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St. Louis Cardinals is an American-based professional baseball team based in St. Louis. Louis, Missouri. The Cardinals compete in Major League Baseball (MLB) as a member club of the National League (NL) Central division. Busch Stadium has been the average of their home since 2006. With the origin as one of the earliest professional baseball clubs in St. Louis. Louis, businessman Chris von der Ahe bought barnstorming clubs in 1881, later known as Brown Stockings, and named them as members of the American Association's (AA) charter the following season. After the termination of AA, St. Louis joined NL in 1892; at the time, they were called Browns and Perfectos before they were officially renamed Cardinals in 1900.

One of the most successful franchises in baseball history, the Cardinals have won 11 World Series championships, the second most in Major League Baseball just behind the New York Yankees, and the most in the National League. Their National League 19 league ranks third in NL history. In addition, Louis has won 13 division titles in the Eastern and Central divisions. While still at AA, St. Louis won four league championships, making them eligible to play as pioneers of the World Series. They tied in 1885 and won straight in 1886, both against Chicago, in the first meeting of Cardinals-Cubs competition that continues to this day.

Cardinals achievements that have had an impact on MLB and sports in general include Branch Rickey pioneering farming systems, Rogers Hornsby's two batting Triple Crowns, Dizzy Dean 30-win season in 1934, Stan Musial 17 MLB and 29 NL records, Bob Gibson 1.12 yielding flat (ERA) in 1968, Whiteyball Whitey Herzog, Mark McGwire broke the record of a season-long home run in 1998, and an unprecedented 2011 championship team comeback. The Cardinals have won 105 matches or more in four different seasons and won 100 or more in total nine times. Cardinals players have won 20 MVP leagues, four Triple Crown batting, and three Cy Young Awards. Baseball Hall of Fame inductees include Lou Brock, Dizzy Dean, Bob Gibson, Whitey Herzog, Rogers Hornsby, Joe Medwick, Stan Musial, Rickey Branch, Red Schoendienst, Ozzie Smith, and Bruce Sutter.

In 2018, rewards Cardinals for $ 1.9 billion, making them the 7th most valuable franchise in MLB; their income the previous year was $ 319 million, and their operating income was $ 40.0 million. Since their purchase in 1995, owner of investment group William DeWitt, Jr. has experienced tremendous growth from the purchase price of $ 147 million. John Mozeliak is President of Baseball Operation, Mike Girsch is general manager and Mike Matheny is his manager. The Cardinals are notable for their strong fan support: despite being in one of the mid-level sports markets, they routinely see attendance among the highest leagues, and are consistently among the Top 3 in MLB in local television ratings.

Video St. Louis Cardinals



History

Before Cardinals (1875-1881)

Professional baseball starts at St. Louis with the birth of the Brown Stockings at the National Association (NA) in 1875. NA folded following that season, and the following season, St. Louis joined the National League as a charter member, finishing in third place at 45-19. George Bradley threw the first no-hitters in the history of Major League. NL drove St. Louis of the league after 1877 due to game game scandal and bankrupt teams. Without a league, they continued to play as a semi-professional barnstorming team until 1881.

The magnitude of the reorganization that followed the seasons of 1877 and 1881 is such that the teams of Brown Stockings 1875-1877 and 1878-1881 are generally not considered continuity as franchises with St. Louis Cardinals today.

The American Association and the early National League era (1882-1919)

For the 1882 season, Chris von der Ahe bought the team, rearranged it, and made it a founding member of the American Association (AA), the league to rival NL. 1882 is generally regarded as the first year of St. Louis Cardinals.

Next season, St. Louis shortened their name to Browns . Soon afterwards they became the dominant team at AA, when manager Charlie Comiskey guided St. Louis to four successive bundles from 1885 to 1888. Pitchers and outfielder Bob Caruthers led the league at ERA 2.07 and won (40) in 1885 and finished in the top six in the second in each of the next two seasons. He also led AA in OBP (.448) and OPS (.974) in 1886 and was ranked fourth in the batting average in 1886 (.334) and fifth in 1887 (.357). Outfielder Tip O'Neill won the first triple crown batting in franchise history in 1887 and the only one in AA history. By winning the banner, Browns plays the winner of the NL banner in the predecessor of the World Series. The Browns twice met Chicago White Stockings - a prototype of the Chicago Cubs - tied one in a heated debate and won another, spurring a stiff Louis St-Chicago competition that is going on to this day. During the ten franchise seasons in AA, they compiled the all time highest league of 780 wins and a 639, a percentage of wins. They lost only 432 contests while binding 21 others.

