2012 St. Louis Cardinals season

Last updated

2012  St. Louis Cardinals
National League Wild Card Winners
St Louis Cardinals Cap Insignia.svg
League National League
Division Central
Ballpark Busch Stadium
City St. Louis, Missouri
Record88–74 (.543)
Divisional place2nd
Owners William DeWitt Jr.
Fred Hanser
Klingaman Group
General managers John Mozeliak
Managers Mike Matheny
Television Fox Sports Midwest
(Dan McLaughlin, Al Hrabosky, Rick Horton)
Radio KMOX (1120AM)
(Mike Shannon, John Rooney)
Stats ESPN.com
Baseball Reference
  2011 Seasons 2013  

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.

Contents

The Cardinals made their 25th trip to the postseason in 2012 after taking the NL Wild Card title by one game over the Atlanta Braves on the last day of the regular season in 2011. They began the 2012 season away against the Miami Marlins on April 4. St. Louis was coming off a 90–72 (.556) season, a second-place finish in the National League Central Division, the aforementioned wild card berth, and their National League-leading 11th World Series championship.

In 2012, they finished with an 88–74 (.543) record and second place in the NL Central. By virtue of coming in second to the Atlanta Braves, they won the second National League Wild Card spot, and then beat the Braves in the NLWC Game. They then played the NL East champion Washington Nationals in the NLDS and beat them in five games to advance to the NLCS against the San Francisco Giants. However, they lost to the Giants in seven games after leading the series 3 games to 1.

Offseason departures and acquisitions

Management

On October 31, 2011, Tony La Russa announced his retirement after 16 years as manager of the Cardinals. After interviewing several candidates, the Cardinals announced, in a press conference on November 14, that former Cardinals catcher Mike Matheny would be the team's new manager, the 49th in team history. [1] At 41, he is the youngest active manager in the majors. He holds the catching major league record for consecutive errorless games at 252, and for consecutive errorless chances with 1,565.

On November 16, Matheny and the Cardinals announced the new coaching staff: Dave Duncan stayed on as the pitching coach for the 17th year as he was the only coach under contract, with third-base coach Jose Oquendo, hitting coach and former Cardinals slugger Mark McGwire, and bullpen coach Derek Lilliquist. 50-year-old Mike Aldrete moved from assistant hitting coach to bench coach. Chris Maloney also 50 years of age, moved from manager of the AAA Memphis Redbirds of the Pacific Coast League to first-base coach in St. Louis; his first time on a major league staff. Former bench coach Joe Pettini and first-base coach Dave McKay moved to other roles in baseball operations for the team. [2]

On December 2, former Cardinals outfielder John Mabry was named assistant hitting coach. [3]

Hitters

On December 8, Albert Pujols signed a 10-year contract with the Los Angeles Angels worth $254 million, declining a 10-year $220 million offer by the Cardinals. His old contract paid him $111 million over eight years from 2004 to 2011. Pujols departed among the leaders in virtually every major offensive category in Cardinals franchise history. At the time of the signing of the contract, he was fourth all-time in hits, third in runs and second in total bases, doubles, home runs, RBIs and walks. He was behind only Stan Musial in the five latter categories. He was seventh in games played and could have climbed as high as third with two more seasons in a Cardinals uniform. [4] He was paid $14,508,395 in 2011. [5] His former teammates were stunned by his decision. [6]

On December 10, the team re-signed Rafael Furcal to a two-year deal worth $14 mil. [7]

On December 12, the Cardinals refused to offer a contract to Ryan Theriot, making him a non-tendered free agent.
On the same day, utilityman [2B/OF] Skip Schumaker accepted a two-year deal worth $3 mil. avoiding free agency after 2012. He was paid $4.7 mil. in his just completed two-year deal. [8]

On December 22, the Cardinals signed outfielder Carlos Beltrán to a two-year deal. [9]

On March 1, 2012, the Cardinals announced the extension of catcher Yadier Molina's expiring $7 mil. contract at the end of 2012, for 5 years (with a 6th year $15 mil. option for 2018) for $75 mil., making him the second-highest-paid catcher (to Twins catcher Joe Mauer) in all of baseball. He leads all catchers with 39 pickoffs since 2005, and has thrown out 44% of all basestealers in his eight years. He led all Cardinals batters in 2011 with a .305 batting average, starting more games behind the plate than any other catcher, and established career-highs with 55 runs scored, 32 doubles, 14 home runs, and 65 RBIs. [10]

Pitchers

On December 15, 2011, the Cardinals signed 35-year-old lefty reliever J. C. Romero to a one-year contract. [11]

The Cardinals invited nineteen players to spring training camp. [12]

The team finished setting its 25-man roster on March 30. Placed on the DL were pitcher Chris Carpenter, utilityman Skip Schumaker, and outfielder Allen Craig. [13]

Regular season

April

On Sunday, April 22 at Pittsburgh, the Cardinals became the first defending world champion team since the 1922 New York Giants to open their title defense with six consecutive series win. [14] They had a record of 11-5 (.688) during that streak. The series streak ended on April 24, with a second consecutive loss to the Cubs in Chicago, although winning the final game of the series on April 25.

May

The Cardinals announced they would retire former manager Tony La Russa' #10 prior to the game on May 11. His number will be the 12th retired by the Cardinals. He ranks third on the managers' all-time wins list with 2,728. 1,408 of those came with the Cardinals in his 16-year tenure there, and his .544 winning percentage with the team is his best of the three clubs he managed in his 33 seasons. [15]

On May 14, Carlos Beltrán was named the National League Player of the Week for the week of May 7–13 after posting six home runs, 13 RBIs, eight runs scored, 30 total bases, and a 1.200 slugging percentage. He collected hits in five of the six games, homering in four of them. This is Beltran's ninth Player of the Week Award and his sixth in the National League. He leads the National League with 15 home runs, and is second in RBIs, with 32. [16]

At home on May 22, Adam Wainwright threw his first complete game shutout since August 6, 2010, in a 4−0 victory over the San Diego Padres. Wainwright missed the entire 2011 season recovering from elbow surgery. It was his ninth career complete game and just his third shutout. [17]

June

Johan Santana threw the first no-hitter in New York Mets' 51-year history (totaling 8,019 regular season and 74 post-season games previously) with an 8−0 shutout over the Cardinals and Adam Wainwright at Citi Field on June 1. 27,069 witnessed the no-hitter, with Santana throwing a career-high 134 pitches. He walked five, and struck out eight. (box score) Left fielder Mike Baxter robbed Yadier Molina with a great catch in the seventh inning for the 20th out. Umpire Adrian Johnson ruled a hard grounder by former Met Carlos Beltrán (in his first return to New York) down the third-base line 'foul' although the ball made a mark on the chalk in the sixth inning. Beltran subsequently grounded out to third base on the next pitch. The no-hitter was the eighth against the Cardinals in their long history, the first time by Hall-of-Famer Christy Mathewson on July 15, 1901. The previous no-hitter against the Cardinals was by Fernando Valenzuela on June 29, 1990, at Dodger Stadium. [18] [19] The Cardinals were also the first defending World Series champion to be pitched a no-hitter against since the Oakland Athletics in their 1990 pennant season. [20] [21] On the opposite side, Cardinals' pitchers have thrown 10 no-hitters against opponents, the last one by Bud Smith against the San Diego Padres on September 3, 2001. The Padres are now the only present team without a no-hitter.

