersaults and flips that mesmerized Cardinal and non-Cardinal fans alike. In 1998, Mark McGwire and the Chicago Cubs' Sammy Sosa collocated national attention with their chase of Roger Maris' single-season home run record of 61. In addition, McGwire also set numerous team home run records. For the 1990s, the Cardinals captured one division title and finished above .500 five times for a .488 winning percentage

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2016 St. Louis Cardinals season</span> Major League Baseball season

The St. Louis Cardinals 2016 season was the 135th for the Major League Baseball (MLB) franchise in St. Louis, Missouri, the 125th season in the National League (NL), and the 11th at Busch Stadium III. They entered the season having won a major-league best 100 games, as three-time defending National League Central champions, and with five consecutive playoff appearances. Forbes magazine estimated the value of the club to be $1.6 billion in 2016, making it the seventh-most valuable franchise in MLB. The Cardinals were eliminated from playoff contention following the San Francisco Giants' 7–1 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers on Sunday, October 2. This was the first time the Cardinals failed to make the playoffs since 2010.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2017 St. Louis Cardinals season</span> Major League Baseball season

The 2017 St. Louis Cardinals season was the 136th for the St. Louis Cardinals of Major League Baseball (MLB), a franchise in St. Louis, Missouri. It was the 126th season for the Cardinals in the National League (NL), and their 12th at Busch Stadium III. The Cardinals missed the playoffs for a second consecutive season, having last done that between the 2007 and 2008 seasons.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2018 St. Louis Cardinals season</span> Major League Baseball season

The 2018 St. Louis Cardinals season was the 137th for the St. Louis Cardinals of Major League Baseball (MLB), a franchise in St. Louis, Missouri. It was the 127th season for the Cardinals in the National League, and their 13th at Busch Stadium III.

