2009 St. Louis Cardinals season

2009 St. Louis Cardinals
National League Central Champions
LeagueNational League
DivisionCentral
BallparkBusch Stadium
CitySt. Louis, Missouri
Record91–71 (.562)
Divisional place1st
OwnersWilliam DeWitt, Jr., Fred Hanser
General managersJohn Mozeliak
ManagersTony La Russa
TelevisionFS Midwest
(Dan McLaughlin, Al Hrabosky)
KSDK (NBC 5)
(Jay Randolph, Rick Horton)
RadioKTRS
(Mike Shannon, John Rooney)
← 2008 Seasons 2010 →

The 2009 St. Louis Cardinals season was the 128th season for the St. Louis Cardinals, a Major League Baseball franchise in St. Louis, Missouri. It was the 118th season for the Cardinals in the National League and their 4th at Busch Stadium III.

The Cardinals, coming off an 86–76 season and fourth place in the NL Central, got off to a strong start in April before a team-wide offensive breakdown caused them to fall behind the Cubs in the NL Central standings. Brilliant seasons from starting pitchers Chris Carpenter, Adam Wainwright, and Joel Piñeiro helped St. Louis to stay in contention until the key midseason acquisitions of Matt Holliday, Mark DeRosa, and Julio Lugo revived the Cardinal offense. An August 20–6 effectively ended the National League Central race, and the Cardinals won the division with a 91–71 record, seven-and-a-half games better than the second-place Cubs. However, their playoff run ended quickly when they were swept in three games by the Los Angeles Dodgers in the NLDS.

Offseason departures and acquisitions

Hitters

The Cardinals retained the services of backup catcher Jason LaRue, signing him to another one-year contract.[1]

On December 4, 2008, the Cardinals agreed to a trade with the San Diego Padres sending reliever Mark Worrell and a player-to-be-named-later (the Padres eventually chose minor-league pitcher Luke Gregerson[2]) in exchange for shortstop Khalil Greene, who will make $6.5 mil, and will be eligible for free agency after 2009.[3] Greene replaced César Izturis, who departed via free agency.

Utility infielder Aaron Miles, a member of the 2006 World Series champion Cardinals, signed a two-year deal on December 31 to play with the Cubs.[4] Felipe López, who became the starting second baseman after a 2008 deadline trade and hit .385 for the Cardinals in two months, became a free agent and signed with the Diamondbacks.[5] The third and last second baseman on the 2008 Cardinals, Adam Kennedy, was given his unconditional release on February 9.[6] With no second baseman with significant big-league experience on the roster, outfielder Skip Schumaker was tabbed to make the unusual transition.[7] Late in training camp Schumaker was designated the official starting second baseman.[8]

Third baseman Troy Glaus underwent right shoulder surgery on January 21, 2009, and was originally expected to miss Opening Day (April 6) and probably most of April.[9] Glaus' progress in rehabbing his repaired right shoulder stalled, and he did not return until September (see below).

Pitchers

Kyle Lohse, who went 15–6 with a 3.78 ERA after signing a one-year contract with the 2008 Cardinals, was re-signed to a hefty four-year, $41 mil. contract on September 29, 2008, the day after the season ended.[10] Mark Mulder's injury-plagued time in St. Louis ended when the Cardinals declined to pick up his $11 mil. option, but instead bought out the remaining year of his contract in 2009 for $1.5 mil.[11]

In December, the Cardinals declined to offer arbitration to relief pitchers Russ Springer and Jason Isringhausen, starter Braden Looper,[12] and relievers Tyler Johnson and Randy Flores.[13] St. Louis made no attempt to retain lefty reliever Ron Villone, who eventually signed with the Mets.[14] On Dec 3, to fill the lack of left-handed relievers caused by the departure of Flores, Johnson, and Villone, they signed lefty relief specialist Trever Miller to a one-year deal potentially worth $2 million if he reaches all the incentives in the contract.[15]

On January 5, the Cardinals signed lefty reliever Royce Ring who was with the 2008 Atlanta Braves, to a one-year contract.[16] However, two months later the Cardinals signed Dennys Reyes, a 31-yr.-old left-handed relief specialist, to a two-year deal worth approximately $3 mil.[17] A few weeks after the acquisition of Reyes, Ring was placed on waivers,[18] eventually accepting an assignment to the minor leagues.[19]

