Tag Archives: Albert Pujols

St. Louis Cardinals slugger Albert Pujols hits 703rd career home run

PITTSBURGH — Albert Pujols hit his 703rd career home run Monday night.

The 42-year-old slugger connected for the St. Louis Cardinals off Pittsburgh Pirates right-hander Mitch Keller, pulling a two-run shot into the left-field stands to snap a scoreless tie in the sixth inning. It was Pujols’ 35th career home run at PNC Park, his most at any visiting ballpark.

The drive gave Pujols 2,216 RBIs, which ranks second all time behind Hank Aaron’s 2,297. Babe Ruth unofficially drove in 2,214 runs but many were not counted because the statistic was not recognized by baseball until 1920.

Pujols has 24 home runs this season and is one of four players in major league history with 700, joining Barry Bonds (762), Aaron (755) and Ruth (714).

Pujols had been hitless in eight career at-bats against Keller.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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St. Louis Cardinals’ Albert Pujols joins 700 club with two-home run day

LOS ANGELES — Albert Pujols became the fourth member of the 700 home run club on Friday night, and he did so in emphatic fashion, launching two home runs in front of a packed Dodger Stadium crowd.

The first homer — a 434-foot, two-run blast to left field — came off Dodgers left-hander Andrew Heaney in the third inning. The second one was a three-run shot in the fourth off righty Phil Bickford. By that point the St. Louis Cardinals held a 5-0 lead, and Pujols had driven in all of his team’s runs.

Upon crossing home plate after his 700th homer, Pujols raced to the backstop to embrace Adrian Beltre, his longtime rival and one of his closest friends. Shortly thereafter, he found Yadier Molina and wrapped him in an emphatic hug.

The Cardinals went on to win 11-0.

Pujols, winding down the final season of a Hall of Fame career, joins Barry Bonds, Hank Aaron and Babe Ruth in the 700 home run club. He is the only one among them to hit Nos. 699 and 700 on the same night. Pujols now has 2,208 RBIs for his career, second on the all-time list behind Aaron’s 2,297.

It’s fitting, perhaps, that the 42-year-old designated hitter accomplished an incredible milestone here at Dodger Stadium, the place that he has often said played a big part in energizing him to play one final season in 2022.

Pujols joined the Dodgers last May, shortly after his release from the Los Angeles Angels, and was reinvigorated while serving as a part-time starter and late-game pinch-hitter over the last five-plus months. He was effective against left-handers and was a major influence in a veteran-laden clubhouse that lovingly called him “Tio Albert.”

Before the game, the Dodgers played a montage for Pujols, with Julio Urias, Hanser Alberto, Justin Turner, Max Muncy, Will Smith and Dave Roberts providing heartfelt messages. Pujols and Molina were gifted golf bags to commemorate their final seasons, then Pujols grabbed the mic to thank the Dodgers’ fans and their organization.

“It brought me so much joy, not just to me, but to my family,” Pujols, addressing the media before the game, said when asked what the atmosphere at Dodger Stadium meant to him. “I think it brought something inside me, that little boy once again that was missing that part of the game.”

Pujols’ final season has seen him play some of his best baseball down the stretch. After his 2-for-4 night Friday, he is batting .319/.381/.696 with 15 home runs and 38 RBIs in 48 second-half games. His 15 homers and 1.076 OPS are both tied for the second-best in the majors in that span, behind only Yankees star Aaron Judge. The surge also has coincided with the Cardinals practically running away from the rest of the National League Central.

Pujols began this season as a platoon option at DH, but he has morphed into one of the Cardinals’ most consistent hitters and is basically an everyday player as they venture into the postseason.

Pujols now has 21 home runs on the year, giving him 18 20-homer seasons for his career, third-most in history behind only Aaron (20) and Bonds (19). He joins Ted Williams as the only players to hit 20 home runs in both their first and final seasons. He owns the most multihomer games after turning 42 in major league history, with four.

“I don’t chase numbers,” Pujols said earlier this week. “I didn’t chase 100, and I got 698. It’s the same thing — trusting my process.”

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Albert Pujols’ pinch-hit grand slam backs fellow 40-something Adam Wainwright’s gem for St. Louis Cardinals

ST. LOUIS — Albert Pujols launched a pinch-hit grand slam and drove in five runs, Adam Wainwright pitched seven sharp innings and the St. Louis Cardinals routed the Colorado Rockies 13-0 Thursday for a three-game sweep.

“We’re playing right now, I think the way that we were expecting ourselves to play early in the year,” Pujols said. “We didn’t, but we had some glimpses here and there. Now we’re playing the best baseball we have played all year long.”

Wainwright called Pujols “incredible.”

“He looks the same as when he left to me,” Wainwright said. “This is what he’s supposed to look like, here, this stadium, doing these things.”

