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Why Lambert Airport scored poorly on a national survey

To be honest, the news was not much of a surprise.

On Wednesday, J.D. Power released its annual survey of travelers’ attitudes toward U.S. and Canadian airports. Most airports fared worse this year than last, but St. Louis Lambert International Airport did even worse than most.

Lambert landed 23rd on the list of 27 airports of its size — between 10 million and 32.9 million passengers a year.

The difference, according to Michael Taylor, an analyst at J.D. Power specializing in travel, hospitality and retail, is investment. Airports that have spent up to multiple billions of dollars on improvements tended to score well.

Lambert has not done so yet, but it does have a plan to make changes in the future.

Before the coronavirus pandemic, Lambert saw about 16 million passengers, according to an open house presentation held in May. By 2040, it expects to see 21 million passengers, give or take a million.

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So the problems with crowds — and waits, and lines, and parking — will only get worse unless the airport can expand.

A master plan for the airport currently proposes adding space onto what is now Terminal 1 to create a single, greatly expanded location for all flights, including at least 10 new gates. Other proposed changes include wider concourses, an improved security checkpoint, a less confusing system of roads into the airport and more.

At a presentation held in May to discuss this plan, representatives of the airport acknowledged problems with crowds — and waits, and lines, and parking. And they pointed out some unique logistical challenges in dealing with these issues.

Interstate 70 runs just in front of the airport, which makes expansion to the south impossible. And access could be improved by moving service roads, but any changes would have to be carefully planned to avoid adversely affecting nearby communities.

The airport has done enough of that in the past. Which is presumably why it is trying so hard not to do it again now.

The survey asked more than 26,000 travelers to rate the airports they had been to in the last 30 days. The six categories they were to make their ratings on, in descending order of importance, were terminal facilities, airport arrival and departure, baggage claim, security check, check-in and baggage check, and food, beverage and retail options.

Lambert scored in the bottom one-third or one-quarter in each of the categories.

Taylor said that travelers’ expectations for airports have changed. Airports used to be merely functional, places where people would go to get onto or off from an airplane.

But now, he said, they are more of a destination in themselves. With increased delays and longer waits to make connections, travelers are spending more time in airports and would like them to be more pleasant.

Airports that score well in satisfaction surveys tend to be open and airy, he said. They are more like a mall. They have a large selection of food and beverage choices, along with retail stores for varied interests.

Ideally, he said, airports should have a mix of popular national chain restaurants (Lambert has a Burger King, a California Pizza Kitchen and a Chili’s, but no McDonald’s or KFC) and local restaurants to give the airport a local identity.

That is where Lambert actually does well, I told him. Though the airport does not have as many places to eat as some others, most of the restaurants are local: The Pasta House, Mike Shannon’s Grill, Three Kings (and its Mexican offshoot, Tres Reyes), Schlafly, Urban Chestnut, several Anheuser-Busch places and more.

But to people who don’t live here, none of these speaks especially of St. Louis. You can get crab cakes in Baltimore and barbecue in Dallas. But only St. Louisans know what it means to get an order of toasted ravioli at the airport Pasta House.

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Updated: Cardinals’ Goldschmidt, Arenado won’t go to Toronto because they are unvaccinated | St. Louis Cardinals

CINCINNATI — The fact that his two best players, Paul Goldschmidt and Nolan Arenado, won’t be available to him in Toronto on Tuesday and Wednesday  doesn’t upset Cardinals manager Oliver Marmol at all. At least that’s what he was saying Sunday after the announcement was made that his two stars had chosen not to be vaccinated against COVID-19 and thus are ineligible to travel to Canada for the two-game series.

The country requires people to have been vaccinated in order to enter.

Marmol, who also won’t have backup catcher Austin Romine for the same reason — the players will not be paid while they are away and will be on the restricted list — said he “completely” respected the players’ decision not to be vaccinated. 

“I’ve talked to all of them and I respect it and agree with their decision,” Marmol said. “I’ve got zero issues with it.”

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Goldschmidt, who homered twice and knocked in all the runs for the Cardinals in their 6-3 loss Sunday to Cincinnati said, “Obviously, not an easy decision.

“Over the last year-plus, I’ve tried to talk to as many doctors and many medical professionals as I could and figured out as much as I could. I just decided the potential risks outweighed the potential benefits. It stinks that I can’t play in Toronto. I hate that part of it.

“It’s a very personal, private medical decision. Unfortunately, it becomes public with this. You’ve got to put your health above everything. For me, this was the best decision for my health and, unfortunately, I have to suffer these consequences.”

Marmol said he didn’t think the decision by Goldschmidt and Arenado, who both were chosen for the recent All-Star Game, would be taken ill in the clubhouse.

“I look at it the other way — the ability of that clubhouse to respect the decision of the two guys who have carried this team all year,” he said. “We’re talking about a personal decision to put something in your body that you don’t agree with.”

Goldschmidt said, “I know there could be reactions on both sides and that’s a consequence of the decision. I just have to do what I feel is best and live with the consequences.”

Across the clubhouse, Arenado said, “I feel healthy. I don’t feel like I needed to get it. I’m very safe. I don’t really go out around people. But those are the rules of Canada. I can’t go.

“I’m not trying to do a political stand here or be a spokesperson or this stuff. I’m choosing to do what’s best for me and my family. I mean no harm. But it’s a decision I made and I’m pretty confident about it.”

Assistant hitting coach Turner Ward also did not go to Toronto, apparently having a medical issue whereby he can’t be vaccinated. And pitcher Johan Oviedo might not be there, either, because his Cuban passport has expired. He headed to Miami on Sunday night to try to get it reinstated Monday in hopes of being able to enter Canada. 

Cardinals president of baseball operations John Mozeliak, who made the announcement about the players not going to Canada via Zoom, said, “It’s a personal decision. The one positive here is that it’s only two games. From that standpoint, life will find a way of going on.

“I don’t think it’s in anybody’s best interest to try and pass judgment (or) try to make this more than it is.”

The Cardinals, Mozeliak said, had hoped that policy in Canada would change, but it didn’t.  But Mozeliak added that he had hoped the Goldschmidt/Arenado decision wouldn’t “fracture” the clubhouse.

