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2001-Present
The Cardinals, having posted 17-8 and 13-14 records the first two
months of the 2000 season, juxtaposed that early-season pattern
and sat in second place at the 2001 season's one-third mark. This
time they went 12-12 in April, dropping into fifth place, before
winning 10 consecutive games May 7-17 and vaulting briefly into
first. A 1-8 road trip in early June was the primary cause of that
month's 11-16 record, and by the All-Star break, the Cardinals were
43-43 and eight games behind division-leading Houston. That was
still their situation, but with a 57-55 record, as they opened play
August 9, before going on an 11-game win streak that triggered the
club's postseason drive. The pair of double-figure win streaks were
the first for a Cardinal ballclub in the same season since 1941.
And the Cardinals' fans continued showing their support, as 3,113,091
paid their way into Busch Stadium, marking the fourth consecutive
season, and sixth in club history, of three-million-plus attendance.
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1975-2000
1976 John Denny wins the National League ERA title at age 23, tying
youngest right-hander to win ERA title in N.L. Lou Brock gets 2700th
hit of his career and closes to within 27 of tying Ty Cobb's stolen
base record.
1977 Lou Brock breaks Ty Cobb's career stolen base mark with number
893 in San Diego, August 29. Garry Templeton becomes youngest M.L.
shortstop ever to gather 200 hits in a season. Templeton leads majors
with 18 triples, highest number since 1957. Ted Simmons sets club
record for home runs by a catcher with 21. Ken Reitz sets new fielding
record with N.L. third baseman by committing only 9 errors. Bob
Forsch wins 20 games.
1978 Bob Forsch no hits Phillies 5-0, April 16 at Busch Stadium.
Manager, Vern Rapp dismissed April 24. Ken Boyer becomes Cardinal
manager April 29. Ted Simmons sets club season record and career
high with 22 homers for a catcher. George Hendrick has 7 RBI's at
Atlanta, August 25. Busch Memorial Stadium gets new astroturf.
1979 Lou Brock collected his 3000th career hit (single off Dennis
Lamp) in the 4th inning against the Cubs on August 13 at Busch Stadium.
On September 23, Brock stole his 938th base making him baseball's
all-time stolen base leader surpassing William (Sliding Billy) Hamilton.
Keith Hernandez wins batting title with .344 average and is co-winner
of National League M.V.P. award with Pittsburgh's Willie Stargell.
Garry Templeton led N.L. with 211 hits. Templeton also led the league
in triples with 19, for the third year in a row, setting a new N.L.
record and tying the major league mark. His 19 triples are highest
number since 1957. He became the first switch-hitter in major league
history to collect 100 hits, both right and left-handed, in one
season. Garry finished with 100 hits RH and 111 hits LH. Ted Simmons
hit a career high 26 home runs, which also set a club record for
homers by a catcher.
1980 Ken Reitz sets new fielding record for N.L. third baseman by
committing only 8 errors. Dane Iorg has 7 RBI's, August 28 vs. Atlanta.
Manager Ken Boyer dismissed June 8. Whitey Herzog becomes Cardinal
manager June 9. On August 18, John Claiborne fired as G.M. and Herzog
named G.M. on August 29. Red Schoendienst served as interim manager
for balance of season. On October 24, Herzog assumed dual role of
general manager and field manager.
1981 The Cardinals finished the season with the best winning percentage
in the Eastern Division, but missed the playoffs because they finished
second in each of the two sections of the schedule, revised due
to the mid-summer players' strike. The Philadelphia Phillies, leaders
when the strike began, were voted the first-half championship (however,
the Phillies, Cardinals, and Cincinnati Reds voted against it),
while Montreal won the second half. In each half, the Cardinals
played fewer games than the winners, and could have tied or won
either half with the opportunity to play the same number of games.
Bruce Sutter, one of several players obtained in winter trades by
Whitey Herzog, won the Rolaids Relief Man award.
1982 In order to concentrate more on managing, Whitey Herzog stepped
down as General Manager on Opening Day, turning the reins over to
Joe McDonald. The move paid off as the Cardinals stayed in first
place for only 48 days of the season and claimed their first ever
National League East Championship. A 3-0 sweep of the Atlanta Braves
put the Cards in their 13th World Series against the Milwaukee Brewers
who fell 4-3 to St. Louis in the 'Fall Classic.' The 1982 team was
characterized by an aggressive running style of baseball; seven
players stole bases in double figures, led by team catalyst Lonnie
Smith, who swiped 68. The team hit only 67 home runs, the fewest
in the major leagues. Strong and consistent pitching performances
were the rule; prior to clinching the title the Cardinals never
lost more than three games in a row. Bruce Sutter had a hand in
almost half of the team's victories.
1983 Despite the fact that the 1983 Cardinals finished in fourth
place, eleven games out, the team was competitive and exciting,
although inconsistent, throughout much of the season. The team climbed
to within a half-game of the division lead on September 5 before
embarking on a thirteen-day road during which the starting rotation
struggled. The running Redbirds set a new club record with 207 stolen
bases. Danny Cox made his way from extended spring training to make
the rotation. Bob Forsch pitched the second no-hitter of his career.
George Hendrick moved to first base after Keith Hernandez was traded
to the Mets; he earned a spot on the Silver Slugger and All-Star
Teams. Ozzie Smith won his fourth straight Gold Glove and Willie
McGee won his first.
