Posts Tagged ‘St. Louis Cardinals’
THE ALL-POSITION FRANCHISE LINEUP
Here are the rules:
1. Assign a team/franchise to the position where it’s placed stars (HOFers, MVPs, All-Stars & Cy Youngs) throughout its history.
2. Use each team/franchise just once.
3. Arrange the franchise positions into a batting order based on each’s composite offensive skills.
1. SS Pittsburgh Pirates (Vaughn, Wagner, Groat)
2. 2B St. Louis Cardinals (Hornsby, Schoendienst, Herr)
3. LF Boston Red Sox (Williams, Yaz, Rice, Ramirez)
4. CF New York Yankees (Combs, DiMaggio, Mantle)
5. 1B NY/San Francisco Giants (Terry, Mize, McCovey, Clark)
6. 3B Boston/Milw./Atl. Braves (Matthews, Pendleton, Jones)
7. RF Detroit Tigers (Heilmann, Kaline, Gibson)
8. C Cincinnati Reds (Lombardi, Bench)
9. SP Brooklyn/LA Dodgers (Roe, Drysdale, Koufax, Sutton, Valenzuela, Hershiser)
RP Phila./Oakland A’s (Fingers, Eckersley, Street)
Have a better lineup? Send it to me!
BEDLAM AT SHEA AS METS CLINCH DIVISION TITLE
Wednesday, September 24, 1969
With Bill Hands pitching the Cubs to a win over the Expos at Wrigley today, the Mets had to take care of business themselves if they wanted to clinch the Eastern Division of the National League.
And take care of business they did, scoring five runs out of the gate off Steve Carlton, the starting pitcher for the National League in this past summer’s All-Star game.
Don Clendenon got the scoring started in a big way with his first inning home run, after Bud Harrelson had lead off with a single and Tommie Agee reached on a walk. Two batters latter, Ed Charles went deep with a two-run shot to knock Carlton out of the box, and the Shea Stadium crowd could sense that this was the Mets’ night.
From there, rookie Gary Gentry kept the Cardinals at bay, allowing just four hits on the night. Clendenon homered again in the fifth inning, his fifteenth roundtripper of the season, to give the Mets another insurance run.
Gentry carried the shutout into the ninth. Lou Brock and Vic Davalillo both singled to open the inning. But Gentry struck out Vada Pinson for the first out, and the next batter, Joe Torre, bounced a tailor-made groundball to Harrelson. The Mets shortstop threw to Al Weis for the out at second, and Weis turned and fired to Clendenon for the final out of the game.
I recount what happened next in 1969: The Year Everything Changed:
Mets announcer Lindsey Nelson officially proclaimed: “At 9:07 on September 24th, the Mets have won the championship of the Eastern Division of the National League!”
As the Mets players ran into the dugout and began spraying champagne inside the locker room, fans stormed the field to celebrate an event that had seemed unthinkable in the team’s first seven years. In what the Associated Press called “one of the most incredible souvenir-snatching safaaris in baseball history,” the Shea crowd tore up as much as 1,500 square feet of sod. The AP quoted a police report the next day that summarized the festive damage: “They celebrated by breaking three wheels off the batting cage and stripping the netting off it. They celebrated by tearing up the all-weather matting in the coaches’ boxes behind first and third base. They celebrated by taking pieces of the scoreboard. They celebrated by stealing home plate.” Fans also sprayed graffiti across the wall in centerfield and stole the stadium’s American flag from atop its outfield post.
The Mets now await the winner of the National League West, which the Atlanta Braves currently lead by 1.5 games over the San Francisco Giants and 3 over the Cincinnati Reds.
Cubs 6, Expos 3. W: Hands (19-14) L: Renko (6-7)
Mets 6, Cardinals 0. W: Gentry (12-12) L: Carlton (17-11)
***
NL EAST W L T PCT GB RS RA New York Mets* 96 61 0 .611 - 615 531 Chicago Cubs 90 67 1 .573 6.0 706 595 Pittsburgh Pirates 82 73 0 .529 13.0 691 632 St. Louis Cardinals 82 74 0 .526 13.5 567 527 Philadelphia Phillies 62 92 0 .403 32.5 624 711 Montreal Expos 52 105 0 .331 44.0 574 762 * clinched division
NL WEST W L T PCT GB RS RA Atlanta Braves 89 68 0 .567 - 667 613 San Francisco Giants 87 69 0 .558 1.5 690 619 Cincinnati Reds 85 70 1 .548 3.0 771 750 Los Angeles Dodgers 82 74 0 .526 6.5 628 538 Houston Astros 78 76 0 .506 9.5 652 638 San Diego Padres 50 106 0 .321 38.5 447 716
METS WIN IN 11, MAGIC NUMBER DOWN TO 1
Tuesday, September 23, 1969
The Mets trailed the Cardinals 2-1 going into the bottom of the eighth, but Art Shamsky singled in Tommie Agee to tie the game. Four innings of scoreless relief from Tug McGraw carried the game into the bottom of the eleventh. Ron Swoboda singled off starter Bob Gibson with one out, Jerry Grote’s hit moved him to second, and Bud Harrelson punched a single into leftfield to score Swoboda with the winning run. New York’s Jim McAndrew started and gave up just two unearned runs in seven innings before leaving in favor of a pinch-hitter.
