Standout pitching performances highlight past week of Cardinals minor league action
A fresh set of MLB Pipeline's Top 100 prospects released Thursday, and four Cardinals made the list.
JJ Wetherholt checked in at No. 16, while Quinn Mathews ranked No. 54. Leonardo Bernal slotted in at No. 79, and Rainiel Rodriguez is 10 spots further down at No. 89.
The three hitters in that group — Wetherholt, Bernal and Rodriguez — each had notable performances over the past week. But they were far from the only ones with shiny highlights in recent games.
Updates on top 10 prospects
JJ Wetherholt, SS, Class AAA Memphis: Wetherholt has put together some sizzling offensive performances lately. On July 18, he collected four hits against Toledo. On Tuesday, he hit a solo home run in the series opener against Gwinnett, and his encore the next day featured a pair of solo home runs. In the month of July, Wetherholt is slashing .327/.421/.816 with a 1.237 OPS. His six home runs since July 1 are one more than he hit in April, May and June combined.
Quinn Mathews, LHP, Class AAA Memphis: On Sunday, Mathews picked up a loss against Toledo. Despite logging seven strikeouts in just 3 2/3 innings pitched, Mathews gave up three hits, two earned runs and five walks. It marked his fourth outing of the season with at least five walks.
Leonardo Bernal, C, Class AA Springfield: Entering Thursday, Bernal had a 10-game hit streak. It was snapped when Bernal was ejected in the bottom of the first inning against Tulsa for arguing a ball call. In his only at-bat in the top of the first, Bernal grounded into an inning-ending double play.
Rainiel Rodriguez, C, Low-A Palm Beach: Rodriguez hit an impressive home run Thursday against Jupiter, taking a pitch above his shoulders over the fence in left field. Entering Friday, Rodriguez is slashing .268/.415/.610 in July, and each of those numbers are vastly improved from June. Seven of his 11 hits this month have gone for extra bases.
Jimmy Crooks, C, Class AAA Memphis: Crooks had a 13-game hit streak snapped July 18, but he bounced back by collecting four hits over his next two appearances, all of which were singles.
Tekoah Roby, RHP, Class AAA Memphis: After allowing just two earned runs and tallying 21 strikeouts over his last four starts (which spanned 21 innings), the right-hander was placed on the 7-day injured list July 15. No specifics were given on what landed him on the IL.
Tink Hence, RHP, Class AA Springfield: Hence hasn't pitched since July 3. He was placed on the 7-day IL on July 12.
Yairo Padilla, SS, FCL Cardinals: Hasn't played since July 5.
Joshua Baez, Class AA Springfield: After going 1 of 10 against Wichita and 0 of 3 in the series opener against Tulsa, he hit an opposite-field home run Wednesday and had two hits Thursday.
Cooper Hjerpe, Class AA Springfield: Hasn't appeared in a game in 2025.
Other standouts
Matt Koperniak (Class AAA Memphis) had quite a day on Thursday. After hitting a solo home run Wednesday, Koperniak hit two round trippers Thursday along with a double.
Aaron Wilkerson (Class AAA Memphis) pitched eight shutout innings in his Memphis debut Wednesday, giving up just four hits.
Nathan Church (Class AAA Memphis) had a productive three-game series against Toledo, registering four hits and three RBI. That included a two-run home run in the first game of a doubleheader Sunday.
Brycen Mautz (Class AA Springfield) struck out eight batters while allowing just one earned run in four innings pitched Tuesday.
Pete Hansen (Class AA Springfield) pitched a shutout over 6 1/3 innings Thursday. He allowed just four hits while striking out six batters.
ӣƵ Cardinals starting pitcher Sonny Gray speaks with the media on Thursday, July 24, 2025, after a win over the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ. (Video by Ethan Erickson, Post-Dispatch)
After tempers flare, Cardinals pitching shuts door on Padres for second consecutive win
Cardinals starting pitcher Miles Mikolas throws during the first inning against the Padres on Friday, July 25, 2025, at Busch Stadium.
Liz Rymarev, Post-Dispatch
Before the Cardinals took the lead they did not let go of Friday night against the Padres, the manner in which their first runner reached base stirred some emotion between the two clubs in the thick of the National League Wild Card race.
Facing Padres starter Nick Pivetta, Cardinals first baseman Willson Contreras was hit on the left elbow by a fastball from Pivetta to lead off the second inning. The hit by pitch was followed by an exchange of words between Contreras and Pivetta and the emptying of both dugouts and bullpens.
“Nothing. I think it was just part of the game,” Contreras said of the exchange. “A couple of words were exchanged there. Nothing major. I think when the benches clear, it makes everything worse. I don’t think it was that bad. He’s a competitor. I’m a competitor. We exchanged words. That was it.”
Once the field cleared and Contreras reached base, the Cardinals capitalized on their first opportunity to hit with a runner on base as Contreras advanced to third later that inning and scored on Yohel Pozo’s groundout for the game’s first run. The lead widened when Masyn Winn produced two runs on a double in the fourth inning and was held steady as Cardinals pitchers, led by starter Miles Mikolas’ five-plus innings, shut out the Padres for a 3-0 win at Busch Stadium.
The result secured back-to-back wins for the Cardinals (54-51) for the first time since they swept the Guardians in a three-game series during the final weekend of June and kept them climbing up the NL Wild Card standings. The Cardinals ended Friday trailing the Padres by 1.5 games for the third NL Wild Card spot with two more games left vs. the Padres this weekend and three scheduled in San Diego to kick off August after the July 31 trade deadline passes.
“They’re ahead of us. We’re chasing them. We need every game,” Cardinals manager Oliver Marmol said.
ӣƵ Cardinals manager Oliver Marmol speaks with the media on Friday, July 25, 2025, after a win over the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ. (Video by Ethan Erickson, Post-Dispatch)
The Cardinals received scoreless relief work from four relievers, an effort capped by Ryan Helsley’s 21st save of the year, in a shutout that marked their 11th of the season. Mikolas received a timely double play in the fourth inning that included an outfield assist from right fielder Jordan Walker that capitalized on Xander Bogaerts’ poor read in his attempt to tag up from first base to second base on a fly out. The Cardinals turned a second double play in the sixth inning on a comeback grounder left-hander Steven Matz reached across his body to snag before throwing to Winn, who covered second base, to nab the lead runner in an at-bat that began with runners at first and second base.
The shutout after allowing 11 hits marked the first time in over 80 years the Cardinals kept an opponent scoreless despite giving up 11 or more hits. The last such effort came against the Boston Braves on August 24, 1943.
“We definitely dodged it,” Marmol said of the traffic his pitching staff navigated on Friday. “We did a nice job of it. ... They scattered some hits, but (Mikolas) had everything working. He mixed it. Kept them off balance. We made some nice plays as well in the outfield, but overall solid.”
A day after scoring nine runs on 12 hits to claim a series-opening win, the Cardinals pushed across three runs on three hits, two walks, and a hit by pitch from Pivetta. The hit by pitch gave the Cardinals their first base runner and was Contreras’ NL-leading 15th hit by pitch of this season.
ӣƵ Cardinals shortstop Masyn Winn speaks with the media on Friday, July 25, 2025, after a win over the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ. (Video by Ethan Erickson, Post-Dispatch)
It drew some frustration after Contreras was hit twice in a span of three games vs. San Diego in April of last season.
“I’m not trying to get any fractures, because last year we played them, and they took me out for a week,” said Contreras, who dealt with a bone bruise in his left hand last season when Padres starter Joe Musgrove hit him with a pitch. “This year is nothing different. None of them are going to feel sorry if I get a broken hand or a broken finger. None of them. ... That’s why I take an exception of that.”
When Contreras began removing his elbow guard and walked down to first base following Pivetta’s inside pitch, he appeared to respond to comments from the righty. Padres catcher Elias Diaz stepped in front of Contreras and walked with him as Contreras continued to exchange words with the Padres starter.
“I know what he said. But nothing, it was just that,” Contreras said.
“I think (Contreras) thinks that he owns a certain part of the plate,” Pivetta said to reporters. “I mean, it’s a fastball, and I don’t hit very many guys. For him to, like, stare at me and try, at least I feel from my side, he’s trying to intimidate me into trying to do stuff. That’s the player that he is. Doesn’t mean that he’s a bad player. He’s a great player. He does play baseball very well, but I’m not going to back down. I’m going to go out and do my thing.”