“We all have strong opinions on what we think the right answer should be,” Mozeliak said. “I think we also all understand it’s hard to convince people to do something they’re not comfortable doing. It’s not that we don’t try to promote the vaccination, but again it comes down to the individuals’ decision. We sort of talked about it but it wasn’t something (where) I thought anybody was going to change their minds.”

Marmol said he was sure the clubhouse wouldn’t be fractured.

“I’m 100% sure that it won’t,” he said.

And Mozeliak said that Goldschmidt and Arenado “are still going to have a lot of political capital in the clubhouse and still be respected.”

Cardinals pitcher Miles Mikolas, who hadn’t been vaccinated until after many others, said he wished he hadn’t been.

“A lot stuff coming about (the vaccine) is not great,” he said. “I’m pretty healthy. I don’t think it was 100% necessary.

“When I got it at the time, it seemed like a good idea. But looking back on it, it’s one of those things where maybe I’d rather have not gotten it.”

Mikolas, who has four children age 5 or under, said he got it for them. 

With the Cardinals embroiled in a division race, first, and then a potential quest for a wild-card playoff spot, one or two games at less than full strength could be critical.

“I know it’s only two games but it’s an important two games we’re playing,” Arenado said. “It hurts. I’m not happy about it. It just stinks. I was actually excited about going to Toronto because Toronto is a great place. I was hopeful they would get rid of that ban.” 

Arenado sat out a game at the end of the first part of the season and didn’t play in the All-Star Game because of a sore lower back, and he isn’t fond of Toronto’s turf.

“If there’s one positive to this, it’s not playing on that,” he said. “Obviously, that’s not why I’m not going.”

“You obviously want your best players every game,” said Marmol, who cited the loss of several other key players for various portions of time this season. “But I have a very strong opinion — which I’ll keep very mild here — that I do not at all see this as an issue. I respect their decision to not be in Toronto.”

Goldschmidt and Arenado flew back to St. Louis Sunday night and will work out this week at Busch Stadium. Arenado said he would not watch the games on television.

“Makes me a little nervous,” he said.

Marmol continued to support the players.

“They’re not just in the lineup,” he said. “I don’t mind it. We’ll figure out a way to win without them for those two days.

“But, obviously, it has to be the topic of conversation today. You’re talking about two guys that completely shape the culture daily in that clubhouse.”

If Goldschmidt and Arenado weren’t on this team at all, there wouldn’t have been much need for Sunday’s interrogation. The Cardinals would not be contenders anyway.

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Hudson, Arenado end frustrations in 5-2 Cardinals win over San Diego | St. Louis Cardinals

Dakota Hudson had been waiting for the day he would still be pitching in the seventh inning for the Cardinals. He hadn’t made it past the fifth in his previous four starts.

Nolan Arenado was waiting for the day he would hit something besides the occasional single. In five recent games, he hadn’t even had that, going nothing for 17.

But Hudson, bailed out in the first inning by center fielder Harrison Bader’s diving catch that saved two runs, retired 18 men in a row before the San Diego Padres had two singles in the seventh inning. Hudson finished that seventh inning, allowing just four hits for the game and, more importantly walking only one.

And he finished the seventh ahead because Arenado, the National League Player of the Month for April but certainly not for May, smacked his first homer in two weeks. Arenado’s two-run liner to left in the sixth following a single by Paul Goldschmidt, who almost certainly will be Player of the Month for May, and Arenado’s RBI single in a two-run eighth provided the difference in a 5-2 Cardinals victory Wednesday at Busch Stadium.

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“The first inning looked a little scary,” said Arenado. “But, almost in the blink of an eye, (Hudson) was going seven innings.”

The Cardinals scored their first series sweep at home and wrapped up a nine-game home stand against contenders Toronto, Milwaukee and San Diego with a 6-3 record and they reached the 50-game mark at 29-21, their best mark of the season. “That shows who we are,” said Arenado. “We feel like we’re playing good baseball. But we feel like we can play better.”

The Cardinals have won 59% of their games with the Padres in their histories.

After an eventful, 28-pitch first, Hudson righted himself, setting everybody down before Jake Cronenworth singled to right with one out in the seventh. Austin Nolan looped a single to right with two outs, bringing pitching coach Mike Maddux to the mound.

Trent Grisham was to be Hudson’s final hitter. After Grisham drilled a long foul to right, he took strike three as Hudson notched all three of his strikeouts in the seventh inning.

“He stepped it up and gave us exactly what we needed today,” manager Oliver Marmol said.

Hudson (4-2) said, “Harry (Bader) makes a great play. I go back out there and make some adjustments. I think less is more.”

The 27-year-old right-hander said he had a talk with himself after the first inning. “I said sitting there thinking to myself, ‘I can continue to throw the way I was throwing this past inning and I’ll be out after three. Or I can settle down (and) force some contact. It may not look pretty but I’m going to make it happen,’’’ he said.

When he came off the field after five — and still was in the game, he said, “Wow! It’s been a while.”

Catcher Andrew Knizner, who took foul tips to the left side of his chin — under his mask — and to his forehead, was coherent enough to dissect the Padres’ offensive strategy, which played into Hudson’s hands. “It really engages me when I get hit in the face,” said Knizner. “I’m like Rocky Balboa.”

Of the Padres’ approach, he said, “We played to our strengths — which happens to be somewhat of that team’s weakness. Their whole lineup is first-pitch swingers. (Hudson) executed pitches early. And quick outs. It’s a matter of trusting his own pitches. ‘This is nasty. This is nasty. I can throw that for strikes. Hit it. Put it in play. I dare you.’”

Hudson said, “I felt I was in the zone with everything.” He is 15-3 in his career at Busch Stadium.

Goldschmidt, who already had shoved his on-base streak to 37 games with a walk in the first, drew his second one in the fourth. Again displaying how good a base runner he is, he went from first to third on Arenado’s first of three hits, a single to left. This play set up a sacrifice fly by Juan Yepez, who had two runs batted in.

“It’s not a little play,” said Marmol. “(Goldschmidt) does it often. You watch how he does it — hitting the bag with his right foot, staying in the baseline, not a wide turn, sticks the slide at third.”

Goldschmidt credited Arizona coach Dave McKay, a longtime first-base coach for the Cardinals,  Arizona coach Eric Young Sr., and Diamondbacks coordinator minor league coordinator Joel Youngblood.

