December 2021

Scott Rolen

Why St. Louis traded Scott Rolen to Toronto for Troy Glaus

As a 6-year-old boy growing up in Southern California, Troy Glaus proudly declared to his mother that he wanted to be the Cardinals’ third baseman. Twenty-five years later, that dream came true, though it required a “very personal” feud between Cardinals manager Tony La Russa and third baseman Scott Rolen to make it happen. On […]

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Jack Clark

Jack Clark signs with the Yankees: January 6, 1988

With the holidays in the rearview mirror and spring training just a few weeks away, Jack Clark finally lost patience. On January 6, 1988, the Cardinals’ leading home-run hitter during their National League pennant-winning seasons in 1985 and 1987 signed a two-year, $3 million contract with the Yankees. Since the Cardinals acquired Clark from the

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Bob Horner

Why the Cardinals signed Bob Horner despite Herzog’s initial concerns

When the idea of signing Bob Horner to replace Jack Clark was first broached, Whitey Herzog didn’t pull any punches. “I don’t like Horner,” the Cardinals manager said. “Of his lifetime homers, about 70% were hit in Atlanta. He never could hit in St. Louis. He can’t hit and he can’t field, and he wants

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Lou Brock

January 7, 1985: Lou Brock is elected to the Hall of Fame

It may have been Lou Brock’s first year of eligibility, but he had been waiting his entire life for Jack Lang’s phone call. At 6 p.m. on January 7, 1985, the secretary-treasurer of the Baseball Writers Association of America called to inform Brock that he had just been elected to the National Baseball Hall of

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Matt Holliday

How Matt Holliday finally signed a record contract in 2010

It took longer than either side was entirely comfortable with, but in the end the Cardinals got their man. On January 5, 2010, Matt Holliday agreed to a seven-year, $120 million deal that represented the largest contract in franchise history. The signing gave the Cardinals a pair of franchise cornerstone sluggers in Holliday and Albert

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Matt Morris

How Matt Morris negotiated his own deal in 2002

After winning 22 games and placing third in the National League Cy Young Award voting in 2001, Cardinals right-hander Matt Morris was arguably at the height of his negotiating power. At a time when many players would have called their agent to begin laying the groundwork for a new contract that would take full advantage

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David Eckstein

Why the Cardinals signed David Eckstein in December 2004

When David Eckstein signed with the Cardinals on December 23, 2004, he couldn’t help but think of his last visit to St. Louis almost 2 ½ years earlier. The second-year major-league shortstop was leading off for the Angels on June 18, 2002, the same day the Cardinals were hosting a pregame memorial service in honor

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