Woody Williams: Pitcher Beat Expectations Along the Way to Excellent 15-Year Major League Career
March 31, 2019 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
Baseball players drafted in the lower rounds face an upward battle when working towards their dream of reaching the major leagues. They don’t have the same name recognition of more highly-regarded prospects and because not as much money and resources have been invested in them, may not always have the same opportunities. A small percentage […]
Cha-Cha Cha-Chas Into the Hall of Fame
January 1, 2014 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! As some of you know, there are three Puerto Rican-born Hall of Famers in Cooperstown: Roberto Clemente, Roberto Alomar, and one other person. There are also three Hall of Fame position players who played for the 1962 San Francisco Giants pennant-winning squad: Willie Mays, Willie McCovey, and one other person. The “one other person” on both […]
NJBM: Whitey Herzog
December 18, 2013 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! I just put up my latest post in the Kids’ Hot Korner section of New Jersey Baseball Magazine. This one is about Whitey Herzog, one of the greatest managers in Missouri baseball history. If you want to read more about the man who invented Whiteyball, just click here. I hope you enjoy the post. […]
The Mad Dash
November 3, 2013 by Matt Nadel · 1 Comment
Hey baseball fans!As most of you probably know, the Boston Red Sox just won the World Series, beating the St. Louis Cardinals in six games. However, did you know that the Sox and Cards have squared off before in the World Series? Out of the 13 times the Sox have been to the Fall Classic, […]
ML”what would”B: What if Orta’s Dribbler in ’85 was Called Out?
October 3, 2013 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! I just put up another ML”what would”B post on More Than a Fan. In every ML”what would”B alternative history post, I discuss what would have happened if a famous event in baseball history had gone differently than it did in reality. For my latest post, I wrote what would have happened if Jorge […]
Feliz Cumpleaños a Gaylord Perry
September 14, 2013 by Matt Nadel · 1 Comment
Hey baseball fans! As some of you know, I share a birthday with no Hall of Famers. The only person who is close to becoming one is Alan Trammell. However, the people celebrating a birthday tomorrow do have a Hall of Fame birthday buddy: Gaylord Perry! Perry played with the Giants, Indians, Rangers, Padres, Yankees, Braves, Mariners, […]
Remembering Pittsburgh from the “We Are Family” Era
September 11, 2013 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
Back when Fisher Bodies were made of steel that was cooked in blast furnaces in Pittsburgh, there was a great baseball team that played along the Allegheny River called the Pittsburgh Pirates. Despite the fact that cars are made of plastic now and the city of Pittsburgh is a high-tech center supported by three top-of-the-line […]
Hangin’ Out with Joe Torre & Friends
July 26, 2013 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! I’m back from camp and I have lots to tell. So today’s post is going to be pretty long, but it’s worth your time. While I was at camp, I was invited to go to Joe Torre‘s Safe At Home Foundation Charity Golf and Tennis Classic. I was involved in the golf portion […]
The Bull-Moose Juju
April 25, 2013 by Ted Leavengood · 2 Comments
As the first month of the baseball season drew to a close in 2012, the Gio Gonzalez trade looked like an inspiration. Stephen Strasburg was back and the Nationals had the best pitching in the National League. Davey Johnson was looking for offense and summoned Bryce Harper. Everything Mike Rizzo touched in 2012 turned to […]
Hitters Fail the Quiz
April 13, 2013 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! Sorry I haven’t posted in about five days. Anyway, I have a one question “quiz” for you. Who has the best mustache in Royals relief history, other than Al Hrabosky? The answer is, of course, Dan Quisenberry! Quisenberry played for the Royals, Cardinals, and Giants from 1979-1990. As a reliever, he was feared throughout […]
Can They Keep Up Their Hot Starts?