AA broke after the 1891 season and Browns were transferred to the National League. This time, the club entered an era of futile cruelty. Between 1892 and 1919, St. Louis managed only five win seasons, finished in last place or next-to-last sixteen times, and ended four seasons with 100 losses or more. The nadir point is the 1897 season: the 29-102 record for the worst percentage of the.221 franchise. St Louis '84 -67 finished as Perfectos will be the best team finish between the AA era and Sam Breadon's purchase of the team. As "Perfectos", teams wear their jersey with red stripes and cardinal striping. Later that season, St. Louis Republic sports writer Willie McHale entered an account in the women's fan column that he heard commenting on the uniform, "How beautiful is the cardinal." Fans liked the "Cardinals" moniker and, the following year, the popularity for that nickname caused the official change to Cardinals .

In 1902, the American League team moved from Milwaukee to St. Louis. Louis, changed their name to St. Louis Browns and built a new park in the location of the old stadium of The Cardinals, attacking a competition that lasted for five decades. Breadon bought minority interest in Cardinals in 1917 and in 1919 Browns Branch manager Rickey joined the Cardinals. The first 28 Cardinals seasons in the NL were a complete reversal of their stay at AA - with a winning percentage of 0.406, they garnered 1,632 wins, 2,425 losses and 74 ties.

Breadon Era (1920-52)

St. Louis baseball started the renaissance: since 1926 the Cardinals have won eleven World Series and nineteen NL banners. Breadon spurred this revival when it bought a majority stake in 1920 and appointed Rickey as a business manager, expanding scouting, player development, and pioneering a small league farming system, filling the role of the general manager today. With Rogers Hornsby at second base, he claimed Triple Crowns in 1922 and 1925, and the Cardinals won the 1926 World Series, the first. St. Louis then won the league in 1928, 1930, and 1931 and 1931 World Series.

The Gashouse Gang Edition claimed the 1934 World Series and Cardinals gathered new frontiers of popularity far beyond St. Louis via radio, leading to the coining of the term "Cardinal Nation". Dizzy Dean led the Gang, won the 1934 MVP, and led NL several times in wins, strikeouts, innings, full games, and shutouts. Johnny Mize and Joe Medwick emerged as two threat powers, with Medwick claiming the final Triple Crown for the Cardinal in 1937.

In the 1940s, the golden era arose when Rickey's farming system became laden with talents like Marty Marion, Enos Slaughter, Mort Cooper, Walker Cooper, Stan Musial, Max Lanier, Whitey Kurowski, Red Schoendienst and Johnny Beazley. This is one of the most successful decades in franchise history with 960 winning 580 losses for a higher percentage of wins than any other Major League team at 0.623. With Billy Southworth managing, they won the World Series in 1942 and 1944 (in the only all-St. Louis series against Browns), and won 105 or more games respectively in 1942, 1943, and 1944. The percentage of managerial win Southworth (.642) is St. Louis' highest since the franchise joined the National League. Musial was considered the most consistent hitter of his era and was most successful in team history, winning three MVPs and seven batting titles. St. Louis then won the 1946 World Series at Mad Maders Slaughter in Game 7. Breadon was forced to sell the team in 1947 but won six World Series and nine NL banner as the owner of the Cardinals. They remained competitive, finishing.500 or better in the next thirteen seventeen seasons, but failed to win the league or World Series until 1964.

Gussie Busch era (1953-89)

In 1953 the Anheuser-Busch beer factory bought Cardinals and Augustus "Gussie" Busch became team leader, spurring Browns' departure in 1953 to Baltimore to become an Orioles, and making the Cardinals the only major league club in town. More success followed in the 1960s, beginning with what is considered one of the most oblique trades in Premier League history, when St. Louis accepts Lou Brock from outside the Cubs for pitcher Ernie Broglio. MVP third baseman Ken Boyer and pitcher Bob Gibson led the club to the World Series winning the same year and Curt Flood, Bill White, Curt Simmons, and Steve Carlton also made important contributions in this decade. In 1967, the new arrival of Orlando Cepeda won the MVP, helping to push St. Louis to World Series. The Cardinals won the league the following year behind ERA's 2.49 Premier League primary staff in what was a record-breaking season throughout the season. Posting the current low record of ERA 1.12 and beating the record of one World Series-17 game, Gibson won the MVP and Cy Young awards that year. However, the Cardinals failed to repeat as World Series champions, winning 3-1 over unseeded Detroit Tigers.

In the 1970s, the third catcher/baseman Joe Torre and first baseman Keith HernÃÆ'¡ndez each won the MVP, but his best team was second place and 90 victories. The team found their way back to the World Series the following decade, starting with Whitey Herzog manager and Whiteyball playing style and other trades that changed the course of the franchise: in 1982, Garry Templeton's shortstop was sent to Padres for fellow Shortstop Ozzie Smith. Widely regarded as one of the best defenders in history, Smith finished first all-time among shortstops at the Gold Glove Awards (13), All-Star games (15), assists (8,375), and a double game (1,590). St. Louis won the 1982 World Series from the falling Milwaukee Brewers. The Cardinals again won the league in 1985 and 1987. In the 1985 Series, they faced cross-country rivals Kansas City Royals for the first time in a non-exhibition game, but they lost the series. Bill DeWitt's (1996-present)