“I’m going to control the inside part of the plate, which I have been doing,” Pivetta continued. “I hit him on the elbow guard. I mean, I haven’t gone back and looked at it, but I could probably guess that he was probably diving over the plate a little bit.”
Warnings were issued to both sides. There were no ejections and no further escalations from the hit by pitch through the rest of Friday’s game.
“We exchanged words. He was competing. I hate getting hit. I’m a competitor,” Contreras said. “Thankfully, that (situation) dies right there.”
Photos: ӣƵ Cardinals win 3-0 as they get the first two of four against the San Diego Padres
Cardinals starting pitcher Miles Mikolas throws during the first inning against the Padres on Friday, July 25, 2025, at Busch Stadium.
Liz Rymarev, Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ Cardinals first base Willson Contreras (40) slide catches the ball during the first inning at a MLB game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025.
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ Cardinals first base Willson Contreras (40) gets into an altercation with San Diego Padres pitcher Nick Pivetta (27)during the second inning at a MLB game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025.
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ Cardinals first base Willson Contreras (40) gets into an altercation with San Diego Padres pitcher Nick Pivetta (27)during the second inning at a MLB game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025.
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ Cardinals catcher Yohel Pozo (63) runs to first as ӣƵ Cardinals first base Willson Contreras (40) runs to home plate during the second inning at a MLB game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025.
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ Cardinals third base Nolan Arenado (28) wears a special edition hat during the fourth inning at a MLB game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025.
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ Cardinals outfielder Jordan Walker (18) catches a fly ball in the outfield during the fourth inning at a MLB game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025.
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ Cardinals first base Willson Contreras (40) celebrates during the fourth inning at a MLB game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025.
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
San Diego Padres second base Jose Iglesias (7) catches a fly ball during the fourth inning at a MLB game against the ӣƵ Cardinals at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025.
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
San Diego Padres third base Manny Machado (13) runs to second base during the sixth inning at a MLB game against the ӣƵ Cardinals at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025.
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
San Diego Padres pitcher Nick Pivetta (27) prepares to throw a pitch as ӣƵ Cardinals first base Willson Contreras (40) watches from third base during the seventh inning at a MLB game at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025.
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
San Diego Padres pitcher Nick Pivetta (27) reacts while talking to umpire Alfonso Marquez (72) after an altercation with ӣƵ Cardinals first base Willson Contreras (40) during the second inning at a MLB game at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025.
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
A young fan cheers as red lights come on for ӣƵ Cardinals pitcher Ryan Helsley (56) during the ninth inning at a MLB game at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ Cardinals pitcher Steven Matz throws on Friday July 25, 2025, in sixth inning of a game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ.
Christian Gooden, Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ Cardinals pitcher Ryan Helsley throws on Friday July 25, 2025, in ninth inning of a game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ.
Christian Gooden, Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ infielder Brendan Donovan watches a hit go by on Friday July 25, 2025, in the ninth inning of a game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ.
Christian Gooden, Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ Cardinals batter Willson Contreras singles on Friday July 25, 2025, in the ninth inning of a game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ.
Christian Gooden, Post-Dispatch
John Mozeliak, ӣƵ Cardinals president of baseball operations, watches action from his suite on Friday July 25, 2025, during a game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ.
Christian Gooden, Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ Cardinals batter Willson Contreras celebrates on Friday July 25, 2025, after hitting a double in the sixth inning of a game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ.
Christian Gooden, Post-Dispatch
Former Cardinal Dick Allen's induction into Baseball Hall too late for him to experience
FILE - Chicago White Sox baseball player Dick Allen in 1973. (AP Photo/File)
STF
At some point Sunday afternoon, Richard Allen Jr. will stand at the dais, the cadre of living Baseball Hall Famers sitting on the stage behind him, and deliver the acceptance speech for his late father, Dick, who will join those immortals with a plaque in Cooperstown, New York.
Thankfully.
Finally.
And sadly.
It took more than 40 years for the former Philadelphia Phillies star and one-time ӣƵ Cardinal to earn his place among the game's all-timers, for voters to recognize Allen's greatness and come to terms with all he had to endure and overcome.
Unfortunately, it seems way too fitting that Allen, who died of cancer in December 2020 at the age of 78, won't be there to experience it.
As William C. Kashatus wrote in his book "September Swoon: Richie Allen, the '64 Phillies and Racial Integration," Allen was "the wrong player in the wrong place at the wrong time."
There's little doubt about that. Throughout his life, he never really got his due.
He has been misunderstood and/or misinterpreted. He didn't always get along with the mainstream media, which was almost exclusively white. Even the Phillies began by referring to him as Richie instead of his preferred name, Dick, and it stuck for years.
"It makes me sound like I'm 10 years old," he once said to George Kiseda of the Philadelphia Bulletin.
There's no denying that controversy seemed to follow Allen.
People remember his altercation with Frank Thomas in 1965, when Allen punched Thomas following a likely racially charged remark — reports over time vary — then Thomas responded by hitting Allen with a bat in the left shoulder.
People remember the messages he wrote with his spikes in the infield dirt at Connie Mack Stadium in 1969, when he wanted out of Philadelphia.
Or the time he injured his hand putting it through a headlight or ... the list goes on.
Overlooked — ignored? — have been the extenuating circumstances that led to Allen's behavior.
In 1963, just three years after graduating from Wampum High School in western Pennsylvania — "a community known for being relatively free of racial strife," according to Bruce Markusen in article on the Hall of Fame's website — and five after playing Columbia for the PIAA Class B boys basketball title, Allen found himself in the middle of a maelstrom not of his making.
He was the first Black man to play professionally in Little Rock, Arkansas, home of the Arkansas Travelers, which was in its first season as the Phillies' Triple-A affiliate.
On opening night, protesters outside the ballpark carried signs, a more tame one saying, "Don't Negro-ize baseball." Arkansas Gov. Orville Faubus threw out the first pitch, less than six years after he tried to block the integration of Little Rock's Central High School.
Following the game, Allen, in his 1989 autobiography "Crash," co-authored with Tim Whitaker, said he found a note on the windshield that began "Don't come back ..." and ended with a racial epithet.
He was the target of death threats that season. There were many places he couldn't go or eat in the city. He fought loneliness and the urge to quit.
FILE - Former Philadelphia Phillies player Dick Allen reacts after a ceremony unveiling his retired number prior to a baseball game between the Phillies and the Washington Nationals in Philadelphia, Thursday, Sept. 3, 2020. (AP Photo/Derik Hamilton, File)
Derik Hamilton
In "Crash" Allen said: "There were two sets of rules in Little Rock, one for the Arkansas Travelers and one for Dick Allen ... That didn't go with me. From that day on, I decided if there was ever a double standard again, I would be the beneficiary, and not the other way around."
The next summer, Allen became the first Black star for the Phillies and emerged at a time of racial unrest in the city, which included riots near Connie Mack Stadium.
The Phillies' collapse in 1964, when they blew a 6.5-game lead with 12 to play, didn't help people's attitudes, either.
Eventually, Allen was the target of merciless booing.
He also earned a reputation for being a divisive force in the clubhouse and for not helping his teams win. Never mind that none other than the greatest player in Phillies history, Mike Schmidt, considered Allen, his teammate in 1975-76, one of his mentors and a guy who helped teach that young team how to win.
Yet through all the difficulties, Allen hit .292 with 351 home runs and a .912 OPS in his 15 major league seasons. He was the 1964 National League Rookie of the Year as a third baseman with the Phillies and the 1972 AL MVP as a first baseman with the Chicago White Sox.
Allen led the 1970 Cardinals in home runs (34), RBIs (101) and on-base plus slugging percentage (.937) in his one year here.
"He had a real intestinal fortitude to go along with that natural talent," his younger brother, Ron, said in a phone interview.
During a stretch of 11 seasons, 1964-74, Allen's .940 OPS and .554 slugging percentage trailed just Hank Aaron's .941 and .561. Allen's 165 OPS-plus was the highest among players with at least 4,000 plate appearances.
"He really, really had that enthusiasm," Ron Allen said. "He had more passion I wish that I had. If I had the passion that he had and anger; you just couldn't tell him that he couldn't do anything. He proved it to you. If I had that, ain't no telling where I'd have ended up. Hall of Fame. I might have been there myself."