“Base running was a priority,” said Goldschmidt. “You couldn’t just hit or play defense. If you couldn’t run the bases, they were on you and made sure you did it the right way.”

Yu Darvish nearly was matching Hudson but he couldn’t get Goldschmidt out when he needed to. The Cardinals’ designated hitter reached base for the third consecutive time in the sixth when he singled to left center with one out. That pushed his hitting streak to 23 games.

Arenado then broke the tie with his 11th homer to left off a 94 mph fastball. Arenado, who has 30 homers against San Diego in his career — most among active players — hadn’t homered since May 18 in New York. He hit .196 in May after batting .375 in April.

“It’s June. It’s a new month for him,” Marmol said.

May ended all right for him on Tuesday, with Arenado blooping a hit to end the nothing-for-17. “I said, ‘Oh, man, that was not a good swing,” related Arenado. “But I got a little lucky.”

The carryover, however, was a solid single later in the game and three more hits on Wednesday.

Marmol — and nearly everyone else — awaits both Arenado and Goldschmidt prospering together. “It’s a matter of time,” said Marmol.

Arenado said, “I hope it happens. I feel the last two years, it hasn’t. Whenever I’m playing well, I feel he’s not swinging it. When he’s swinging it, I’m not. It was cool to hit back-to-back days. I feel we never do that.”

Goldschmidt also said, “I keep waiting for (it) to happen.”

In the last month, Arenado said, “I had been beating myself up a little bit. Yeah, it was a tough month. But we’ve got a lot of season left.”

Goldschmidt hit .404 for the month with 10 homers. “He’s in a zone,” said Arenado. “I don’t know if I’ve ever been in one like that before.”

For the record, in only three of the eight months the two have played together have they both hit over .267. It happened in May and July of last year and in April of this year, when Goldschmidt batted .282 — but with just one homer.

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Big league bound: Cardinals call on Gorman, Liberatore to revamp roster after late loss to Mets | St. Louis Cardinals

NEW YORK — The Cardinals wasted no time Thursday sifting through the rubble from an extra-innings loss at Citi Field before putting pieces together to give them a dramatic new look.

The New York Mets had not yet stopped celebrating their 7-6 victory in the 10th inning when the Cardinals management began revamping the roster in the middle of a road trip. The visitors’ clubhouse remained closed to anyone but team officials for 10 minutes, 15 minutes, 26 minutes after the final out — not because of what was being said to the current team after a sour series in Queens, but who was being added to it overnight.

Nolan Gorman and Matthew Liberatore, the Cardinals’ top prospects and friends since their boyhoods in Arizona, will join the club in Pittsburgh for their major-league debuts. Liberatore, a lefty and one of the top pitching prospects in the minors, will start Saturday at PNC Park. Gorman, the game’s leading power prospect with a Triple-A best 15 homers, will take over at second base Friday.

“We have a need,” manager Oliver Marmol said. “So, he’s coming to fill it.”

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And more changes could follow.

For the second consecutive game, a short start and overextended innings left the bullpen exposed and then it shattered. After allowing nine runs in a loss Wednesday, Cardinals relievers misplaced a lead in the fifth and 10th innings. Harrison Bader ran the Cardinals back into the game with a steal in the ninth and scored to tie the game, 5-5, on Paul Goldschmidt’s fourth RBI. In the final swing of his career during a regular-season game in Queens, Albert Pujols extended his major-league record for grounding into double plays, but this one scored Corey Dickerson to give the Cardinals 6-5 lead for closer Giovanny Gallegos to hold. Spoiler: He didn’t.

Mets shortstop Francisco Lindor had barely reached second base as the free runner at the start of the 10th inning when he headed home on Pete Alonso’s third career walk-off homer.

“We’ve got to get deeper in games,” Marmol said of his starters. “The pace of the game wasn’t really pleasant to be honest with you. It was slow. We’ve got to engage our defense a little more, and honestly there will be some reshuffling of that bullpen to see who can get outs.”

The Cardinals had started to prepare for Liberatore’s likely start Saturday since a rainout forced a doubleheader at Citi Field this past Tuesday. While percolating for weeks because of his power show at Class AAA Memphis, the decision to promote Gorman came fast Thursday.

Left fielder Tyler O’Neill experienced soreness in his right shoulder, had difficulty playing catch Thursday morning with coach Willie McGee, and was diagnosed with an impingement in his throwing arm. The Cardinals placed him on the 10-day injured list and sent him back to St. Louis for examination by team doctors. An additional benefit of the time off the active roster will be at-bats in the minors for O’Neill on a rehab assignment.

That left the Cardinals with an opening for a bat.

They’ve acknowledged for weeks the search for a bat.

“Just what we need,” said rookie Juan Yepez, who homered Thursday and paired with Gorman for a thunderous start to the season with the Triple-A Redbirds. “He’s such a great teammate. Great hitter, too. That power lefty. It will be good for us.”

The Cardinals’ 19th overall selection in 2018, Gorman vanquished any concerns about his sluggish spring training with 15 homers, a.308 average, a .677 slugging percentage, and his 1.044 OPS in the first 34 games of Memphis’ season. He had back-to-back three-hit games this week, and he’s been jockeying with Cardinals Class AA outfielder Moises Gomez for the minor-league lead in homers. Gomez surged ahead with 17.

The Cardinals had been hesitant to thrust Gorman, 22, into the majors too early, too swiftly because of his newness at second base and adjustment to the speed of the game for a gold-laced defense. The club has also wanted to see a reduction in his strikeout rate — 50 in his first 133 at-bats this year.

“He’ll be in the lineup. He’s here to play,” Marmol said. “He’s going to get here and he’s going to show what he’s able to do. He’s been working hard minimizing strikeouts. It’s something he’s aware of, we’re aware of. (He’s been working) at it pretty good. Still making a lot of contact and driving the ball.”

Gold Glove-winning second baseman Tommy Edman will slide over to shortstop to make room for Gorman. The Cardinals placed starter Jack Flaherty on the 60-day disabled list clear a spot on the 40-man roster for Gorman.

The roster move for Liberatore will come Saturday, and it could be telling.

