This is an era of overstatement; if
the word “incredible” were removed from the vocabulary TV news and sports
casters could barely speak. Even the least-exceptional occurrence is thusly
described; as my late friend Seymour Shlaes used to say, “It’s so incredible
it’s unbelievable.”
That’s
why it’s good to focus on something exceptional that’s so often been repeated
it has become ordinary. I mean the presence of the St. Louis Cardinals in
another baseball playoffs season. While most of the attention in the
now-concluding pennant races has been elsewhere they are there again, for the 16th
time in this 23-seasons-old century. And while they won’t be favored to reach
the World Series the fact they’re in the mix gives them a shot. They’ve made it
four times since 2000 and won it twice, in 2006 and 2011.
Plus, they
haven’t been bad in their non-pennant years. Since Y2K they’ve had just one
sub-.500 season, a record exceeded only by the almighty New York Yankees. And while it can be said that the Yankees (and
their National League-counterpart L.A. Dodgers) buy their victories with a
limitless budget, the small-market Cardinals, with a mid-level payroll, gather
them the hard way, through skill, guile and perseverance. There’s a lesson
there, for any organization that aspires to do the same.
You’re
probably waiting for my “to be sure” paragraph, and I won’t disappoint. Point
one in this regard is that the Redbirds’ success dates back farther than the
year 2000. In the horse-and-rabbit stew that is Major League Baseball (the
horse being the Yankees), the Cardinals have been the biggest rabbit, with 11
World Series titles (to the Yanks’ 27) beginning in 1926. Point two is that
other small-market clubs, namely the Oakland A’s and Tampa Bay Rays, also have
outperformed expectations over the last two decades, but their charts are
roller coasterish while that of the St. Louisans looks like a placid lake.
The
Cards’ record stands in sharpest contrast with that of the Chicago Cubs, my
team and their biggest rival. The Cubs broke their epic, 100-year-plus championship
drought only after Theo Epstein showed up in 2011, cleaned the stable of every
serviceable veteran, and intentionally sustained three bad seasons while
building toward contender status. The drought was broken by a good run and the 2016
crown, but the Cubs never repeated that triumph and Epstein eventually left the
team where he found it—near the bottom looking up. Its latest rebuild now
numbers two dreary seasons with no certain end in sight.
Fans
love to debate whether good fans make good teams or vice versa (I favor the
latter position) but it’s not debatable that St. Louis is as good a baseball
town as there is. Except for hockey—a niche sport in the American Midwest—the
Cards have the city to themselves, the NFL having fled in 2015 and professional
basketball absent since the ABA folded in 1976. With a metro-area population of
about 2.8 million people, 21st on the U.S. table, the team annually
ranks at or near the top of the MLB attendance list, regularly averaging more
than 40,000 filled seats a game in its 44,000-seat Busch Stadium home. That’s
despite local summer weather famous for its sticky heat.
A larger
asset has been the kind of organizational stability that’s rare in the
impatient world of big-time sports. The current span started with Bill DeWitt
Jr., who bought the team from the Anheuser Busch brewing people in 1996. He’s a
baseball guy to the core, his father having owned and run the St. Louis Browns
and Cincinnati Reds. His own history in the sport started as a nine-year-old
batboy for the Brownies.
Walt Jocketty was the Cards’
general manager when DeWitt bought the team. He was kept on, serving until
2007. He then was replaced by his assistant, John Mozeliak, who in 2017 was
replaced by his assistant, Mike Girsch. Similarly, the team’s recent
managerial chain includes just Tony LaRussa (1996-2011), Mike Matheny
(2012-18), Mike Shildt (2018-21) and, now, Oliver Marmol. Matheny, Shildt and
Marmol all had Cardinals’ tenure before becoming managers. Marmol has been with
the team since he was a 19-year-old player draftee in 2007.
That’s the “Cardinals’ Way,” the
title the team affixes to the 86-page handbook it gives to every new employee.
For players it lays out the fitness expectations, practice designs and on-field
approaches it applies at every level of its system. For the Cards, the saw
“being on the same page” is meant literally.
But if the Cards march mostly in
step they can break cadence to plug holes. Their lineups typically are anchored
by home-grown players, such as the catcher Yadier Molina and the pitcher Adam
Wainwright, but when the need arises they can reach out for help, even if it
means breaking the game’s maxims. For example, they ignored the lately popular
“never pay anyone over 30” rule to trade for their two current best
players—first baseman Paul Goldschmidt and third-baseman Nolan Arenado—after
those guys’ original teams decided against paying them at market prices.
Goldschmidt was picked up in 2019 at age 31
and given a five-year, $130 million contract. He’s repaying the Cards with an
MVP-quality season at 34. Arenado, the game’s best third-baseman since Mike
Schmidt, was acquired in 2021 at age 30 with six years remaining on an
eight-year, $260 million deal. He’s annually been hitting 30-plus home runs and
batting in 100-runs-plus as usual in St. Louis.
The Cardinals have been
lucky—witness Molina and Wainwright going relatively injury free for
extraordinary periods (Molina is in his 19th season, Wainwright his
17th). And Albert Pujols, the Hall of Fame-to-be slugger the team
jettisoned in 2011 at age 31, is back at 42 and having a swan-song season worth
a Hollywood script. In his case them that has deserves to get.
2 comments:
There is a good reason that stars like Arenado, Goldschmidt, and Pujols come (or return) to the Cardinals: They want the rings that come with playing for a winner. Someone needs to send Trout and Ohtani copies of The Cardinals Way.
You make my heart sing with this column, Fred. Having been born in St. Louis just before the 1946 Cardinal Series win, I've enjoyed Series wins as a high-school grad in '64 and a college senior in '67. Got married the year of the '82 Series win.Heck, I even rejoiced after leaving the Wall St. Journal and moving to Boston. Here, the Cards let the Sox break the Curse of the Bambino (a 2004 sweep) gave 'em another title in '13--after winning in '06 and '11, of course. Yes, Fred: a great team to be a (nearly) life-long fan of....
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