Allen's journey to Cooperstown was a long one. In his 15 years on the Baseball Writers Association of America ballot, he never received more than 18.9% of the vote. Then twice he fell one vote short on Veterans Committee ballots — in Golden Era Committee voting in 2014 and 2021 — before finally making it this year through the Classic Era Committee.
When Richard Jr. makes his speech Sunday, it surely will be a bittersweet moment.
"I remember we were at a Hall of Fame banquet here in Lawrence County, and they were honoring my mother (Era)," Ron Allen said. "And my mother got up to speak, and she gave this speech on the greatest Hall of Fame that she had ever seen. And she said the Baseball Hall of Fame doesn't compare to my Hall of Fame. My Hall of Fame is in heaven.
"This is what we were always taught, because we had a Christian mother, and she taught us Christian values, and she instilled that in Dick.
"You know, the Hall of Fame is great — which we are really proud of, and like my nephews and nieces, they are over the moon over this thing — but being here to smell the roses, it takes a different plane with me, because it hurts my heart that he didn't get to see it, because he certainly deserved it.
"Even with the difficulties he had to go through, he withstood it, and I'm thankful for it, and I pray to God for it, and that's what I'll look at when I get there."
A look at the 2025 inductees into the National Baseball Hall of Fame
Ichiro Suzuki
Position: RF.
Teams: Seattle Mariners, New York Yankees, Miami Marlins.
How elected: Selected on 393 of 394 ballots (99.7%) by the Baseball Writers Association of American in his first year of eligibility, nearly becoming the first position player to be unanimous.
Notable: Finished his 19-year (2001-19) major league career batting .311 with 3,089 hits and 509 stolen bases despite not debuting until the age of 27. Spent the first nine seasons of his pro career in his native Japan, batting .353 with 1,278 more hits. ... American League MVP and Rookie of the Year in 2001. ... Was a 10-time All-Star, 10-time Gold Glove winner and won three Silver Slugger awards. ... Won two batting titles (.350 in 2001 and .372 in 2004). ... Set a major league single-season record with 262 hits in 2004.
CC Sabathia
Position: Left-handed starting pitcher.
Teams: Cleveland Indians, Milwaukee Brewers, New York Yankees.
How elected: Received 86.8% in balloting by the Baseball Writers Association of American in his first year of eligibility. Candidates need 75% to earn induction.
Notable: Went 251-161 with a 3.74 ERA in 561 games over 19 seasons (2001-19). Struck out 3,093, ranking 18th all-time, in 3,577.1 innings. ... AL Cy Young Award winner in 2007. ... Six-time All-Star. ... Won the World Series in 2009 with the Yankees; he was MVP of the AL Championship Series that season.
Billy Wagner
Position: Left-handed relief pitcher.
Teams: Houston Astros, Philadelphia Phillies, New York Mets, Boston Red Sox, Atlanta Braves.
How elected: Received 82.5% of votes in his 10th and final year on the Baseball Writers Association of America ballot.
Notable: Hard thrower was a seven-time All-Star who finished his career with 422 saves, ranking eighth all-time. ... Finished 47-40 with a 2.31 ERA and 1,196 strikeouts in 903 innings in 16-year career (1995-2010). ... Seven-time All-Star. ... Won the NL Rolaids Relief Man award in 1999.
Dave Parker
Position: OF, DH.
Teams: Pittsburgh Pirates, Cincinnati Reds, Oakland Athletics, Milwaukee Brewers, California Angels, Toronto Blue Jays.
How elected: Received 14 of 16 votes by the Hall's Classic Baseball Era Committee; 12 votes were needed for election.
Notable: Hit .290 with 339 homers and 1,493 RBIs in 19 seasons (1973-91), the first 11 as a feared slugger for Pittsburgh. ... NL MVP in 1978, when he hit .334 with 30 homers, 117 RBIs, 20 stolen bases and a .979 OPS. Also won one of his three Gold Gloves that season. ... Seven-time All-Star who was the game's MVP in 1979. ... Won two batting titles (.338 in 1977, 1978). ... Won World Series titles in 1979 with Pittsburgh and 1989 with Oakland. ... Died on June 28 at the age of 74 from complications of Parkinson's disease.
Dick Allen
Position: 3B, 1B, OF.
Teams: Philadelphia Phillies, ӣƵ Cardinals, Los Angeles Dodgers, Chicago White Sox, Oakland Athletics.
How elected: Received 13 of 16 votes by the Hall's Classic Baseball Era Committee; 12 votes were needed for election.
Notable: Hit .292 with 351 homers and 1,119 RBIs in 15 seasons (1963-77). ... Seven-time All-Star. ... Won the 1964 NL Rookie of the Year award. ... AL MVP in 1972. ... Died on Dec. 7, 2020, at the age of 78 due to cancer.
'Miles had everything working,' Cardinals' Oli Marmol says of win over Padres
'He's just trying to get us going,' Masyn Winn on Willson Contreras' hit by pitch reaction
Started by Miles Mikolas, Cardinals shutout Padres to make ground in NL Wild Card race
With the Cardinals looking to make up ground in the NL Wild Card standings as the calendar nears the end of July and creeps closer to the July 31 trade deadline, a shutout effort started by Miles Mikolas and RBIs from Yohel Pozo and Masyn Winn helped them inch upward in the standings on Friday night.
Playing host to Padres, the Cardinals received five-plus scoreless innings from starter Mikolas, an RBI from Pozo in the third inning to provide a lead, and two RBIs on fourth inning double by Winn to pad it in their 3-0 win over San Diego at Busch Stadium.
The win put the Cardinals (54-51) 1 1/2 games behind the Padres for the final wild card spot in the National League.
Hit for two homers and four runs across his four inning against Arizona on Sunday, Mikolas’s outing marked his fifth scoreless outing of five more innings this season. Mikolas logged five-plus innings as he worked around seven hits and did not issue a walk to the 21 batters he faced before his exit.
Mikolas (6-7) recorded five outs on groundballs and five on flyouts. He worked around traffic in the third inning when hits by Elias Diaz and Fernando Tatis Jr. put runners on second and third base. He did so again in the fourth inning when a double play started by right fielder Jordan Walker helped the veteran starter escape an inning that began with back-to-back hits by Jackson Merrill and Xander Bogaerts.
Mikolas left his start with a runner on first base after a single from Manny Machado opened the sixth inning and after he threw 73 pitches — 52 of which were strikes.
The five-plus innings set the Cardinals up to roll out their core of high-leverage arms to notch a second consecutive win.
Steven Matz, Phil Maton, and JoJo Romero each notched holds with scoreless innings of relief apiece as they bridged to closer Ryan Helsley. Helsley, who along with Maton and Romero were pitching on back-to-back days, secured his 21st save of the season with outing.
Pozo produced the first of the Cardinals’ three runs on a groundout in the third inning that allowed Willson Contreras to score from third base. Winn’s double came with no outs in the fourth inning and plated Contreras and Nolan Arenado after they drew back-to-back one out walks.
The Cardinals’ Willson Contreras is congratulated by teammates after scoring on a Masyn Winn double in the fourth inning against the Padres on Friday, July 25, 2025, at Busch Stadium.
Christian Gooden, Post-Dispatch
Turning two on the Friars
When the Padres threated to score against Mikolas and Matz, double plays helped the two Cardinals keep San Diego out of the runs column.
For Mikolas, the timely double play he received came in the fourth inning and included an outfield assist from Walker.
Facing Gavin Sheets with Merrill and Bogaerts on first and second base after the two collected back-to-back singles, Mikolas got Sheets to hit a fly ball to right field. The fly ball to Walker was deep enough or Merrill to successfully tag up to third base, but not deep enough for Bogaerts to move up an extra bag as a bad read on Walker’s throw led Bogaerts to be tagged out with ease.
Working with a runner on third base and two outs, Mikolas got ahead of Jake Cronenworth 1-2 with a sinker for a called strike and with fastball placed away that Cronenworth fouled off. The at-bat was capped with a slider that broke in on Cronenworth and got him to whiff for an inning-ending strikeout.
The first Cardinal out of the bullpen on Friday after Mikolas allowed a leadoff single to Manny Machado to begin the sixth inning, Matz’s timely double play started with a snag he made on a comebacker from Sheets.
After he recorded a lineout of Merrill and allowed runners to reach first and second base when Bogaerts singled, Matz’s 0-2 curveball to Sheets was sharply hit to his arm side. The lefty reliever made a backhanded grab and made an accurate throw to shortstop Winn to begin an inning-ending double.