June 1, 2012 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
The first third of the baseball season is just wrapping up and has already been marked by numerous injuries, slow starts, and surprises galore. In particular there are some players who have come out of relative obscurity and are well on their way to posting seasons beyond what even the most optimistic analysts predicted during […]
Touring the Bases with Bart Zeller
December 9, 2011 by Jack Perconte · Leave a Comment
Bart Zeller is a former major leaguer, who recently coached the Joliet Slammers to their first ever Frontier League championship. Bart is a great baseball man who obviously loves managing and actually still plays himself, all of which you will read about. I believe you will enjoy the great insight Bart gives about independent baseball, […]
Not With a Bang
October 29, 2011 by Gerry Von Hendy · Leave a Comment
It is over: Alan Craig squeezes the fly in his mitt and at the mound the Cardinals, the team from out of nowhere, (yes, the Cardiac Cardinals, and why hasn’t someone used this tag already?) pile on. They are the champions of baseball for 2011. I had thought that the Cardinals might win Game Seven. […]
No Retirement in Site for Ageless Milo
July 23, 2011 by Dan Schlossberg · 2 Comments
As a broadcaster, Milo Hamilton doesn’t have to worry about his arms or legs giving out. He can still read his voluminous notes and talk about baseball with the best of them. Plus his voice still projects the dulcet tones that accompanied his call of Hank Aaron’s record 715th home run on April 8, 1974. […]
If I Ran Baseball-Interleague Edition
June 13, 2011 by Nick Waddell · 1 Comment
Recently a few managers have come out against interleague play, stating the uniqueness has worn off, and that interleague play is tired. I disagree. I think it’s great that some interleague “traditions†have stuck around, like Cubs/White Sox, A’s/Giants, and Marlins/Rays. Ok, so maybe Marlins/Rays isn’t the most exciting matchup, but it’s still the battle […]
St. Louis vs. Cincinnati
May 18, 2011 by Daniel Shoptaw · 4 Comments
How exactly did we get here? Â How did we come from St. Louis and Cincinnati having just a passing thought in each other’s minds to a knockdown, dragout rivalry between the two squads and the two fan bases? Â And, honestly, why is there such a rivalry, Johnny Cueto notwithstanding? The history of Cardinals and Reds […]
A New Beginning, The Same Ending
April 1, 2011 by Daniel Shoptaw · Leave a Comment
In all the hoopla surrounding the start of the season, perhaps I misunderstood.  I thought we were turning the page to 2011, not reliving 2010.  Yet, for one game at least, a lot of last year’s issues reared their head in St. Louis. It was extremely frustrating to see how many two on, nobody out innings […]
Final Cardinal Cuts
March 29, 2011 by Daniel Shoptaw · Leave a Comment
I’ve had a wonderful run of luck with my prognostications lately.  Seems like anytime I say X, Y actually happens and fairly quickly afterwards. Yesterday was another of those days, as Fernando Salas was sent to Memphis and Bryan Augenstein made the team.  I will admit that when the Cards plucked Augenstein from the waiver wire, I just […]
Trying to Focus on the Positives
March 22, 2011 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
At his best Nyjer Morgan is a scrappy, prototypical lead off guy. Â Diminutive in size, he plays with grit and determination. He hurt himself sliding head-first into second base one too many times a season ago. But in 2010 he committed a multitude of sins, not the greatest of which was running into the Cardinal […]
10 Reasons You Should Already Be Especially Psyched for Opening Day
March 16, 2011 by Seamheads · Leave a Comment
The smell of freshly laid sod, ballpark hot dogs and seven-dollar beer is in the air (or on the ground). Baseball season is quickly approaching, and fans everywhere — well, perhaps except for Houston, Pittsburgh and Seattle — are champing at the bit to find out how the 2011 MLB season will unfold. Opening Day […]
The Calm After The Storm
February 17, 2011 by Daniel Shoptaw · Leave a Comment
Yesterday’s deadline came and went.  Albertageddon peaked yesterday morning, but by the end of the day had calmed back down.  Life goes on. The man himself showed up today at camp.  He spent a good half an hour talking to the press, in a situation reminiscent of Mark McGwire’s address to the media last spring training.  McGwire spoke […]
Love Is In The Air
February 14, 2011 by Daniel Shoptaw · Leave a Comment
Today is a day of love. Â That love that keeps you going, that warms you through the winter and sustains you in the summer. Â The love that is always there, continuing to grow and evolve. Â You have to have it, can’t live without it. Yes, my friends, today is Pitchers And Catchers Report Day. Â I […]
The All-Time St. Louis Cardinals (a draft book chapter)
December 11, 2010 by Tom Stone · Leave a Comment
Who would be selected for a mythical All-Time Cardinals dream team roster? And how have others answered this fun question throughout the years?