With the win and Chicago’s loss, the Mets’s magic number is down to 1.
Mets 3, Cardinals 2 (11 inn.). W: McGraw (9-3) L: Gibson (18-13)
Ken Holtzman’s second-half struggles continued, as he lasted just three innings and gave up five runs to visiting Montreal. Bob Bailey drove in three runs, and both Rusty Staub and Ron Fairly went deep for the Expos.
Expos 7, Cubs 3. W: Stoneman (11-18) L: Holtzman (17-12)
***
NL EAST W L T PCT GB M#
New York Mets 95 61 0 .609 - 1
Chicago Cubs 89 67 1 .571 6.0 -
SEAVER WINS 7TH STRAIGHT START, METS’ MAGIC NUMBER SHRINKS TO 3; TWINS WIN THE WEST
Monday, September 22, 1969
Is there any better pitcher on the planet right now than Tom Seaver?
Working on three days’ rest, the man they call The Franchise notched his seventh victory in seven starts - all complete games – and his ninth in his last nine decisions. Seaver allowed just one run on four hits to the visiting St. Louis Cardinals, and he also drove in a run with his seventh-inning single. Art Shamsky had an RBI single and Jerry Grote went 2 for 3 for New York.
With the Cubs idle on Monday, the Mets’ magic number for clinching the division is down to 2.
Mets 3, Cardinals 1. W: Seaver (24-7) L: Briles (15-13)
NL EAST W L T PCT GB M#
New York Mets 94 61 0 .606 - 3
Chicago Cubs 89 66 1 .574 5.0 -
BONUS GAME
The Minnesota Twins claimed the crown in the American League West with a 4-3 victory over the Royals in Kansas City. Leadoff man Cesar Tovar went 3 for 5 and drove in two runs. Veteran hurler Bob Miller carried a three-run lead into the ninth, but an Ed Kirkpatrick single and a double from Lou Piniella brought the tying run to bat with no outs. On came reliever Al Worthington, who got Joe Foy on a fly to center for out number one. Jerry Adair and Buck Martinez punched one safely into rightfield, but a quick-thinking Tony Olivia fired to second to nab pinch-runner Scott Northey. Worthington then got Paul Schaal to ground to first base for the final out.
Twins 4, Royals 3. W: Miller (5-4) L: Rooker (4-15)
Elsewhere in the majors, the Baltimore Orioles have clinched the American League East and the San Francisco Giants hold a slim half-game lead over the Atlanta Braves in the National League West.
AL WEST W L T PCT GB Minnesota Twins 92 61 0 .601 - Oakland Athletics 81 71 0 .533 10.5 California Angels 68 85 1 .444 24.0 Chicago White Sox 64 88 0 .421 27.5 Kansas City Royals 64 89 1 .418 28.0 Seattle Pilots 60 93 1 .392 32.0
MOOSE NO-HITS METS AT SHEA, CARDS TAKE 2 OF 3 AT WRIGLEY
Saturday, September 20, 1969
The Mets may be in first place, but the Pirates are looking like the top team in the East right now.
Bob Moose threw a no-hitter at Shea, giving Pirates their third win in two days against New York. Moose walked 3 and struck out 6. After walking Rod Gaspar to lead off the ninth, Moose got Tommie Agee to pop up, retired Wayne Garrett on a ground out to third, and then secured the no-hitter when Art Shamsky grounded out to second.
Pirates 4, Mets 0. W: Moose (12-3) L: Gentry (11-12)
Errors by All-Stars Ron Santo and Glenn Beckert opened the door for four Cardinals runs as St. Louis emerged with a victory in Wrigley, despite a triple and home run from Jim Hickman.
Cardinals 4, Cubs 1. W: Carlton (17-10) L: Hands (18-14) SV: Grant (7)
Friday, September 19, 1969
Looking for something to build off next year, the improving Pittsburgh Pirates jumped on the streaking New York Mets to sweep a doubleheader at Shea. Matty Alou led the charge in game one by going 4 for 4 with 3 RBI, and Willie Stargell was 3 for 5 with a home run and 2 RBI in the second game. New York’s Al Weis went a combined 4 for 7 on the day and Jerry Grote a combined 3 for 6.