A bit of banter
ӣƵ Cardinals shortstop Masyn Winn speaks with the media on Friday, July 25, 2025, after a win over the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ. (Video by Ethan Erickson, Post-Dispatch)
An 0-1 fastball from starter Nick Pivetta that hit Contreras on the left elbow led the Cardinals’ and Padres’ benches and bullpen to empty after words were exchanged by Contreras and Pivetta.
Contreras, who entered Friday tied for first in the majors with 14 hit by pitches, tossed his bat and began taking off his elbow guard and began to walk down the first base line when Pivetta began walking towards Contreras. Contreras and Pivetta exchanged to Pivetta as he walked down the line and Padres catcher Elias Diaz stepped in front of Contreras.
Contreras continued to walk to exchange words with Pivetta as he walked to first base, the Cardinals and Padres dugouts bullpens emptied onto the field. Players and coaches returned to the dugout shortly after the infield crowded with Padres and Cardinals.
The benches-clearing moment did not result in any ejections.
Mikolas shows added zip
Entering Friday with an ERA above 5.00 through 19 starts this year, Mikolas got just one whiff on the 73 pitches he threw but had some extra life on his repertoire.
The 36-year-old righty’s average fastball velocity on the night was 2.2 mph higher than its yearly average, per Statcast. The velocity of his slider averaged 90 mph, a 2.8 mph increased for its yearly average, and peaked at 92.4 mph.
Mikolas’ added velocity on his repertoire showed late into his outing as he used a 95.6 mph sinker and a 96.2 mph fastball to help him strikeout Cronenworth in the fourth inning and flashed a 91.5 mph slider in the fifth inning to help him retire Luis Arraez on a flyout to end the fifth inning with Tatis stranded at second base.
ӣƵ Cardinals utility man Brendan Donovan speaks with the media on Thursday, July 24, 2025, after a win over the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ. (Video by Ethan Erickson, Post-Dispatch)
Photos: ӣƵ Cardinals win 3-0 as they get the first two of four against the San Diego Padres
Cardinals starting pitcher Miles Mikolas throws during the first inning against the Padres on Friday, July 25, 2025, at Busch Stadium.
Liz Rymarev, Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ Cardinals first base Willson Contreras (40) slide catches the ball during the first inning at a MLB game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025.
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ Cardinals first base Willson Contreras (40) gets into an altercation with San Diego Padres pitcher Nick Pivetta (27)during the second inning at a MLB game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025.
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ Cardinals first base Willson Contreras (40) gets into an altercation with San Diego Padres pitcher Nick Pivetta (27)during the second inning at a MLB game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025.
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ Cardinals catcher Yohel Pozo (63) runs to first as ӣƵ Cardinals first base Willson Contreras (40) runs to home plate during the second inning at a MLB game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025.
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ Cardinals third base Nolan Arenado (28) wears a special edition hat during the fourth inning at a MLB game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025.
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ Cardinals outfielder Jordan Walker (18) catches a fly ball in the outfield during the fourth inning at a MLB game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025.
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ Cardinals first base Willson Contreras (40) celebrates during the fourth inning at a MLB game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025.
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
San Diego Padres second base Jose Iglesias (7) catches a fly ball during the fourth inning at a MLB game against the ӣƵ Cardinals at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025.
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
San Diego Padres third base Manny Machado (13) runs to second base during the sixth inning at a MLB game against the ӣƵ Cardinals at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025.
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
San Diego Padres pitcher Nick Pivetta (27) prepares to throw a pitch as ӣƵ Cardinals first base Willson Contreras (40) watches from third base during the seventh inning at a MLB game at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025.
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
San Diego Padres pitcher Nick Pivetta (27) reacts while talking to umpire Alfonso Marquez (72) after an altercation with ӣƵ Cardinals first base Willson Contreras (40) during the second inning at a MLB game at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025.
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
A young fan cheers as red lights come on for ӣƵ Cardinals pitcher Ryan Helsley (56) during the ninth inning at a MLB game at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ, on Friday, July 25, 2025
Liz Rymarev,Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ Cardinals pitcher Steven Matz throws on Friday July 25, 2025, in sixth inning of a game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ.
Christian Gooden, Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ Cardinals pitcher Ryan Helsley throws on Friday July 25, 2025, in ninth inning of a game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ.
Christian Gooden, Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ infielder Brendan Donovan watches a hit go by on Friday July 25, 2025, in the ninth inning of a game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ.
Christian Gooden, Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ Cardinals batter Willson Contreras singles on Friday July 25, 2025, in the ninth inning of a game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ.
Christian Gooden, Post-Dispatch
John Mozeliak, ӣƵ Cardinals president of baseball operations, watches action from his suite on Friday July 25, 2025, during a game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ.
Christian Gooden, Post-Dispatch
ӣƵ Cardinals batter Willson Contreras celebrates on Friday July 25, 2025, after hitting a double in the sixth inning of a game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ.
Christian Gooden, Post-Dispatch
'I can't say thank you to the fans enough,' Cardinals' Miles Mikolas says after strong start
The ӣƵ Cardinals get the second of four games with a 3-0 win over the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ.
Matthew Liberatore heads into second half start feeling 'rejuvenated': Cardinals Extra
While coming up through the minor leagues as a starter, Cardinals lefty Matthew Liberatore was no stranger to a full season’s workload as a full-time starting pitcher.
In years past, Liberatore has surpassed 100 innings of work in three different minor league seasons and reached as high as 149 2/3 innings in a regular season, that latter of which came in 2022 when he made starts in Class AAA and in the majors. But this season, one in which the 25-year-old lefty has had his first full run as a starter in the majors after working from the bullpen in 2024, has led to some “adapting and adjusting.”
“My body is not as conditioned as it was previously to this kind of workload,” said Liberatore, who reached 100 1/3 before the All-Star break arrived. “… This is also the highest level I’ve ever had this kind of workload at. There are stresses and things that I haven’t dealt with before, but I’ve really tried to see that as an opportunity to learn about myself and to grow.”
Cardinals pitcher Matthew Liberatore walks to the dugout after pitching the seventh inning against the Cubs on June 23 at Busch Stadium.
Laurie Skrivan, Post-Dispatch
Following conversations with Cardinals coaches and the team’s pitching staff that weighed Liberatore’s previous workloads and what would be best for Liberatore’s health and team success, Liberatore had his first start of the second half pushed to help manage his innings. He’ll get his second-half start Saturday against the Padres after a stretch that has allowed him to feel “rejuvenated” as well as mentally “reset.”
“As much as it was meant to be a physical reset, I felt like I got a chance to kind of reset my mind and recommit to some of the principles that I like to identify with when I’m on the mound and pitching,” Liberatore said on Friday while seated inside the Cardinals’ dugout at Busch Stadium.
Liberatore’s 100 1/3 innings over 18 starts tied him with Andre Pallante for second most among Cardinals pitchers when the All-Star break arrived. That body of work was 14 1/3 innings more than Liberatore tossed over 60 bullpen outings the year prior.
Amid the gap in starts, the left-hander threw an extended bullpen on Monday while the Cardinals were in Colorado that was a simulated game intended to replicate three innings of work, Post-Dispatch reporter Derrick Goold reported. Liberatore was set to mimic a regular five-day break after that included a bullpen days later.
“I feel really good. I think I’m in a really good spot right now, and I couldn’t be more excited to take the ball tomorrow,” Liberatore said.
Liberatore said the Cardinals did not place an innings “ceiling” or “floor” with his workload. His body of work in 2024 provided some further understanding of how his body could respond to his workload.
Liberatore made 54 of his 60 appearances in 2024 out of the bullpen after starting 18 of his first 31 games in the majors since he debuted in 2022. Liberatore’s background as a starter provided Cardinals manager Oliver Marmol with a bullpen piece who could provide multiple innings.
The lefty’s ability to bounce back efficiently following appearances helped him make 11 starts on no days rest, 17 on one day rest, and 10 with two days of rest in between outings. He sported a 4.40 ERA for the season and a 3.69 ERA when appearing from the bullpen.
Liberatore made five of his six appearances during spring training out of the bullpen but logged multiple innings each time out. He worked as high as four innings in a start during his last Grapefruit League appearance before being named the fifth starter in the Cardinals’ opening day rotation.
“It’s kind of one of those things (where) you spent a year in the bullpen last year, but you threw a lot of innings, so let’s go out and compete and see how you respond, and then we’ll make adjustments as we need to,” Liberatore said. “That’s kind of how we’ve handled it and I think that that’s probably the right way of going about it.”
