All posts tagged St. Louis Cardinals

Tony LaRussa Retires

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St. Louis Cardinals general manager Tony LaRussa announced today that he will retire after 16 years with the club.  Read more…

Cards Take World Series, Make Millions Care About Baseball

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What a team. What a ride — the Cardinals, the world champs.

And so it was that the St. Louis Cardinals clinched the seventh game of the 2011 World Series, a contest where they seemed to fly on their adrenaline from last night’s game six comeback, while the Texas Rangers just never got going.  Read more…

David Freese, Cards, Force World Series Game Seven

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The St. Louis Cardinals were obviously not ready to go home.

The Cards came back from two two-run deficits in the ninth and tenth innings of last night’s game six of the World Series, ending in an almost unbelievable 11th-inning walk-off home run from David Freese that took the score to 10-9, and the contest to a seventh game. (You should watch that homer and the celebration after, if you didn’t see it. I didn’t think I cared about baseball enough to get chills over it. Turns out I was completely wrong about that. Try not to feel something. I dare you.) Read more…

So I Like Pitchers? or Let Me Tell You About My Fantasy Drafts

Last year I joined one of my husband’s fantasy baseball leagues and deemed the exercise worthy of repetition this season. What’s not to love? Fantasy baseball leagues allow one to to talk smack to friends in a sanctioned environment and then take their money, all while spending even more time than usual on the interwebs. Win.

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This year I’m in three leagues. Last year, my draft strategy for the White Russians was pick hot dudes (Dan Haren), Iowans (Casey Blake), and people with interesting names or stories (Prince Fielder is a vegetarian, y’all, and Tim Lincecum is a fascinating freak of nature), and I did pretty well. This year, I actually, you know, did a little research. When I say “research”, I mean, I asked my husband to print out copies of his rankings spreadsheets for me. Why reinvent the wheel when I’m legally bound to someone who spends hours analyzing projections? My management style: efficiency.

While I’m satisfied with my teams, I’ll not know just how good they are until the season begins and things get crackin’, but here are my highlights.

  • My pitching staff is ON FIYAH in the Minors.  It’s a shallow league, which makes it incredibly easy to have a good-looking team, but I’ve got Zack Greinke and Felix Hernandez starting, and (wait for it) Jonathan Broxton, Mariano Rivera, and Francisco Rodriguez in the bullpen. I’ve got saves covered. I’ve also got Matt Garza in all three leagues. I had him last year, a mediocre 8-12 record, but I think he’s ready to take it to the next level and could break out this year.
  • In my Twitter league, I’m also looking to my pitching staff: hometown hero Chris Carpenter is a stalwart for the Cardinals and easy to cheer for when I’m at Busch Stadium. I also snagged my baseball boyfriend Dan Haren, whom I’ve followed since his stint here in St Louis. What can I say? I’m into tall, dark, long-haired dudes who look sleepy all the time. Here’s hoping Arizona’s hitters help Haren out a bit this season. I’ve also got Broxton and Garza in those leagues, and Haren’s teammate Chad Qualls, Arizona’s closer, in the bullpen.
  • Sleeper pick: Minnesota’s Michael Cuddyer. I’ve got him in two leagues. First off, he hit .429 for the Twins in the playoffs against the Yankees last year. He can fill in at first or outfield, and he’s leading the majors in spring training hitting (.513). Plus, the Twins are going to have an exciting season with the inaugural season of the new Target Field. Worst case scenario, he’ll be a versatile, reliable bench player. Best case scenario: Twins rally around out-for-the-season Joe Nathan, win the pennant in a brand-new stadium, and Cuddyer is a solid contributor at the plate.

The work is hard and the season is long, but I think 2010 may just be the year the White Russians bring home their first (virtual) hardware.

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The Best Rivalry

Spare me your Yankees vs. Red Sox.

Give me a break about the Giants and Dodgers.

And don’t even approach me about inter-city rivalries.

The best rivalry in baseball is, forever has been, and will forever be, Cardinals vs. Cubs.

Separated by less than 300 miles of Interstate 55, the two Midwestern cities host teams which have met over two thousand times since their first matchup WAY back in 1885. Yes, the Cubs may own a 1,146 to 1,078 record against the Cardinals, however the Redbirds have won eight more World Series championships than the Cubs have or every will for that matter.cardscubsfirstplace

It’s true that in recent years the Cubs have tried, and failed, to shed the “Lovable Loser” moniker that’s followed them for so many years.

Last year they compiled an impressive 97-64 before being swept in three games by the LA Dodgers.

The year before that the Cubs were swept by the Arizona Diamondbacks… again , a sweeping that I thoroughly enjoyed.

On the other hand is my team the Cardinals… aka the 2006 World Series Champion Cardinals who are looking to come back from a painful season in which they finished 11 ½ games behind their archrival despite winning 86 games.

So as a lifelong Cardinals fan, I’m also a lifelong Cubs hater.

This weekend, the two teams square off for a 4-game series that sees the Cardinals in First place, 2 games ahead of the Milwaukee Brewers and 3 ½ games ahead of the Cubs.

Sure, I’ll root for the Cubs if they’re playing the Yankees or Red Sox, but otherwise I want the Cubs to lose. Badly. So badly in fact that I want their ancestors to feel the sting of losing.

In short, I hate the Cubs… I really do.

But lately, something has been happening… and it’s damndest thing is.

It’s getting hard, at times, to hate the Cubs.

What’s worse is that a majority of Cubs fans are ok people… not like Yankees/Red Sox where every other fan is a jackass begging for a smack upside the head or Giants/Dodgers where people actually, you know, get physically assaulted.

Now don’t let this fool you, I still hate the Cubs with the passion of a billion burning suns.

I hate when the Cardinals lose to the Cubs.

I hate seeing so much blue at home Cardinals games when the teams meet.

If I, or anyone in my immediate family for that matter, had been alive the last time the Cubs won the World Series (waaaaaaaayyy back in 1908), I would have hated that.

If they ever, in my lifetime, win a World Series I would hate that (though that doesn’t really seem like an issue with each passing year, does it?).

I loved when the Cardinals traded for Mark DeRosa weeks ago, a move that was bemoaned not only by Cubs fans, but by Cubs players as well.

So yes, I <b>do</b> hate the Cubs… but not *as much* as the Yankees, Red Sox and, more recently, the Brewers (<i>a hatred exacerbated by their ridiculous attempts to look like ‘everyday’ people  by un-tucking their jerseys after each game</i>)

But as I said, at times it’s hard to hate the Cubs. They have a rich, if fruitless, history, a great ballpark (save for the chances of being hit by falling concrete), and an excellent fan base (save for the few schmucks that you’ll find at <i>any</i> baseball game).

Every Cardinal/Cub game I’ve ever been to has seen the fans sitting side by side, laughing, ribbing each other and buying each other beers.

Could you see that happening in New York or Boston?

So embrace the best rivalry in baseball this weekend as two games, Saturday’s afternoon tilt on Fox and Sunday’s night cap on ESPN. Not only will you see the best rivalry in sports, but you’ll also see the best player in baseball play for one of the best managers in baseball in one of the best stadiums in baseball.

It’s not a game, it’s history.

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