1984 The Cardinals got off to a bad start in 1984 and dwelled in
fifth place for much of the first half of the season before turning
things around after the All-Star break to finish with a winning
record (84-78). Following the mid-summer classic the Cards posted
a 42-33 record, second in the N.L. That surge lifted the Cards into
a third-place finish in the division at year's end despite contending
with many injuries. The team's 220 stolen bases broke the club record
of 207 in 1983. They were the first major league team since the
1916 St. Louis Browns to steal 200 or more bases three years in
a row. Bruce Sutter set a National League record and tied the major
league record for saves in a season (45) and was Fireman of the
Year. Joaquin Andujar (20-14, 12 CG, 4 SHO) became the club's first
20-game winner in seven seasons and won a Gold Glove. Rookie Terry
Pendleton hit .324 after joining the club in July, sparking the
team to a 41-29 record. The Cards drew over 2,000,000 fans for the
third consecutive year.
1985 The Cardinals lost their first four games, bounced back to
7-7, only to lose the next four. The next time they reached .500
was at 20-20, before turning it on. They finally made it to first-place
on June 21, where they remained for most of the season. Five defeats
in six games early in September left the Cardinals a game behind
the New York Mets with 25 to play. But the Redbirds then won 14
of their next 15 and took the division title by three games with
101 victories. Willie McGee was the batting champion (at .353, a
new high for a N.L. switch-hitter) and league Most Valuable Player;
Vince Coleman was Rookie of the Year; and John Tudor and Joaquin
Andujar each won 21 games while Danny Cox took 18. Willie McGee
and Ozzie Smith won Gold Gloves again, and great starts by Tommy
Herr (110 RBI) and Jack Clark (22 homers) contributed. Closer Todd
Worrell was called up on August 28. In a great NLCS, the Cards dropped
the first two games and then won four straight. Ozzie won Game 5
with a dramatic bottom-of-the-ninth home run off Tom Niedenfuer,
his first ever homer batting left-handed. Down 5-4 with two out
in the top of the ninth of Game 6, Jack Clark tagged Niedenfuer
for a three-run homer to take the game and the series. In the World
Series, Bret Saberhagen's Kansas City Royals defeated the Redbirds
in seven games. The most memorable event of the series was Don Denkinger's
blown call in the top of the ninth inning in Game 6, on Jorge Orta's
leadoff grounder Don Denkinger call in the Game 6.
1986 The defending National League Champions stumbled at the beginning
of the season. After the first two months of the season the Cardinals
had the worst record in the League. But the team righted itself
posting winning records in each of the next four months to finish
third in the National League's Eastern Division. Individually Vince
Coleman stole 107 bases to become the first player ever to steal
over 100 bases in each of his first two seasons and the first N.L.
player to steal 100 bases twice; rookie left-hander Greg Mathews,
who was promoted from Louisville, won 11 games in little more than
half a season; Ozzie Smith won his seventh straight Gold Glove and
Todd Worrell was named N.L. Rookie of the Year. Worrell blazed his
way to a major league rookie record 36 saves, becoming the first
rookie pitcher ever to lead the league in saves and the first rookie
to earn N.L. Relief Pitcher of the Year honor...Three attendance
milestones were hit and surpassed during the course of the season.
The Cardinals reached the two million mark for the fifth consecutive
year, drew the 75 millionth fan in the history of the franchise
since 1900 and drew the 50 millionth fan to see the Redbirds play
under Anheuser-Busch ownership.
1987 Sparked by a potent offense, the Cardinals slipped no further
than two games back in the N.L. East standings and claimed sole
possession of first place on May 22. Beset by injuries to several
key players throughout the season, manager Whitey Herzog made use
of a mixture of experienced veterans and eager rookies to fill the
voids created by injuries. The Cardinals extended their lead to
9-1/2 games on July 23 but saw the lead shrink to 1 game as late
as Sept. 19. A come-from-behind win a New York on Sept. 11 followed
by a doubleheader sweep of the Expos on Sept. 29, set the stage
for the pennant clinching win over Montreal on Oct. 1. Several Cards
enjoyed banner seasons offensively, including Vince Coleman (third
straight season with 100 SB), Jack Clark (35 HR and 106 RBI), Ozzie
Smith (.300 BA for first time in his career), Terry Pendleton (.286
BA and 96 RBI), Willie McGee (105 RBI). The Redbirds had four starters
with 10 or more victories (John Tudor, Bob Forsch, Greg Mathews
and Danny Cox) while rookie Joe Magrane showed much promise in his
initial season. In the bullpen, Todd Worrell followed up his impressive
rookie season with 33 saves and Ken Dayley overcame serious elbow
surgery to post nine wins in relief. 1987 was a fantastic year at
the gate as well, as the Cardinals drew a Major League leading 3,072,122
fans, becoming just the third club in M.L. history to surpass the
three million mark in attendance.
1988 After acquiring Tom Brunansky from Minnesota in April, the
defending N.L. champions climbed within six games of first on June
12, but injuries to Bob Horner and Terry Pendleton crippled the
offense. By the end of July, the Cardinals were 19 games out of
first. Newcomer Jose DeLeon became the first Cards pitcher since
1972 to record 200 strikeouts. Sophomore hurler Joe Magrane won
the N.L. ERA title with a 2.18 mark, despite winning just five games.
Todd Worrell posted his third-straight 30-save season, and Vince
Coleman led the league in stolen bases for the fourth consecutive
year. Jose Oquendo became the first N.L. player since 1918 to play
all nine positions in a season. Trades that brought Pedro Guerrero,
Denny Walling and Brunansky to St. Louis also ended long-time affiliations
with departing players Tom Herr, Bob Forsch and John Tudor. Despite
finishing fifth, the club drew nearly 2.9 million fans to Busch.
1989 Although the outlook was bleak when injuries crippled the pitching
staff in spring training, the Cardinals remained in the race until
the final week of the season. The Redbirds pulled within a half-game
of the division-leading Chicago Cubs with a dramatic come-from-behind
win on Sept. 9, but a six-game losing streak followed and the Cards
sunk to third place on the final day of the season. Pedro Guerrero
was spectacular in the clutch, batting .406 with runners in scoring
position and leading the club with 117 RBI and a .311 batting average.