Marmol reaches win No. 300
The Cardinals’ series-opening win over the Padres on Thursday marked the 300th victory of manager Oliver Marmol’s career. With the win, Marmol ranks 13th in franchise history among Cardinals managers.
Marmol has led the Cardinals since the start of the 2022 season after rising through the Cardinals’ system as a minor league manager and coach before joining the big-league staff in 2017. His clubs have had a .508 winning percentage in 590 games the 39-year-old skipper at the helm.
“I’m glad I’m able to do it here. I was just in the office,” Marmol said on Thursday night of his milestone win. “Someone else brought it up. The one thing I think about is that I like doing it with this group. I really do. We have a young core with some veterans sprinkled in. I like being able to go out there every day and compete with them. I’m glad we were able to do it today, but that’s what comes to mind when I think of that.”
Thompson checks-in
Left-hander Zack Thompson was at Busch Stadium Friday for a check-in with Cardinals doctors as he looks to begin a throwing program within the next “week or two.” Thompson (left lat strain) said he is still dealing with discomfort. He’s remained at the Cardinals’ training complex in Jupiter, Florida, while he’s gone through his rehab.
He’s gone through programs to build strength in his shoulder after having been sidelined since early March, but has not thrown recently. He said the goal is to “get back on a mountain as quick as possible.”
Worthy: Mike Shildt's words provide encouragement about the ongoing Cardinals transition
Every word about player development that we’ve heard from the Cardinals new brain trust led by soon-to-be-president of baseball operations Chaim Bloom and assistant general manager Rob Cerfolio has made sense. Reasonable. Thoughtful. Well-articulate. They’ve hit all the right notes.
They’ve been clear that they’re not reinventing player development. Instead, they’ve stressed honoring the history, tradition and staying true to the things that have long been strengths of the Cardinals organization and yielded decades of success molding big-league ballplayers.
Here’s the thing. Some of us have been afflicted with a naturally skeptical (perhaps cynical) disposition.
Sometimes it’s like that thing you get with teenagers. If a parent tells them something, they can’t possibly take it at face value. Another person tells them the same thing, and it’s two steps from being gospel.
Bloom and Cerfolio are parental figures in this case, and the talk about melding the past with a more modern approach triggers suspicion.
After all, they’ve said the things people in their positions are supposed to say. That doesn’t mean it will hold true. The same goes for manager Oli Mamol and his staff. They’ve also had a hand in the player development revamp.
Ah, but the Major League Baseball schedule provided a remedy in the form of a baseball man no longer tied to the organization but that was shaped by the principles of The Cardinal Way.
His name is Mike Shildt. He’s the current manager of the San Diego Padres, who came to Busch Stadium this weekend for a four-game series, and he’s the former manager of the Cardinals and former longtime member of the organization’s player development staff.
Padres manager Mike Shildt, center, and Cardinals manager Oliver Marmol shake hands before a game on Monday, Aug. 26, 2024. It was Shildt’s first contest at Busch Stadium since he was fired as Cardinals manager in 2021. He was replaced by Marmol.
Laurie Skrivan, Post-Dispatch
“I was raised in this organization by some of the best baseball minds, not even arguably, in the history of the game,” Shildt said while seated in the visiting dugout prior to Thursday’s series opener. “It starts with Mr. Kissell — George Kissell — here 66 years, and the guy that was his right-hand man and, ultimately, my mentor. A gentleman named Mark DeJohn, who was the field coordinator for a very long time.
“Gary LaRocque, the farm director, was instrumental in helping develop me. Then you had Hall of Fame managers that were able to pour into me. Tony (La Russa) at the time was the manager, and you had Whitey (Herzog) that was really good to me. Red (Schoendienst) was fantastic. Mr. (Joe) Torre wasn’t here, but he clearly was a Cardinal and was really good to me.”
Many of you know the background, but a quick recap of the Shildt Cardinals tenure:
He joined the organization in 2004 as an area scout, then held various roles in player development (including eight seasons as a manager) before he joined the big-league staff in 2017. He became interim manager after Mike Matheny’s firing in July 2018, and Shildt became the full-time manager in August 2018. The Cardinals were a playoff team in each of his first three full seasons as manager (2019-2021), but “philosophical differences” between Shildt and John Mozeliak led to Shildt’s ouster following the 2021 season.
When Shildt surfaced with the Padres, his first role came as a player development consultant in 2022.
So there might not be many people better suited than Shildt to give an honest insiders assessment of whether The Cardinal Way translates to modern player development as the game continues to change with technology, data and new teaching methods.
So, does The Cardinal Way have to evolve into something new? Or is it still the foundation upon which future generations should be constructed?
Both, as it turns out.
Shildt referenced an anecdote from a player development meeting during Kissell’s final season in the organization.
“I was a part of more of the leadership of it and he was retiring at 88, and I said, ‘You know, Mr. Kissell we’re not going to change a thing,’” Shildt recalled.
“I said it in front of the group, and he appreciated that. But then right after the meeting he came right up to me and he said, ‘Let me tell you something. If you don’t think it changed in the last 66 years, you’re kidding yourself!’”
So let’s get this straight. One of the many lasting messages from a patron saint of Cardinals baseball, George Kissell, that still sticks in Shildt’s brain is that The Cardinal Way was always meant to change.
“So it was all about being able to stay relevant and adapt,” Shildt said. “I think that’s the sweet spot of all the things — the tools that are at the fingertips in player development now — that are very, very healthy.
“But I do think, with a lot of confidence, there’s also a blend of competition to what that looks like. The mental, physical competition, the toughness it required to play this game and the baseball intellect that takes place every night.”
Shildt did not say the fundamentals, attention to detail and fine nuances of the game have become any less important. He didn’t say it’s OK to hand everything over to analytics and computers. He didn’t say replace baseball IQ with ChatGPT.
He expressed “confidence” that there’s a way to bring together the aspects of the game that can’t be measured with fancy machinery and combine them with those aspects that a human eye can’t accurately or reliably measure.
“The one thing about this game that just will not change — first of all, it’s played by humans and there’s a human element to it,” Shildt said. “And it’s very situational based. Almost regardless of era, you look up and you realize that the teams that play clean and the teams that mitigate walks and free bases, the teams that put the ball in play and execute with runners in scoring position typically win games.
“I’m confident that’s not going to change because it hasn’t in the last 160 years.”
So maybe — just maybe — these new dudes with the Ivy League degrees are onto something.
Welcome to Trader Mo's: Checking receipts on John Mozeliak's deadline deals for Cardinals
The following article is an excerpt from today's Write Fielder, a weekly newsletter from the Post-Dispatch that delivers behind the seams stories and builds upon the baseball coverage available here at and brings it directly to your inbox every Friday morning.
In the past two seasons, the Cardinals traded a player at the deadline that went on to contribute to a World Series championship, putting John Mozeliak on the opposite side of a deadline deal likely to help define his tenure atop baseball operations.
In 2023, the Cardinals flipped two players they got a year earlier at the deadline to Texas, and lefty Jordan Montgomery helped drive the Rangers to their first championship a few months later. A year ago, at the 2024 trade deadline, the Cardinals sent Tommy Edman to the Los Angeles Dodgers as part of a three-team trade. Edman won the National League Championship Series MVP on his way to a ring with the Dodgers and a lucrative extension.
Take note interested clubs.
The Cardinals could pull off a hat trick as trade deadline kingmaker.
Trading for players to boost a postseason run – not trading away those players – used to be the annual goal of the Cardinals, and as Mozeliak reaches his final trade deadline as the club’s president of baseball operations selling seems most likely. It’s not the approach they wanted, but it is the approach they advertised and expected.
While the coverage in the newspaper focuses on what’s ahead for the Cardinals – dealing veteran relievers, listening on a few young players – the newsletter takes a look back at Mozeliak’s previous 17 trade deadlines at the helm of baseball operations. There were salary swaps (like 2017, 2019) and stand pats (like 2009, 2013!, 2020). I looked at the players moved out and the players brought in, and what Wins Above Replacement (WAR) they added to their new team or the Cardinals, respectively.
An example: Edman provided the Dodgers a 2.1 WAR so far, and the Cardinals got a 0.8 WAR from Erick Fedde before cutting him this past week. Tommy Pham was also in the deal and was a minus-0.4 WAR with the Cardinals to yield a minus-1.7 WAR deal.