Pirates 8, Mets 2 (1). W: Veale (13-12) L: Ryan (6-3)
Pirates 8, Mets 0 (2). W: Walker (3-6) L: McAndrew (6-7)
Both Ken Holtzman and Bob Gibson recorded extra-inning complete games in the front end of a doubleheader at Wrigley, and Jim Hickman touched Gibson for a double with two outs bottom of tenth to drive in Billy Williams with the winning run. The Cardinals struck back with 5 runs, 3 unearned, off the Chicago bullpen to pull away in game two.
Cubs 2, Cardinals 1 (1, 10 inn.). W: Holtzman (17-11) L: Gibson (18-12)
Cardinals 7, Cubs 2. W: Torrez (9-4) L: Selma (12-9)
***
STANDINGS AT CLOSE OF PLAY ON 9/20/69
NL EAST W L T PCT GB
New York Mets 91 61 0 .599 -
Chicago Cubs 88 66 1 .571 4.0
Pittsburgh Pirates 82 70 0 .539 9.0
St. Louis Cardinals 82 70 0 .539 9.0
Philadelphia Phillies 61 91 0 .401 30.0
Montreal Expos 50 104 0 .325 42.0
SWOBODA’S HOMERS LIFT METS IN ST. LOUIS, NEW YORK LEADS EAST BY 4 1/2 GAMES
Monday, September 15, 1969
Dick Selma lost his fourth straight decision as the host Expos, who sit in the NL East cellar with 100 losses, pummeled the second-place Cubs. First baseman Ron Fairly went 3 for 3 with a home run and 4 RBI, and second baseman Gary Sutherland was 4 for 5.
Expos 8, Cubs 2. W: Wegener (5-12) L: Selma (12-8)
Two days after hitting a game-winning grand slam, Ron Swoboda clubbed a pair of two-run homers to lead the Mets over the Cardinals in St. Louis. His second blast came in the eighth inning off starter Steve Carlton to give New York the lead for good. Tug McGraw took over for Gary Gentry in the seventh and pitched three shutout innings for the win.
Mets 4, Cards 3. W: McGraw (8-3) L: Carlton (16-10)
***
NL EAST W L T PCT GB RS RA New York Mets 89 58 0 .605 - 583 504 Chicago Cubs 85 63 1 .574 4.5 671 554 St. Louis Cardinals 79 68 0 .537 10.0 539 495 Pittsburgh Pirates 77 69 0 .527 11.5 644 600 Philadelphia Phillies 59 87 0 .404 29.5 584 663 Montreal Expos 48 100 0 .324 41.5 536 722
BUCS’ BLASS COOLS OFF METS, GIBSON’S 10 IP AND BROCK HR BEAT CUBS
Sunday, September 14, 1969
Steve Blass pitched his way around 11 hits and broke the Mets’ 10-game winning streak.
New York battled back to tie the game after trailing 3-0, but Blass himself singled in the go-ahead run for Pittsburgh and then made the lead hold up. Starter Nolan Ryan took just his second loss of the season.
Bud Harrelson tallied three hits in the leadoff spot for the Mets, while Ed Charles and Jerry Grote had two hits apiece and all three men scored once.
Pirates 5, Mets 3. W: Blass (15-9) L: Ryan (6-2)
Chicago’s Ken Holtzman and St. Louis’s Bob Gibson both carried a pitcher’s duel into the 10th inning, when Lou Brock won it for the home team with a walk-off home run. Gibson held the Cubs to just seven hits, two by Holtzman and two by recently acquired centerfielder Jimmie Hall.
Despite pitching well, Holtzman fell to 0-3 in the month of September.
Cardinals 2, Cubs 1 (10 inn.). W: Gibson (18-11) L: Holtzman (16-11)
***
NL EAST W L T PCT GB
New York Mets 88 58 0 .603 -
Chicago Cubs 85 62 1 .578 3.5
SWOBODA SLAM GIVES SEAVER 22ND WIN, JENKINS FALTERS LATE, DIERKER AND NIEKRO COMBINE FOR 23 SCORELESS INNINGS IN ATLANTA
Saturday, September 13, 1969
Ron Swoboda struck a grand slam in the eighth inning off reliever Chuck Hartenstein to power the Mets to a comeback win, their tenth straight victory. Tom Seaver went the distance to win his seventh consecutive decision.
Mets 5, Pirates 2. W: Seaver (22-7) L: Walker (2-6)
Meanwhile, Fergie Jenkins fell apart in the eighth in St. Louis as the Cardinals mounted their own four-run rally, with Joe Torre and Tim McCarver knocking in two runs apiece on singles.