Vince Coleman again led the league in stolen bases and set a major
league record by stealing 50 consecutive bases without being caught,
a streak begun in 1988. Despite the early concern over the pitching
staff, Joe Magrane (18 wins) and Jose DeLeon (16) spearheaded the
patched-up starting unit. The Cardinals set a club attendance record,
attracting 3,080,980 fans during a season that ended on a sad note
when long-time club president August A. Busch Jr. died at age 90.
1990 Considered by many to be a contender following the spring training
"lockout," the Cardinals never lived up to expectations and finished
in last place for the first time since 1918. On July 5, Manager
Whitey Herzog resigned after more than 10 years as the Cards' skipper.
Interim manager Red Schoendienst took over until Aug. 2, when Joe
Torre was named manager. Willie McGee won the league batting title
(.335), despite being traded to Oakland in late August as the team
made room for younger players. One of those was rookie catcher Todd
Zeile, who led the team with 15 homers. John Tudor returned to the
club and posted a team-high 12 wins but announced his retirement
following the season. Vince Coleman led the league in steals for
the sixth straight year, tying Maury Wills' N.L. record, and batted
a career-high .292. Starting pitchers Jose DeLeon (a league-high
19 losses) and Joe Magrane (17 losses) were disappointments. Reliever
Lee Smith was a steady closer following his acquisition in May,
saving 27 games. Jose Oquendo set a major league record for fewest
errors by a second baseman (three).
1991 Coming off a last-place finish, the Cardinals were one of baseball's
biggest surprises in 1991, moving up to second place in the N.L.
East. Manager Joe Torre, in his first full season at the Cardinals'
helm, opened the year with several unproven players at key positions.
Among the young standouts were outfielders Ray Lankford and Felix
Jose. Lankford led the majors with 15 triples and had a team-high
44 steals. Nine Cardinals stole 10 or more bases, the first time
since 1917 that a team had done so. Former Athletic Jose, playing
his first full season in the National League, led the Cardinals
in batting (.305) and plugged Busch Stadium's spacious gaps with
40 doubles. Sophomore Todd Zeile made a fine transition from catcher
to third base, leading the club with 11 homers and 81 RBI. Catcher
Tom Pagnozzi, seeing his first full-time duty, earned a Gold Glove
award. The season also was a good one for Cardinals named Smith.
Lee Smith set an N.L. record with 47 saves and became only the fifth
pitcher to record 300 career saves. Ozzie Smith set an N.L. record
for fewest errors by a shortstop (eight) en route to winning his
12th Gold Glove. Bryn Smith's 12 wins paced the pitching staff,
which was without Joe Magrane, Frank DiPino and Todd Worrell due
to injuries. Young starters Ken Hill (11 wins) and Omar Olivares
(11 wins), and reliever Cris Carpenter (10 wins) helped fill the
void.
1992 Though injuries took a toll in the Cardinals' centennial season,
the team actually led the N.L. East by one game on June 1, despite
losing three players in the first week of the season. Injuries or
illnesses continued to mount, however, as the team lost shortstop
Ozzie Smith to chicken pox for two weeks in late June and Omar Olivares
and Rheal Cormier from the starting rotation. At second base, seven
players were used. Ray Lankford, moved from first to third in the
order, became the first Cardinal since Lou Brock in 1967 to hit
20 homers and steal 20 bases. Ozzie Smith tied Felix Jose for the
club lead in batting (.295) and stole a team-high 43 bases. The
"Wizard" also collected his 2,000th career hit and 500th stolen
base, besides earning his 12th All-Star Game berth and 13th Gold
Glove. Bob Tewksbury emerged as the No. 1 starter, winning 16 games
and ranking second in the majors with a 2.16 ERA. He joined Smith
on the N.L. All-Star squad, as did catcher Tom Pagnozzi, who tied
a league mark with a .999 fielding average, and reliever Lee Smith,
who led the league in saves (43) for the second straight season.
Smith received help in the bullpen from Todd Worrell, who, after
missing the last two seasons to injury, moved into the top spot
on the Cards' all-time saves list. The team's major league record
16-game errorless streak in August helped establish a club record
for fielding (.985). On the down side, the Redbirds set records
for most strikeouts and caught stealing in a season. Moving the
fences in proved beneficial. The Cards set a Busch Stadium season
high while out-homering opponents, 55-52.
1993 Helped by a 20-7 mark in June (a club record for the month)
and a potent offense, the Cardinals closed to within three games
of the front-running Philadelphia Phillies in mid-July, only to
fall 10 games back by the end of August. Midseason injuries to relievers
Mike Perez, Les Lancaster and Paul Kilgus put the pitching staff
on the skids. Offensively, several players enjoyed banner seasons,
reflected by the team's 118 home runs, the most in 30 years. Newcomer
Gregg Jefferies finished third in the N.L. batting race at .342
and swiped 46 bases, the most ever by a Cardinal first baseman.
Mark Whiten cracked a team-high 25 home runs, including four in
the second game of a September 7 double-header at Cincinnati, thus
becoming only the 12th player to accomplish the feat. His 12 RBI
in the game tied former Cardinal Jim Bottomley's major league record.
For the season, Whiten finished with 99 RBI. Todd Zeile drove in
60 after the All-Star break, finishing with a team-high 103 RBI
as he settled into the cleanup spot. Bernard Gilkey enjoyed a breakthrough
season, leading the club in hits, extra-base hits and runs scored.