On June 7, Jaime García (left-hander), landed on the disabled list after his 2-inning June 5 start with a left shoulder sprain. He is the eighth player on it, one-off the season high of nine—at the same time with the seven others which include two starting pitchers (he and Chris Carpenter), two relievers (Scott Linebrink and Kyle McClellan), two infielders (Lance Berkman and Matt Carpenter), and two outfielders (Jon Jay and Skip Schumaker). [22]

On June 15, batting against his old team the Kansas City Royals, Carlos Beltrán became the first switch-hitter in MLB history to attain 300 home runs and 300 stolen bases, with his seventh stolen base in the second inning. Seven other hitters also are members of the 300-300 club. [23]

July

Carlos Beltrán (of) and Rafael Furcal (ss) won the fan voting to be starters at their positions for the 83rd All-Star Game in Kansas City's Kauffman Stadium on July 10. Yadier Molina (c) was selected by the players as a reserve for his fourth consecutive year; he ranked second in the voting to starter Buster Posey. Lance Lynn was also selected by the players as a reserve pitcher; his first time going to the All-Star Game. Retired Cardinals' manager Tony La Russa will un-retire for the one game. Coaches Derek Lilliquist, Jose Oquendo and Mark McGwire will also be participating in the event, as all are members of La Russa's All-Star staff. Former St. Louis coaches Joe Pettini, Dave McKay and Dave Duncan are members of that coaching staff, as well. Beltran is leading the NL with 61 RBIs, and second in home runs with 20. He also ranks in the top 10 with a .310 batting average. It will be his fourth time as an All-Star fan-vote starter, seventh overall. [24] As an added bonus for Beltran, he was also picked to participate in the Home Run Derby contest on July 9, the night before the All-Star Game. It will be the first time for him in that fan-favorite event. [25]

On July 6, after the passing of Yadier Molina's wife's grandfather, he left the team to join his family in Puerto Rico and was put on the bereavement list. He will miss the three weekend games and won't participate in the All-Star game. Matt Holliday was picked by Tony La Russa to replace him on the roster. Bryan Anderson was recalled from AAA-Memphis to replace Molina on the Cardinals' roster, with Tony Cruz to start as catcher for the weekend games. [26]

After the rosters were opened to the fans, voting was held to decide the final fan-voted addition to each team. The online balloting was conducted from Sunday afternoon, July 1, through Thursday afternoon, July 5. The winners of the final vote were David Freese of the St. Louis Cardinals (NL), and Yu Darvish of the Texas Rangers (AL). Chipper Jones, of the Atlanta Braves, was removed from the ballot on July 3 after he replaced Matt Kemp on the roster due to Kemp's injury. [27]

The 83rd All-Star Game on July 10, at Kansas City's Kaufmann Stadium was an 8-0 blowout for the National League, its sixth shutout win against two shutout losses for the NL. It made retired manager Tony La Russa the first manager to win All-Star Games in both leagues. He was 3-0 in the AL, but 0-2 in the NL before this year's game. [28] La Russa emphasized this was his final game as a manager. [29] [30]

On July 3, the team and disabled pitcher Chris Carpenter decided he will have season-ending surgery to repair his thoracic outlet syndrome that has plagued him all year with nerve-related shoulder problems. Recovery time is estimated at six months, so if done this month he will be ready for spring training in February 2013. [31] Surgery is set for July 19, performed by Dr. Gregory Pearl in Dallas, Texas. [32]

On July 16, Trevor Rosenthal was called up for the first time to the major leagues, and made his debut in the eighth inning on July 18, the 2,000th player in Cardinals' history. No other franchise in baseball has reached 2,000. [33]

On July 21, at home against the Cubs, a 0−0 tight game started by Jake Westbrook (8-8, after getting the win in 7 inn.) was broken in the bottom of the seventh with a 12-run explosion by the Cardinals, won by that 12−0 score with 16 hits against only 4 for the Cubs. The inning-explosion featured 7 doubles, tying a major-league record set by the (NL) 1936 Boston Bees (against the Cardinals at Sportsmen's Park, first inning on August 25), 17 batters with 10 hits including a triple, 2 singles, 2 walks, and a wild pitch. David Freese started the inning with an infield single. Allen Craig then got one of his two doubles that inning, and the merry-go-round was on. The 12-runs in an inning also tied the highest runs in any inning by a Cardinals' team since the 1926 club did it in the third inning against the Phillies on September 15. Gameday Recap [34] The club got 27 total bases and 9 doubles in the game—the last time they did that was on July 12, 1931. [35]

The team made a trade on the last day of the non-waiver deadline, July 31, sending minor-league third baseman Zack Cox to the Miami Marlins for minor-league relief pitcher Edward Mujica. [36]

August

On August 3, Lance Berkman went on the disabled list for the third time this season with knee problems. [37]

Matt Holliday got his 1,500th career hit on August 30.

September

Yadier Molina got his 1,000th career hit on September 4, a rare infield single.

Shelby Miller got his first major league win as a reliever, in a crucial fourth game of the series, in the 12th-inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers on September 16. [38]

On September 17, the Cardinals announced they were moving their short-season affiliation with the Batavia (NY) Muckdogs to the State College (PA) Spikes in the same New York–Penn League. [39]

On September 19, the Cardinals announced they were moving their low-A team from Quad Cities (Iowa) back to Peoria (Illinois) where they had the team from 1995 to 2004, in the Midwest League. [40]

On September 19, David Freese and Yadier Molina hit their 20th home runs of the seasons. It marked the first time in Cardinals' history that five players have hit 20 home runs in a season, with the shutout win against the Houston Astros. Carlos Beltrán (29), Matt Holliday (27), and Allen Craig (21) reached 20 previously. [41]

On September 20, the Cardinals went over the 3 million attendance figure for the ninth consecutive year. [42]

On September 21, Chris Carpenter returned to the rotation for the first time this season after surgery in July, refuting doctors' predictions of no pitching possible in 2012. He faced 22 batters (77 pitches, 47 strikes) in pitching five innings, giving up five hits (incl. a double and triple) and two runs, hitting one batter, walking one, and striking out two against the Chicago Cubs in Chicago, leading 3−2 after the fifth inning, but Fernando Salas blew the save for him with two-outs and two strikes in the ninth when leading 4–2, and the team lost in 11 innings. [42] [43] [44] "My stuff wasn't as sharp as I'd like, it wasn't even as sharp as it's been in those simulated games", said Carpenter, who preceded this start with four simulated games. "I did the best I could to get as many outs as I could and give us a chance. It was fun to go out there. It's definitely something I can build on, and hopefully my stuff is sharper as I get out there more often." [45]

On September 23, Pete Kozma hit his first home run. The next game on the 24th he hit his second home run.