The metric isn’t foolproof – relievers tend to lag – but it helps map the highs and lows and plenty of huhs from past deadline days for the Cardinals and how they’ve done in the Mozeliak era.
The Headliner
In 2009, after they got off the charter train from D.C. in Philadelphia, Mark DeRosa texted teammate Skip Schumaker that he was “the appetizer.” Acquired by the Cardinals a few weeks early, DeRosa was referencing a trade more than a year in the making. The Cardinals, near the deadline, acquired Matt Holliday. Mozeliak landed his future Cardinals Hall of Famer and one of the most lopsided deals in Cardinals’ history.
The Cardinals sent RHP Clayton Mortensen, 3B Brett Wallace, and OF Shane Peterson to Oakland for Holliday. That trio combined for a minus-0.9 WAR and little return for their teams. (Although, Mortensen was once traded for Marco Scutaro before he and Holliday would collide in October.) Holliday gave the Cardinals their cleanup hitter and a 2.3 WAR that season. He re-signed as a free agent the next winter and finished with a 23.0 WAR and a red jacket.
• Plus-3.1 WAR deal, but eventually a plus-23.9 WAR acquisition.
ӣƵ Cardinals Hall of Famer Matt Holliday receives his red jacket during the Hall of Fame induction ceremony at Ballpark Village on Saturday, Aug. 27, 2022.
Robert Cohen, Post-Dispatch
The Win-Wins
At the 2017 deadline, the Cardinals traded LHP Marco Gonzales to Seattle for OF Tyler O’Neill. Gonzales would provided the Mariners 8.4 WAR and a reliable starter, and though his time with the Cardinals was interrupted by injuries, O’Neill had a standout year and 10.1 WAR. In the end, not the high upside either team hoped, but the trade yielded contributions on both side.
At the 2018 deadline, the Cardinals sought a lefty reliever and dealt 1B Luke Voit to the Yankees to get LHP Chasen Shreve along with a right-hander Giovanny Gallegos. The deal proved to be more equal than either team projected. Gallegos, a 4.4 WAR reliever for the Cardinals, helped balance Voit’s breakout year and 4.8 WAR total in pinstripes.
At the 2022 deadline, the Cardinals sought a lefty reliever – is there an echo in here? – and dealt backup infielder Edmundo Sosa to Philadelphia for JoJo Romero. After his key outing in Thursday’s win, Romero has a 2.7 WAR for the Cardinals. Sosa has a 4.7 WAR, and he got to the World Series with the Phillies, giving the Cardinals three consecutive deadlines where they’ve moved a player who won a pennant.
• Minus-0.2 WAR on Gallegos deal. Plus-1.7 WAR on O'Neill, and minus-2.0 WAR on Romero, though TBD still.
ӣƵ Cardinals relief pitcher Giovanny Gallegos (65) holds his hand to his heart as he leaves the field during a game against the Atlanta Braves on Tuesday, April 4, 2023, at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ.
Christine Tannous, Post-Dispatch
The Flops
The Cardinals’ ability to deal outfielders who shine elsewhere is not limited to the winter or waivers. At the 2018 deadline, the Cardinals sold a little, bought a little, and tried to get a strong return on an outfielder without a spot, the aforementioned Pham. They traded him to Tampa Bay in return for OF Justin Williams, LHP Genesis Cabrera, and RHP Roel Ramirez. Pham went on to be a 6.4 WAR player and leave a minus-7.2 WAR gap in the deal.
At the 2021 deadline, a stark need for starters led the Cardinals to an unlikely deal for longtime rival Jon Lester. Even the lefty said the deal was possible because he didn’t have a no-trade clause. Cubs standout Lester got his 200th win with the Cardinals, and in return Washington got Lane Thomas, another outfielder squeezed out of the lineup by the Cardinals. Thomas was 6.4 WAR player for the Nats. Lester chipped in 0.1 WAR in his weeks as a Cardinal.
• Minus-6.3 WAR on Lester deal. Minus-7.2 WAR on Rays deal.
Tampa Bay's Tommy Pham high-fives teammates in the dugout after homering off the New York Yankees' Masahiro Tanaka in a game in 2018. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara, file)
Chris O'Meara
The Flips
The 2022 deadline was active for the Cardinals as they added their Game 1 starter for a playoff series, Jose Quintana, and in other deals Romero and Montgomery. It’s what happened a year later that puts a new look on the 2022 deadline. They flipped some of those same players for prospects that could tilt the look of these deals by next year.
The Cardinals acquired Montgomery from the Yankees for OF Harrison Bader. Montgomery was a 3.0 WAR for the Cardinals and Bader had 0.9 WAR for the Yankees. Stratton came with Quintana and gave the Cardinals a 0.5 WAR in exchange for a deal centered around RHP Johan Oviedo, who has given the Pirates 2.9 WAR.
In 2023, the Cardinals flipped Montgomery with Stratton to Texas for LHP John King, RHP Tekoah Roby, and INF Thomas Saggese. Montgomery gave the Rangers a 1.8 WAR before striking it rich as a champion. King has been a 1.1 WAR lefty so far for the Cardinals, and Roby is in Class AAA Memphis about to be one of the Cardinals top three pitching prospects.
• Plus-2.1 WAR on Montgomery deal with Yankees. Minus-0.7 WAR on Pirates deal. In fairness, TBD on Rangers deal.
ӣƵ Cardinals starting pitcher Jordan Montgomery is surround by other Cardinals pitchers after he was pulled from the game at the end of the sixth inning during a game between the Miami Marlins and ӣƵ Cardinals at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ on Tuesday, July 18, 2023. Photo by David Carson, dcarson@post-dispatch.com
David Carson, Post-Dispatch
The Tearjerker
At the 2014 deadline, two beloved members of the Cardinals clubhouse found out in awkward ways that they had been dealt to Boston for an irascible right-hander described as the “rusty nail” the team needed. There were tears in the clubhouse and manager Mike Matheny confessed to being emotional about the move. Considering John Lackey’s contract, the deal was nearly a masterstroke – if the Cardinals didn’t fall shy in the NLCS of a second consecutive.
The Cardinals sent 1B/OF Allen Craig and RHP Joe Kelly to the Red Sox for right-hander Lackey and the minimum salary he also had for 2015. Lackey was a 5.4 WAR pitcher for the Cardinals. Craig was never the same, and Kelly gave the Sox 2.5 WAR and helped win a World Series ring in 2018.
• Plus-4.3 WAR ... before Lackey vamoosed to Cubs for a ring.
ӣƵ Cardinals starting pitcher John Lackey reacts after getting the final out in the seventh inning during a game between the ӣƵ Cardinals and the Cincinnati Reds on Tuesday, Sept. 22, 2015, at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ. Photo by Chris Lee, clee@post-dispatch.com
Chris Lee
The Weavers
Not to be confused with the pitching brothers – one of whom definitely served this same purpose for the Cardinals almost two decades ago – these are the moves that, like a rug, bring the whole room together.
In 2010, the Cardinals finally landed the groundball-guru that they had been coveting for awhile: Jake Westbrook. All it took was San Diego and Cleveland drawing them into a three-team deal that sent OF Ryan Ludwick to the Padres and brought Westbrook to the Cardinals. He was an influential starter for the Cardinals and part of three consecutive NLCS teams and two World Series clubs. Ludwick was a minus-0.6 WAR in San Diego to Westbrook’s 1.0 WAR in ӣƵ.
The big winner in the deal was Cleveland.
Cleveland got Cory Kluber, a 32.5 WAR pitcher during his time there, and – near as I can tell – the most impactful player by that metric involved in any of these deadline deals involving the Cardinals since 2008.
In 2012, the Cardinals needed a reliever for the seventh inning, and they acquired RHP Edward Mujica from the Marlins for 3B Zack Cox, a former first-round pick. Cox never reached the majors. Mujica reached the All-Star Game as the Cardinals closer and a 2.8 WAR reliever.
• Plus-2.8 WAR on Mujica addition, but much more, really. Plus-1.6 WAR on Westbrook add compared to Padres.
The Cardinals Edward Mujica is surrounded by teammates and doused with beer and champagne in the locker room as they celebrate their National League Central Division Championship after the ӣƵ Cardinals beat the Chicago Cubs 7-0 on Friday, Sept. 27, 2013, at Busch Stadium in ӣƵ.