Ozzie Smith recorded his 16th-straight 20-steal season and passed
Larry Bowa to become the all-time N.L. leader in games played at
shortstop. Gerald Perry tied a club record with 24 pinch-hits. Though
the pitching was largely inconsistent, Bob Tewksbury led the staff
with a career-best 17 wins and walked only 20 batters for the second
straight season. Cuban rookie Rene Arocha ranked second on the staff
with 11 wins, despite missing nearly a month with a broken finger.
Reliever Lee Smith became the majors' career saves leader in April
and set a club record for career saves (160) before being traded
to the New York Yankees in late August. The Cards slipped defensively,
committing 159 errors and failing to place a member on the Rawlings'
Gold Glove team for the first time since 1977.
1994 The season started with a bang when Ray Lankford homered in
the first at-bat of the schedule, but a players' strike in mid-August
forced the cancellation of the remainder of the season and the World
Series, ending the year in tragic fashion. When play was suspended
on August 12, the Redbirds were 53-61 and tied with Pittsburgh for
third place in the newly formed N.L. Central Division. The club's
5.14 ERA was its worst since 1897, and the opposition outscored
the Cards by nearly 100 runs. A seven-game winning streak by Bob
Tewksbury and a consecutive-game homer streak of 12 games highlighted
the early portion of the schedule, helping the club stay within
five games of first place through July 2. The Cardinals were involved
in 14 shutouts and, despite inconsistent pitching, won seven of
them. They tied an N.L. record by using six pitchers in a shutout
(2-0) win at Pittsburgh on May 17. On May 24 against Philadelphia,
they established a record for most runners left on base (16) in
a shutout loss. The Cardinals blasted 108 home runs, exceeding the
100-homer plateau for just the second time since 1980, and were
on pace to hit their most round-trippers since 1963. They hit a
Busch Stadium-record five home runs in a July 1 win vs. Colorado.
An 8-20 record in July included two of the team's lowest moments:
On July 16 at Colorado, Cardinal pitchers walked a team-record 16
batters, one short of the N.L. record, and on July 18, the team
tied an N.L. mark by losing an 11-run lead in its 15-12 loss at
Houston. Ozzie Smith passed Luis Aparicio on July 14 to become baseball's
all-time assist leader at shortstop. On September 1, Mark Lamping
was appointed president, replacing the retiring Stuart Meyer. Lamping
named Walt Jocketty general manager in October, replacing Dal Maxvill,
who had held the title since 1985. Hall of Famers Bob Gibson and
Lou Brock were named to manager Joe Torre's coaching staff for 1995.
1995 The season was disappointing in most respects, with the Cardinals
posting a 62-81 mark and their worst winning percentage (.434) since
1990. The schedule was reduced to 144 games due to the players'
strike that continued into the first week of April. Once play began
on April 26, the Cardinals never challenged for the NL Central lead.
On June 16, Manager Joe Torre was fired and replaced by Mike Jorgensen.
Although the team languished near the Central Division basement,
there were a number of individual highlights. Reliever Tom Henke
saved 36 of 38 opportunities, including a team-record 22 straight
to begin the season, and won his first Rolaids Relief title. He
also notched his 300th career save, becoming the seventh pitcher
to reach that plateau. Henke headlined a bullpen that led the NL
with a 2.71 ERA and a .225 opponents' batting mark. Rich DeLucia
topped the team with eight wins (the lowest-ever total to lead the
club), all in relief. While starters Danny Jackson and Ken Hill
failed to fulfill expectations, Mike Morgan, who was acquired in
a June trade for Todd Zeile, gave the Busch Stadium crowd a night
to remember on July 3 when he held Montreal hitless for 8.1 innings.On
offense, the Cardinals' outfield trio of Bernard Gilkey (a team-high
.298 BA), Ray Lankford (25 HRs, 82 RBIs) and Brian Jordan (22 HRs,
81 RBIs) led the way. Lankford's team-high 25 homers were the most
ever by a Cards center fielder, and he tied Jordan for the team
lead with 24 steals, thus becoming only the fifth Cardinal and the
first since 1948 to lead the team in both home runs and steals.
Jordan and Lankford also formed the Redbirds' first 20-homer tandem
since 1980. First baseman/outfielder John Mabry (.307) narrowly
missed qualifying for the NL Top 10 in batting, but his average
topped all NL rookies and earned him a spot on the Topps All-Rookie
team. Ozzie Smith, who was slowed by a shoulder injury, added to
his collection of fielding records on Sept. 15 when he turned his
1,554th double play, an all-time high among shortstops. He also
became the first big-league shortstop since 1950 to play at the
age of 40 and the first Cardinal shortstop to do so since 1918.
Off the bench, veteran Gerald Perry became the club's all-time pinch-hit
leader (70), rookie Mark Sweeney hit in seven straight pinch at-bats
(one short of the major league record) and Danny Sheaffer hit the
Cards' first pinch grand slam in nearly 10 years. The Cardinals
took part in two bizarre games at Dodger Stadium: on May 12 they
committed seven errors, their highest single-game total since 1940,
and on Aug. 10 they recorded a 2-1 forfeit win, the first forfeited
game in the majors since 1979. A busy off-season included the hiring
of Tony La Russa as manager and the announced sale of the club to
a group of long-time Cardinals fans led by Fred Hanser, William
DeWitt Jr. and Andrew Baur. The Busch playing surface was changed
from artificial turf to natural grass prior to the '96 season.
1996 With new ownership, new Manager Tony LaRussa and a variety
of new players in place, the Cardinals made their first postseaon
appearance since 1987. The year also marked the end of an era, as
shortstop Ozzie Smith completed his 19th, and final, major league
campaign. The Cardinals began their climb to their first N.L. Central
Division title after falling nine games below .500 following a series
sweep by Colorado in mid-May. They rebounded with a sweep of the
division-rival Astros in Houston, went on to record a 17-10 mark
in June and reached the All-Star break tied for the division lead.