The Cardinals lost three of the four games to the Mets this season, and in the final two the starter did not complete the fifth inning. That put quicksand under the bullpen — and the more the relievers kicked and delivered, the more they sank. Thrust into Wednesday’s game early because Jake Walsh did not retire a batter, Nick Wittgren allowed all three runners he inherited to score and snap a tie game. On Wednesday, Wittgren relieved Dakota Hudson in the fifth inning, inherited a run, and then allowed a three-run inning that flipped the game on the Cardinals. Hudson allowed two runs in the first inning, needed 30 pitches to get three out, and pitched with little pep. Marmol remarked that the game’s soporific pace was dull for the defense, too.

“Just got to be quicker, quicker to make adjustments,” Hudson said. “Quicker to get in rhythm.”

The pace and the partial starts rolled down hill like a snowball, gathering gunk and size, and the bullpen could not help but get bowled by it.

The Cardinals’ bullpen allowed 12 runs, five from lefty T.J. McFarland, in the final 8 1/3 innings of the series it pitched. The Mets bullpen allowed six runs total in 16 innings pitched during the series.

“We just have to get in there and McFarland and Wittgren — get your groundball,” Marmol said. “That’s what they’re here for. A little bit of a tough run at it. They need to get back to doing that.”

Liberatore could be a part of that.

The doubleheader Tuesday left the Cardinals rewriting the schedule to keep starters Steven Matz and Miles Mikolas on normal rest. That created a vacancy for Saturday — and an opportunity for the lefty. Liberatore, 22, has a 3.83 ERA in seven starts at Memphis. In three of his past four starts, Liberatore has pitched at least six innings, twice gone seven, and he had back-to-back seven shutout innings in his final two April starts.

If it’s innings the Cardinals want, Liberatore will get a look. If it’s a lefty the Cardinals need, Liberatore has struck out 15 of the 58 left-handed batters he’s faced this season.

The audition is open-ended.

Like Gorman, it will be obvious if he sticks around.

“He’s coming to throw on Saturday and we’ll get a good look at it,” Marmol said. “And just see where we want to go from there.”

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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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‘He changed the game’: Andrew Miller, who ‘revolutionized’ relief and played leading role for MLBPA, retires | Derrick Goold: Bird Land

JUPITER, Fla. — A reliever whose brilliance in October “revolutionized” how teams now finish games is leaving the mound just as his latest, lasting impact on baseball is beginning.

Andrew Miller, a postseason MVP and 6-foot-7 lefty with a wicked slider who showed how the best reliever didn’t have to wait until the ninth to save a game, is retiring after a 16-year career, he told the Post-Dispatch. The 36-year-old pitcher spent the past three seasons with the Cardinals and the past three months as a measured, influential voice at the negotiating table representing the players’ union during bargaining that won greater earning power for the young players inheriting the game.

When needed, he always did know how to close.

“He changed the game,” said Adam Wainwright, the Cardinals’ veteran starter.

“He changed the game and he kind of took that relief role back to when it first started, guys who could do two, three innings – and he was the guy who did it in the postseason,” Wainwright continued. “I have an appreciation for what he did for the entire game of baseball. As many hours as that guy put in for the union over these past few years is kind of staggering. He may retire and that means this whole offseason he still spent 16 hours on the phone a day, for us, for who’s next – that means a lot.”

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A two-time All-Star, Miller pitched for seven teams. He spent four years of his career with Boston, where faith from the front office allowed him to reinvent himself and relaunch as a reliever. He had a 36-save season for the New York Yankees in 2015, and the next fall, after a trade to Cleveland, had one of the most dominant playoff runs ever by a reliever. He set a postseason record with 30 strikeouts in the postseason, besting the previous record of 28. During the American League Championship Series he pitched 7 2/3 innings of relief in a five-game series, struck out 14 of the 25 batters he faced, and won the ALCS MVP.

Miller and Cincinnati’s Rob Dibble, in 1990, are the only relievers to win a postseason MVP award and not be their team’s primary closer.

“Playoff baseball is the greatest place to be and there is no better feeling in the world than having success on that stage,” Miller wrote in a text this week. “I feel very fortunate that my career worked out the way that it did. Of course there were tough stretches, injuries, and times of doubt. I also won’t deny that I can find myself in moments of wondering what if this or that had happened differently, could it have somehow been better? I’m usually pretty quick to be able to step back though and see how lucky I have been. The hard times were necessary for me to grow and to be able to appreciate the highs along the way. Ultimately, I was able to play for many great franchises, wear historic uniforms, and play in some amazing ballparks.

“I made some of the best friends I will ever have in life through the game,” he added. “I was able to work with the union and see the good it can do for players while learning so much about the game.”

Two years before he overwhelmed October and invited teams like the Cardinals to reimagine their bullpen use even during the regular season, Miller helped change how middle relievers were compensated.

A jackpot awaited top-shelf closers in free agency. Saves paid. But setup and targeted relievers didn’t come near the same level, even if they handled high-leverage assignments just as expertly. In December 2014, with one save on his baseball card, Miller signed a four-year, $36-million to wear pinstripes and pitch in the Bronx. It was the richest contract ever for a setup man. By the start of the 2016 season, six more of the top 10 contracts to non-closer relievers had been signed around and after Millers’.

As teams shook loose from the defining relief roles by the inning and the limits of saving closers for the ninth, metrics advanced with bullpen usage and so did salaries. Milwaukee lefty reliever Josh Hader was an All-Star receiving Cy Young award votes and before he got his 13th career save he received a $4.1-million salary in his first year of arbitration. And he lost that arbitration hearing. Hader’s teammate, Devin Williams, a Hazelwood East grad, won the Rookie of the Year award in 2020 as a reliever – who did not have a single save.

But he did have nine holds to go with that 0.33 ERA in 22 appearances.

What Miller did in Cleveland help make middle relievers rockstars.

“He certainly gave baseball teams something to dream about,” said his agent Mark Rodgers. “He was really a utility pitcher at the time – could do anything needed. … He’s a bit of a Renaissance Man. Curious. So many interests. Everyone who has been his teammate will tell you what a gentleman he is. But the person least impressed with Andrew Miller and his ability and talent has to be, without a doubt, Andrew Miller.”