Spring training

St. Louis went 19-12-2 in Grapefruit League play,[20] their most victories since they had 21 wins in 1997. Attendance at RDS was 106,266 in 18 home games (9-7-2) for an average home attendance of 5,901. In 15 road games (10-5-0), attendance 84,499; road average 5,633.[21]

On March 30, relief pitcher Chris Perez was optioned to AAA, finalizing the pitching situation for Opening Day. Cardinals will carry 12 pitchers, including seven relievers which include long-reliever Brad Thompson.[22] Rookie Jason Motte appeared to win the closer job, although the Cardinals made no official announcement.[23]

Joe Mather was the final cut in spring training. Among the players making the Cardinals out of camp were utility infielders Joe Thurston and Brian Barden and two players making their big-league debuts: David Freese, who took the injured Troy Glaus' spot at third base, and former first-round draft pick (and highly anticipated prospect)[24][25] Colby Rasmus.[26] Mather's demotion left Ryan Ludwick as the only outfielder on the roster who hits right-handed.

Regular season

April

Opening Day 2009 looked a lot like 2008: a blown save and a bullpen loss. Rookie closer Jason Motte gave up four runs with two outs in the ninth inning, and the Pirates beat the Cardinals 6–4.[27]

On April 7, the Cardinals beat the Pirates 9-3 as Albert Pujols hit his first home run of the season and reached base five times. As such, Pujols became only the third Cardinals player in the last 55 years to reach base four or more times in each of the first two games of the season.[28] On April 8, the Cardinals lost to the Pirates by a score of 7–4, but Albert Pujols set the franchise record for most assists by a first baseman in a 9-inning game with seven. It was the most assists by a Major League first baseman since the National League record of eight was set in 1971. Pujols also collected his 700th career walk in the game.[29]

On April 9, Chris Carpenter and relievers Franklin and Reyes combined on a one-hitter as the Cardinals beat Pittsburgh 2–1. It was Carpenter's first victory since Game 3 of the 2006 World Series, October 24.[30] St. Louis followed up the Pittsburgh series with a three-game sweep over Houston. In the second game of the Astro series (Apr. 11), Pujols tied a career best with seven RBI as the Cardinals won 11–2;[31] while in the final game Kyle Lohse retired 24 consecutive batters en route to a 3-0 complete game victory.[32]

On April 14, staff ace Chris Carpenter injured his left rib cage while batting. Early estimates were that he would miss at least a month, and it might be as long as two months.[33] An MRI exam on April 16 revealed an oblique tear on his left side.[34] On April 17, rookie pitcher P. J. Walters was called up from AAA-Memphis to take Carpenter's spot in the rotation.[35]

On April 20 the Cardinals attempted to buttress a sagging bullpen by trading former Rule 5 draft pick Brian Barton for Atlanta Braves' relief pitcher Blaine Boyer. Boyer was tabbed to join the big-league club, leaving St. Louis with 13 pitchers on the 25-man roster, with David Freese optioned to Memphis.[36][37]

On Saturday, April 25, in a nationally televised game on Fox, with the Cardinals leading 3–1 in the seventh inning against the Chicago Cubs, Albert Pujols hit his 8th career grand slam, helping the team win its 5th consecutive game (8-2) and solidifying their lead in the NL Central division. The slam also gave him 1,002 RBIs, making him the 260th player to reach the 1,000-level.[38][39]

Brendan Ryan went to the 15-day DL with a hamstring strain on April 30, and former first-round draft pick Tyler Greene was called up to be Ryan's replacement.[40] The Cardinals finished the month of April with a 16–7 record, best in baseball.[41] Albert Pujols was named Player of the Month for April and Brian Barden Rookie of the Month.[42]

May

Center fielder Rick Ankiel ran face-first into the outfield wall while making a catch on May 4. Three days later, he was placed on the DL (retroactive to May 5), and minor-league outfielder Shane Robinson was called up to take his place on the roster.[43] On May 12, right fielder Ryan Ludwick joined Ankiel on the DL after straining his right hamstring against the Pirates. The team recalled Nick Stavinoha from its AAA-Memphis team to take Ludwick's spot on the roster.[44]

The injuries to Ankiel and Ludwick, combined with the continuing absence of Carpenter, contributed to a 4-10 stretch that dropped the Cardinals out of first place in the NL Central. In a showdown series between the Cardinals and Brewers May 16–18, Milwaukee swept St. Louis in St. Louis, winning three games by a combined score of 17–6. In the opener, Wainwright held the Brewers to two hits in eight innings but still lost, 1–0, on a Corey Hart home run. In the second game, Cardinal pitchers walked eight batters and hit four; in the third game, they walked eleven and hit one. Milwaukee took over first place in the Central.