On September 24, closer Jason Motte was named NL Player of the Week after saving all five of the Cardinals' wins in the week of September 17–23, and is leading the NL in saves with his 40th. He became the first closer with the Cardinals to save 40 games since Jason Isringhausen in 2004. It was the first time he has won that award, and the first time a closer had won it since Huston Street in 2009. [46] [47]

October

On October 2, despite losing in their 161st game with a chance to clinch in front of almost 40,000 fans, the team later clinched the second wild-card spot when the Los Angeles Dodgers lost to their arch-rival San Francisco Giants. [48] [49]

For the last game of the season at home on October 3, Shelby Miller, who started 2012 as the club's top prospect, made his major league debut as a starter against the Cincinnati Reds. He has already had five appearances (1-0, 2.35 ERA) in 7.2 IP as a reliever. [50]

Season standings

NL Central standings

NL Central
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
Cincinnati Reds 9765.59950314734
St. Louis Cardinals 8874.543950313843
Milwaukee Brewers 8379.5121449323447
Pittsburgh Pirates 7983.4881845363447
Chicago Cubs 61101.3773638432358
Houston Astros 55107.3404235462061

NL Wild Card

Division leaders
Team W L Pct.
Washington Nationals 9864.605
Cincinnati Reds 9765.599
San Francisco Giants 9468.580
Wild Card teams
(Top 2 teams qualify for postseason)
Team W L Pct. GB
Atlanta Braves 9468.580+6
St. Louis Cardinals 8874.543
Los Angeles Dodgers 8676.5312
Milwaukee Brewers 8379.5125
Philadelphia Phillies 8181.5007
Arizona Diamondbacks 8181.5007
Pittsburgh Pirates 7983.4889
San Diego Padres 7686.46912
New York Mets 7488.45714
Miami Marlins 6993.42619
Colorado Rockies 6498.39524
Chicago Cubs 61101.37727
Houston Astros 55107.34033

Performance Against National League Opponents


Source: MLB Standings Grid – 2012
TeamAZATLCHCCINCOLHOULADMIAMILNYMPHIPITSDSFSTLWSHAL
Arizona 2–55–42–59–76–012–65–33–33–42–43–47–119–91–52–49–6
Atlanta 5–23–41–56–14–23–314–43–312–612–63–24–33–45–18–108–10
Chicago 4–54–34–122–48–52–42–44–134–22–48–83–31–67–101–65–10
Cincinnati 5–25–112–45–110–52–43–39–66–23–411–76–24–36–72–57–8
Colorado 7–91–64–21–55–28–103–45–15–22–72–48–104–142–54–32–13
Houston 0–62–45–85–102–52–42–48–94–23–35–123–51–84–111–76–9
Los Angeles 6–123–34–24–210–84–24–21–64–35–26–111–78-106–54–26–9
Miami 3–54–144–23–34–34–22–44–44–128–101–45–15–22–59–95–13
Milwaukee 3–33–313–46–91–59–86–14–43–22–511–43–42–46–93–56–9
New York 4–36–122–42–62–52–43–412–42–310–85–24–34–44–34–148–7
Philadelphia 4–26–124–24–37–23–32–510–85–28–103–44–32–45–29-95–10
Pittsburgh 4–32–38–87–114–212–51–64–14–112–54–31–53–38–73–210–8
San Diego 11–73–43–32–610–85–37–111–54–33–43–45–16–123–32–38–7
San Francisco 9–94–36–13–414–48–110–82–54–24–44–23–312–63–31–57–8
St. Louis 5–11–510–77–65–211–45–65–29–63–43–47–83–33–33–48–7
Washington 4–210–86–15–23–47–12–49–95–314–49-92–33–25-14-310–8

Performance Against American League Opponents

TeamW-L Record
Chicago White Sox 2-1
Cleveland Indians 1-2
Detroit Tigers 1-2
Kansas City Royals 4–2

Performance Against Divisions

DivisionsHomeRoadTotalTotal Pct.
NL Central26-1219-2045-32.584
NL East7-97-1114-20.412
NL West13-58-1021-15.583
Interleague/AL Central4-54-28-7.533
TOTAL50-3138-4388-74.543

Players and Coaching Staff

Opening Day lineup

NumberNamePosition
15 Rafael Furcal SS
3 Carlos Beltrán RF
7 Matt Holliday LF
12 Lance Berkman 1B
23 David Freese   3B
4 Yadier Molina C
19 Jon Jay CF
33 Daniel Descalso 2B
26 Kyle Lohse P

Roster

2012 St. Louis Cardinals
Roster
PitchersCatchers

Infielders

OutfieldersManager

Coaches

Minor Leagues

Farm system

LevelTeamLeagueManager
AAA Memphis Redbirds Pacific Coast League Ron Warner
AA Springfield Cardinals Texas League Mike Shildt
A Palm Beach Cardinals Florida State League Johnny Rodríguez
A Quad Cities River Bandits Midwest League Luis Aguayo
A-Short Season Batavia Muckdogs New York–Penn League Dann Bilardello
Rookie Johnson City Cardinals Appalachian League Oliver Marmol
Rookie GCL Cardinals Gulf Coast League Steve Turco

LEAGUE CHAMPIONS: Springfield

For more information about minor league teams, minor league players and the St. Louis Cardinals organization, see St. Louis Cardinals minor league players and:

St. Louis Cardinals Farm System Affiliates
2012 Prospect Watch
Cards organization preview, Top 20 Prospects, MLB.com (February 8, 2012)
Memphis Redbirds (Memphis Redbirds-AAA roster)
Springfield Cardinals (Springfield Cardinals-AA roster)

Final Regular Season Statistics

Composite scoring by inning

INNING12345678910111213141516171819TOTAL
CARDINALS115851065978919084465040100100765
OPPONENTS102556569509877644610221120103648

Batters

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

Players HITTING statistics [ dead link ]

=Team leader
PlayerGABRH2BHRRBIBBSOGIDPAvg.OBPSLG
Matt Holliday 1575999517736271027513216.295.379.497
Carlos Beltrán 15154783147263297651249.269.346.495
Yadier Molina 13850565159282276455510.315.373.501
David Freese 144501701472520795712219.293.372.467
Rafael Furcal(leadoff -8/30)121477691261854944577.264.325.346
Allen Craig (utility/1b)11946976144352292378915.307.354.522
Jon Jay 117443701352244034719.305.373.400
Daniel Descalso 14337441 851042637835.227.303.324
Matt Carpenter 11429644 8722646346310.294.365.463
Skip Schumaker 10727237 751412827506.276.339.368
Tyler Greene 771791639941913564.218.272.358
Shane Robinson 1021662042831614325.253.309.355
Matt Adams 278682162135243.244.286.384
Lance Berkman ( -9/7) 32  8112 21 72 714193.259.381.444
Pete Kozma 2672112452147194.333.383.569
Adron Chambers 41544120045180.222.300.296
Erik Komatsu 151934000220.211.286.211
Ryan Jackson 131722000131.118.167.118
Bryan Anderson 101223100160.250.357.333
Steven Hill 91012100030.200.200.300
Pitcher Totals16231725428213131455.132.166.183
Team Totals(10/3)1625,6227651,5262901597325331,192135.271.338.421
NL Rank---1216724132214