Those early deals for non-closer relievers from 2014-2015 included two former Cardinals, Luke Gregerson and Pat Neshek, and inspired the Cardinals’ rush to outbid other teams for Brett Cecil. They signed the setup lefty to a four-year, $30.5-million contract and advertised how they wanted to find the next Andrew Miller. They had tried several times to acquire Miller, develop a Miller from within, or cast a free-agent reliever in that same role. Finally, before the 2019 season they just signed Miller.

“He kind of revolutionized all of it – your best pitcher doesn’t have to be your starter or your closer,” Cardinals pitching coach Mike Maddux said Thursday. “And he was the best pitcher on multiple staffs. What he did in the postseason to help his team was groundbreaking. I don’t think anybody really duplicated what he’s done – as far as throwing multiple innings in the hairy innings, whenever they are.

“He was like the secret weapon on any team he was on.”

In three seasons with the Cardinals – all of which ended in the playoffs, some of which were limited by injuries – Miller was 6-7 with a 4.34 ERA in 129 appearances and 103 2/3 innings. Miller, who purchased a retro redbirds logo tee shirt from the 1980s to wear in the clubhouse, struck out 126 batters as a Cardinal, of the 979 he had in his career.

Overall, Miller went 55-55 with 63 saves and a career 4.03 ERA.

In the postseason, Miller was 2-1 with a 0.93 ERA and 54 strikeouts in 38 2/3 innings. He was credited with one save and forever changing postseason pitching.

Initially drafted by Tampa Bay, the team nearest his boyhood home, Miller turned down a sizeable bonus to pitch at North Carolina. In June 2006, the Tigers drafted him sixth overall. In August 2006, he debuted – less than 50 days after the draft. He was with Detroit as they lost the 2006 World Series to the Cardinals. Before the 2008 season, he was a talent in the blockbuster trade that sent Miguel Cabrera and Dontrelle Willis from the Marlins to Detroit. Miller’s command and then his career started to drift as the Marlins kept him in the rotation.

Granted free agency shortly after a trade to Boston, Miller resigned with Boston and, with future general manager Ben Cherington as a champion, ignited his ability as a reliever.

“What I recall was a complete and total accountability as a young player, a high draft pick comes in and says whatever I have or haven’t done is on me,” said Cherington, now Pittsburgh’s general manager. “He had the conviction he was going to figure it out. Our hope was to somehow free him up to be the athletic Andrew Miller, the unique Andrew Miller. It wasn’t overnight. It wasn’t like he came to Boston – and boom! The career took off and really turbocharged after he left.

“His ability was part of changing the game, changing how people thought about their pitching staffs – not just bullpens,” Cherington added. “He became synonymous with the postseason, with how people saw what was possible with pitching use in the playoffs.”

He went from Boston to Baltimore to the record deal with the Yankees in part because he didn’t want to leave the Eastern Time Zone and force his family to stay up watching games.

First elected as a union rep while in Florida, that became a constant for Miller even as his role on the field changed. He was part of the Collective Bargaining Agreement negotiations in 2011, 2016, and then again this past year as the likelihood of a lockout gathered like a storm at the horizon. He became one of the leading, public voices for the union and, according to teammates, a steadying, studious presence for any of their questions. In conversations with the Post-Dispatch and other outlets he stressed the goals of the union were to improve the game on the field by eliminating the incentives teams have for tanking and reasons they have for keeping young players offer rosters. In a podcast interview with The Athletic’s Jayson Stark, Miller said, “Fans want to go out and see a competitive product, and that’s what we want to sell to them – the best version of baseball.”

On that podcast hosted by Stark and Doug Glanville, “Starkville,” Miller described his motivation as the stories he heard in the clubhouse about sacrifices made by players in the past. He said: “Gives you more than a little bit of a desire to carry that forward and pass it on to the next generation.”

As a member of the Major League Baseball Players’ Association’s executive board, Miller was present for the negotiations at Roger Dean Stadium, and along with Max Scherzer remained at the ballpark during the marathon talks that stretched toward 3 a.m. local time. Strides made during the Jupiter talks resulted in an agreement within 10 days and the swift start to a full 162-game season.

“Miller cares about his fellow players, and he got them back on the field, in a far superior position to where they were before,” wrote Hall of Fame baseball writer Peter Gammons for The Athletic.

Miller then took a vacation.

In a text message this week, Miller cautioned that he could “talk about the game forever.” He mentioned how the “big-league steakhouse dinner” should not be lost as a tradition, the joy he got from playing for several of the historic franchises, wearing Red Sox, the redbirds, and the pinstripes. Away from the field he’ll have a chance to ski, to skateboard, and to pursue all the interests Wainwright listed recently in the clubhouse, from wine to knowing the type of wood used to make Wainwright’s guitar.

“He’s a man who knows a lot about a lot of things,” Wainwright said.

Just not what his next role in baseball will be.

“The list of people who took me aside, put their arm around me, made me laugh when I needed to, or taught me something is endless,” Miller wrote in a text message. “It’s safe to say I would have been faced with the next chapter much earlier on if it weren’t for them. As someone who thought their career was practically over in 2010, to be able to experience everything I did along the way is incredible. You shouldn’t ever hear complaints from me. It was a heck of a run.”

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Cardinals throw rotation derby ‘wide open’ as Flaherty has shoulder inflammation treated, will start on IL | St. Louis Cardinals

JUPITER, Fla. — The same pitching depth that, initially left unattended, depleted last season and nearly capsized the Cardinals’ ability to contend has its first significant test of the new year.

Jack Flaherty received an injection Friday to calm irritation in his right shoulder and will start the regular season on the injured list, his return to the rotation to be determined after two weeks without throwing. Flaherty traveled to Los Angeles to meet with a physician and have a pre-existing tear near his joint reviewed for the cause of stiffness in the shoulder.

He was diagnosed with bursitis, according to a source, and received treatment to soothe the inflammation. Mozeliak said the righthander was prescribed a platelet-rich plasma injection.

“(We) still think this is something he can pitch through,” said John Mozeliak, president of baseball operations. “So our fingers are crossed that that’s true.”

Flaherty has pitched with a “small” SLAP tear – the junction where the shoulder meets the biceps – for the past five seasons, including the 2019 season, a source described. Cardinals president of baseball operations John Mozeliak noted the tear when announcing Friday’s treatment, and the team later confirmed its knowledge of the tear from past years.