According to Elias Sports Bureau, the Cardinals are the first team in big league history to have a player at least 40 years old hit a grand slam and another at least 40 to pitch seven shutout innings in the same game. Pujols is 42, 2 years older than Wainwright.

The NL Central-leading Cardinals won their fourth in a row and sent Colorado to its fifth straight loss. St. Louis has won 12 of its past 13 home games and has taken 12 straight from the Rockies at Busch Stadium.

Pujols hit his 690th career home run, connecting off Austin Gomber and capping a five-run third that made it 10-0. It was Pujols’ 16th career grand slam — his first as a pinch hitter — and it moved him into a tie with Hank Aaron, Babe Ruth and Dave Kingman for 10th-most slams of all time.

He became the first player to hit a pinch-hit grand slam within the first three innings of a game since the Yankees’ Bobby Murcer on July 25, 1971, against the Brewers

Cardinals manager Oliver Marmol said he went with the unconventional decision to pinch hit Pujols in the third inning for designated hitter Brendan Donovan because he liked the matchup against Gomber.

“He’s been killing lefties,” Marmol said. “The game’s never over, but you can put the game away there with a good swing and it’s always good to get the crowd engaged. We felt good about it and he did his job.”

Pujols added an RBI single.

“I think at the end of the day, just being part of a great organization, a great group of guys that want to win, young players they’re watching, I’m blessed to be here, and just help those guys out,” Pujols said. “It’s fun, trust me.”

Wainwright (10-9) gave up three hits, two of them infield singles. He struck out seven, walked none and retired his final 13 batters.

“My job today it was just to not mess it up,” he said. “The offense was the story. They were incredible you know and Albert hitting the grand slam, I mean we’re just kind of like living in his shadow right, which is where we should be.”

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

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‘This is our house’: Albert Pujols schools Brewers, helps launch Cardinals to power win | St. Louis Cardinals

Hours before he hit two home runs and punctuated an emphatic victory, Cardinals great Albert Pujols gave a young, struggling teammate a tip, leading to the homer that changed the game.

During a hitters’ meeting early Sunday morning, Pujols drew from his previous at-bats against Milwaukee reliever Taylor Rogers, including an eight-pitch strikeout Saturday. Five of the eight pitches Pujols saw were Rogers’ slider. He told his teammates, including Dylan Carlson, how Rogers used the slider, how it moved and the spot to look for it as a pitch to drive.

“He’s aggressive with it,” Carlson recalled. “Be ready to go.”

Carlson led off the eighth inning against Rogers on Sunday and the lefty’s first pitch was a slider. Carlson was ready to go. He piloted the pitch into the left-field seats to break a tie and send the first-place Cardinals toward a 6-3 victory at Busch Stadium and a series win against second-place Milwaukee. Tyler O’Neill’s solo homer tied the game in the sixth, Carlson’s homer broke that tie in the eighth, and bookended around those were Pujols’ two homers — one to start the scoring and a three-run knockout to finish the series.

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As his second homer of the day, 10th of the season and 689th of his career traveled 443 feet into the left-center bleachers, Pujols broke into a trot and pointed to the dugout. He then stretched his hands across his chest, as if to highlight the team name stitched there.

“It’s very clear what he was stating: This is our house,” manager Oliver Marmol said. “You’re not going to come in here and beat us.”

Said Pujols: “Just the reaction that I had. Big hit in a big situation.”

Like Carlson, because of Pujols’ description, being ready for a pitch he’d never seen from a pitcher he’d never faced, so much of Sunday began in small moments.

O’Neill and Carlson have lockers beside each other in the Cardinals clubhouse. They stretch together, play outfield beside each other and share several pregame routines — and that’s not all they share.

They’ve both been struggling. Carlson has experienced upswings and downturns all season, while O’Neill has spent most of the year either injured on searching for his swing or both. The Cardinals’ ongoing search for a spark at leadoff brought them together again atop the lineup Sunday. While stretching and talking Sunday, O’Neill leaned over to Carlson.

“It’s our day,” he said.

Carlson entered Sunday’s game batting leadoff, but 4 for 37 (.108) since his previous homer. O’Neill, hitting second, had struck out in six of his previous eight at-bats and hit .080 over his previous 25 at-bats. He had seven homers in his first 91 plate appearances last season. He started the sixth Sunday with six homers in his past 265 plate appearances.

O’Neill was asked what inspired his statement.

“We’re due. It’s due time,” O’Neill said. “We want to start banging out here. We hold ourselves to higher standards, especially more than what we’re posting right now. We want to excel. So that’s the goal. We want to get on base as much as possible for the big sticks. Take care of business.”

Before their day or their due arrived, Sunday started with more of the same. By the time O’Neill came to the plate with one out in the sixth inning, neither outfielder had reached base against Milwaukee lefty Aaron Ashby. O’Neill had two ground outs. Carlson had two strikeouts, wincing at how the second one ended.