The race remained close until Labor Day weekend, when the Redbirds
swept three games from the first-place Astros to take over the division
lead for good. Right fielder Brian Jordan led the league with a
.422 batting average with runners in scoring position and teamed
with center fielder Ray Lankford, the N.L. fielding leader, to provide
dazzling outfield defense. New left fielder Ron Gant led the team
with 30 homers despite missing over a month to injury. Brothers
Andy (18-10) and Alan Benes (13-10) combined for 31 wins, and newcomer
Todd Stottlemyre fashioned 14 victories in his first N.L. season.
Lefthander Donovan Osborne won a career-high 13 games. The bullpen
was anchored by former Oakland relief ace Dennis Eckersley, who
saved 30 games in 34 tries. Fan-favorite Willie McGee returned to
the club after five years with San Francisco and Boston and batted
.307, including .350 in the pinch. The season also featured many
record-setting achievements: The Cardinals tied a 56-year-old club
record with a seven-homer game (July 12 at Chicago); the pitching
staff recorded a team-record 1,050 strikeouts; and Willie McGee's
five-RBI inning tied Chick Hafey's 1930 mark. The Cardinals retired
the uniform numbers of Red Schoendienst (2), Enos Slaughter (9)
and Ozzie Smith (1). In their first postseason appearance in nine
years, the Cardinals swept a best-of-five Division Series from San
Diego. After taking a 3-1 lead over defending World Series champion
Atlanta in the NLCS, the Cardinals lost three straight.
1997 After beginning the season with a six-game losing streak, the
Cardinals never climbed above .500 and finished in fourth place
with a 73-89 record, 11 games behind division-winner Houston. The
Redbirds did manage to take sole possession of first place for two
days (July 2-3), and their high-water mark for the season was an
even .500 (41-41). But after trailing first-place Pittsburgh by
only two games at the All-Star break, the Cardinals dropped to 711/42
back by the end of July. During the course of the season, the Cardinals
set several club records. They used a record 51 players (including
24 pitchers), swatted a franchise-record 144 round-trippers (one
more than their 1955 total of 143), and established team highs in
strikeouts - at the plate (1,191) and on the mound (1,130). Ray
Lankford, who missed the first two weeks of the season while recovering
from shoulder surgery, emerged as a star-caliber player, leading
the team with a career-high 31 homers (the most ever by a Cards
center fielder) and career-best 98 RBIs. He finished only percentage
points behind team batting leader Delino DeShields (.2954 to .2946).
Slugger Mark McGwire arrived July 31 and belted 24 home runs as
a Cardinal, including 15 in September (a club record for one month).
He finished with 58 homers, tying the major league record for righthanded
hitters. McGwire became just the fifth player to hit as many as
58 home runs and only the second, next to Babe Ruth, to record 50
or more in consecutive seasons. "Big Mac's" total of 110 homers
in 1996 and '97 are the most ever back-to-back by a righty. He finished
the year by homering in 12 consecutive series, but none of those
blasts matched the flair of the 517-foot shot he launched above
the left-field scoreboard in his first at-bat on Sept. 16, the day
he announced he'd signed a multiyear contract with the club. Pitcher
Matt Morris displayed much promise in his first season, leading
N.L. rookie pitchers in wins (12), ERA (3.19), complete games (three),
strikeouts (149), opponents' batting average (.258) and innings
pitched (217). He topped the staff in victories and starts (33).
DeShields led the team in batting (.295), hits (169), triples (14),
sacrifice flies (six) and stolen bases (55). He was the first Cardinal
since Lankford in 1991 to lead the league in triples. The Cardinals
posted an 8-7 record against A.L. opponents in their first year
of interleague play. They swept a three-game series from Minnesota
but lost three at Milwaukee. The team drew 2,634,014 fans, the fifth-highest
total in club history. Before the season, the Cardinals added a
hand-operated scoreboard in center field and moved the visitors'
bullpen to right field.
1998 While Mark McGwire slugged his way to a record-setting season,
the Cardinals finished in third place for the fifth time in the
last decade, 19 games behind Central Division champion Houston.
The 83-79 Cardinals jumped out of the gate strong, as McGwire began
his march toward 70 home runs by going deep in each of the first
four games, helping the Redbirds to a 16-11 record through April.
As injuries took their toll, the Cardinals labored into the All-Star
recess in fourth place, 12 1/2 games out of first, with a 40-46
record. The team wound up closing the season with a 43-33 record
after the break, including an 18-7 mark in September, the franchise's
best record in that month since moving into Busch Stadium in 1966.
more>>
1999 The Cardinals concluded the 1900s almost exactly the way they
began them - their .466 winning percentage (75-86) in '99 was nearly
identical to their .464 mark in 1900, and they finished 21 1/2 games
out of first place, slightly off their 19-game deficit 99 years
earlier. Mark McGwire followed his record-setting 70-homer season
of 1998 with a 65-homer campaign in 1999 and led the league with
147 RBIs. more>>
2000 The 2000 squad opened the season with a 7-1 win over rival
Chicago on Opening Day and remained in first place for all but three
days. By the All-Star break, the club held an eight-game lead over
the Cincinnati Reds and ended the season as National League Central
Division Champions, 10 games ahead of their closest pursuer. With
a 95-67 record, the team became the 23rd in franchise history, and
first since 1987, to reach the 90-win mark. more>>
1951-1975
1952 In late 1952, when it appeared that Fred Saigh might sell the
club to out-of-town interests who might seek to move it, Anheuser-Busch,
Inc., led by its president, August A. Busch Jr., stepped in and
purchased the club. The sale was announced on February 20, 1953.