After Gussie Busch died in 1989, the brewery took over and hired Joe Torre to manage the late 1990s, then sold the team to an investment group led by William DeWitt, Jr. in 1996. Tony La Russa replaced Torre in the spring of 1996. In 1998, Mark McGwire competed with Cubs' Sammy Sosa for a home run run in the pursuit of a one-season home run record. From 2000 to 2013, the Cardinals rebuilt their way to the top with ten playoff appearances, four NL banners, two World Series titles and 1,274 regular-season wins against 993 losses for 0.560 victory percentages, leading the National League and second in MLB alone. to the New York Yankees. In addition to Jim Edmonds, Albert Pujols, and Scott Rolen, the Cardinals featured three great idlers and defenders dubbed "MV3;" Pujols won three MVPs and hit 0.328 with 445 home runs in his Cardinals career. In 2004, Chris Carpenter's powerful 3.09 ERA playoffs and 15 wins helped the team's strength to win the best leagues 105 and pick up the NL banner. In 2006, with injuries and inconsistencies, they won the World Series, beating Detroit in five games to set an all-time low of 83 victories for World Series winners.

In 2009, the Cardinals reached 10,000 wins, since they first played at the American Association (AA). St. Louis returned to the playoffs in 2011, first overcoming the biggest game-win deficit after 130 matches (at 10.5) to outperform the Atlanta Braves on the final day for a wild card playoff spot. In Game 3 of the World Series, Pujols becomes the third player to hit three home runs in the World Series game. In Game 6, third baseman David Freese and outsider Lance Berkman each link the score on the Cardinals' last strike - the first to occur in any game in MLB history - and St. Louis defeated the Texas Rangers then the game with a walk-off. home run from Freese. After winning the Series, La Russa retired and became the only manager to do so after winning the title. He also finished with the most wins for managers in franchise history with 1,408.

Successor of La Russa, Mike Matheny, helped extend the playoff play St. Louis as he became the first manager in the era playing division to guide the Cardinals to the NLCS and playoffs in his first two seasons. In 2014, Cardinals extend their NLCS barrage to 4, with their 3-1 series win over Dodgers, at NLDS. Ten days after being eliminated from the postseason by San Francisco Giants, rookie Oscar Taveras was killed in a car accident while traveling to his hometown, Puerto Plata in the Dominican Republic. On November 17, they acquired Atlanta Braves winger Jason Heyward (who just got out of the Gold Glove winning season) to replace Taveras. On June 16, 2015, the FBI and the Justice Department began an investigation on the Cardinals for the possibility of hacking out Houston Astros. The incident was carried out by Scouting Director Chris Correa. For the first time since the 2007-2008 season, the Cardinals missed the playoffs in successive years, 2016-2017.

Maps St. Louis Cardinals



Ballpark

The Cardinals play their home game at the Busch Stadium (also referred to as New Busch Stadium or Busch III ) in downtown St. Louis, crossed 7th and Clark near the intersection of Interstate 64 and 70. The stadium opened for the 2006 season at a cost of $ 411 million and had a normal capacity of 46,861. The Cardinals completed their inaugural season at the new Busch Stadium by winning the 2006 World Series, the first team since the 1923 New York Yankees to do so. This open-air stadium emulates a "retro-style" baseball theme park HOK Sport (now Populous) built since the 1990s. The open panoramic perspective on the outfield wall offers an incredible view of the city skyline. Louis featuring a typical Arch Gateway. The Eads Bridge replica stretches to the park entrance on the third base side, while Stan Musial's statue appears in front of the entrance. Other sculptures at the corner of 8 and Clark include Rogers Hornsby Hall of Famers, Ozzie Smith, George Sisler, Cool Papa Bell, Bob Gibson, Jack Buck and others.

Due to increasing demand, Game 7 of the 2011 World Series accommodates a record of 47,399 baseball by increasing the number of standing room tickets only. The attendance record for each sporting event is 48,263, in a 2013 Football Association (soccer) friendly match between Chelsea F.C. and Manchester City FC, made possible by in the field. The largest attendance (53,000) of any event on U2's Busch during a concert of their 360 Â ° Tour in 2011.