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Addressing the inflammation within the shoulder joint was the focus of Friday’s procedure, which was overseen by Dr. Neal ElAttrache, the Dodgers’ team doctor. The goal is to alleviate the stiffness the righthander experienced while throwing this offseason and give Flaherty and the team a better sense of a timetable for his return.

Once he’s cleared to resume a throwing program after at least two weeks, he will need to go through a spring training-like schedule, leaving the Cardinals with an opening in the rotation for much of April.

They signed righthander Drew VerHagen within hours of the lockout ending, and Mozeliak identified righthander Jake Woodford and prospect Matthew Liberatore as leading candidates to leave camp in the rotation.

Aaron Brooks struck out the final five batters he faced Friday during his two scoreless innings in the Cardinals’ 4-2 win against Houston. He has been a starter in South Korea and agreed to a minor-league deal with the Cardinals to make his bid for a big-league return.

“For me, it’s wide open,” manager Oliver Marmol said of the competition for the fifth spot in the rotation as the season opens. “It’s completely wide open. Everyone has a shot at it.”

The cascade of pitching problems that swamped the Cardinals in the first half of 2021 began in spring training as Miles Mikolas (forearm) and Kwang Hyun Kim (back) had setbacks. Then Flaherty, 8-1 at the time, tore his oblique at Dodger Stadium. When the team sided with its in-house alternatives instead of shopping for outside help, an innings crisis developed. The Cardinals sank from the division lead and did not reanimate their postseason chances until they acquired three veteran lefties — Wade LeBlanc, Jon Lester, and J. A. Happ — to shoulder innings and bring stability to the rotation.

Insisting they had learned that lesson, the Cardinals collected some reinforcements this winter, signing free agent Steven Matz for the rotation and later VerHagen and Brooks. The idea was to free up younger pitchers such as  Woodford, Johan Oviedo, Liberatore and others to supplement the rotation, not save it. Alex Reyes also was identified as a potential starter, but a frayed labrum will delay his readiness by at least two months, Mozeliak confirmed Friday.

“Obviously, ‘Woody’ is going to get an opportunity, VerHagen is going to get an opportunity,” Mozeliak listed. “You saw a young lefty (Liberatore) today. Everybody is going to get chances. The more pressure it just puts on the other four to make sure we can count on them. Then the pressure starts to become, ‘How much can you take?’”

Options remain outside the Cardinals’ walls.

Happ, whom the Cardinals have acknowledged interest in, remains a free agent. There are several free agents such as Drew Smyly, a lefty, who have been starters and relievers in recent years. The Oakland Athletics are  fielding offers for two of their starters, lefty Sean Manaea and righthander Frankie Montas. Manaea is a free agent at season’s end. In trade talks coming out of the lockout, the Cardinals have found teams asking for their leading prospects, such as Liberatore, and preferred the straight-cash cost of free agents.

“The reality is that group is thinking out quite a bit,” Mozeliak said.

Flaherty missed two months of last season because of the oblique strain, and when he returned he had shoulder discomfort that returned him to the injured list. The shoulder issue possibly was caused by his body reacting and adjusting to the oblique strain thus altering his mechanics and causing stress on the shoulder. Flaherty was able to return to the active roster for the playoff game and was ready to pitch in relief. After his exit examination, the righthander rested and then began his offseason training.

As he increased the intensity of his workouts, his shoulder became stiff and felt less free as he delivered a pitch.

Unable to communicate to the Cardinals because of to the lockout — which forbid team officials, including physicians, from communicating with players on the 40-man roster — Flaherty eased back from his throwing program. He adopted a conservative preparation for spring training. He agreed that the inability to talk with the Cardinals or the trainers limited what he could do, and that last weekend was the team’s first chance to discuss, explore, and examine the discomfort he experienced.

He went through a series of scans, re-scans, and reviews, and he sought a second opinion – which players often do because they can, by rule – that ultimately took him to LA on Friday. He met with ElAttrache, who works with LA-area teams such as the Dodgers and has done surgeries on athletes from Kobe Bryant (rotator cuff) to Chris Sale (elbow reconstruction).

This coming week, the Cardinals and Flaherty’s representative must reach an agreement on his contract for 2022 or exchange salary requests by Tuesday. The lockout pushed back the usual arbitration hearings, and they’ll now take place during the season. Flaherty won his arbitration hearing with the Cardinals a year ago.

Reyes is in the same spot.

Last week, Reyes sought a second opinion and treatment options for the shoulder pain that kept him from throwing off the mound during the offseason. He was unable to notify the Cardinals of that until the lockout lifted. Reyes received a stem cell injection this past week after meeting with Dr. James Andrews. The righthander will not throw for at least two weeks, and he will open the season on the injured list. The Cardinals do not expect him to be ready to return for more than two months, in late May or early June.

“We want to put him in position to be successful,” Mozeliak said. “We’re not going to rush something for a week or two just to have him take a step back. Safety first.”

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Seeing red? MLB postpones pageantry of Cardinals’ home opener, stalls labor spat after ‘last-ditch effort’ | St. Louis Cardinals

JUPITER, Fla. — Somewhere the redcoats will hang and somewhere the trucks will wait, and sometime the pageantry, like bunting and NL pennants, will unfurl for a home opener at Busch Stadium. But there was no deal in Manhattan, so it won’t be April 7, says Major League Baseball.

Keep the Clydesdales comfortable.

Despite two lengthy days of negotiations in New York and a three-pronged poke by the owners at the last minute, MLB and the players’ union could not strike an agreement before the commissioner’s moving deadline to assure a 162-game schedule. With a counterproposal from the MLB Players’ Association still on the table Wednesday night, commissioner Rob Manfred officially extended baseball’s lockout and redacted the third and fourth series from the 2022 schedule in another episode of cancelation theater.

That pushes the Cardinals’ home opener back from its original date and, on the MLB schedule, cancels the first homestand.

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The Cardinals’ next scheduled home game is April 25.

“In a last-ditch effort to preserve a 162-game season, this week we have made good-faith proposals that address the specific concerns voiced by the MLBPA and would have allowed the players to return to the field immediately,” Manfred said in a statement. “The clubs went to extraordinary lengths to meet the substantial demands of the MLBPA. … Regrettably, after our second late-night bargaining session in a week, we remain without a deal.”