1953 Bill Veeck, owner of the A.L. Browns knew as soon as the sale
to Anheuser-Busch, Inc. was announced, that he would seek to move
his team to Milwaukee or Baltimore. Veeck negotiated the sale of
Sportsman's Park to A-B on April 9. Following the 1953 season, the
park was renovated and renamed Busch Stadium.
1954 Musial hit five home runs in a May 2 double-header against
the Giants at Busch Stadium.
1957 Musial established an N.L. endurance record by extending his
streak of consecutive games played to 895 before being forced to
the bench by injury. The mishap occurred at Philadelphia on August
22, when he tore a muscle and chipped a bone in his shoulder blade
as he swung at and missed a high, outside pitch. He won the batting
title with a .351 average.
1958 Musial, pinch-hitting in the sixth inning, doubled against
the Cubs at Wrigley Field on May 13 to collect his 3,000th career
hit. Curt Flood played 121 games in his rookie campaign.
1962 Musial, nearing his 42nd birthday, made a bid for his eighth
batting title by hitting .330, but Tommy Davis of the Los Angeles
Dodgers won the crown with a .346 mark. Twenty-three-year-old Bob
Gibson was recalled from the minors.
1963 Musial, who won seven N.L. batting titles in his 22-year career
with the Cardinals and had a lifetime average of .331, announced
his retirement. His famous No. 6 became the first Cardinal number
to be retired on September 29. The All-Star infield of Julian Javier,
Dick Groat, Ken Boyer and Bill White set the tone for 1964.
1964 On June 15 the Cardinals acquired OF Lou Brock from the Chicago
Cubs. In 103 games with the Cards he scored 81 runs, helping to
catapult the team from 7th to 1st place, as they won the division
on the season's last day. Ken Boyer won the N.L. MVP with 119 RBIs.
OF Curt Flood won a Gold Glove alongside Willie Mays and Roberto
Clemente. The Cards upset the New York Yankees in a seven-game series,
the Cardinals first Series appearance since the addition of four
new franchises and two new divisions to baseball in 1961. Ken Boyer
hit a grand slam to win the fourth game; Tim McCarver, who batted
a Series-high .478, smashed a 10th inning home run to win the fifth
game, and Ron Taylor and Roger Craig combined for 9.2 scoreless
innings of relief.
1966 The Cardinals closed old Busch Stadium on May 8 with a 10-5
loss to the San Francisco Giants. On May 12, they opened new Busch
Memorial Stadium in downtown St. Louis by defeating the Atlanta
Braves, 4-3, in 12 innings. Lou Brock singled with the bases loaded,
driving in Curt Flood with the winning run. The winning pitcher
was Don Dennis, the loser Phil Niekro. Mike Shannon got the first
Cardinal hit, a first-inning single, and Atlanta's Felipe Alou hit
two home runs. The Cardinals also hosted the All-Star Game.
1967 Home paid attendance topped 2 million for the first time. "El
Birdos" enjoyed the dominating play by Latin stars Julian Javier
and Orlando Cepeda. Winning their 11th pennant, the Cardinals defeated
the Boston Red Sox, four games to three. Bob Gibson pitched three
complete-game victories and Lou Brock put on one of the finest offensive
displays in World Series history. Gibson limited the Red Sox to
only 14 hits in three games, and Brock topped all Series hitters
with a .414 batting average. Lou also set a Series record by stealing
seven bases and Roger Maris hit .385 and drove in seven runs.
1968 Bob Gibson had a 22-9 record, hurled 13 shutouts, had a 15-game
winning streak and allowed only 38 earned runs in 304 innings for
a 1.12 ERA, a Major League record for a pitcher who worked more
than 300 innings. He set a World Series strikeout record with 17
in the first game against Detroit. His remarkable season earned
him the National League's Cy Young and Most Valuable Player awards.
In the Series, the Cardinals led three games to one, but the Tigers
rallied to win the last three contests and claim their first world
championship since 1945. Gibson won two games for the Redbirds and
had 35K in the Series, breaking the mark of 31 he set against the
Yankees in 1964. Lou Brock batted .464 and stole seven bases.
1969 On September 15 against the New York Mets, Steve Carlton struck
out 19 batters, a major league record at the time. However, he lost
the game, 4-3, as Ron Swoboda hit a pair of two-run homers. Carlton
struck out at least one man in every inning and fanned the side
in four different frames.
1970 Gibson had a 23-7 record and received his second N.L. Cy Young
Award. The Cardinals played their first season at Busch on AstroTurf,
which replaced the original natural-grass field.
1971 Joe Torre won the N.L. batting title with a .363 average and
was named league MVP. Gibson pitched his only career no-hitter,
an 11-0 victory over the Pirates on August 14. Red Schoendienst
established a longevity record for Cardinal managers, completing
his seventh season. Lou Brock became the first major league player
to steal 50 or more bases in seven consecutive years.
1972 Gibson extended his major league record for most seasons with
200 or more strikeouts to nine. He also set an N.L. career mark
for righthanders with his 2,786th strikeout. Brock extended his
record for most consecutive seasons of 50 or more stolen bases to
eight. The Cardinals drew their 50 millionth fan since 1900.
1973 Brock stole his 600th base, moving into ninth place on the
all-time list, and extended his major league record for most consecutive
seasons with 50 or more steals to nine. Gibson moved into second
place on the all-time strikeout list. Joe Torre collected his 2,000th
hit and 1,000th RBI.