If the Holliday deal was the most predictable, then the most stunning deal of Mozeliak’s tenure came in 2011. It included an outfielder who, like others, would go on to be the most productive player after the deal for his new team. But that’s forgotten to history because flags fly forever.
At the deadline in 2011, the Cardinals willingness to part with young, talented first-rounder Colby Rasmus became an eight-player swap with Toronto that included an assist from the Chicago White Sox. The Cardinals sent Rasmus, LHP Trever Miller, LHP Brian Tallet, and RHP P. J. Walters, to the Jays for RHP Octavio Dotel, LHP Marc Rzepczynski, RHP Edwin Jackson (via Sox), and OF Corey Patterson.
As a group, that foursome provided Cardinals 0.2 WAR.
Rasmus would bring Toronto 6.7 WAR.
That make the deal a net negative (minus-6.2 WAR for Cardinals).
But Dotel & Co. revitalized the Cardinals’ bullpen, Jon Jay took off in center, and the Cardinals put together a remarkable September that didn’t stop until they upset the Rangers for the 2011 World Series. That is the final say on a trade, regardless of WAR. Measure them in title rings.
Montgomery, 1.
Stratton, 1.
Edman, 1.
Kelly, 1.
Cardinals, 1.
• General manager Walt Jocketty started the Cardinals' transformation into the ӣƵ A's by acquiring starting pitcher Todd Stottlemyre and Dennis Eckersley from Oakland. Stottlemyre came in a Jan. 9, 1996, trade for Allen Battle, Carl Dale, Bret Wagner and Jay Witasick; Eckersley arrived via a Feb. 3, 1996, swap for Steve Montgomery. Those pitchers helped manager Tony La Russa revive a moribund team.
• Jocketty's successor, John Mozeliak, delivered a July 27, 2011, season-saver that subtracted moping outfielder Colby Rasmus (above) and added pitchers Edwin Jackson, Octavio Dotel and Marc Rzepczynski (along with outfielder Corey Patterson). That deal improved team chemistry, shored up the starting rotation, bolstered the bullpen and helped propel the Cardinals on a World Series championship run.
The Write Fielder drops every Friday morning around 9 a.m. ӣƵ time, and in addition to a lede story like the one above it includes exclusive interviews, deep dives into statistics, crowdsourcing suggestions for the experience at Busch Stadium, and even some travelogue or other personal tidbits from venturing around the majors on the baseball beat.
With 7 games in their next 10 against the Padres, the team they're chasing in the NL wild card race, and potential roster-stripping trades, Cardinals are teetering on the edge.
As recent results and the standings nudge the Cardinals toward being a seller at the deadline, Marmol says the team is the "least distracted" by the uncertainty.
Ruth Leahy, a Rockies season ticket holder who often gave her ticket to her grandson, died Tuesday morning, just hours before Kyle saved the Cardinals in a loss.
Cardinals' experiment to add free TV, direct streaming is mostly a hit: Media Views
So far, so (largely) good with the Cardinals’ efforts to increase their television and streaming viewership levels.
The club has been experimenting this year with placing a handful of its locally produced games on over-the-air television after an absence of a decade and a half, and also is making all its local telecasts available for direct purchase via streaming for the first time.
The developments have led to significantly increased viewership and although the rise is not at blockbuster levels, an extreme bump seemed unlikely at a time of fan discontent with the team as evidenced by a significant downturn in home attendance even before the club’s recent slide.
The Cardinals have been using Gray Media-owned KMOV (Channel 4) and/or Matrix Midwest (Channel 32) to supplement their cable telecasts on FanDuel Sports Network, a simulcasting arrangement scheduled to encompass 10 games and perhaps one or two more late in the season depending on how many contests national outlets add for exclusive coverage (ESPN just picked their Aug. 10 home game against the Cubs for “Sunday Night Baseball”).
Through last week’s All-Star break, seven games had been shown in that package. But only four had been carried on KMOV, which has been on the air for seven decades and has a large following. Those also were shown on Matrix Midwest, which won’t reach its first anniversary for another month and has had miniscule viewership numbers according to audience-measuring firm Nielsen. Because KMOV is a CBS affiliate, it has limited pre-emptions of network programming so the three contests in the deal that it didn’t carry were shown over-the-air only on Matrix (in addition to the cable coverage).
Channel 4’s telecast of its four games were seen in an average of 4.5% of the market, according to Nielsen, but the Matrix figure was a measly 0.2%. It is evident that the over-the-air telecasts cannibalized cable viewership — the FDSN average rating for those contests was 2.8, compared to its season average of 4.2 at the break. But the combined audience for all three channels, 7.5% of the market, is a big increase over the cable-only average and is a figure that few shows attain in this era of significantly declining television viewership.
While that is a major crash from the 12.3 figure KSDK (Channel 5) drew for a series of Sunday afternoon games in 2010, the last time the Cards included over-the-air contests in their broadcasting deals, it is a highly respectable figure in the modern landscape.
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ӣƵ Cardinals
For example: In 2010, Cards cablecasts drew a 9.5 rating. This year they were as mentioned at 4.2 when play resumed after the break, with viewership having risen each month. Also, the top-rated show nationally for the television season that ended in the spring of 2010 was the Tuesday night version of “American Idol,” at 13.7. Topping the list for the season that ended last spring was “Sunday Night Football,” at 5.3.
Cardinals senior vice president of business operations Anuk Karunaratne said the club is pleased with the results from its return to free TV, at least on KMOV.
“I think it’s been what we would’ve hoped it would be,” he said. “The reason we were doing this was to increase reach, and from all of the information we’ve seen there’s clearly a lift — a significant lift — in viewership on those games.”
JD Sosnoff
KMOV
JD Sosnoff, general manager of both local Gray stations, embraces the results.
“I’m thrilled with having the Cardinals, and the response we’ve received from the viewers has been nothing but positive about their ability to access the games,” he said. “I think the biggest benefit is for viewers in the marketplace who now have the ability to watch games if they chose not to pay for a subscription service. ... It’s been a really good thing for the ӣƵ Cardinals as well.”
An additional aspect of the return to free TV is that the contests Gray is showing in ӣƵ also are available over the air in more than a dozen outlying markets across the Cardinals’ broadcast territory (mostly on Gray stations) in addition to appearing on cable.
“We’ve been really happy with that,” Karunaratne added. “We’ve gotten a lot of positive feedback from viewers who said they’re really glad to have that as an option.”
Karunaratne estimated that about as many people are watching the over-the-air telecasts outside of ӣƵ as in the market.
“That’s been really positive,” he said.
Sosnoff said he did not yet have exact market-by-market viewership figures in the hinterlands but said reaction has been strong.
“The Gray stations in the region are ecstatic about being able to offer that in their communities,” he said.
Matrix malaise
One definitive conclusion can be drawn from the Cards’ over-the-air test, and is backed by similar results for the Blues: According to Nielsen’s figures, Matrix Midwest simply isn’t ready to be a standalone over-the-air option for the major local teams.
The Blues also experimented with the Gray channels this year, the first time in 16 seasons they had over-the-air television in their local broadcast lineup, and are considering more such telecasts for the coming season. It was a small sample size last spring, just three games, and unlike the Cardinals they did not simulcast them on cable. KMOV aired two of the three contests in the package and averaged a 4.4 rating (compared to the season-long cable average of 2.5). Matrix had one to itself, which drew just 1% of the market, and when both stations had the telecasts that Matrix numbers were microscopic 0.2 and 0.1.
With the Cardinals, Matrix as mentioned averaged just 0.4% of the market when it shared games with KMOV and the cable station. That rose to just 0.5% when Matrix was the only free TV option, a miserable showing. Things have been so dismal that Nielsen reports Matrix had a 0.03 rating (less that 0.1% of the market watching, which rounds to a 0 rating) for the game against the Los Angeles Dodgers on June 6 it shared with the other channels. Nielsen’s figures say that in one 15-minute segment of the telecast, 46,488 people were watching on cable, 45,742 on KMOV and 104 on Matrix.
Sosnoff, the GM of the local Gray stations, has taken exception before with the Nielsen figures and said that another service he uses has higher numbers for Matrix’s games. But Nielsen remains the industry standard and its Matrix ratings are extremely low despite the station continuing to add sports content in its effort to transition from showing mostly old TV shows to becoming a destination for athletics-oriented material, the most high profile being these Cardinals and Blues live games.