BOLD = Lead NL
* not on active roster
** on personal leave; date and G missed
on 15-day disabled list; date DL and G missed
†† on 60-day disabled list

TEAM HITTING statistics

Baseball Reference – 2012 St. Louis Cardinals

Starting pitchers

Note: GS = Games started; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; H = Hits allowed; HR = Home runs allowed; BB = Walks allowed; SO = Strikeouts; WHIP = (walks + hits) per inning pitched; HBP = Hit by pitch; BF = Batters faced; O-AVG = Opponent batting average.; O-OBP = Opponent on-base percentage.; O-SLG = Opponent slugging percentage.; R suppt = Runs support average from his team's batters per games started

Cardinals PITCHING statistics

Sortable TEAM PITCHING Statistics

=Team leader
PlayerGSIPWLERAHHRBBSO WHIP HBPBFO-AVGO-OBPO-SLGR suppt
Kyle Lohse 33 211.01632.86 19219381431.094  864.239.274.3684.4
Adam Wainwright (2 ShO)32 198.214133.94 19615521841.256  831.259.309.3924.5
Jake Westbrook (1 CG)28 174.213113.97 19112521061.398  751.282.338.3915.1
Lance Lynn (as starter only)29 169.01753.67 15715621741.309  710.248.322.3965.9
Jaime García 20 121.2 773.92136 730 981.360  515.289.327.4024.2
Joe Kelly (as starter only)16  91.1 463.74  97 9 32 591.412  391.275.338.4194.4
Chris Carpenter  3   17.0 023.71  16 2  3 121.122   72.242.296.4241.7
Shelby Miller (as starter only) 1    6.0 000.00   1 0  2   70.501   21.056.190.0561.0
Starters' Totals162989.171473.62986792717831.27324,155.261.313.3904.75

Bold = lead NL * not on active roster
on 15-day disabled list; DL date and G missed
†† on 60-day disabled list

Relief pitchers

Notes: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; H = Hits allowed; HR = Home runs allowed; BB = Walks allowed; SO = Strikeouts; WHIP = (walks + hits) per inning pitched; HBP = Hit by pitch; BF = Batters faced; O-AVG = Opponent batting average; O-OBP = Opponent on-base percentage; O-SLG = Opponent slugging percentage

17-27; 3.90 ERA; 473.1 IP; 434 H; 212 R; 205 ER; 55 HR; 165 BB; 435 SO; 1.266 WHIP
42/64 SV/Opp; 115 Holds; 343/492 First Batter Retired (70%); 64/242 Inherited Runners Scored (26%) [51]

Relievers statistics

PitcherGIPWLERAHHRBBSO WHIP HBPBFO-AVGO-OBPO-SLG
Lance Lynn (2012 totals)35 176.01873.78 16816641801.3210  744.253.327.401
Joe Kelly (2012 totals)24 107.0 573.53 1121036  751.38 3  457.271.333.407
Mitchell Boggs 7873.1412.2156521581.052279.211.279.291
Jason Motte*6772.0452.7549917860.922296.191.245.331
Fernando Salas 6558.2144.3056527601.421256.251.335.386
Marc Rzepczynski 7046.2134.2446717331.350196.257.321.408
Víctor Marte 4840.1324.9151614361.612185.305.364.491
Edward Mujica 2926.1001.032913210.87097.215.240.323
Trevor Rosenthal 1922.2022.781427250.93189.175.250.263
Sam Freeman 2420.0025.4017210181.35184.230.329.324
Barret Browning 2219.1135.121827111.29083.247.305.397
Kyle McClellan 1618.2015.301629111.34272.222.325.375
Eduardo Sánchez 1715.0016.6011213131.60170.204.362.352
Shelby Miller (2012 totals)613.2101.32904160.95154.184.259.204
Maikel Cleto 99.0007.001342151.67141.342.390.737
J.C. Romero 118.00010.13143252.00141.368.415.658
Brandon Dickson 46.1007.11102261.90032.333.375.633
Brian Fuentes 65.0009.0061562.20026.300.423.500
C.J. Fick 21.2005.4030102.4009.429.500.571
  • Note: Jason Motte led all relief pitchers with 42 saves, recording all the total team saves for the season. He was also the National League leader in saves as well.

Scheduling and Results

Home attendance

YearAttendance (games)AVG/gameNL Rank
20123,262,109 (81)40,2734th of 16
2011 3,093,954 (81)38,1973rd of 16

2012 St. Louis Cardinals
2011 St. Louis Cardinals

Game log

As with all 30 teams, Major League Baseball released the Cardinals' 2012 schedule on September 14, 2011. The Cardinals' Opening Day game was away against the Miami Marlins on April 4 [52] and was nationally televised by ESPN at 6 PM CDT. [53] [54]

All game times for the following table were in Central Time Zone, [55] and were broadcast on Fox Sports Midwest, unless otherwise noted. Twenty games from April 9 to August 10 were blacked out for those watching Fox Sports Midwest from their AT&T U-verse cable because of a financial dispute between them continuing from the previous year. [56] Those games are marked with an asterisk (*) in the schedule below.