In the second inning, Hunter Renfroe hit a two-run homer off Cardinals starter Miles Mikolas for the game’s first runs. Carlson thought he had a play on the ball, leaping and reaching over the wall only to have the ball land just beyond his glove.

“It’s no secret I’ve been struggling a little bit,” Carlson said. “That fly ball, that home run, got out of my reach — just kind of how it’s been going for me lately. So, for me to come up in that situation like that (later), I was trying to keep it as simple as possible.”

Pujols’ 688th homer of his career cleaved the Brewers’ lead in half.

O’Neill’s first homer in 10 days tied it 2-2 against Ashby.

Mikolas (9-9) continued to work quick to hold that knot. The right-hander allowed four hits. One didn’t leave the infield, and another was erased by a double play. He kept the pace peppy by not walking a batter, and after Renfroe’s homer, Mikolas retired 13 of the next 14 Brewers batters. He and Ashby swapping swift innings led to a two hour, 17 minute game, the shortest of the season at Busch.

“Everyone’s family-favorite pitcher, getting everybody home for dinner,” Mikolas said. “In this case, maybe even home for lunch.”

Mikolas had just a pitched a perfect eighth, striking out the final two batters he’d face in the game and delivered the tie to the bottom of the inning. Marmol had made a decision earlier in the game to set up how he wanted the lineup to look for the Brewers’ lefty reliever Rogers. He stayed with Pujols against a right-handed reliever in the seventh and counted on the possibility the game would find its way back to him vs. a lefty later.

That possibility had to start with Carlson.

He walked to the plate with none of the baggage from recent misses.

The young center fielder said talking with O’Neill about their intertwined slumps and O’Neill’s confidence earlier Sunday put him in “that right headspace to go out there.” The advice from Pujols gave him the right pitch to seek and the right place to look. He had the right swing from the right side to greet it and launch the Cardinals to their first lead.

“At this point in the season, you’re just trying to help the team win any way possible,” Carlson said. “Especially in a series like this. These are big games. We’ve got to win these ones. Trying to help the team. I think when you put it in that perspective, it helps a lot. You take some pressure off and just play.”

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2022 MLB All-Star Game – How each Home Run Derby slugger picked his pitcher

Corey Seager called his father Thursday to ask Jeff Seager how long it has been since he’s thrown batting practice. It might have seemed an odd question, but there was a very special reason behind it: Corey wanted his dad to pitch to him in the Home Run Derby.

Jeff Seager did not immediately say yes. Rather, he drove the 2 miles to Northwest Cabarrus High School, where he had thrown a zillion hours of batting practice to his sons within cages for which the Seagers possessed a key. Jeff Seager loosened up his arm — and apparently felt OK, because he quickly phoned Corey back to give him the OK.

Seager will likely be a favorite of the Dodger Stadium crowd in the derby, as he returns to L.A. for the first time since he signed with the Texas Rangers as a free agent in the offseason. He’ll have an ingrained understanding of how the ball will travel in the late afternoon on a hot California day. He’ll be surrounded by familiar faces, from security to the clubhouse attendants. But the most rewarding part of the event for Seager will be sharing the moment with his father. “He has probably thrown the most to me in my life,” Corey said in a phone conversation this week. “You’re doing what makes you the most comfortable.”

“It’ll be a really exciting moment, in multiple ways.”

When Corey did the derby back in 2016 in San Diego, Jeff Seager threw to him then, too. Corey remembers his dad being pretty nervous at first, “but then he kind of locked in.”

As the last confirmed contestant, just 72 hours before the derby, Seager made no plans to practice, to reacquaint himself with the pace of the event, the exhaustion that overtakes a lot of the competitors. “Nah, I’m just going to wing it,” he said, though he added: “I definitely will try to pull the ball.”

A rundown of some of the plans and pitchers for the other Home Run Derby sluggers:

For the slugger who has seemingly mastered the art of the Home Run Derby like no other player, there was no doubt about whom he would pick to throw to him — the man who could be regarded as the industry standard for batting practice pitching, 65-year-old Dave Jauss.

In 2021, Jauss was a coach with the Mets and helped Alonso dominate the derby in Colorado. After the Mets changed managers and most of their coaching staff, Jauss took a job with the Washington Nationals. But Alonso approached him during spring training to confirm that if Alonso was back in the derby, Jauss would again throw to him.

Actually, it was Alonso’s teammate, Jeff McNeil, who first leaked the news to Jauss. “So you know, Pete’s going to ask you again,” McNeil said.