“If it works out, I think it will be just good for our region in general to have more dedicated sports programming,” Karunaratne said. “That’s part of the reason why we did it, and it takes time to build equity in that.”
But the Nielsen numbers say Matrix remains unfamiliar — or unknown — to many despite it being widely available, so time could be short for it to prove it’s a viable sole over-the-air option.
“What seems nondebatable is (viewership) it is significantly lower when it’s just on Matrix,” he said. “So that’s not helping us achieve our goal, which is more reach. ... In the long run we would like to see those numbers come up for it to make sense for those games to just be on Matrix.”
Cards direct streaming
Another key component of the Cardinals’ strategy in trying to gain exposure throughout their geographic broadcast territory is to sell the telecasts directly to fans via streaming, something the Blues have done for the past three seasons before the Cards began doing so this year. Previously, a subscription to a program distributor that carried the team’s cable network was required to stream the telecasts.
FanDuel Sports Network said that through the All-Star break more than 131,000 separate customers have watched at least part of one game through the app. That’s a 238% increase over the same point last year, with a peak of 51,000 streamers for a contest June 3 against Kansas City. However, the company is not releasing the average number of streamers per game. The figures include viewers throughout the region, not just in the ӣƵ area.
“It is a significant number in relation to the number of people that are watching on TV,” the Cardinals’ Karunaratne said of the streaming figures while emphasizing the importance of the entire region, not just the immediate area, to the club. “That’s been really positive.”
A free month of the streaming coverage is being offered for new customers who pay for a month of service by registering at then using the code CardsBOGO at checkout. The deal runs through the end of July.
The bottom line
The Cardinals’ TV and streaming moves have combined to help the club attain a goal. While the cable viewership rating is unchanged for the same point last year, the increase with streaming plus the addition of over-the-air games has created an overall audience rise.
“We wanted to make a significant impact on reach,” Karunaratne said. “Our approach to doing that was to create more options for people to be able to access the games, and we’ve seen really good uptake on both of those (options). As we think about next season, we’ll keep thinking about ways we can continue enhanced that. And hopefully grow those numbers.”
He said the plan is for the direct-purchase option for streaming to return next season and added that while a “final decision” hasn’t been made about incorporating free TV into the local broadcast lineup then, “that is something we would like to continue.”
Cardinals TV ratings comparisons
Television ratings per outlet for Cardinals games played before the All-Star break this year. The rating represents the percentage of the market watching on these channels, according to Nielsen.
DATE
OPPONENT
KMOV (4)
MATRIX (32)
FDSN
April 11
vs. Philadelphia
6.3
0.2
2.5
April 25
vs. Milwaukee
---
0.6
3.2
May 16
at Kansas City
---
0.7
4.5
May 30
at Texas
3.7
0.2
2.0
June 6
vs. LA Dodgers
3.6
0.0
3.1
June 20
vs. Cincinnati
---
0.4
4.2
July 11
vs. Atlanta
4.4
0.4
3.4
Average
4.5
0.4
3.3
Post-Dispatch baseball writer Derrick Goold joined columnist Jeff Gordon to discuss a possible sell-off with the team fading from the playoff race.
Worthy: Why the Cardinals weren't losers in the Erick Fedde trade, even in hindsight
Fedde’s tenure crashed to a halt like an anvil dropped from the top of the Gateway Arch. He didn’t push the rotation to a next level, but that was never why the Cardinals acquired him.
As much as Cardinals followers will want to believe they’ve moved into a new era with a new head of baseball operations coming aboard at the end of the season in Chaim Bloom, the Cardinals likely aren’t yet past the point of getting utility out of guys like Fedde.
Their pipeline hasn’t progressed so much that they can rely on internal options to fill their needs. Players like Fedde fill in gaps to bridge to their homegrown options. They’ll likely still need a few of the Feddes of the baseball world in the immediate future.
Cardinals manager Oliver Marmol, left, approaches the mound to remove starting pitcher Erick Fedde from the game against the Braves on Saturday, July 12, 2025, at Busch Stadium.
Eli Randolph, Post-Dispatch
Whether you want to call him a placeholder, a stand-in or something else, Fedde bought them time. He helped them tread water for almost one year.
That was his larger purpose, helping the Cardinals rotation doggy paddle to this point.
Remember that at the time Fedde joined the club, Matthew Liberatore was pitching in relief and Andre Pallante had barely made his 10 starts after an early-season transition out of the bullpen that required a stint in the minors.
Fedde provided a serviceable, somewhat-experienced rotation option (he appeared in his 150th MLB game earlier this season) that allowed the Cardinals to maintain a deliberate and measured approach in developing their young starting pitching prospects — an area they’d fallen painfully short in recent years.
No amount of hoping, wishing, praying, foot stomping or pounding on the table you did would’ve changed the fact that the pitching prospects, aside from McGreevy, weren’t viable options for rotation to start this season.
Even Liberatore’s presence in the rotation came a bit out of nowhere at the end of spring training.
Forcing the matter with any one of the other minor-league starters at the start this season would have been reckless, and it could have set that pitcher back significantly.
Injuries definitely factored into the equation, eliminating options such as Zack Thompson and Drew Rom from every being in the conversation. That’s also the nature of pitching. An injury or two always wait around the corner.
So Fedde was necessary, especially since the Cardinals coffers were locked up pretty tight this winter. Lest we forget, the lone free-agent addition was Phil Maton.
In the final recap of Fedde’s Cardinals stint, he made 30 starts and posted a 4.69 ERA — slightly lower than Miles Mikolas’ ERA each of the past three seasons (5.07) — with a 5-15 record, 157 1/3 innings, a 1.39 WHIP, 6.2 strikeouts per 9 innings and 3.7 walks per 9 innings.
In fairness, the pitcher the Cardinals acquired prior to last summer’s trade deadline performed significantly better in the previous 21 starts with the Chicago White Sox in his return to MLB after a year in Korea.
Cardinals starting pitcher Erick Fedde leaves the mound after giving up three runs in the second inning against the Cubs on Wednesday, June 25, 2025, at Busch Stadium.
Eli Randolph, Post-Dispatch
That Fedde posted a 7-4 record with a 3.11 ERA, 8.0 strikeouts per 9 and 2.5 walks per 9 while pitching for a team that sent a historic bar for futility.
Fedde’s recent performance made him the subject of widespread angst, including that of Cardinals skipper Oli Marmol. Coupled with the fact he blocked Michael McGreevy from the rotation, that combination irreparably colored Fedde’s entire stint with the club.
Over his final five starts, Fedde made it through just 17 2/3 innings, posted a 13.25 ERA, walked more batters (11) than he struck out (eight) and gave up eight home runs. He gave up six runs or more in three of those starts, and the Cardinals lost each of his final five starts.
Certainly, ending Fedde’s tenure two starts earlier might have made a lot of people feel a little better. However, the impact would not have been earth shifting.
As for the price the Cardinals paid for Fedde, they traded away from an area of redundancy when they sent to the Los Angeles Dodgers. His primary positions — shortstop, second base, center field — were areas where the Cardinals had multiple options either at the big leagues or knocking at the door.
Not to mention, Edman never appeared in a game for the Cardinals last season due to a wrist injury.
Edman’s outstanding postseason performance doesn’t erase the fact that in 117 regular season games with the Dodgers (entering Thursday), he’s batted .230 with a .284 on-base percentage and a .404 slugging percentage with 17 home runs and nine stolen bases.
Going by the metric wins above replacement (WAR) as calculated by , Cardinals center fielder Victor Scott II, shortstop Masyn Winn and all-star second baseman Brendan Donovan have each, individually, been more valuable this season than Edman.
The Cardinals did not lose.
The other part of the Fedde deal included the Cardinals shipping a teenage Panamanian pitcher who, respectfully, even the most devoted Cardinals follower couldn’t identify if he sat down next to them at the ballpark (right-hander Oliver Gonzalez) to the Dodgers.
Meanwhile, the Cardinals also added veteran outfielder and right-handed hitter Tommy Pham to their lineup until they decided to cut him loose and allow him the chance to catch on with a team in playoff contention.
The lingering feeling of unhappiness about the Fedde trade for Cardinals fans isn’t because they made an awful deal. They didn’t.
That feeling is a result of the awful last few weeks for Fedde, and it’s because the deal also reflects the predicament the organization created by failing to produce internal starting pitching options.