Legend
Cardinals Win Cardinals Loss Game Postponed / Tie
2012 Game Log
April   (14–8) (.636)
#DateOpponent / TimeScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
1April 4@ Marlins 6:05pm (ESPN)4–1 Lohse (1–0) Johnson (0–1) Motte (1)36,601 1–0
2April 6@ Brewers 3:10pm11–5 García (1–0) Gallardo (0–1)46,086 2–0
3April 7@ Brewers 3:05pm (Fox)6–0 Greinke (1–0) Wainwright (0–1)42,084 2–1
4April 8@ Brewers 1:10pm9–3 Lynn (1–0) Wolf (0–1)33,211 3–1
5April 9@ Reds 6:10pm *7–1 Westbrook (1–0) Bailey (0–1)16,909 4–1
6April 10@ Reds 6:10pm *3–1 Lohse (2–0) Leake (0–1) Motte (2)17,110 5–1
7April 11@ Reds 11:35am4–3 Chapman (2–0) Rzepczynski (0–1)20,672 5–2
8April 13 Cubs 2:15pm9–5 Samardzija (2–0) Wainwright (0–2)46,882 5–3
9April 14 Cubs 12:05pm (Fox)5–1 Lynn (2–0) Volstad (0–1)46,792 6–3
10April 15 Cubs 1:15pm *10–3 Westbrook (2–0) Maholm (0–2)44,952 7–3
11April 17 Reds 7:15pm *2–1 (10) Motte (1–0) LeCure (0–1)35,562 8–3
12April 18 Reds 7:15pm11–1 García (2–0) Latos (0–2)35,907 9–3
13April 19 Reds 12:45pm6–3 Arroyo (1–0) Wainwright (0–3) Marshall (2)40,049 9–4
14April 20@ Pirates 6:05pm4–1 Lynn (3–0) Morton (0–1) Motte (3)23,509 10–4
15April 21@ Pirates 6:05pm2–0 Burnett (1–0) Westbrook (2–1) Hanrahan (2)25,218 10–5
16April 22@ Pirates 12:35pm5–1 Lohse (3–0) Bédard (0–4)30,437 11–5
17April 23@ Cubs 7:05pm *3–2 Dolis (1–1) Motte (1–1)37,794 11–6
18April 24@ Cubs 7:05pm3–2 (10) Russell (1–0) Salas (0–1)38,894 11–7
19April 25@ Cubs 1:20pm5–1 Lynn (4–0) Volstad (0–3)34,894 12–7
20April 27 Brewers 7:15pm *13–1 Westbrook (3–1) Gallardo (1–2)43,063 13–7
21April 28 Brewers 12:05pm (Fox)7–3 Lohse (4–0) Estrada (0–1)42,586 14–7
22April 29 Brewers 1:15pm3–2 Greinke (3–1) García (2–1) Axford (5)45,824 14–8
May   (13-16) (.448)
#DateOpponent / TimeScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
23May 1 Pirates 7:15pm10–7 Wainwright (1–3) Morton (1–2) Motte (4)36,345 15–8
24May 2 Pirates 7:15pm *12–3 Lynn (5–0) Burnett (1–2)35,987 16–8
25May 3 Pirates 12:45pm *6–3 Bédard (2–4) Westbrook (3–2)40,601 16–9
26May 4@ Astros 7:05pm5–4 Harrell (2–2) Lohse (4–1) Myers (7)27,201 16–10
27May 5@ Astros 6:05pm8–2 Norris (2–1) García (2–2)23,633 16–11
28May 6@ Astros 1:05pm8–1 Wainwright (2–3) Happ (2–2)22,288 17–11
29May 7@ D'backs 8:40pm9–6 Lynn (6–0) Saunders (2–2) Motte (5)26,447 18–11
30May 8@ D'backs 8:40pm6–1 Westbrook (4–2) Kennedy (3–2)30,156 19–11
31May 9@ D'backs 8:40pm7–2 Lohse (5–1) Miley (3–1) Motte (6)27,710 20–11
32May 11 Braves 7:15pm *9–7 (12) Hernández (1–0) McClellan (0–1) Kimbrel (11)45,190 20–12
33May 12 Braves 6:15pm7–2 Beachy (4–1) Wainwright (2–4)44,157 20–13
34May 13 Braves 1:15pm7–4 Hanson (4–3) Lynn (6–1)45,729 20–14
35May 14 Cubs 6:07pm (ESPN)6–4 Camp (2–1) Boggs (0–1) Dolis (4)44,276 20–15
36May 15 Cubs 12:45pm7–6 Motte (2–1) Dolis (2–3)45,538 21–15
37May 16@ Giants 9:15pm *4–1 García (3–2) Bumgarner (5–3) Motte (7)41,324 22–15
38May 17@ Giants 2:45pm *7–5 Cain (3–2) Wainwright (2–5) Casilla (9)41,225 22–16
39May 18@ Dodgers 9:10pm6–5 Jansen (3–0) Salas (0–2)40,906 22–17
40May 19@ Dodgers 9:10pm6–0 Kershaw (4–1) Westbrook (4–3)39,383 22–18
41May 20@ Dodgers 7:00pm (ESPN)6–5 Guerra (2–3) Rzepczynski (0–2) Jansen (5)44,005 22–19
42May 21 Padres 7:15pm5–4 Motte (3–1) Cashner (2–3)40,360 23–19
43May 22 Padres 7:15pm4–0 Wainwright (3–5) Vólquez (2–4)39,151 24–19
44May 23 Padres 7:15pm6–3 Lynn (7–1) Suppan (2–3) Motte (8)40,715 25–19
45May 24 Phillies 7:15pm10–9 Valdés (1–0) Salas (0–3) Papelbon (13)40,135 25–20
46May 25 Phillies 7:15pm5–3 (10) Valdés (2–0) Motte (3–2) Papelbon (14)43,375 25–21
47May 26 Phillies 6:15pm (Fox)4–0 Kendrick (1–4) García (3–3)44,476 25–22
48May 27 Phillies 1:15pm8–3 Wainwright (4–5) Halladay (4–5)42,659 26–22
49May 28@ Braves 12:10pm8–2 Lynn (8–1) Hanson (5–4)42,126 27–22
50May 29@ Braves 6:10pm5–4 Delgado (3–5) Westbrook (4–4) Kimbrel (14)26,218 27–23
51May 30@ Braves 6:10pm10–7 Venters (3–2) Rzepczynski (0–3) Kimbrel (15)28,474 27–24
June   (13-14) (.481)
#DateOpponent / TimeScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
52June 1@ Mets 6:10pm8–0 Santana (3–2) Wainwright (4–6)27,069 27–25
53June 2@ Mets 3:10pm5–0 Dickey (8–1) Lynn (8–2)27,914 27–26
54June 3@ Mets 7:05pm (ESPN2)6–1 Niese (4–2) Westbrook (4–5)23,559 27–27
55June 4@ Mets 12:10pm5–4 Rzepczynski (1–3) Rauch (3–5) Motte (9)25,830 28–27
56June 5@ Astros 7:05pm9–8 Harrell (5–4) García (3–4) Myers (14)18,911 28–28
57June 6@ Astros 7:05pm4–3 Wainwright (5–6) Norris (5–3) Motte (10)18,517 29–28
58June 7@ Astros 7:05pm14–2 Lynn (9–2) Happ (4–6)22,265 30–28
59June 8 Indians 7:15pm6–2 Tomlin (3–3) Westbrook (4–6)42,098 30–29
60June 9 Indians 6:15pm (Fox)2–0 Lohse (6–1) Masterson (2–6) Motte (11)41,694 31–29
61June 10 Indians 1:15pm4–1 Pestano (3–0) Motte (3–3) Perez (20)43,400 31–30
62June 12 White Sox 7:15pm6–1 Quintana (2–1) Wainwright (5–7)40,972 31–31
63June 13 White Sox 7:15pm *1–0 Lynn (10–2) Peavy (6–2) Motte (12)40,045 32–31
64June 14 White Sox 7:15pm *5–3 Westbrook (5–6) Floyd (4–7) Motte (13)43,464 33–31
65June 15 Royals 7:15pm3–2 Mazzaro (3–1) Lohse (6–2) Broxton (16)42,001 33–32
66June 16 Royals 1:15pm10–7 Boggs (1–1) Collins (4–1) Motte (14)42,018 34–32
67June 17 Royals 1:15pm5–3 (15) Broxton (1–1) Sánchez (0–1)41,680 34–33
68June 19@ Tigers 6:05pm *6–3 Verlander (7–4) Lynn (10–3) Coke (1)36,733 34–34
69June 20@ Tigers 6:05pm *3–1 Westbrook (6–6) Porcello (4–5)38,871 35–34
70June 21@ Tigers 12:05pm2–1 (10) Benoit (1–1) Marte (0–1)40,776 35–35
71June 22@ Royals 7:10pm11–4 Kelly (1–0) Mazzaro (3–2)37,902 36–35
72June 23@ Royals 1:10pm8–2 Wainwright (6–7) Mendoza (2–4)37,240 37–35
73June 24@ Royals 1:10pm11–8 Marte (1–1) Collins (4–2)29,063 38–35
74June 25@ Marlins 6:10pm *8–7 (10) Marte (2–1) Gaudin (1–1) Motte (15)27,369 39–35
75June 26@ Marlins 6:10pm5–2 Lohse (7–2) Zambrano (4–6) Motte (16)25,444 40–35
76June 27@ Marlins 6:10pm5–3 Sánchez (4–6) Freeman (0–1) Bell (15)28,397 40–36
77June 29 Pirates 7:15pm14–5 Correia (4–6) Wainwright (6–8)45,382 40–37
78June 30 Pirates 1:15pm7–3 Karstens (1–2) Lynn (10–4) Hughes (1)37,162 40–38
July   (15-10) (.600)
#DateOpponent / TimeScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
79July 1 Pirates 1:15pm5–4 Westbrook (7–6) Bédard (4–9) Motte (17)37,821 41–38
80July 2 Rockies 7:15pm9–3 Lohse (8–2) Chatwood (1–1)39,456 42–38
81July 3 Rockies 7:15pm3–2 Francis (2–1) Kelly (1–1) Betancourt (13)41,701 42–39
82July 4 Rockies 6:15pm4–1 Wainwright (7–8) Guthrie (3–8) Motte (18)42,338 43–39
83July 5 Rockies 7:15pm6–2 Lynn (11–4) Friedrich (4–6) Motte (19)41,751 44–39
84July 6 Marlins 7:15pm3–2 Nolasco (8–6) Westbrook (7–7) Bell (19)46,721 44–40