Ballpark Village, a mixed-use development located opposite Clark Street from Busch Stadium, is aimed at enhancing the experience of ballpark players. Phase 1 development, completed for the start of the 2014 season, including entertainment venues, restaurants, and retail. Linked by Cardinals Nation (which includes Cardinals Hall of Fame, a two-story Cardinals themed restaurant and a rooftop seating for 300 fans with field views across the street), the 20,000 square foot Budweiser Brew House, FOX Sports Midwest Live! and PBR, the construction of the $ 100 million Ballpark Village stage is intended to be a meeting room throughout the year, not just during the baseball season.

previous baseball stadium

Busch Stadium is the fourth average Cardinals' house and the third to bear the name. The Cardinals' original ballpark was Sportsman's Park from 1882 to 1892 when they played at the American Association and was known as Browns. In 1893, Browns moved to a new baseball stadium five blocks northwest of Sportsman's Park that would serve as their home from 1893 to 1920. The new park was originally called New Sportsman's Park but became more commonly referred to as Robison Field. In the mid-1920 season Cardinals leave Robison Field and return to the original Sportsman's Park and become tenants of their American League rivals, St. Louis Browns. In 1953, Anheuser-Busch Brewery purchased the Cardinals and the new owner later also bought Sportsman's Park from Browns and named it Busch Stadium, then became Busch I. Browns then left St. Louis. Louis for Baltimore after the season. The Cardinals built the Busch Memorial Stadium, or Busch II, in downtown St. Louis, opened it during the 1966 season and played there until 2005. It was built as a multi-purpose stadium house of both Cardinals baseball and NFL Football Cardinals, now Arizona Cardinals. Busch Stadium is currently built adjacent to, and partly on, the Busch Memorial Stadium site.

Spring training

The field of Cardinals home in spring training is Roger Dean Stadium in Jupiter, Florida. They share the complex, which opened in 1998, with Miami Marlins. Before moving to Jupiter, Cardinals held spring training at Al Lang Field in St. Louis. Petersburg, Florida from 1937 to 1997.

Attendance at home in regular season

The Cardinals have exceeded the attendance of 3 million every season since 2004.

St. Louis Cardinals put Carlos Martinez on mound for 7:15 pitch on ...
src: www.poncapost.com


Logo and uniform

The Cardinals have few logos throughout their history, though the logos have evolved over time. The first logo associated with the Cardinals was the interconnected "SL" that appeared on the team's hat and or arm at the beginning of 1900. The initial uniform usually featured the name "St. Louis" in a white uniform and a gray uniform that both had a red accent cardinal. In 1920, "SL" largely disappeared from team uniforms, and for the next 20 years the team wore white hats with red striping and red bills.

In 1922, the Cardinals wore their uniforms for the first time featuring two familiar cardinal birds perched on the baseball bat on the name "Cardinals" with the letter "C" from the word associated with the bat. The concept of birds coming from the general manager, Branch Rickey, noticed the colorful cardboard arrangements that featured the cardinal birds on the table at the Presbyterian church in Ferguson, Missouri, where he spoke. Production arrangements were made by a woman named Allie May Schmidt. Schmidt's father, a graphic designer, helped Ricky make the logo a familiar subject in the Cardinals uniform. Colloquially referred to as "birds in bats", originally appeared with birds perched on black bats and "cardinal" in print. An alternative version of this logo with "St. Louis" replacing "Cardinals" appeared in 1930 and was the main logo in 1931 and 1932 before "Cardinals" returned. In 1940, the familiar " StL " logo was now introduced on the team cap. Interlocking " StL " has undergone some minor modifications over the years but has appeared in team caps every year since. The first appearance of "STL" in 1940 coincided with the introduction of blue sea as a uniform color. From 1940 to 1955, the team wore a navy blue hat with red and red " StL " money while the shirt featured a dark red and blue accent. In 1951, the "bird on bat" logo was changed to display the yellow baseball bat.

In 1956, the Cardinals changed their hat to a solid blue with red " StL ", removing the red bill. Also, for that season alone, the Cardinals used the script "Cardinals" on their uniforms, excluding "beating birds." The latest version of the "bird in bat" logo was returned in 1957 with the word "Cardinals" written in cursive under the bat. In 1962, the Cardinals became the first National League team to show the names of players behind their shirts. In 1964, while retaining their blue hat for street games, the Cardinals changed their home caps to red by locking each other " StL ". The following year, they changed their road caps to red too. In 1967, the birds on the bat emblems in the jersey were again tweaked, making birds more realistic and changing their tail position relative to bats and this version remained on all Cardinals game T-shirts until 1997.

In 1971, following the baseball trend at the time, Cardinals replaced the traditional flannel shirts and trousers with belts with new knit pullover shirts and elastic waist pants. Another trend in baseball led the Cardinals to change their street uniform from gray to light blue from 1976 to 1984. In 1992, the Cardinals again wore traditional buttons and buttoned trousers with belts. In the same year they also began wearing a navy all-round cap with red " StL " on the road only while wearing the same red and white hat in the home game. In 1998, "birds in bats" was updated for the first time in 30 years with more detailed birds and thicker letters. That year, St. Louis introduced a hat featuring a cardinal bird perched on a bat worn only for Sunday's home game. New birds on bat designs are modified again next year, with yellow beak and white eyes replacing the red and yellow eyes of the 1998 version. The uniform number also returned to the front of the shirts in 1999 after a two-year hiatus.