The union, in a statement, said “the owners’ decision to cancel additional games is completely unnecessary. After making a set of comprehensive proposals to the league (Wednesday) afternoon and being told substantive responses were forthcoming, players have yet to hear back.”

As the lockout reaches its 99th day, the owners have maintained the need for a 28-day spring training and have reverse-engineered the cancellations from there, and MLB referred to a full season has difficult “because of the logistical realities of the calendar.” The commissioner postponed opening day until April 14th.

An “at least” was not included in the statement.

Those pesky realities of the calendar now put all the Grapefruit League schedule in jeopardy as teams were expected to leave Florida the final week of March. Major League Baseball is also on the brink of not being on the field for April 15th, the 75th anniversary of the day Jackie Robinson made his major-league debut and broke the color barrier.

The commissioner and owners cannot unilaterally impose a shorter regular season on the players or prorated salaries — the real economic threat of reducing games. The players will now negotiate to restore the full season, to defend their salaries for all 162 games, and to insist on securing service time for a full season.

As if the two sides need one more jagged mountain to move.

For the second time in week, Major League Baseball established a deadline for an agreement and then extended it. Less than seven days after saying there was no way to have a complete season, Manfred told the MLBPA there actually was: a deal by Tuesday, no later. When negotiations that day carried past midnight, neared 3 a.m. New York time, and spanned 17 ½ hours over several meetings, MLB agreed to extend the deadline so that the union could caucus with its members early Wednesday morning and reply to the owners’ offer.

At issue was the international draft the owners had linked to removing draft-pick compensation from free agency — a goal the union has had for decades.

Earlier this year, Manfred said that the owners had agreed to drop the draft pick teams lose for signing some free agents while keeping the draft pick the player’s former team gets. For the union, that represents unlocking a governor on salaries for players who receive qualifying offers. That deterrent would vanish. The catch is the owners would get what they’ve sought for many years — an international draft — and something the union has steadfastly rejected. It has appeared in multiple proposals from the owners since July, and each time the union has rejected it. While the union would like to see an improvement to the international system, sources have said, its members do not see an international draft as possible, reducing the dollars and opportunities for international players and not the best immediate mechanism.

Especially not one built in a New York Minute to fit the CBA.

“The Dominican (Republic) is not the U.S.,” Hall of Famer David Ortiz told ESPN. “You can’t snap a finger and everything lines up to operate the right way. We need to do this slowly.”

The owners and union both responded to a more deliberate timeline with their final exchanges Wednesday, right before Manfred canceled another week of games. The owners presented the union three options to complete a deal, as detailed by reporters in New York who talked with a league spokesman. First, the union could accept the international draft and lose the draft pick penalty for signing some free agents. Second, the union could delay the implementation of the international draft until 2024, give time to work on its structure, and also immediately lose the draft pick attached to free agents. But, if a draft was not in place by November 2022, according to reports, the owners could reopen the CBA for negotiations and, given this offseason, impose another lockout till they got their way.

Third, status quo: draft-pick penalty stays, no international draft.

The union countered Wednesday with a fourth option, according to reports from New York and a spokesperson. The MLBPA agreed to delaying an international draft with a November deadline, and if a plan wasn’t in place, then the draft-pick penalty would return.

The two sides continued discussing that option Wednesday night, The Washington Post and other outlets reported.

Max Scherzer, the St. Louis-area native and leading member of the union’s executive committee, wrote on Twitter that MLB making the international draft the sudden hinge to a deal was “muddying the waters and deflecting blame.”

Within the exchanges this week there was a narrowing of the gaps, like two lines curving toward each other but not yet ready to touch. On the issue of minimum wage, the sides were $10,000 apart in the first year, with the owners upping their offer to $700,000 for the first year and rising to $770,000 in the CBA’s fifth year. The union has sought $710,000 to $780,000. A bonus pool for pre-arbitration players that did not exist until the union proposed it and the owners have since adopted it in their proposals has dropped from a $115 million ask from the union to a proposed $65 million, closest yet to the owners’ offered $40 million.

And luxury tax thresholds — a glaring issue in the Florida sun — has seen progress as the owners and union are now proposing $230 million and $232 million, respectively, for the first year. The union wants to see that climb to $250 million, the owners $242 million, per The Athletic.

All that movement was conditional, and the condition strategically affixed by the owners was the draft, something the union had resisted to get something the union had chased.

Over the past two weeks as the negotiations give hints of getting closer together, the only certainty has been opening day getting further away.

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Deadline delayed (again): In latest attempt to save full season, MLB and players’ union prompt overnight negotiations | St. Louis Cardinals

JUPITER, Fla. — If only Major League Baseball and the players’ union could cover the distances between them at the negotiating table as briskly as they’ve walked between meeting rooms.

Negotiators for both sides traded in last week’s sun in Florida for the stage of New York City, last week’s walk within Roger Dean Stadium to an 8-minute stride around Rockefeller Center in Manhattan. But they tread a familiar path. A deadline created by the owners spurred negotiations — and reports of progress — late night and on into the early morning Wednesday.

The sides agreed to resume talks Wednesday morning, announcing as such around 3 a.m. New York time, 17 hours after their first talks of the day.

Major League Baseball advertised that it would come to an agreement with the players’ union by Tuesday or the lockout would continue and more regular-season games would be canceled. In that group set to be canceled was the Cardinals’ April 7 home opener at Busch Stadium against Pittsburgh. If the two sides were able to reach an agreement by an unspecified deadline Tuesday, the commissioner’s office said a full season, all 162 games, would be possible. Tuesday came and went, some more midnight oil burned, another deadline with added elasticity, and MLB delayed any decision on games until Wednesday.

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An agreement would kick the industry into warp speed with spring training camps opening as early as this weekend and more than a hundred appealing free-agents hitting the open market for teams to bid on in a mad dash to fill rosters.

The lockout reached 98 days Wednesday with the two sides still talking over their latest proposals and the union mulling a counteroffer to bring them closer. It is already the second-longest work stoppage in baseball history. The sides are trying to avoid it becoming the first lockout in history that leads to a loss of regular-season games.