Jauss has a long history in the derby. He and Clint Hurdle threw to all the competitors in 1999, when the event was in Fenway Park, and after his showing with Alonso last summer, Jauss was asked to throw to hitters in Major League Baseball’s Home Run Derby X. Scheduling around his work with the Nationals, Jauss was in London earlier this year and has trips scheduled to South Korea and Mexico in the months ahead.

His ability to throw consistently in batting practice, Jauss said, laughing, is what “has kept me in the game. I’m not wearing the Wally The Green Monster costume, and I don’t have to be Abraham Lincoln in the presidents’ race.”

The experience of throwing in the derby has been enriched by sharing the experience with Alonso, whose family has embraced Jauss and his family. “He’s such a quality guy, and good for the industry,” Jauss said.


Like Alonso, Soto makes it clear his goal is to win. Last year, Soto took out Shohei Ohtani in a wild first-round matchup, and what he learned from that night will inform his approach in this year’s derby. “I’m going to do the same thing I did last year — I’m not going to try to hit moon shots,” he said. “I’m going to just be consistent [with my swing].”

The urban legend surrounding the derby is that hitters will sometimes mess up their swings going through the event, which requires the participants to take the sort of rushed hacks they never would in their day-to-day preparation. But Soto mentioned last year that he felt that the derby helped him, getting his aggressiveness and swing on track for a second half in which Soto generated a slash line of .333/.485/.601. That experience has Soto all-in on this year’s event, and he has asked Jorge Mejia to pitch to him. He has worked with Soto extensively; the two met when Soto was 17 years old. “He’s been my hitting coach in the offseasons,” Soto said.

Mejia’s delivery, Soto said, allows him to see the ball well — a three-quarters motion, not too high and not too low. “He’s pretty accurate,” Soto said.


Rodriguez is 21 years old and ranks among the youngest competitors in Home Run Derby history, but he’s asked around enough to know this: He’s not going to worry about distance, just clearing the fence. “I’m not going to be trying to hit the ball the furthest,” he said over the phone. Rather, his hope is that he gets a lot of pitches up in the zone so he can consistently get the ball in the air and over the fence, while conserving some of his energy for the swings to follow.

Rodriguez’s intent was to practice over the weekend, to at least try the timed format, to understand what he is in for. His batting practice pitcher, Franmy Peña, was in Texas over the weekend, with a locker next to Rodriguez’s, as part of their preparation for the derby.

Peña’s family runs a baseball academy in the Dominican Republic, and Rodriguez said that if not for Franmy and his father, he doesn’t believe he would be in the event. Peña played in the minor leagues with the Rockies and Brewers organizations a decade ago, serving as a catcher for much of that time. Some of the best batting practice pitchers are former catchers because of their short, precise arm action. Peña throws him batting practice a lot, Rodriguez said, and is very consistent.

Of course, throwing batting practice is different when it’s in a ballpark that’ll be packed the way that Dodger Stadium will be Monday, a fact Rodriguez acknowledged. Through the years, nervous and inaccurate pitchers have sometimes sabotaged derby participants. “But he is ready for it,” Rodriguez said.


The belief among some of the competitors is experience will be crucial to defeat Alonso, and nobody has more derby experience than Pujols, who is in this event for the fifth time. He will set an age record in the derby — at 42 years and 183 days old, he is more than 2 years older than Barry Bonds, who was 39 years and 353 days old when he reached the semifinals in 2004.

Pujols is also more than 8 years older than the oldest winner, Dave Parker, who was 34 when he took his swings in 1985 — and, relatedly, Pujols has the most home runs (685) of any competitor at the time.

Pujols asked Kleininger Teran, the Cardinals’ bullpen catcher and a regular batting practice pitcher, to throw for him.


A couple of weeks ago, Schwarber seemed to be leaning against swinging in the derby. But understanding that the event needs the best power hitters, he changed his mind. Before he made a final call, he reached out to the batting practice pitcher who threw to him in 2018 when he nearly edged Bryce Harper in Washington. Mike Sanicola played at the University of Miami and has thrown to Schwarber in the offseason. Schwarber and others refer to him as Money because his batting practice is so consistent.

“Would you want to do it?” Schwarber asked.

“Absolutely,” Money responded.

What Schwarber learned about Sanicola in 2018, he said, is that Sanicola “isn’t going to be overtaken by the moment. He’s pretty confident in himself.”

Schwarber said his own takeaway is that he really doesn’t have to try to hit every single pitch. Rather, it’s better to be patient and home in on pitches he can drive. “The constant swinging wasn’t maybe the best strategy,” he said. “But don’t get me wrong, you’re going to be working at a quick pace.”

The left-handed-hitting Schwarber mostly pulled the ball that year, when he came in second behind Harper, but this time around, he figures he’ll try to drive the ball to center or right-center. His sweet spot? “Anywhere in the strike zone,” he said, chuckling. “Aim for the middle, and we’ll go from there.”