On November 16, 2012, Cardinals unveiled a new alternative uniform to wear at home games on Saturday starting with the 2013 season. The modified, cream-colored outfit with red stripes on the arms and underside, was the first since 1932 at where "St. Louis" will be used instead of "Cardinal" and defend "the birds on the bat." 2013 also saw the team adopt their red hat as their main uniform for home and away games; Navy caps are maintained as an alternative, mainly used against other red-hooded teams. Over the years, the Cardinals have released various marketing logos depicting anthropomorphic cardinals in throwing positions, swinging baseball sticks, or wearing baseball caps that have never been part of a game uniform.

Cardinal sin: Ex St Louis baseball exec cops to 'hacking' rival ...
src: regmedia.co.uk


Support

Fans

Mascots

The team mascot is an anthropomorphic cardinal wearing a team uniform called Fredbird. He is assisted by Tim Fredbird, a group of eleven women who entertain fans from the field and on dugout.

While unofficial, Rally Squirrel became an unexpected phenomenon during postseason 2011. Making a "debut" in Game 3 of the NLDS on October 4, a squirrel ran across the home plate in the middle of the field from Roy Oswalt from Phillies to Cardinals' Skip Schumaker. The Cardinals will win Game 4 and the next Game 5 (October 7) in Philadelphia to advance to the NLCS, symbolizing the "role" of squirrels in the victory. This squirrel is popularized as "Buschie the Rally Squirrel" In recognition of the popularity of squirrels, a small portrayal of Rally Squirrel is also included on the official World Series ring received by the team. It appears under the "STL" logo on the side of the ring.

Fredbird sparked controversy in May 2015, when he was asked by a fan for a photo and gave it a sign that read "Life of the Police". The team later claimed that Fredbird should not be involved in political activities or social commentary.

Rivalry

Chicago Cubs

Competition Cardinals-Cubs refers to the game between the Cardinals and the Chicago Cubs. This competition is also known as Downstate Illinois rivalry or I-55 Series (in previous years as Route 66 Series ) as both cities are located in along Interstate 55 (which in itself replaces the famous US Route 66). The Cubs led the series from 1,134-1,103 to 22 June 2016, while the Cardinals led the National League banner with 19 against the Cubs' 17. The Cubs have won 11 banners in the Mainstream Baseball Era (1901-present), while 19 of the Cardinals have been won since 1926. The Cardinals also have an edge in the success of the World Series, having won 11 championships for the Cubs' 3. The game featuring the Cardinals and Cubs saw many fans visiting both the Busch Stadium in St. Petersburg. Louis or Wrigley Field in Chicago. When the National League split into two and three divisions, the Cardinals and Cubs stayed together. This has added to the excitement of several races over the years. The Cardinals and Cubs play once in the postseason, when the Cubs beat 3 Cardinals to 1 in the 2015 National Division Serie.

St. Louis Cardinals - Fine Art - Dowdle Folk Art
src: dowdlefolkart.com


Club executives and officials

Ownership and rating

An investment group headed by William DeWitt, Jr. had the St. Louis Cardinals, having bought a team from Anheuser-Busch (AB) in 1996. Like other periods of Cardinals transaction history, doubts oscillate whether buyers will keep the team at St. Louis, because of the city's status as a "small market", which seems to hinder the competitiveness of the club. That's how it happened when Sam Breadon put the Cardinals for sale in 1947: then President NL Ford Frick proposed moving the Cardinals to Chicago. When AB placed Cardinals for sale in 1995, they openly declared their intention to find a buyer who would defend the club at St. Louis. In March 1996, AB sold a team of $ 147 million for a partnership led by the Southwest Bank Drew Baur, Hanser and DeWitt, Jr. Civic Center Redevelopment, a subsidiary of AB, entered into a parking garage and adjacent property and also transferred it to Baur group ownership. The Baur group then sold the garage to another investment group, lowering the purchase price of the net franchise to about $ 100 million, about $ 10 million less than the World Financial Value of the team at that time $ 110 million.

Current Reds owner Bob Castellini and brother Thomas Williams and W. Joseph Williams Jr. each of whom once had shares in Cardinals dating back to the purchases of the Baur-DeWitt team team. To allow the purchase of the Reds in 2005, other group members bought the shares of Castellini and the Williams brothers, totaling about thirteen percent. At that time, Forbes valued the Cardinals for about $ 370 million. However, after reabsorbing the stock into the rest of the group, they decided to make it available to new investors in 2010. Amid further allegations that the Cardinals owed the city's earnings share, DeWitt revealed that their profitability has not reached the threshold to trigger liabilities.