85July 7 Marlins 1:15pm3–2 Lohse (9–2) Zambrano (4–7) Motte (20)41,312 45–40
86July 8 Marlins 1:15pm5–4 Boggs (2–1) Bell (2–5)38,436 46–40
--July 10 83rd All-Star Game National League 8,   American League 0   (Kansas City, Missouri;   Kaufmann Stadium)
87July 13@ Reds 6:10pm5–3 Simón (1–1) Wainwright (7–9) Chapman (12)40,217 46–41
88July 14@ Reds 3:05pm (Fox)3–2 (10) LeCure (3–2) Marte (2–2)37,583 46–42
89July 15@ Reds 7:00pm (ESPN)4–2 Bailey (8–6) Westbrook (7–8) Chapman (13)39,280 46–43
90July 16@ Brewers 7:10pm3–2 Motte (4–3) Axford (2–6)30,128 47–43
91July 17@ Brewers 7:10pm3–2 Wolf (3–6) Kelly (1–2) Rodríguez (2)30,491 47–44
92July 18@ Brewers 1:10pm4–3 Axford (3–6) Wainwright (7–10) Rodríguez (3)37,753 47–45
93July 20 Cubs 7:15pm4–1 Lohse (10–2) Dempster (5–4) Motte (21)43,786 48–45
94July 21 Cubs 6:15pm12–0 Westbrook (8–8) Germano (0–1)43,424 49–45
95July 22 Cubs 1:15pm7–0 Lynn (12–4) Wood (4–5)42,411 50–45
96July 23 Dodgers 7:15pm5–3 Billingsley (5–9) Kelly (1–3) Jansen (19)42,806 50–46
97July 24 Dodgers 7:15pm *8–2 Wainwright (8–10) Kershaw (7–6)38,195 51–46
98July 25 Dodgers 7:15pm *3–2 (12) Salas (1–3) Wright (4–3)37,841 52–46
99July 26 Dodgers 12:45pm7–4 Westbrook (9–8) Capuano (10–6) Motte (22)36,607 53–46
100July 27@ Cubs 1:20pm9–6 Lynn (13–4) Wood (4–6) Motte (23)40,778 54–46
101July 28@ Cubs 12:05pm3–2 Russell (4–0) Kelly (1–4) Mármol (13)41,276 54–47
102July 29@ Cubs 1:20pm4–2 (10) Russell (5–0) Rosenthal (0–1)39,534 54–48
103July 31@ Rockies 7:40pm11–6 Lohse (11–2) Francis (3–3)31,297 55–48
August   (16-13) (.552)
#DateOpponent / TimeScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
104August 1@ Rockies 7:40pm9–6 Westbrook (10–8) Belisle (3–3)29,547 56–48
105August 2@ Rockies 7:40pm8–2 Brothers (6–2) Salas (1–4)29,659 56–49
106August 3 Brewers 7:15pm *9–3 Kelly (2–4) Wolf (3–8)41,505 57–49
107August 4 Brewers 6:15pm6–1 Wainwright (9–10) Rogers (0–1)42,036 58–49
108August 5 Brewers 7:05pm (ESPN)3–0 Lohse (12–2) Estrada (0–5) Motte (24)40,274 59–49
109August 6 Giants 7:15pm8–2 Westbrook (11–8) Cain (10–5)38,652 60–49
110August 7 Giants 7:15pm4–2 Zito (9–8) Lynn (13–5) Affeldt (3)41,293 60–50
111August 8 Giants 7:15pm15–0 Vogelsong (10–5) Kelly (2–5)36,906 60–51
112August 9 Giants 12:45pm3–1 Wainwright (10–10) Bumgarner (12–7) Motte (25)32,810 61–51
113August 10@ Phillies 6:05pm *3–1 Halladay (6–6) Browning (0–1) Papelbon (25)43,122 61–52
114August 11@ Phillies 6:05pm4–1 Westbrook (12–8) Lee (2–7) Motte (26)44,233 62–52
115August 12@ Phillies 12:35pm8–7 (11) Horst (1–0) Browning (0–2)42,877 62–53
116August 14 Diamondbacks 7:15pm8–2 Kelly (3–5) Kennedy (10–10)34,587 63–53
117August 15 Diamondbacks 7:15pm5–2 Wainwright (11–10) Saunders (6–9) Motte (27)33,572 64–53
118August 16 Diamondbacks 7:15pm2–1 Hernandez (2–2) Motte (4–4) Putz (23)36,758 64–54
119August 17 Pirates 7:15pm2–1 McDonald (11–5) Westbrook (12–9) Hanrahan (34)38,689 64–55
120August 18 Pirates 3:05pm (Fox)5–4 Browning (1–2) Bédard (7–13) Motte (28)40,313 65–55
121August 19 Pirates 1:15pm6–3 (19) Rodríguez (8–12) Browning (1–3)43,412 65–56
122August 21 Astros 7:15pm7–0 Wainwright (12–10) Harrell (10–9)35,370 66–56
123August 22 Astros 7:15pm4–2 Lohse (13–2) Norris (5–11) Motte (29)35,198 67–56
124August 23 Astros 12:45pm13–5 Westbrook (13–9) Keuchel (1–6)30,343 68–56
125August 24@ Reds 6:10pm8–5 Kelly (4–5) Latos (10–4) Motte (30)36,162 69–56
126August 25@ Reds 3:05pm (Fox)8–2 Leake (6–8) García (3–5)41,680 69–57
127August 26@ Reds 12:10pm8–2 Wainwright (13–10) Bailey (10–9)31,564 70–57
128August 27@ Pirates 6:05pm4–3 Lohse (14–2) Burnett (15–5) Motte (31)16,700 71–57
129August 28@ Pirates 6:05pm9–0 McDonald (12–6) Westbrook (13–10)17,492 71–58
130August 29@ Pirates 6:05pm (ESPN)5–0 Rodríguez (9–13) Kelly (4–6)19,398 71–59
131August 30@ Nationals 6:05pm8–1 Jackson (8–9) García (3–6)23,269 71–60
132August 31@ Nationals 6:05pm10–0 Gonzalez (17–7) Wainwright (13–11)29,499 71–61
September   (15-12) (.556)
#DateOpponent / TimeScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
133September 1@ Nationals 3:05pm (Fox)10–9 Boggs (3–1) Storen (1–1) Motte (32)34,004 72–61
134September 2@ Nationals 12:35pm4–3 Mattheus (5–1) Lynn (13–6) Clippard (29)31,096 72–62
135September 3 Mets 1:15pm5–4 Kelly (5–6) McHugh (0–1) Motte (33)40,952 73–62
136September 4 Mets 7:15pm5–1 García (4–6) Harvey (3–4)34,108 74–62
137September 5 Mets 12:45pm6–2 Dickey (18–4) Wainwright (13–12)30,090 74–63
138September 7 Brewers 7:15pm5–4 (13) Kintzler (1–0) Lynn (13–7) Axford (26)38,648 74–64
139September 8 Brewers 6:15pm6–3 Fiers (9–7) Westbrook (13–11) Axford (27)40,422 74–65
140September 9 Brewers 1:15pm5–4 (10) Lynn (14–7) Loe (6–5)39,919 75–65
141September 10@ Padres 9:05pm11–3 Stults (6–2) García (4–7)18,081 75–66
142September 11@ Padres 9:05pm6–4 Vólquez (10–10) Wainwright (13–13) Gregerson (6)29,887 75–67
143September 12@ Padres 5:35pm3–2 Richard (13–12) Lohse (14–3) Gregerson (7)16,442 75–68
144September 13@ Dodgers 9:10pm2–1 Lynn (15–7) Rodriguez (0–1) Motte (34)43,309 76–68
145September 14@ Dodgers 9:10pm8–5 Tolleson (2–1) Rosenthal (0–2)40,167 76–69
146September 15@ Dodgers 8:10pm4–3 Belisario (6–1) Motte (4–5)42,449 76–70
147September 16@ Dodgers 3:10pm5–2 (12) Miller (1–0) Ely (0–2) Motte (35)35,754 77–70
148September 18 Astros 7:15pm4–1 Lohse (15–3) Abad (0–5) Motte (36)35,422 78–70
149September 19 Astros 7:15pm5–0 Lynn (16–7) Harrell (10–10) Motte (37)39,062 79–70
150September 20 Astros 12:45pm5–4 García (5–7) Norris (5–13) Motte (38)34,788 80–70
151September 21@ Cubs 1:20pm5–4 (11) Cabrera (1–1) Kelly (5–7)29,100 80–71
152September 22@ Cubs 12:05pm5–4 (10) Boggs (4–1) Chapman (0–1) Motte (39)40,298 81–71
153September 23@ Cubs 1:20pm6–3 Lohse (16–3) Germano (2–9) Motte (40)33,354 82–71
154September 24@ Astros 7:05pm6–1 Lynn (17–7) Abad (0–6)12,584 83–71
155September 25@ Astros 7:05pm4–0 García (6–7) Harrell (10–11)16,943 84–71
156September 26@ Astros 7:05pm2–0 Norris (6–13) Carpenter (0–1) López (8)18,712 84–72
157September 28 Nationals 7:15pm12–2 Wainwright (14–13) Jackson (9–11)39,166 85–72
158September 29 Nationals 6:15pm6–4 (10) Storen (3–1) Freeman (0–2) Stammen (1)42,264 85–73
159September 30 Nationals 1:15pm10–4 Lynn (18–7) Detwiler (10–8)40,084 86–73
OCTOBER   (2-1) (.667)
#DateOpponent / TimeScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
160October 1 Reds 7:15pm4–2 García (7–7) Arroyo (12–10) Motte (41)38,480 87–73
161October 2 Reds 7:15pm3–1 Latos (14–4) Carpenter (0–2) Chapman (38)39,644 87–74
162October 3 Reds 7:15pm1–0 Marte (3–2) Broxton (4–5) Motte (42)42,509 88–74