Most derby sluggers will try to aim to one part of the park — like Todd Frazier, who tried to pull all pitches to left field. But when the right-handed-hitting Acuña was in the derby in 2019, he distinguished himself from other competitors by launching the ball in all directions. “He’s got power to the opposite field, and he can put on a show,” Braves coach Tomas Perez said.

It was Perez who pitched to Acuña that year — a Venezuela native pitching to a fellow Venezuelan — and he will again in L.A. He and Acuña had talked for weeks about returning to the event, and about three weeks ago, the Braves outfielder got the invitation officially. “Everybody in my country will be watching,” said Perez, who pitches batting practice to Acuña in the Braves’ daily regimen. “Hopefully, we can do it right, and it’ll be a lot of fun for the fans, for our country.”

Acuña and Perez agreed to practice a little over the weekend in Washington — a timed minute. The sweet spot that Perez says he’ll be aiming for as he works to Acuña: inside just a bit, in the upper part of the strike zone just a bit.


As Ramirez explained through an interpreter, the derby is something that he’s always wanted to do, partly for those around him, for his mom. “My family was anxious to have me do it,” he said.

And the man throwing to him might as well be family. More than a decade ago, Junior Betances had been hearing often from a friend about his nephew, about what a special baseball talent he was, so Betances found some time to watch the kid. That was the first time he saw Ramirez, then 17 years old.

Then, in his role as a minor league hitting coach, Betances worked with Ramirez, mentoring him in professional baseball. Given all of that shared history, Ramirez reached out last week to Betances, who is now working for the Guardians’ Double-A affiliate, and asked him whether he wanted to throw in the derby. For Betances, it was an emotional moment.

“It’s unbelievable,” Betances said. “I’m so excited, and I appreciate it so much.”

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Pujols, Alonso, Acuna To Participate In Home Run Derby

The 2022 Home Run Derby will take place next Monday, and the field is beginning to take shape. Mets first baseman Pete Alonso and Braves outfielder Ronald Acuña Jr. each announced this afternoon that they’d be participating, while Katie Woo of the Athletic reports that Cardinals designated hitter Albert Pujols will partake as well.

Pujols’ participation is the most surprising (and notable) of the three. He’s a four-time contestant but hasn’t appeared in a Derby in more than a decade. He’s only hit five longballs this year but twice led the National League during his first stint in St. Louis and is fifth all-time in homers. In his final big league season, Pujols is already set to head to the All-Star Game in recognition of his career. He’ll add the Derby to the celebration.

Alonso is hoping to defend his two straight titles. The New York slugger won in 2019, then backed that up with another championship last year. (The 2020 Derby was canceled). Along the way, he knocked off Acuña in the semifinals during the 2019 event. Atlanta’s star outfielder will join the festivities for a second time. Both Alonso and Acuña will team with Pujols on the NL All-Stars; Alonso is a reserve, while Acuña will be in Brian Snitker’s starting lineup.

MLBTR will update this post as the remainder of the Derby participants are revealed.

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Albert Pujols Planning To Retire After 2022 Season

Albert Pujols is back with the Cardinals, and he’ll wrap up his career where it began. Speaking to reporters (including Derrick Goold of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch) at a press conference announcing his return to St. Louis, Pujols confirmed he’s planning to retire after the upcoming season. “This is it for me. This is my last run,” he told the group.

Pujols is headed into the 22nd season of a Hall of Fame career. He has spent a bit more than half that in Cardinal red, breaking into the big leagues with a Rookie of the Year-winning 2001 campaign. The slugging first baseman finished fourth in NL MVP voting his debut season, and he’d remain among the top five finishers in that balloting for all but one season in St. Louis ( a 2007 campaign in which he finished ninth).

During that run, Pujols claimed the MVP award on three separate occasions. He led MLB in OPS+ in four of the five seasons between 2006-10, claiming the Silver Slugger Award in each of the latter three years. Pujols went to the Midsummer Classic in nine of his first 11 seasons with the Cards and helped the club to a pair of World Series championships. Over his time in St. Louis, he posted an incredible .328/.420/.617 slash, averaging more than 40 home runs per season.

Of course, the second half of Pujols’ career wasn’t close to the otherworldly heights he reached during that time. Pujols posted above-average offensive numbers for each of his first five seasons in Orange County after signing a ten-year pact with the Angels during the 2011-12 offseason. He only put up excellent numbers during his first season with the Halos (.285/.343/.516 with 30 homers) as his batting average and on-base numbers sharply declined, although Pujols twice more eclipsed 30 longballs in Anaheim.

As his production continued to wane towards the end of that deal, the Angels released Pujols last May. He landed with the Dodgers and served as a righty platoon/bench bat before hitting the open market again this winter. In a full-circle moment, the 42-year-old agreed to head back to St. Louis for one final run last night.