The Berkman Actuality
December 6, 2010 by Daniel Shoptaw · Leave a Comment
Regular reader(s) will remember that, last week, I wrote about the possibility that Lance Berkman would become a Cardinal.  My conclusion was that it wouldn’t happen and it didn’t work for the Cardinals. Yeah, this is why I don’t bet actual money on anything. As you know by now, the Cards came to terms with Berkman over […]
Broken Promises
September 15, 2010 by Daniel Shoptaw · Leave a Comment
“I won’t lose again.” Adam Wainwright said those words two starts ago, upset with how he had been performing and looking at a four-game losing streak.  He was able to win last time out, continuing the vow, but last night, that promise was broken. The two-out problem bit the Cardinals again.  In the second, Wainwright had […]
More Of The Same
September 14, 2010 by Daniel Shoptaw · Leave a Comment
It’s a little checklist that Cardinal fans go through before games, to prepare themselves for what is to come: Is the opposing pitcher someone the Cardinals haven’t seen much of? Check. Does the opposing pitcher have a high ERA? Check. Is the opposing pitcher lefthanded? Hey, he’s not! Â Maybe they have a chance! Of course, […]
Cardinals Get Off Script
September 10, 2010 by Daniel Shoptaw · 1 Comment
We’ve seen it before.  Way too many times, in fact.  A miscue, a bad pitch, and suddenly the Cardinals are in a 3-0 hole early in the game, a hole that they don’t climb out of as they slog to another loss. Finally, someone got that script into rewrite. I was afraid we were in for […]
“It Didn’t Look Like They Wanted To Come Out And Beat Us”
September 2, 2010 by Daniel Shoptaw · 1 Comment
I think the title of this post says it all.  When a player on the opposing team questions the desire, there’s little else to say about the 2010 Cardinals. That was Geoff Blum’s quote to MLB.com after yesterday’s game.  “It didn’t look like they wanted to come out and beat us at all.”  We talked about […]
Another Lost Cardinal Weekend
August 30, 2010 by Daniel Shoptaw · 1 Comment
What is left to say about this team? Â We are using up all the possible words to describe what we are seeing out of this team that, on paper, is one of the most talented ever to play in St. Louis but, on the field, has a frustrating inability to not put bad teams away. […]
Sigh-Inducing
August 18, 2010 by Daniel Shoptaw · Leave a Comment
Just when you start to believe in this team, to think that they’ve finally found that gas pedal on the team car, they stomp on the brakes.  A four game winning streak to get into first place?  Let’s follow that up with three losses against sub-.500 teams!  I feel like I’m a driving instructor. Of course, […]
A Cautionary Note
August 13, 2010 by Daniel Shoptaw · Leave a Comment
I’ve been thinking about this topic for a bit, but before I could write about it Brian Burwell, for once, beat me to it.  There’s been a lot of optimism out of the sweep of Cincinnati, as well there should be.  However, I’m not sure we can say this team has turned the corner and the […]
Sweeping Our Cares Away
August 12, 2010 by Daniel Shoptaw · Leave a Comment
Earlier this year, the Cardinals took the first two games from the Toronto Blue Jays on the road and sent out Adam Wainwright to complete the sweep.  Wainwright, though, had one of his rare off games and the Cards weren’t able to use the brooms. This time, though, Wainwright was able to seal the deal and […]
Frustration Revisited
July 28, 2010 by Daniel Shoptaw · Leave a Comment
I thought this was behind us. Whatever corner the Cardinals turned after the All-Star break, they’ve turned another one or two and seem to be back where they started from–a frustrating team that can’t get anything going.  And when the big gun has an off night, you know things aren’t going your way. I guess you […]
Gaining On The Off Day
July 27, 2010 by Daniel Shoptaw · Leave a Comment
The Cardinals hit the Big Apple yesterday.  They saw the sites (Ryan Franklin went to the Statue of Liberty with his family, according to the official Cardinal Twitter feed), made some appearances (more on Albert Pujols in a bit) and picked up a half-game on the Reds when Milwaukee beat them 3-2.  In other words, just […]
Cardinals Continue To Roll
July 21, 2010 by Daniel Shoptaw · Leave a Comment
What’s been the most encouraging thing during this current Cardinal winning streak is that they keep winning in different ways.  The first couple of games, they slugged.  They’ve had good pitching performances.  They’ve had comebacks.  They’ve beaten pitchers that normally give them fits. Everything save the comebacks came into play last night.  OK, they didn’t really […]