See also

Regular Season Schedule (calendar style) [ dead link ]
Regular Season Schedule (sortable text)
National Broadcast Schedule (all teams), EDT

Postseason Game Log

2012 Postseason Game Log
NLDS   (3–2) (.600)
#DateOpponent / TimeScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
1October 7 Nationals 2–30–1
2October 8 Nationals 12–41–1
3October 10@ Nationals 8–02–1
4October 11@ Nationals 1–22–2
5October 12@ Nationals 9–73–2
NLCS   (3–4) (.429)
#DateOpponent / TimeScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
1October 14@ Giants 6–41–0
2October 15@ Giants 1–71–1
3October 17 Giants 3–12–1
4October 18 Giants 8–33–1
5October 19 Giants 0–53–2
6October 21@ Giants 1–63–3
7October 22@ Giants 0–93–4

Cardinals Record When

(through October 3, final)

SituationW-L RecordPct.
Home50-31.617
Away38-43.469
Scoring first58-26.687
Opponent scores first30-48.385
Scoring more than 3 runs76-19.800
Scoring 3 runs7-16.304
Scoring fewer than 3 runs5-39.114
Leading after 7 innings78-5.940
Tied after 7 innings5-12.294
Trailing after 7 innings5-57.081
Leading after 8 innings80-6.930
Tied after 8 innings4-10.286
Trailing after 8 innings4-58.065
In errorless games52-35.598
In error-made games36-39.480
Out-hit opponents73-13.849
Same hits as opponents4-7.364
Out-hit by opponents11-54.169
Extra innings6-12.333
Shutouts10-11.476
One-run games21-26.447
One or Two-run games28-43.394
Monday games13-4.765
Tuesday games14-11.560
Wednesday games17-9.654
Thursday games8-8.500
Friday games9-17.346
Saturday games12-14.462
Sunday games15-11.577
StatNumberTotalPct.
Runs via HR259765.339
Opp. Runs via HR230648.355

Postseason

Wild Card Game

Friday, October 5, 2012

Team123456789 R H E
St. Louis Cardinals000301200660
Atlanta Braves0200001003123
WP: Kyle Lohse (1–0)   LP: Kris Medlen (0–1)   Sv: Jason Motte (1)
Home runs:
STL: Matt Holliday (1)
ATL: David Ross (1)

Time: 3:09 (19 min. delay)
Attendance: 52,631 [57]
Official Box Score

Division Series

Game 1, October 7

3:07 p.m. (EDT) at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Missouri

Team123456789 R H E
Washington010000020382
St. Louis020000000231
WP: Ryan Mattheus (1–0)   LP: Mitchell Boggs (0–1)   Sv: Drew Storen (1)

Game 2, October 8

4:37 p.m. (EDT) at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Missouri

Team123456789 R H E
Washington0100201004102
St. Louis04120104X12130
WP: Lance Lynn (1–0)   LP: Jordan Zimmermann (0–1)
Home runs:
WSH: Ryan Zimmerman (1), Adam LaRoche (1)
STL: Allen Craig (1), Daniel Descalso (1), Carlos Beltrán 2 (2)

Game 3, October 10

1:07 p.m. (EDT) at Nationals Park in Washington, D.C.