Latest annual financial records

In 2018, respects the seventh Cardinal among 30 MLB franchises. Their estimated value of $ 1.90 billion was an increase of $ 100 million from the previous season, when they were ranked seventh. St. Revenue Louis in 2018 is $ 319 million, up $ 9 million. Their Operating Income is $ 40.0 million. The Cardinals Agreement with Fox Sports Midwest, signed in 2015, begins in 2018, and is worth $ 1 billion until 2032. In 2014, Forbes rewarded the Cardinals at $ 820 million and argued earlier that they were playing "at the baseball market is the best team in the country and is among league leaders in television ratings and attendance every season. "Along with the growth of Major League Baseball, Cardinals value has increased significantly since the purchase of Baur-DeWitt. In 2000, the franchise was worth $ 219 million, a growth rate of 374% until 2014. The franchise value grew by 12.7% from 2013 to 2014. The Forbes methodology of team value is the firm's value (equity plus net debt) which includes its rough economy but excludes the value of real estate itself. Forbes does not include the value of the team's regional sports network. Major League Baseball Advanced Media (100%) and MLB Network (67%) and league investment portfolio are included in our values. In total, these three assets have a value of approximately $ 425 million for each team. Operating income and earnings (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) measure cash in versus cash out (not accrual accounting) for the 2017 season. Their figures include post-season and net of revenue sharing and stadium debt payments. Income includes the prepaid paid team paid network as well as the proceeds from the non-MLB event at the baseball stadium. The non-recurring $ 18 million each team receives in 2017 from the sale of shares in BamTech to Walt Disney is issued, as are the advantages or disadvantages of the team's RSN.

All assessments per Forbes.
1 Under the current stadium deal (except the new stadium is waiting) without any reduction for debt, apart from the stadium debt.
(2018: $ 715 million market., Stadium $ 447 million., Sports $ 493 million, brand management $ 245 million.)
(2017: $ 666 million market., $ 411 million stadium., $ 488 million sports., Brand management $ 235 million.)
(2016: $ 613 million market., Stadium $ 378 million., Sports $ 406 million., Brand management $ 219 million.)
(2015: $ 548 million market, $ 338 million Stadium, $ 331 million in sports, $ 197 million brand management).
(2014: $ 339 million market., Stadium $ 211 million., Sports $ 156 million., Brand Management $ 124 million.)
Ã, (2013: $ 291 million market., Stadium $ 182 mi., Sports $ 151 million., Brand management $ 91 million.)
Ã, (2012: $ 240 million market., Stadium $ 157 million., Sports $ 119 million, brand management $ 78 million).
Ã, (2011: $ 206 million market., Stadium $ 136 million., Sports $ 111 mi., Brand management $ 65 million.)

2 Net revenue from the stadium is used for debt repayment.
3 Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization.
4 Includes benefits and bonuses.
5 Compare the number of wages per player salary relative to the rest of MLB. Playoff wins counts twice as much from regular season wins. The 120 score means that the team achieved 20% more winnings per dollar salary than the league average in 2010.

Franchise Principal
  • Owner, Chairman and CEO: William DeWitt, Jr.
  • President: William DeWitt III

Other interests

In addition to Ballpark Village, which has now completed its first phase, opened on 27 March, and is considered a great success with the first phase of the project, totaling 120,000 square feet (11,000 m 2 ). The Cardinals have three of their Minor League Baseball affililiates:

  • Springfield Cardinals, Texas League (AA)
  • Palm Beach Cardinals, Florida State League (High-A)
  • Gulf Coast League Cardinals, Gulf Coast League (Rookie League)

Executive

Baseball Operation
  • President, Baseball Operation: John Mozeliak
  • Vice President/General Manager: Mike Girsch
  • The General Manager's Assistant: MoisÃÆ'Â © s RodrÃÆ'guez (promoted to Asst GM on September 27, 2017)
  • Director, Players Development: Gary LaRocque
  • Director of Scouting: Randy Flores
  • International Operations Director: MoisÃÆ'Â ss RodrÃÆ'guez (promoted to Asst GM on September 27, 2017)
  • Player Director Personnel: Matt Slater
  • Director, Baseball Administration: John Vuch
  • Senior Medical Adviser: Barry Weinberg
Finance and Administration
  • Sr. Vice President and CFO: Brad Wood
Event Services and Goods Trade
  • Vice President, Event and Trading Service: Vicki Bryant
Stadium Operations
  • Vice President, Operation Stadium: Matt Gifford
Ticket Sales, Marketing & amp; Corporate Sales
  • Sr. Vice President of Sales & amp; Marketing: Dan Farrell
  • Vice President, Marketing & amp; Entertainment Stadium: Thane van Breusegen
  • Vice President, Ticket Sales and Services: Joe Strohm

Managerial scroll

Field managers with two or more years manage, and current managers are included here.

Table Button
  • * The franchise leader of all time. ** The franchise leader since 1900.