Pujols has already racked up a laundry list of career accomplishments. His name dots the all-time leaderboards in most major categories. He’s 12th with 3,301 hits, and he’s just 18 knocks away from supplanting Paul Molitor in the top ten. Barring injury, he’s sure to get there this year. It’ll be harder — but not impossible — for Pujols to set another pair of achievements in the home run department. Already 5th all-time with 679 big flies, he needs 18 more to pass Alex Rodríguez for fourth-place and 21 homers to reach the 700-mark plateau. Pujols is 64 RBI from Babe Ruth for second-place in that category, and he has a chance to leapfrog both Willie Mays (38 away) and Stan Musial (92 away) on the total bases leaderboard.

Obviously, Pujols won’t shoulder the kind of workload he did early in his career. Paul Goldschmidt is the regular first baseman with the Cards, leaving the designated hitter role as the cleanest path to at-bats for Pujols. In recent seasons, he hasn’t hit well enough that a win-now St. Louis team will be committed to playing him everyday in that capacity, but he figures to pick up some pinch-hit work and starts against left-handed pitching. Cardinals fans will get an opportunity to watch Pujols chase those various milestones for a final six months, and he’ll go out alongside the two other players most synonymous with the past two decades of Cardinal baseball.

Yadier Molina has already announced plans to retire after this year himself. Adam Wainwright, who turns 41 in August, returned for a 17th season on a one-year deal over the offseason. There has been plenty of speculation over the past few seasons that Wainwright could soon step away himself, although he has yet to commit one way or the other. The three-time All-Star starter again demurred on his future this afternoon, telling reporters he’s “not crossing that bridge” at the moment (via John Denton of MLB.com).

To Wainwright’s credit, he has remained highly productive deep into his 30’s, showing even less of a drop-off in performance than either of his legendary teammates. All three players have been iconic members of the organization, and they’re now officially reunited for one last run. Whether Wainwright will join Molina and Pujols as outgoing stars remains to be seen, but the trio will be together this year in hopes of bringing a third World Series to St. Louis.



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Redbird reunion: Pujols is returning to the Cardinals on one-year deal | St. Louis Cardinals

JUPITER, Fla. — The Cardinals’ search for a way to maximize the brand new position of designated hitter has led to a reunion with one of the greatest hitters of all from their past.

Albert Pujols and the Cardinals are finalizing a one-year contract to bring the franchise icon back to St. Louis, multiple sources said late Sunday night. The agreement, first reported Sunday night by the Post-Dispatch, is pending a physical and will pay Pujols $2.5 million.

An inevitable first-ballot Hall of Famer, Pujols returns to St. Louis for the coda of a career that began with a stunning spring training and Rookie of the Year award in 2001, matched Stan Musial with three MVPs, and now brings him home 21 homers shy of 700 for his career. Pujols, 42, will have the opportunity to be the team’s righthanded-hitting DH against lefthanded starters or a deterrent off the bench against lefties in late innings.

The Cardinals imagine a similar role to the one Pujols had with the Los Angeles Dodgers this past season, and one manager Oliver Marmol has sought as he lets matchups guide his lineups.

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A member of the Cardinals’ front office declined comment.

The Cardinals had ongoing internal discussions this spring about how a reunion would work with the current roster and clubhouse, and conversations with Pujols’ representatives increased this past weekend. A team source acknowledged how Pujols would fit the roster and ignite nostalgia, joining his friend and longtime teammate Yadier Molina for the catcher’s farewell season. Two sources described Pujols’ eagerness to rejoin the Cardinals if offered.

Drafted by the Cardinals in 1999, Pujols hit his way into the opening day lineup on April 2, 2001, and began an unprecedented run of production to start a major-league career. In his first 10 seasons, he hit at least .300 with at least 30 homers and 100 RBIs each season, and he led the National League in average, homers, and RBIs for the 2000s, claiming a decade Triple Crown despite spotting the entire league a year. While with the Cardinals, Pujols won an MVP in 2005, 2008, and 2009, and he won two World Series championships. His last appearance as a Cardinal was celebrating the 2011 title, and that winter he left for the west coast, signing a 10-year, $240-million deal with the Angels.

Pujols was released by the Angels in May, a few months shy of the end of his contract. A Cardinals source said “the timing was off” for the team to sign him then, though internally they mused about bringing No. 5 back for an encore in the autumn of his career.

As recently as Sunday morning, officials with the Cardinals downplayed a match with Pujols because all spring they have consistently talked up their promise to prospects.

On Sunday morning, Post-Dispatch sports columnist Ben Frederickson asked Marmol if the team would consider adding a righthanded-hitting veteran, like Pujols, to the roster as they did a week ago with lefthanded-hitting outfielder Corey Dickerson.

Marmol stressed the team’s interest in rookie Juan Yepez.