References

  1. "The Official Site of The St. Louis Cardinals: News: Jocketty no longer GM of Cardinals". Archived from the original on March 8, 2012. Retrieved January 13, 2008.
  2. "The Official Site of The St. Louis Cardinals: News: La Russa remains Cardinals manager". Archived from the original on March 8, 2012. Retrieved January 13, 2008.
  3. ESPN - Mozeliak replaces former boss Jocketty with Cardinals - MLB
  4. Stltoday.com - Lamping resigns from Cards, takes job in New York Archived March 15, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  5. The Official Site of The St. Louis Cardinals: News: La Russa criticizes Rolen's demeanor
  6. The Official Site of The St. Louis Cardinals: News: Cardinals in no hurry to move Rolen
  7. The Official Site of The St. Louis Cardinals: News: No deal imminent for Rolen
  8. ESPN - La Russa says Cards will do what's right for team, not player - MLB
  9. The Official Site of Major League Baseball: News: Glaus-Rolen deal near completion
  10. The Official Site of Major League Baseball: News: Doctors sign off on Rolen-Glaus trade
  11. The Official Site of The St. Louis Cardinals: News: Cards deal icon Edmonds to Padres
  12. ESPN - Report: Cards release Taguchi to open spot for Rule 5 draft pick - MLB
  13. The Official Site of The St. Louis Cardinals: News: Eckstein's tenure in St. Louis likely over
  14. ESPN - Cards agree to deal with infielder Izturis - MLB
  15. The Official Site of The St. Louis Cardinals: News: Catcher LaRue signs with Cardinals
  16. The Official Site of The St. Louis Cardinals: News: Cardinals nab outfielder in Rule 5 Draft
  17. Cardinals cut ties with Spiezio
  18. Cardinals Notes 2-26-08
  19. Pitcher bats 8th
  20. Pineiro signs
  21. The Official Site of The St. Louis Cardinals: News: Cardinals add Clement to rotation mix
  22. Matthew Leach (March 14, 2008). "Lohse signs contract with Cards". St. Louis Cardinals.MLB.com. Archived from the original on March 15, 2008. Retrieved March 14, 2008.
  23. "St. Louis Cardinals GAME NOTES" (PDF). March 28, 2008. p. 2. Retrieved March 29, 2008.[ dead link ]
  24. "St. Louis Cardinals GAME NOTES" (PDF). March 29, 2008. Retrieved March 29, 2008.[ dead link ]
  25. ESPN 2008 St. Louis Cardinals preview
  26. Sports Illustrated 2008 predictions
  27. Sports Illustrated Scouting Report: St. Louis Cardinals
  28. Opener postponed
  29. Matthew Leach (April 2, 2008). "Lohse strong, Cardinals can't hold on: Bullpen surrenders two runs in the eighth inning". MLB.com. Archived from the original on April 4, 2008. Retrieved April 2, 2008.
  30. Adam Wainwright splits
  31. Cards 6, Rockies 5
  32. Jason Isringhausen game log
  33. Isringhausen out of closer role
  34. Cards 5, Brewers 3
  35. "Cardinals disable Jason Isringhausen". St. Louis Cardinals PRESS RELEASE. May 16, 2008. Archived from the original on May 19, 2008. Retrieved September 27, 2008.
  36. Derrick Goold (May 17, 2008). "Notes: Franklin backs taxed bullpen". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Archived from the original on April 20, 2009. Retrieved September 27, 2008.
  37. Owen Perkins (May 8, 2008). "Cards not fazed by lost lead". MLB.com. Archived from the original on May 9, 2008. Retrieved September 27, 2008.
  38. Rays 3, Cards 1
  39. Pineiro to DL
  40. Duncan to DL
  41. Wellemeyer pitcher of the month
  42. Worrell up, Jiminez down
  43. Worrell homers
  44. Boggs called up
  45. Wainwright to DL
  46. Pujols suffers strained left calf: Cards slugger to be examined Wednesday, likely headed to DL
  47. Pujols to miss at least three weeks: With slugger sidelined due to calf strain, Cards recall Duncan
  48. Isringhausen activated
  49. Stavinoha up
  50. Tigers 3, Cardinals 2
  51. "Closers providing scant relief" Archived June 30, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  52. Mulder activated
  53. "Cubs-Cards rivalry transcends time: Intensity between both clubs nearly like Yankees-Red Sox". MLB.com. July 5, 2008. Retrieved September 27, 2008.[ dead link ]
  54. Cards 5, Cubs 4
  55. (July 6 GAME NOTES) PDF [ permanent dead link ]
  56. All-Stars by team
  57. Mulder's start cut short by hurt shoulder
  58. "Garcia ready to step into relief role: La Russa hints left-hander could eventually move into rotation". MLB.com. July 11, 2008. Archived from the original on July 15, 2008. Retrieved September 27, 2008.
  59. Cards 10, Mets 8 in 14 inn.
  60. Izzy to close
  61. "Cards activate Carpenter, option Flores". MLB.com. July 30, 2008. Retrieved September 27, 2008.
  62. Carpenter solid in season debut: Ace righty thrilled to be back on hill after 16 months away
  63. Clement released
  64. Cardinals sign infielder Lopez
  65. Closer-by committee likely in the Cards: Isringhausen loses stopper job after Tuesday's four-run ninth
  66. Cards 9, Dodgers 6 [ dead link ]
  67. Ankiel returns to Cards' starting lineup: Slugger gets start in left field on Monday (Aug. 11) against Marlins
  68. Cards suffer double loss in finale: Carpenter exits with injury in defeat to division-leading Cubs
  69. Carpenter exits with arm injury: Cards right-hander strains right triceps on 66th pitch vs. Cubs
  70. Carp to DL
  71. Izzy out for year
  72. Six called up Archived September 5, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  73. Ankiel out
  74. Baseball Info Solutions and Bill James (2008). The Bill James Handbook 2009. ACTA Sports. p. 372.
  75. 2008 First-Year DraftTracker, St. Louis Cardinals
  76. 2007 Cards tab third baseman with top pick: Arizona State product Wallace a Pac-10 Triple Crown winner