St. Louis Cardinals Logo, St. Louis Cardinals Symbol, Meaning ...
src: 1000logos.net


Player

List of current names

Train staff

Selected individual achievements and awards

  • Darryl Kile Award: Two awards are presented each year, one for Cardinal St. Louis and another for the Houston Astro, each exemplifying Kile's kindness as "a good teammate, a good friend, a good father and a humble man." Winners are selected by each local chapter of the American Baseball Writers Association. View: award-winning St. Louis Cardinals and league leader Ã,§ Darryl Kile Good Guy Award.
  • No-hug: The cardinal thrower has thrown 10 no-hitters: Ted Breitenstein (1891), Jesse Haines (1924), Paul Dean (1934), Lon Warneke (1941), Ray Washburn ( 1968), Bob Gibson (1971), Bob Forsch (1978 and 1983), Josà ©  © JimÃÆ' © nez (1999), and Bud Smith (2001). The Cardinals have never been involved in the perfect game, win or lose.
  • Cy Young Awards: Two Cardinal pitchers have won the Cy Young Awards: Bob Gibson in 1968 and 1970, and Chris Carpenter in 2005.
  • MVP Awards: 16 different Cardinal players have won a total of 20 Most Valuable Player awards, the most recent being Albert Pujols in 2009. Pujols and Stan Musial have collected the MVP at most with three each. Bob Gibson won the Cy Young Award and MVP award in 1968. The Cardinals came second after 22 MVP New York Yankees.
  • Rookie of the Year: Six Cardinals have won the Rookie of the Year award: Wally Moon in 1954, Bill Virdon in 1955, Bake McBride in 1974, Vince Coleman in 1985, Todd Worrell in 1986, and Albert Pujols in 2001.
  • Reach for cycles: The 20 cardinal players have reached the cycle, most recently being Mark Grudzielanek in 2005.
  • Triple Crown: Four of the 16 Triple Crowns batting in the major leagues (including three from only six in the National League) are by Cardinals. Tip O'Neill won the only American Association Triple Crown and the first in franchise history in 1887. Rogers Hornsby became the only two-time winner in NL history when he did so in 1922 and 1925 (Ted Williams won two AL Triple Crowns ). Triple Crown Joe Medwick in 1937 was the last in the history of the National League. The 1925 Hornsby number leads the entire major league, making it one of only five players to win this Triple Crown.
  • Home run and RBI in the game: Jim Bottomley drove in 12 games against Brooklyn on Sept 16, 1924, MLB single game record all time. On September 7, 1993, Mark Whiten hooked that record and another MLB record record with four home runs.
  • 2 Grand Slams in one inning: Fernando TatÃÆ's is the only player in Premiership history to reach two grand slam home runs in the same innings, on 23 April 1999. Both against Chan Ho Park of the Dodgers.

Team captain

  • Leo Durocher 1934-1937
  • Terry Moore 1942-1948
  • Ken Boyer 1959-1965

Hall of Famers

Inaugurated as National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum

St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Fame Museum

In 2014, Cardinals announces the reopening of the Hall of Fame franchise after a hiatus of 6 years. The formal selection process recognizes former players as Cardinals Hall of Famers each year. In order to qualify for the election, a player must be a Cardinals member for at least three seasons. The team initially released the names of 22 former players and personnel who were included in the premier class of 2014. There are now 40 Cardinals Hall of Fame members.

Entered into the Missouri Sports Hall of Fame

Retired number

The Cardinals have retired 12 total jersey numbers - second in MLB only to New York Yankees '21 - in honor of 14 former players and total club personnel on the left court wall at Busch Stadium. A 15, Jackie Robinson, respected by all MLB teams. During the time Rogers Hornsby played, Cardinals have no numbers on their uniforms. This practice began with the Cleveland Indians in 1920. Thus, Hornsby did not have a number for retirement.

Note:

  • Hornsby: When glorified in 1937, '"SL"' was used as a substitute for numbers when he played mostly in an era without numbers.
  • 42: The number of Jackie Robinson 42 has retired throughout the baseball in 1997. The Cardinals retired in September 2006 in honor of Sutter, who was elected at the Fame Hall early This year.
  • 85: The cardinal's shareholder honors Busch with number 85 on his 85th birthday in 1984.

Out of circulation, but not officially retired

  • 5: Albert Pujols' number (1B, 2001-2011) has not been re-published since he signed a contract with the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim after the 2011 season.
  • 51: Willie McGee's number (OF, 1982-1990, 1996-1999) has not been re-published since the end of the 2001 season.
  • 57: Darryl Kile's number (P, 2000-02) has not been re-published since his death in mid-season 2002. Together with Josh Hancock number 32, another active pitcher who died mid-season, with a small round logo containing initials and their numbers on the cardinal bullpen wall. During the 2014 playoffs, but after Cardinals elimination, rookie candidates and Oscar Taveras star were killed in a car accident. The number 18 is added together with Kile and Hancock in the house bullpen; However, his number was reissued the following season to close his friend Carlos Martinez.