On May 20, Chris Carpenter returned after missing a month with a strained oblique. Carpenter pitched five shutout innings, and the Cards won a pitching duel with the Cubs, 2–1.[45] In his next start Carpenter was perfect for six innings, but St. Louis lost in 10 innings to Milwaukee, 1–0.[46] Carpenter's ERA remained at 0.00 after his first four appearances. The two Carpenter starts were part of a nine-game streak for Cardinal pitching in which they held the opposition to three runs or less in every game and did not allow a home run.

On the 29th Ludwick was activated from the DL. To make room, the Cardinals put Khalil Greene on the DL with "social anxiety disorder".[47] Greene, signed with the intention of being the everyday shortstop in 2009, played poorly in the field, was hitting .200 at the time he hit the DL, and had been playing less and less frequently in May.[48] St. Louis went 13–14 in May and finished the month at 29–21, one game behind Milwaukee in the NL Central. The Cardinals spent the month of May in a horrific team batting slump that saw them post a .299 OBP for the month, dead last in baseball;[49] exceptionally strong pitching in May (3.56 team ERA) helped St. Louis stay close to the top of the NL Central standings.[50]

June

On June 4, the Cardinals released newly acquired pitcher Blaine Boyer and called up Jess Todd to take his place.[51] One day later, Kyle Lohse, still suffering from the aftereffects of a hit-by-pitch on his throwing forearm, May 23, went to the DL for the first time in his career, and infielder Tyler Greene recalled.[52] The day after that (June 6), pitcher Blake Hawksworth became the 13th rookie to play for the Cardinals in 2009 (a major-league high for any team) and the seventh to make his major-league debut, when he was called up and Jess Todd was sent down.[53]

The continuing team-wide offensive blackout reached its nadir in the second week of June, when the Colorado Rockies, second-worst team in the NL with a 21–32 record prior to the series, came to St. Louis and swept the Cardinals in four games, outscoring the Cardinals 33–9.

Khalil Greene, after three weeks on the disabled list due to anxiety disorder, was activated on June 18.[54] In his first start since being activated, on June 19, Greene started at third base and hit a home run.[55] He went on to hit a home run in each of his first three games back, helping the Cardinals to sweep Kansas City in Kansas City and reclaim sole possession of first place in the NL Central. However, Greene went 0 for his next 16, suffered a relapse of his social anxiety disorder, and went back on the disabled list.[56]

On June 27, in an effort to revive a sputtering offense, the Cardinals acquired Mark DeRosa from Cleveland for Chris Perez and a player to be named later. DeRosa, who in his career has played every position but pitcher, catcher, and center field, was expected to play third base for St. Louis.[57] One month later Cleveland selected Jess Todd to complete the deal.[58]

A continuing inability to hit (.310 OBP for June) weighed down the Cardinals for another month: they went 12-17 for June to drop their record for 2009 to 41–38.

July

On July 5, Albert Pujols and Yadier Molina were named as winners of the fan balloting and starters for the National League in the 80th All-Star Game.[59] Ryan Franklin, 20 for 21 in save opportunities with a 0.84 ERA, was selected to be one of the relief pitchers.[60] On July 14, St. Louis hosted the All-Star Game for the first time in 43 years. The AL beat the NL 4–3. Albert Pujols was 0-for-3 with an error that led to an AL run, Yadier Molina had an RBI single, and Ryan Franklin pitched a scoreless inning.

After appearing in only three games for St. Louis, new addition Mark DeRosa went onto the disabled list (retroactive to July 1) on July 7, suffering from a strained wrist.[61] However, the rest of the Cardinals, buoyed by Pujols, a hot Colby Rasmus, and a resurgent Ryan Ludwick, went 6–4 on their ten-game road trip before the break, and entered the All-Star break with a 49–42 record and a 2.5 game lead in the NL Central.