“It is a front office question,” Marmol said. “I’ll answer it with (this): We’re wanting to give Yepez the most opportunity and see what we got there. Has he performed the way he’d like to? No. Is he carrying himself in a way that gives us the belief he can do a good job? Yes. We want to see as much of that as possible. We’ll see a decent amount of at-bats for him moving forward.”

Marmol scripted his lineup Sunday specifically because the Mets had Jacob deGrom, the two-time Cy Young Award winner, scheduled to throw three innings and Max Scherzer, a three-time winner, assigned to handle the final six innings. He said he wanted to see lefthanded-hitting Lars Nootbaar, at DH, against top gear-velocity righthanders, and watch how Yepez adjusted over the course of a game. The Mets’ pitching plan meant Marmol could assure at least three at-bats for each young hitter against the All-Stars.

“These are the type of guys you have to beat if you want to win the whole thing,” Marmol said.

Nootbaar went hitless in four at-bats, two each against deGrom and Scherzer, but he improved with each pass. Nootbaar worked his way back from an 0-2 count against deGrom to get it full in his second at-bat and the got under a pitch for a flyout to center. Yepez went zero-for-three but worked a walk in one of his three plate appearances against Scherzer. Marmol said that Yepez’s swing “was shorter, which was good to see.”

The 24-year-old righthander hit .286 with 27 homers and a .969 OPS in the minors this past season, including a .971 OPS in 92 games at Class AAA. This spring, he’s sweetened his on-base percentage with five walks but is three-for-16 with as many hits as strikeouts. The Cardinals like how his swing and analytics project in the majors, particularly against higher-velocity pitches.

Or, as Nootbaar called them, “hoppy heaters.”

The Cardinals’ envision using the NL’s new toy – the DH – as a matchup position, one that could change game to game based on the handedness and style of the opposing pitcher. Dickerson was signed to a one-year, $5-million this month to be the lefthanded-hitting complement. The Cardinals like Nootbaar against “hoppy heaters,” and they set up the roster this spring to get Yepez a long look at being the righthanded bat off the bench or at DH. Marmol has likened the use of the DH to the line-change lineup San Francisco used effectively – swapping multiple bats out of the lineup during a game to maximize matchups.

It’s how the Dodgers put Pujols in position to excel last season.

The Angels released Pujols in May, a few months shy of completing the 10-year, $240-million contract that brought him west from the Cardinals in 2011. He signed with the Dodgers and enjoyed targeted use as a righthanded-hitting option at first base and pinch-hitter. He finished the year with a .603 slugging percentage and a .939 OPS vs. lefties in 146 plate appearances. Ten of his 13 homers vs. lefties came in the 33 hits he had in those specific assignments with the Dodgers.

Pujols’ return will give the Cardinals’ three members of their 2006 championship team back in the clubhouse again: Molina, Pujols, and the closer on that team, Adam Wainwright, who is expected to start opening day. Skip Schumaker, a teammate with that trio for the 2011 World Series victory, is the team’s new bench coach.

While with the Cardinals, Pujols will have a chance to burnish the statistics that are bronze-ready for Cooperstown. A .297 career hitter, Pujols has 679 home runs, 2,150 RBIs, and 3,301 hits. He is among the all-time leaders in total bases, homers, RBIs and almost any statistic kept for the game’s most productive hitters, tracked by modern data or found on the back of baseball cards.

He starts the year 18 homers shy of surpassing Alex Rodriguez for fourth all-time in home runs.

Pujols would be behind only Barry Bonds, Hank Aaron, and Babe Ruth.

Pujols’ No. 5 has not been worn since he left for the Angels as the Cardinals prepared for its eventual retirement, and there will be a statue of him outside of Busch Stadium someday.

But he has a few home games to play first.

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Cardinals To Sign Albert Pujols

The Cardinals are finalizing a one-year deal to bring Albert Pujols back to St. Louis, according to Derrick S. Goold of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Just hours ago, reports surfaced that the club had a growing interest in a reunion. Now it seems that it has come to fruition and the 42-year-old will return to the nest to be a Cardinal once more. Pujols will be paid $2.5MM, per Mark Feinsand of MLB.com.

Pujols, 42, spent the first 11 years of his career with the Cardinals, playing at an unfathomable level and enshrining himself as a future Hall of Famer. In that time, he hit 445 home runs and put up an incredible .328/.420/.617 for a wRC+ of 167. He was a key reason why the club was a continual competitor in that time, making the postseason in 7 of those 11 seasons and winning the World Series in 2006 and 2011.