1974 Brock steals 118 bases to break Maury Wills' single-season
mark and surpasses Max Carey's N.L. career record. Brock moves from
ninth to second on the all-time career stolen base list. Gibson
strikes out the 3,000th batter of his career to become only the
second pitcher in baseball history to reach that figure. The Cardinals
draw more than 1,800,000 fans, the third-highest home attendance
in their history. The Redbirds and Mets play a 25-inning game, the
longest night game in major league history and the longest game
ever played to conclusion. Cardinals win as Bake McBride scores
from first on two errors. McBride is named the N.L. Rookie Of The
Year.
1975 Brock gets career hit No. 2,500 and stolen base No. 800. Gibson
retires after a 17-year Cardinal career and 251 victories. Gibby
is honored by a standing-room crowd on Bob Gibson Day. Jacket Day
attracts 50,548 fans, the largest regular-season crowd in St. Louis
baseball history. Hrabosky compiles 13 wins and 22 saves and is
named "Fireman of the Year.'' Ted Simmons finishes second in the
league batting race with a .332 average.
1926-1950
1926 In their first World Series appearance, the Cardinals, led
by player-manager Hornsby, edged the Yankees in a seven games. The
team led the N.L. in eight offensive categories. Their 90 home runs
led the league, while their 82 triples placed them second. They
were not caught stealing once (83 SB). Veteran 39-year-old righthander
Grover Cleveland Alexander, obtained by the Redbirds in a midseason
trade with the Chicago Cubs, won the second and sixth games of the
Series, then came on to save the seventh game.
1928 The Cardinals won the pennant behind Jim Bottomley's 93 extra
base hits and a staff that completed 83 games, but they were swept
by the Yankees in the Series. Babe Ruth batted .625 for the Series
and hit three home runs in one game, and Lou Gehrig batted .545
with nine RBI. Four of Gehrig's six hits were home runs.
1930 On September 28, the last game of the season, 19-year-old Jay
Hanna "Dizzy" Dean made his big league debut, pitching a complete
game three-hitter in a Cardinals win. The team won the pennant but
dropped the Series to Philadelphia that year, 4-2. Cardinal victories
were pitched by Bill Hallahan, 5-0 in the third game, and Jesse
Haines, 3-1 in the fourth.
1931 In Pepper Martin's (the "Wild Horse of the Osage") rookie season
the Cardinals avenged their loss to Philadelphia, taking the Series
in seven games. Martin stole five bases, collected 12 hits and batter
.500. Bill Hallahan and Burleigh Grimes each pitched two victories
for the Cardinals.
1932 Dizzy Dean won 18 games in his rookie campaign after spending
all of 1931 in Houston, in the Texas League. He led the league in
strikeouts (191), shutouts(4) and innings pitched (286).
1933 Leo (the Lip) Durocher's first year with the club and Joe Medwick's
rookie season. Frankie (Fordham Flash) Frisch, at 34, played 2B
while co-managing with Gabby Street.
1934 The "Gas House Gang" won the National League pennant on the
final day of the season, then defeated Detroit in the Series. Four
games to three. Dizzy Dean predicted 45 wins between himself and
his brother, Paul, a rookie. Dizzy won 30, his brother 19, for a
total of 49 and each won two games in the Series. The final game
of the Series, won by the Cardinals 11-0, was marked by Commissioner
Kenesaw Landis' order to eject Joe "Muscles" Medwick from the game.
Medwick had slid hard into Tigers third baseman, Marv Owen, in the
sixth inning, so infuriating Detroit fans that they bombarded him
with fruit, vegetables and debris when he took his position in left
field in the bottom of the inning. Landis removed Medwick to halt
the disturbance.
1937 Medwick won the Triple Crown with 31 home runs, 154 RBI and
a .374 batting average. He remains the last National Leaguer to
accomplish the feat.
1940 After years of wrangling, the Browns and the Cardinals finally
agreed to split the $150,000 cost of installing lights at the park.
The Browns were given the honor of hosting the first night game
in St. Louis on May 24th.The Cardinals first night game was on June
4. Medwick went 5-for-5, but the Birds were trounced by the Dodgers,
10-1. The All-Star Game was hosted by the Cardinals at Sportsman's
Park on July 9th and a sellout crowd of 32,373 saw the National
League win, 4-0. Johnny Mize hit a then club-record 43 home runs.
1942 Winning 43 out of their last 51 games, St. Louis erased a 10.5
game deficit and passed Brooklyn on September 13th on their way
to a world championship. The 106-48 Cardinals are considered won
of baseball's all-time greatest teams; the average player age was
under 27. Home-grown talents Enos (Country) Slaughter and Stan (The
Man) Musial, a 21-year-old rookie, were products of Branch Rickey's
farm system. Mort Cooper was N.L. MVP, posting 22 wins, seven losses
and a 1.77 ERA. In the Series, the Cardinals lost the first game
to the Yankees, then roared back to win four straight. Rookie pitcher
Johnny Beazley won two games, lefthander Ernie White shut out the
Yankees in the third game, and third baseman Whitey Kurowski belted
an RBI-triple in the second game and a two-run, ninth-inning homer
to clinch the finale.
1943 N.L. MVP Musial led the league in batting average (.357); hits
(220); doubles (48); triples (20); total bases (347); on-base average
(.425); and slugging percentage (.562). The Cardinals dropped four
of five to the Yankees in the World Series.
1944 TThe Cardinals felled the St. Louis Browns in the cross-town
champion's only World Series appearance. In this only all-St. Louis
World Series, pitching dominated as the Cardinals defeated the Browns,
four games to two. The two teams combined to strike out a six-game
Series-record 92 batters, 49 by Cardinal pitchers and 43 by Browns
hurlers. Emil Verban topped Cardinal hitters with a .412 average.