The middle of July saw major changes to the Cardinals lineup. On July 18, Mark DeRosa, suffering from a torn tendon sheath in his wrist that eventually required offseason surgery, was reactivated from the DL and returned to the starting lineup.[62] Four days later, Chris Duncan, one of the few remaining players from the 2006 world champion Cardinals, was traded to the Boston Red Sox for shortstop Julio Lugo, along with a player-to-be-named-later or cash; and the team recalled Brian Barden.[63][64] Two days after that, on July 24, the Cardinals traded three prospects, including their #1 prospect, third baseman Brett Wallace, pitcher Clayton Mortensen, and outfielder Shane Peterson, for Oakland Athletics outfielder Matt Holliday.[65]

On July 28, Todd Wellemeyer was demoted to the bullpen. Mitchell Boggs was called up from AAA-Memphis to take his July 31 start. At the time of the move, Wellemeyer's 5.79 ERA was second-worst in the National League among players with enough innings to qualify for the ERA title.[66]

Buoyed by the arrival of Holliday and Lugo plus the return of DeRosa to the lineup and a hot Rick Ankiel, the Cardinals won six of their last nine games in July, and went 16-11 for the month. They ended July 1/2 game ahead of the Cubs in the NL Central. Ryan Ludwick earned honors as the National League Player of the Month for July, after batting .340 with 6 HR's and a league-high 28 RBI. The Cardinals have had the NL's top player three of the first four months with Albert Pujols winning the award in both April and June.[67]

August

Albert Pujols tied the all-time NL season record set by Ernie Banks in 1955 by hitting his fifth grand slam of the year, (and his second HR of the game) on August 4 at New York. Pujols' slam was the exclamation point in a 12–7, 10-inning victory, in which Pujols went 4-for-5 with five RBIs and three runs scored. The Cardinals previously forced extra innings by rallying for two runs in the ninth off Mets' ace closer Francisco Rodríguez.[68][69]

After briefly returning to the starting rotation, Todd Wellemeyer went on the DL with elbow inflammation. Mitchell Boggs was again tabbed to take his place in the rotation.[70] Later in the month, starting pitcher Kyle Lohse joined him on the DL with a strained groin.[71]

The team came to terms and signed their #1 draft pick, pitcher Shelby Miller, on August 17, just hours before the deadline.[72][73]

John Smoltz signed with the team on August 19 as a probable fifth starter and also possible reliever after the Red Sox released him.[74] In his first start, against San Diego, Smoltz threw five scoreless innings, striking out nine, and got the win.

The Cardinals played some of their best baseball of the season in the middle of August. Consecutive series victories against Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, San Diego, and Los Angeles, plus a win in the first game of another series with San Diego, pushed St. Louis to 17 games over .500 at 70–53, the furthest over .500 the franchise had reached since the 2005 team went 100–62. St. Louis opened up a six-game lead over the second-place Cubs during this stretch.

A 7–0 victory from Chris Carpenter, giving him an NL-tying 14th win, over San Diego at Petco Park on August 22, was the unofficial 10,000th win in franchise history. The official total (9,219) is lower because the Cardinals franchise does not count its ten years in the American Association in its all-time statistics.[75]

On August 28, Albert Pujols hit his eighth career walk-off home run in John Smoltz's first home game at Busch Stadium in a 3–2 win over Washington.[76]

A sweep of the Nationals ended one of the best Augusts in franchise history. The Cardinals went 20-6 for the month, pushing their overall record to 22 games over .500 at 77–55, and opening up a ten-game lead over the Cubs. They did not lose a series all month. Albert Pujols had a 1.092 OPS for the month while Matt Holliday, whose acquisition at the end of July coincided with the sudden takeoff of the Cardinals, posted a .963 OPS for August.[77] Aces Adam Wainwright and Chris Carpenter had ERAs of 1.30 and 2.20 for August. Closer Ryan Franklin did not allow a run all month.[78] Wainwright's 2–1 win over the Nationals on August 30 made him MLB's first 16-game winner.[79] Carpenter was named the NL's Pitcher of the Month for August.[80]

September/October

Third baseman Troy Glaus, out all year with a shoulder injury, became the first September call-up after maximum roster size expanded to 40.[81] Adam Wainwright was touched for six runs in five innings by the Pirates but still earned his league-leading 17th victory on September 4.[82] Albert Pujols hit only his second career pinch-hit home run in the 10th for a dramatic 2–1 game-winner over the Pirates, at PNC Park, September 5.[83]

Chris Carpenter threw a one-hitter on September 7 against the Brewers at Miller Park, striking out 10, earning his first shutout since September 11, 2006,[84] and reaching 1,300 career strikeouts.