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Minor league affiliation


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Radio and television coverage

Radio

Capable of reaching 21 million listeners in nine countries including Missouri, Illinois, Arkansas, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Mississippi, Oklahoma, and Tennessee, Cardinals radio network is the second largest in MLB with 117 affiliate stations. In St. Louis, CBS's CBS (1120 AM) airs Cardinals games over the radio and feeds the rest of the Cardinals network. Mike Shannon and John Rooney alternated as a play-by-play announcer, with Chris Hrabe serving as pre-match and post-game host. The 50,000 watt clear channel signal KMOX covers most of the continental United States at night. At one time, due to Cardinals status as a "regional" franchise, Cardinals radio networks accounted for nearly half of the country.

The 2011 season marks the return of Cardinals to KMOX after five seasons at KTRS (550 AM), a station that is 50 percent owned by Cardinals. With a seven-decade, and continuous partnership since 1954, its conclusions were realized after the 2005 season when CBS Radio and Cardinals failed to reach agreement on a new rights treaty. However, frustrated by the coverage of less than 5,000 watts of KTRS, Cardinals reached a new deal with KMOX in 2011.

Mike Shannon announced 30 fewer matches in 2013, compared to the 15 that he released in 2012, and in the previous season. Most games will be street games and three city journeys. He has announced Cardinals' games starting in 1972, making 2013 his 41st year announce. He was 74 in July. He has announced Cardinals games for more years than anyone except Jack Buck (1954-58, 1961-2001) who announced for 46 years.

Television

Since 2000, the cardinal broadcast has earned the top three ranks in MLB every season. Fox Sports Midwest broadcasts all the games in high definition and is the exclusive TV announcer of the team, with the exception of selected Saturday afternoon games on Fox (via St. Louis affiliation, KTVI) or Sunday Night Baseball on ESPN. Fox Sports, Fox Sports, Fox Sports Southwest, and SportSouth Water Cardinals games for fans living in the Cardinals broadcast region that do not receive Fox Sports Midwest channels. During the 2016 season, Cardinals averaged 8.54 and 104,000 viewers on primetime TV shows in St. Louis.

Television commentator ranks include Dan McLaughlin, Rick Horton, and Al Hrabosky. Jimmy "The Cat" Hayes serves as a space journalist during the game as well as on Cardinals Live, before and after the show. Cardinals Live is hosted in-studio by Pat Parris along with game analysts and former Cardinals players Jim Edmonds, Gary Bennett and Chris Duncan.

Cardinals Kids , a program aimed at young team fans, airs weekly in the season at Fox Sports Midwest. It was hosted by former Cardinals pitchers Andy Benes, Fredbird's mascot team, and Busch Stadium Public Address announcer John "The U-Man" Ulett. The 30-minute show began airing in 2003 and presents team news, player profiles, and history of the Cardinals team in child-friendly ways along with games and trivia.

A weekly magazine program, This Week at Cardinal Nation , aired on St. Louis. Louis' NBC affiliate KSDK. The Cardinals game has been seen in KSDK (and its predecessor, KSD-TV) from 1947 to 1958, 1963 to 1987, and 2007 through 2010. KPLR-TV is another over-the-air Cardinals announcer, who brought the game from 1959 through 1962 and from 1988 to 2006.

Former Cardinals broadcasters include Jack Buck, Harry Caray, Dizzy Dean, Joe Garagiola, Sr., and Jay Randolph. Joe Buck, son of Jack Buck, was an official member of the Cardinals announcer team from 1991 to 2007. The younger Buck is currently the premier playing-by-play guide for Major League Baseball and National Football League national broadcasts on Fox Sports..

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Opening Day Formation

Opening the payday

Payout Opening Day for a list of 25 people (since 2000): 2018-23 payroll obligations

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Note


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References


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Further reading

  • Cash, Jon (2002). Before They Became Cardinal: Major-League Baseball in the nineteenth century St. Louis . University of Missouri Press. ISBNÃ, 0-826-21935-7.
  • Eisenbath, Mike (1999). The Cardinals Encyclopedia . Philadelphia: Temple University Press. ISBNÃ, 1-56639-703-0. OCLCÃ, 40193767.
  • Judd, Dennis (2002). The Infrastructure of Play: Building a Tourist Cities . Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 978-0-7656-0956-4.
  • Taylor, Phil (October 31, 2011). "Where's The Boo In Booster?". Sports Illustrated . Retrieved October 28 2011 . Redbird Nation's reputation as the most knowledgeable, loyal and, above all, a friendly fan in the majors... 'Our fans are the best because they are as excited as anywhere else,..., but they may be a bit more fair, 'said the manager. Louis, Tony La Russa.
  • Weintraub, Robert (2013). Victory Season: End of World War II and Birth of Baseball Gold Age . New York: Little, Brown & amp; Company. ISBN 978-0-316-20591-7.

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External links

  • St. Official website of Louis Cardinals
  • The Cardinals Timeline
  • St. News of the Louis Cardinals (from St. Louis Post-Dispatch )
  • St. Louis Cardinals Team Index (in Baseball Reference)
  • St. Team Louis Cardinals page (at Scout.com)

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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