Jim Hickman and Randy Hundley had each homered for Chicago, while Billy Williams went 2 for 5 with an RBI.
Cardinals 7, Cubs 4. W: Grant (8-11) L: Jenkins (19-11) SV: Hoerner (15)
BONUS GAME
With four teams all within 3.5 games of each other atop the National League West coming into Saturday, the Astros and Braves locked in an epic matchup. Houston’s Larry Dierker hurled an amazing 12 scoreless innings, nearly matched by Phil Niekro’s11 shutout frames. The Astros looked to have won it when Jimmy Wynn singled in two runs off Cecil Upshaw in the top of the 13th, but then closer Fred Gladding was touched for a single, double, walk, and single and was eventually charged with the loss when Wade Blassingame walked Bob Aspromonte to force in the winning run. The extra-innings win kept Atlanta in first place by one game over Cincinnati in the West.
Braves 3, Astros 2 (13 inn.). W: Doyle (2-0) L: Gladding (3-7)
***
NL STANDINGS
EAST G W L T PCT GB RS RA New York Mets 145 88 57 0 .607 - 576 496 Chicago Cubs 147 85 61 1 .582 3.5 668 544 St. Louis Cardinals 145 78 67 0 .538 10.0 534 490 Pittsburgh Pirates 143 76 67 0 .531 11.0 635 591 Philadelphia Phillies 143 57 86 0 .399 30.0 576 652 Montreal Expos 146 46 100 0 .315 42.5 521 718
WEST G W L T PCT GB RS RA Atlanta Braves 146 81 65 0 .555 - 615 582 Cincinnati Reds 143 78 64 1 .549 1.0 724 709 Los Angeles Dodgers 143 78 65 0 .545 1.5 593 488 San Francisco Giants 145 79 66 0 .545 1.5 645 592 Houston Astros 143 75 68 0 .524 4.5 625 589 San Diego Padres 145 45 100 0 .310 35.5 404 665
METS SLUGGER LEADS CHARGE AGAINST PIRATES, CUBS STARTERS DROP THE BALL AS TEAM DROPS TWO IN ST. LOUIS
Sunday, July 5, 1969
Trailing 6-1 after just 2 innings, the New York Mets rallied back in Pittsburgh to win 8-7. Don Clendenon’s 3-run homer capped a 4-run rally in the 6th inning.
After starter Jim McAndrew had lasted just 2/3 of an inning and Nolan Ryan went just as long, the combination of Danny Frisella, Ron Taylor, and Cal Koonce kept the Mets in the game. Jerry Grote had 2 hits and an RBI, as did Ron Swoboda off the bench.
With Chicago’s doubleheader loss, the Mets pulled back to within 5 games of the Cubs.
Mets 8, Pirates 7. W: Taylor (4-2) L: Hartenstein (2-4) SV: Koonce (6)
***
The Cubs were scoreless in 16 of 18 innings of a doubleheader in St. Louis as they were swept by the Cardinals.
In the first game, Steve Carlton scattered 8 hits over 8-plus innings as the Cards carried a 4-0 lead into the 9th. Ernie Banks went 3-for-3, and Ron Santo and Randy Hundley had 2 hits apiece for the Cubs. Steve Huntz’s 2-run single in the 4th proved to be the difference.
In the second game, Rich Nye gave up 5 runs in just 3 innings. St. Louis starter Mike Torrez yielded 3 unearned runs in 2 2/3, but Chuck Taylor came out of the pen to throw 6 1/3 shutout innings. Mike Shannon’s 3-run homer and Joe Torre’s 2-run roundtripper powered the Cardinals’ attack in game 2. Jim Qualls was 2 for 4 with 2 ribbies for Chicago.
Cardinals 4, Cubs 2 (1). W: Carlton (10-5) L: Hands (9-7) SV: Hoerner (9)
Cardinals 6, Cubs 5 (2). W: C. Taylor (1-0) L: Nye (1-4)
Team Name W L T PCT GB Chicago Cubs 52 31 1 .627 - New York Mets 45 34 0 .570 5.0
HOLTZMAN EXITS EARLY IN CUBS’ LOSS TO CARDS
Saturday, July 5, 1969
Nelson Briles outpitched Ken Holtzman this afternoon in Busch Stadium.
The sixth-, seventh-, and eighth-place hitters for St. Louis each knocked in a run off Holtzman, who hurt his own cause by committing 2 errors while allowing 4 runs in just 3 1/3. Meanwhile, Briles tossed a complete-game 5-hitter. Glenn Beckert went 2 for4 and score Chicago’s only run.
Cardinals 5, Cubs 1. W: Briles (7-7) L: Holtzman (10-4)
***
The Mets did not play on Saturday.