A three-game sweep by the Braves September 11–13 marked the first time St. Louis had lost a series since July 24–26 against Philadelphia, and the first time the Cardinals lost the opening game of a series since July 20 against Houston.

After the Memphis Redbirds' season ended with a loss in the AAA National Championship Game, the Cardinals announced four more September call-ups: David Freese, Tyler Greene, Josh Kinney, and Matt Pagnozzi.[85] Pagnozzi, nephew to former Cardinals All-Star catcher Tom Pagnozzi, first appeared in a game on September 29, becoming the tenth player to make his big-league debut with the 2009 Cardinals. The other nine rookies were Freese, Greene, P. J. Walters, Shane Robinson, Jarrett Hoffpauir, Colby Rasmus, Blake Hawksworth, Clayton Mortensen, and Jess Todd.

The Cardinals finally clinched the NL Central championship at Colorado (September 26), with their 90th win, 6–3, on a tie-breaking home run by replacement catcher Jason LaRue in the 7th inning.[86] Ryan Ludwick later added a pinch-hit 2-run home run in the 9th inning. Adam Wainwright got his NL-leading 19th win, going 8 innings with 130 pitches, giving up 10 hits, walking one, and striking out 11. It was the Cardinals' seventh NL division championship in the last ten seasons, and eighth for manager Tony La Russa in 14 seasons as Cardinal manager, although one championship was a shared one with Houston in 2001.

On October 1, Chris Carpenter threw five shutout innings in a 13–0 victory over Cincinnati. Carpenter finished his season with a 17–4 record. He lowered his ERA to 2.24, securing his first ERA title and the first ERA title for any Cardinal since Joe Magrane was National League ERA champion in 1988. Carpenter also hit the first home run of his big league career, a grand slam, and drove in six runs to double his career RBI total.[87]

In that same game Carpenter pitched (Oct 1, 2009), Tony La Russa passed John McGraw for second-most games managed in baseball with his 4,770th game managed (2,552-2,214-4). La Russa gets three more games (October 4) to extend his managed games to 4,773 (2,552-2,217-4) by the end of the 2009 season.

The next night, a bullpen collapse robbed Adam Wainwright of his chance to be the only 20-game winner in baseball, but Wainwright still finished as the National League leader in wins, with a 19–8 record and a 2.63 ERA.[88]

The Cardinals finished the 2009 season losing 8 of their last 10 and 14 of their last 21 to go 91-71 for the year. Albert Pujols won his first home run title with 47, despite not homering after September 9. He also broke the all-time single-season record for assists by a first baseman with his record 185th in the last game.[89]

On October 5, Chris Carpenter was named NL Comeback Player of the Year (second time) for his superb season, after leading the NL with a 2.24 ERA and an .810 winning percentage (17-4).[90]

Postseason

Division Series

In the 2009 National League Division Series, St. Louis faced off against the Los Angeles Dodgers, NL West champions. The Cardinals went 5–2 against the Dodgers in the regular season, and were the favorites in the National League,[91] but the Dodgers swept the Cardinals in three games to bring St. Louis' 2009 season to a quick end. It was only the second time in eight trips to the postseason that a LaRussa-led Cardinals team lost in the first round.

Awards

Adam Wainwright and Yadier Molina won Gold Gloves, the first for Wainwright and second for Molina.[92] Albert Pujols won the Silver Slugger Award as the best hitting first baseman in the NL,[93] and the Hank Aaron Award as the best hitter in the National League.[94] In a close race, Wainwright finished third in voting (90 pts.) for the Cy Young Award despite getting the most first place votes (12). Chris Carpenter finished second (94 pts.), six points behind winner Tim Lincecum.[95] Albert Pujols won his second consecutive Most Valuable Player award, winning all 32 first place votes.[96]

Season standings

NL Central
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
St. Louis Cardinals 91 71 .562 46‍–‍35 45‍–‍36
Chicago Cubs 83 78 .516 46‍–‍34 37‍–‍44
Milwaukee Brewers 80 82 .494 11 40‍–‍41 40‍–‍41
Cincinnati Reds 78 84 .481 13 40‍–‍41 38‍–‍43
Houston Astros 74 88 .457 17 44‍–‍37 30‍–‍51
Pittsburgh Pirates 62 99 .385 28½ 40‍–‍41 22‍–‍58