Throughout the process, the union has preached caution, and sources have detailed how some of the overtures the owners have made in the union’s direction have come with fine print that wasn’t as palatable. A recurring one has been how the owners were to expedite rules changes, increasing the commissioner’s power to do so sooner than one year and, perhaps, with less involvement of the union. Some of the rules changes explored included a pitch clock, larger bases to invite more steals, and outlawing extreme defensive shifts. A universal designated hitter has been adopted as a given by both sides.

In their exchanges Tuesday there was movement — and there were apparent tagalongs. The owners again made a stride toward the union when it comes to upping the minimum salary. The owners revisited an offer to raise it to $700,000 for the coming season, up from $570,500 in 2021. That minimal salary would grow to $770,000 through the course of the five-year Collective Bargaining Agreement. The owners also reportedly laced their proposal Monday night with other benefits for younger players, and the MLB Players’ Association had sought for more than a year to secure ways for young players to get paid a higher salary earlier in their careers.

The owners adopted the union’s proposal for a bonus pool to be used to reward pre-arbitration players for top performances. The union sought a $115-million pool, then came down to $80 million in a recent proposal, while the owners covered the ground from a $10 million pool at one point to discussing one around $30 million, per several reports. The owners also offered players who finish first or second in Rookie of the Year voting a full year of service time and draft-pick incentives as a way to address service-time manipulation.

All of those mechanisms serve to give younger players a higher price point when entering the arbitration system, and thus prime the system with future salary gains.

The tradeoffs for the union continue to be the rub. The owners have sought an international draft and tied incentives the union desires to accepting that. There is a large group of the union’s membership that has been resistant to accepting an international draft, and some agents have expressed concern especially if it suppresses bonuses to lower than the domestic draft.

An MLB spokesman told reporters in New York that the union requested more time to speak with its constituents early Wednesday morning.

Any international draft proposal would be central to that conversation.

The owners want a 14-team playoffs, but much of the discussion over the past week has centered on a 12-team format because the union wants to protect the spoils of winning a division. To reduce the benefit of tanking — something both sides wanted to see — there has been growing agreement on a draft lottery for at least the first five picks in the draft.

Early in the negotiations, the owners sought to create harsher penalties for spending over the luxury tax, and on Tuesday The Athletic reported that the owners expanded those to create a steep price for a “runaway spender.” The owners want protection against the rogue with a thick wallet that warps the open market — in other words they want some limits in place on New York Mets owner Steve Cohen. The CBT, or Competitive Balance Threshold, continued to be a major gulch the two sides had to bridge to reach any agreement, and what either side tried to attach to its movement was critical to talks.

The talks Tuesday came at the same time Apple announced a new exclusive partnership — and lucrative deal for owners — with Major League Baseball to broadcast a doubleheader on Fridays through its Apple TV+ streaming service.

For the second time in as many weeks, Major League Baseball set a deadline for an agreement before it would cancel additional games in the regular season.

This week’s deadline came with a twist.

After meetings concluded in Jupiter without a deal, the commissioner canceled the first two series of the regular season and insisted that the year would be shortened by a labor dispute. The owners cannot unilaterally impose a shortened season on the players for 2022, and sure enough — a full season of a 162 games, full pay, and full service time was reanimated as a possibility this week, one week after they weren’t. Major League Baseball alerted the players’ union Monday that an agreement made by Tuesday could restore the full season, even if it required a delayed start to allow for a 28-day spring training.

That brought some added urgency to the talks and some familiarity as for the second consecutive week the discussions went late into the night.

When facing a deadline to start the season on time on Feb. 28, the two sides spent nearly 17 hours at Roger Dean Stadium shuttling between meetings and swapping proposals that began with hypotheticals. The two sides left as 3 a.m. local time approached and Major League Baseball announced that enough progress was made to delay that deadline. Talks slowed and then went sideways the next day when MLB offered its “best and final offer.” That offer rejected, the commissioner extended the lockout and postponed opening day past the scheduled March 31. Many of the negotiators left Florida for New York believing the owners’ deadline for a full season had passed.

Not so fast: seven days later, the sequel.

Representatives from the union and owners met in person at least twice Tuesday, one side trekking from the MLB offices on 51st Street and Sixth Avenue to the MLBPA offices on 49th Street. The negotiators had many other conversations by phone, and as 10 p.m. New York time approached, details of MLB’s proposal to the union began surfacing.

Over the past week, as they created deadlines, the owners inched up the luxury tax threshold in their offers. This past season, the Competitive Balance Tax landed on teams that spent more than $210 million. Two did. But several teams stopped on their spending on a dime to avoid the tax — illustrating the union’s concern that the CBT had become a soft salary cap. The union wanted the cap to expand, to mirror the increase in revenues or inflation, and the owners were resistant. Their initial offer was $214 million for the first year, and at one point, according to sources, they offered a $220-million threshold but it was static for three years. The union had wanted to see the tax trigger to start at $238 million in the first year and rise to $263 million by the end of the five-year agreement.

In their offer late Tuesday, the owners proposed starting at $230 million, according to The Athletic, and raising the CBT to $242 million over the five-year span of the agreement.

The Cardinals hosted Day 2 of their minor-league camp Tuesday. With more than a dozen major-league players in the area and some of them working out together in Palm Beach County, the club planned and positioned itself to open camp as soon as MLB gives the green light that a deal has been struck.

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Omicron has arrived: St. Louis County reports ‘blindingly fast’ surge in cases | Coronavirus

NOTE: On Thursday, Nov. 18, 2021, the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services (DHSS) changed how it reports COVID-19 cases and deaths. The department began counting reinfections as new cases, and added epidemiologically linked cases to its counts.

On April 17, 2021, DHSS adjusted a database error that was causing individuals with both a positive PCR and antigen result to be counted as both a probable and confirmed case. This correction removed 11,454 cases that were counted twice in previous probable antigen cases, according the notation. That date’s data has been removed from this display.

Beginning March 8, 2021, DHSS began posting county-level data showing “probable” COVID-19 cases detected by antigen testing. Using the historical data from the DHSS dashboard, we reconfigured this graph to include that number in the total.

Missouri updated its data dashboard on Sept. 28. 2020, to delete duplicate cases. This resulted in a decrease of total cases which caused the daily count to reflect a negative number. That date’s data has been removed from this display.

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