Team123456789 R H E
St. Louis1300011208141
Washington000000000070
WP: Chris Carpenter (1–0)   LP: Edwin Jackson (0–1)
Home runs:
STL: Pete Kozma (1)
WSH: None

Game 4, October 11

4:07 p.m. (EDT) at Nationals Park in Washington, D.C.

Team123456789 R H E
St. Louis001000000130
Washington010000001231
WP: Drew Storen (1-0)   LP: Lance Lynn (1-1)
Home runs:
STL: None
WSH: Adam LaRoche (2), Jayson Werth (1)

Game 5, October 12

8:37 p.m. (EDT) at Nationals Park in Washington, D.C.

Team123456789 R H E
St. Louis0001201149110
Washington3030000107110
WP: Jason Motte (1–0)   LP: Drew Storen (1–1)
Home runs:
STL: Daniel Descalso (2)
WSH: Ryan Zimmerman (2), Bryce Harper (1), Michael Morse (1)

Time: 3:49
Attendance: 45,966 [58]
Official Box Score

Composite line score

2012 NLDS (3–2): St. Louis Cardinals over Washington Nationals

Team123456789 R H E
St. Louis Cardinals19232227432442
Washington Nationals 33302013116395
Total attendance: 228,293  Average attendance: 45,659

National League Championship Series

Game 1

Sunday, October 14, 2012 – 8:15 p.m. (EDT) at AT&T Park in San Francisco, California [59]

Team123456789 R H E
St. Louis020400000680
San Francisco000400000471
WP: Edward Mujica (1–0)   LP: Madison Bumgarner (0–1)   Sv: Jason Motte (1)
Home runs:
STL: David Freese (1), Carlos Beltrán (1)
SF: None

In Game 1, Carlos Beltrán hit his 14th career postseason homer and David Freese also went deep as the Cardinals took a 6–4 lead over the San Francisco Giants after six innings of the NL championship series opener. Freese hit a two-run homer in the second and Beltrán followed with one in the fourth as the Cardinals knocked out Madison Bumgarner with six runs in 3+23 innings.

Bumgarner breezed through a perfect first inning but ran into trouble in the second when Yadier Molina singled on an 0–2 pitch with one out. Freese then drove a 3–2 pitch over the wall in left-center to give the Cardinals a 2–0 lead. That gave Freese 25 career RBIs in the postseason and tied him with Molina for third most ever for the Cardinals. Bumgarner then couldn't make it out of the fourth. Descalso doubled and scored on Pete Kozma's double. Jon Jay added a two-out RBI single and Beltrán ended Bumgarner's night with the homer.

George Kontos got out of the fourth and Tim Lincecum pitched two hitless innings as he once again excelled in his new role out of the bullpen.

Lance Lynn struggled to hold onto that lead in his first postseason start after 10 career relief appearances. After starting the game with three hitless innings, Lynn ran into trouble with two outs and a runner on first in the fourth. Hunter Pence and Brandon Belt followed with singles to drive in San Francisco's first run. They both scored on Gregor Blanco's triple. Brandon Crawford followed with an RBI double to make it 6–4 and Lynn left after walking pinch-hitter Aubrey Huff. Joe Kelly got out of the jam when second baseman Daniel Descalso made a diving stop of Ángel Pagán's grounder up the middle.

No runs were scored for the remainder of the contest.

Game 2

Monday, October 15, 2012 – 8:07 p.m. (EDT) at AT&T Park in San Francisco, California [60]

Team123456789 R H E
St. Louis010000000152
San Francisco10040002X7120
WP: Ryan Vogelsong (1–0)   LP: Chris Carpenter (0–1)
Home runs:
STL: None
SF: Ángel Pagán (1)

Game 3

Wednesday, October 17, 2012 – 4:07 p.m. (EDT) at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Missouri [61]

Team123456789 R H E
San Francisco001000000191
St. Louis00200010X360
WP: Kyle Lohse (1–0)   LP: Matt Cain (0–1)   Sv: Jason Motte (2)
Home runs:
SF: None
STL: Matt Carpenter (1)

A 3-hour 28 min rain delay was longer than the time of the game itself at 3:02.

Game 4

Thursday, October 18, 2012 – 8:07 p.m. (EDT) at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Missouri [62]

Team123456789 R H E
San Francisco010000002361
St. Louis20002220X8120
WP: Adam Wainwright (1-0)   LP: Tim Lincecum (0-1)
Home runs:
SF: Hunter Pence (1), Pablo Sandoval (1)
STL: None

The second-largest crowd of the year 47,062 saw the Cardinals win, 8-3. Adam Wainwright went seven strong innings, giving up only four hits and one run, the home run to Hunter Pence, walking none and striking out five.

Game 5

Friday, October 19, 2012 – 8:07 p.m. (EDT) at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Missouri [63]

Team123456789 R H E
San Francisco000400010560
St. Louis000000000071
WP: Barry Zito (1–0)   LP: Lance Lynn (0–1)
Home runs:
SF: Pablo Sandoval (2)
STL: None

Game 6

Sunday, October 21, 2012 – 7:45 p.m. (EDT) at AT&T Park in San Francisco, California [64]

Team123456789 R H E
St. Louis000001000151
San Francisco14000001X691
WP: Ryan Vogelsong (2–0)   LP: Chris Carpenter (0–2)

Game 7

Monday, October 22, 2012 – 8:07 p.m. (EDT) at AT&T Park in San Francisco, California [65]

Team123456789 R H E
St. Louis000000000072
San Francisco11500011X9140
WP: Matt Cain (1–1)   LP: Kyle Lohse (1–1)
Home runs:
STL: None
SF: Brandon Belt (1)

Composite line score

2012 NLCS (4–3): San Francisco Giants over St. Louis Cardinals

Team123456789 R H E
St. Louis Cardinals23242330019506
San Francisco Giants 366120015235634
Total attendance: 311,326  Average attendance: 44,475

Farm system

LevelTeamLeagueManager
AAA Memphis Redbirds Pacific Coast League Ron Warner
AA Springfield Cardinals Texas League Mike Shildt
A Palm Beach Cardinals Florida State League Johnny Rodríguez
A Quad Cities River Bandits Midwest League Luis Aguayo
A-Short Season Batavia Muckdogs New York–Penn League Dann Bilardello
Rookie Johnson City Cardinals Appalachian League Oliver Marmol
Rookie GCL Cardinals Gulf Coast League Steve Turco

LEAGUE CHAMPIONS: Springfield

Draft selections

St. Louis Cardinals 2012 Draft Selections

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