Based on that otherworldly run of success, he was signed by the Angels to a ten-year, $254MM deal covering the 2012-2021 seasons. Pujols continued to hit at a level above the league average for the first five years of that deal, though a few notches below what he did as a Cardinal. From there, things only got worse, as he hit just .242/.291/.406 from 2017 to 2020, producing a wRC+ of just 84. After 24 games last year, with just a few months remaining on the contract, the Angels released him. Surprisingly, he was picked up by the Dodgers, who planned to limit the veteran slugger to a bench/platoon role, primarily facing lefties. The strategy worked out fine enough, as Pujols hit .254/.299/.460 as a Dodger, a wRC+ of 101.

The earlier report from Katie Woo of The Athletic indicated that the club was interested in bringing Pujols back for a reunion, but in a similar role to the one he had with the Dodgers last year. Now that the National League will have the designated hitter this year, it will be easier for the club to implement Pujols in this way, being used as a pinch hitter or in the DH slot, trying to limit his exposure to righties. Woo noted that that the club has traditionally shied away from platoon strategies in the past, but that new manager Oliver Marmol is planning on changing that. Paul Goldschmidt is firmly entrenched as the club’s regular first baseman, meaning Pujols will be in the mix for DH/pinch-hitting duties alongside Corey DickersonLars Nootbaar and Juan Yepez.

For Yepez, he seemed poised to make the team after a tremendous year in the minors. Between Double-A and Triple-A last year, he hit .286/.383/.586, for a wRC+ of 154. Then there’s Nolan Gorman, who also spent last year between Double-A and Triple-A, hitting .279/.333/.481, wRC+ of 115. However, Woo reports that, given that Yepez is just 24 and Gorman doesn’t turn 22 until May, the club is considering a plan wherein they each spend a bit more time in the minors getting regular reps, waiting for an opportunity to open up as the season progresses.

While Yepez and Gorman will surely get their opportunities down the line, the narrative of the moment is that one of this generation’s greatest hitters is returning to where he started his career and flourished. He will also reunite with Yadier Molina and Adam Wainwright, long-time Cardinals who were alongside Pujols for his greatest seasons, including those two World Series championships.



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Cardinals Have Growing Interest In Albert Pujols

The Cardinals “have had increased conversations” with Albert Pujols, reports Katie Woo of The Athletic, who also says that “interest is growing in bringing back the former Cardinal for the 2022 season.”

Just two weeks ago, it was reported that the Cardinals were considering such a move. But club chairman Bill DeWitt Jr. seemed to throw some cold water on that idea, saying “we’ve got most of our club pretty well set.” However, it seems the club may have warmed to the idea of bringing Pujols back to where he started his career and had his best seasons.

Pujols was drafted by the Cardinals in 1999 and made his MLB debut with the club in 2001. Over 11 seasons from 2001 through 2011, he hit 445 home runs and put up an incredible .328/.420/.617 for a wRC+ of 167. He was a key reason why the club was a continual competitor in that time, making the postseason in 7 of those 11 seasons and winning the World Series in 2006 and 2011. Based on that otherworldly run of success, he was signed by the Angels to a ten-year, $254MM deal covering the 2012-2021 seasons. Pujols continued to hit at a level above the league average for the first five years of that deal, though a few notches below what he did as a Cardinal. From there, things only got worse, as he hit just .242/.291/.406 from 2017 to 2020, producing a wRC+ of just 84. After 24 games last year, with just a few months remaining on the contract, the Angels released him. Surprisingly, he was picked up by the Dodgers, who planned to limit the veteran slugger to a bench/platoon role, primarily facing lefties. The strategy worked out fine enough, as Pujols hit .254/.299/.460 as a Dodger, a wRC+ of 101.

As per Woo’s report, the Cardinals would be considering a reunion with Pujols to implement his skills in a similar manner to how the Dodgers did last year. She notes that the club has traditionally shied away from platoon strategies in the past, but new manager Oliver Marmol is planning on changing that. Paul Goldschmidt is firmly entrenched as the club’s regular first baseman, meaning Pujols would be in the mix for DH/pinch-hitting duties, alongside Corey Dickerson, Lars Nootbaar and Juan Yepez. For Yepez, he seemed poised to make the team after a tremendous year in the minors. Between Double-A and Triple-A last year, he hit .286/.383/.586, for a wRC+ of 154. Then there’s Nolan Gorman, who also spent last year between Double-A and Triple-A, hitting .279/.333/.481, wRC+ of 115. However, Woo reports that, given that Yepez is just 24 and Gorman doesn’t turn 22 until May, the club is considering a plan wherein they each spend a bit more time in the minors getting regular reps, waiting for an opportunity to open up as the season progresses.

Regardless of how the roster machinations play out, the move would surely have its biggest reverberations in the public relations department. It was in St. Louis that Pujols established himself as one of the greatest hitters of his generation and more or less guaranteed himself a future plaque in the Hall of Fame. A return to where it all started for the 42-year-old would surely be a tremendously popular storyline with Cardinals fans and baseball fans in general.

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