The Series was dubbed the "Streetcar Series" as many fans used that
mode of travel to and from the ballpark.
1946 Home paid attendance topped 1 million for the first time. The
Cardinals and Dodgers finished the season in a tie for first in
the N.L., the first time that occurred in the major leagues. Stan
Musial won the N.L. MVP award, leading the league in nearly every
offensive category. Enos Slaughter led the league with 130 RBIs.
The Cardinals took a three-game series with the Dodgers to decide
the N.L., then defeated Boston in a seven-game World Series. Harry
"the Cat" Brecheen won three games for the Redbirds. In the bottom
of the eighth inning of the seventh game, with the score tied at
3 to 3, Enos Slaughter singled, then scored all the way from first
on Harry Walker's double to left-center. Slaughter's "Mad Dash"
surprised Red Sox relay man Johnny Pesky, whose moment's hesitation
allowed Slaughter to score the winning run.
1947 At the end of the season, Breadon, his health failing, sold
out to Robert E. Hannegan (then Postmaster General of the United
States) and Fred Saigh. Hannegan served as president until 1949,
selling his share to Saigh.
1948 Stan Musial won his third N.L. Most Valuable Player award and
led the league in nearly every batting department - average (.376);
runs (135); hits (230); total bases (429); doubles (46); triples
(18); runs batted in (131); and slugging percentage (.702). The
St. Louis Browns hosted the All-Star Game at Sportsman's Park on
July 13.
1950 The Cardinals played their first night opener in St. Louis.
1901-1925
1902 An American League team came to St. Louis, taking up the old
Browns team name, and since they moved into the old Grand Avenue
ballpark, they readily took on the old "Sportsman's Park" name.
1911 The ownership of the club passed to Robison's daughter, Mrs.
Helene Hathaway Britton. Mrs. Britton bought out Manager Roger Bresnahan's
contract and hired Miller Huggins.
1914 In Miller Huggins' second year, the Cardinals finished the
season in third place. It was something of a sensation because a
St. Louis National League team had not finished that high since
1877.
1916 After the season, Mrs. Britton sold her stock in the club to
her attorney, James C. Jones, and stockholders, including a St.
Louis automobile dealer named Sam Breadon.
1917 The fan-controlled club needed a baseball man to run it. They
found one in Branch Rickey, then business manager of the A.L. Browns
. Rickey was named president, however the club continued to struggle
financially. Mr. Breadon was called upon frequently for financial
assistance. League Park was renamed Cardinal Field.
1920 Sam Breadon became president and majority stockholder of the
Cardinals, and Branch Rickey moved to Vice President and General
Manager. This leadership team successfully developed the Cardinals,
leading them to their first World Championship in 1926. One of Breadon's
first moves was to sell Robison Field and become tenants at Sportsman's
Park. Branch Rickey used proceeds from the sale of the ballpark
to invest in the first Cardinals farm club affiliation at Houston,
TX.
1922 Rogers Hornsby won the Triple Crown with 42 home runs, 152
RBI and a .401 batting average.
1924 Hornsby won the batting title with a .424 average, the highest
mark in the National League since 1900.
1925 Hornsby won his second Triple Crown with 39 home runs, 143
RBI and a .403 average. On Memorial Day, Rogers Hornsby was named
manager of the club, succeeding Branch Rickey. Rickey became strictly
a front office man, and a very successful one, building a reputation
for his excellent eye for raw talent and thrifty dealings. The Cardinals
had six farm teams in 1925, and that number increased over the next
few years to help fuel their growing success story.
1876-1900
1876 The St. Louis Brown Stockings, owned by John B.C. Lucas, became
a charter member of the National League in the nation's centennial
year. The team went 45-19 and finished in second place, four games
behind Chicago, 47-13. George Washington (Grin) Bradley went 45-19
and recorded the league's first no-hitter.
1877 Bradley was signed by Chicago in 1877 and the team finished
in fourth place. Under accusations of scandal, Lucas withdrew his
team from the league before the 1878 season.
1881 The Sportsman's Park and Club was formed to take over the operation
of the Grand Avenue Ballpark. With Dutchman Chris Von der Ahe as
corporate president and chief stockholder, professional baseball
was back in St. Louis. Von der Ahe entered his St. Louis Browns
into the American Association. Charles Comiskey was his manager.
The team won four consecutive pennants from 1885-1888.
1886 The American Association Browns beat Chicago of the National
League in a winner-take-all world championship game that went 10
innings.
1892 The American Associaton folded at the conclusion of 1891 and
the St. Louis Browns rejoined the N.L. as part of the newly reformed
12 team circuit. The St. Louis franchise has had continuous membership
in the National League ever since.
1893 Von der Ahe was offered a larger property at Vandeventer and
Natural Bridge Avenues, so Chris and his corporation moved Sportsman's
Park to the new location. The last (exhibition) game at the Grand
Avenue ballpark was April 23rd vs. Cincinnati and the club moved
to the new grounds to be ready for the home opener on April 27th.
The park was known as (New) Sportsman's Park.
1898 After several years of second-division baseball and a disastrous
fire, Chris Von der Ahe and his corporation were bankrupt. The Robison
Brothers stepped in to purchase the Browns.
1899 The Robison Brothers, Frank and Stanley, discarded the name
of Browns, calling the St. Louis National Leaguers the Perfectos.
The team was outfitted in red striped stockings and red-trimmed
uniforms. When sportswriter Willie McHale, of the St. Louis Republic,
heard a lady fan remark, "What a lovely shade of cardinal," the
new nickname was used in his column, and struck a chord with St.
Louis fans. The team officially changed its name from the Perfectos
to the Cardinals in 1900. The ballpark also discarded the old Sportsman's
Park name in favor of League Park.
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