Game log

Regular Season Schedule (calendar style) Archived February 15, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
Regular Season Schedule (sortable text) Archived March 10, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
Downloadable Schedule for Microsoft Outlook, Palm (PDA)
National Broadcast Schedule Archived February 10, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
All game times are in Central Time Zone.[97]

Legend
Cardinals WIN Cardinals LOSS Game POSTPONED
2009 Game Log
APRIL (16–7)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record
1 April 6 Pirates 6–4 Grabow (1–0) Motte (0–1) Capps (1) 45,832 0–1
2 April 7 Pirates 9–3 Lohse (1–0) Snell (0–1) 35,206 1–1
3 April 8 Pirates 7–4 Duke (1–0) Wellemeyer (0–1) Capps (2) 35,535 1–2
4 April 9 Pirates 2–1 Carpenter (1–0) Ohlendorf (0–1) Reyes (1) 35,293 2–2
5 April 10 Astros 5–3 Piñeiro (1–0) Hampton (0–1) McClellan (1) 37,224 3–2
6 April 11 Astros 11–2 Wainwright (1–0) Oswalt (0–2) 43,454 4–2
7 April 12 Astros 3–0 Lohse (2–0) Rodríguez (0–1) 36,310 5–2
8 April 13 @ Diamondbacks 2–1 Wellemeyer (1–1) Davis (0–2) Franklin (1) 25,014 6–2
9 April 14 @ Diamondbacks 7–6 (10) Peña (2–0) Thompson (0–1) 25,678 6–3
10 April 15 @ Diamondbacks 12–7 Piñeiro (2–0) Garland (1–1) 21,298 7–3
11 April 16 @ Cubs 7–4 Wainwright (2–0) Patton (0–1) Franklin (2) 38,909 8–3
12 April 17 @ Cubs 8–7 Heilman (2–0) Pérez (0–1) Mármol (2) 40,250 8–4
13 April 18 @ Cubs 7–5 (11) Guzmán (1–0) Reyes (0–1) 40,878 8–5
April 19 @ Cubs Postponed
14 April 21 Mets 6–4 Motte (1–1) Putz (1–1) Franklin (3) 35,506 9–5
15 April 22 Mets 5–2 Piñeiro (3–0) Maine (0–2) Franklin (4) 35,622 10–5
16 April 23 Mets 12–8 Lohse (3–0) Hernández (1–1) 38,522 11–5
17 April 24 Cubs 4–3 McClellan (1–0) Mármol (0–1) Franklin (5) 45,812 12–5
18 April 25 Cubs 8–2 Boggs (1–0) Marshall (0–1) 46,707 13–5
19 April 26 Cubs 10–3 Harden (2–1) Wellemeyer (1–2) 44,742 13–6
20 April 27 @ Braves 3–2 Piñeiro (4–0) Jurrjens (2–2) Franklin (6) 16,739 14–6
21 April 28 @ Braves 2–1 Moylan (1–1) McClellan (1–1) González (3) 18,121 14–7
22 April 29 @ Braves 5–3 Wainwright (3–0) Vázquez (2–2) Franklin (7) 19,127 15–7
23 April 30 @ Nationals 9–4 Pérez (1–1) Tavárez (0–2) 18,007 16–7
MAY (13–14)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record
24 May 1 @ Nationals 6–2 Wellemeyer (2–2) Zimmermann (2–1) 20,697 17–7
25 May 2 @ Nationals 6–1 Martis (3–0) Piñeiro (4–1) 19,950 17–8
May 3 @ Nationals Postponed
26 May 4 Phillies 6–1 Blanton (1–2) Lohse (3–1) 35,990 17–9
27 May 5 Phillies 10–7 Myers (2–2) Wainwright (3–1) 36,754 17–10
28 May 6 Pirates 4–2 McClellan (2–1) Duke (3–3) Franklin (8) 36,188 18–10
29 May 7 Pirates 5–2 Wellemeyer (3–2) Ohlendorf (3–3) Franklin (9) 41,928 19–10
30 May 8 @ Reds 6–4 Cueto (3–1) Piñeiro (4–2) Cordero (9) 18,016 19–11
31 May 9 @ Reds 8–3 Harang (3–3) Lohse (3–2) 40,651 19–12
32 May 10 @ Reds 8–7 (10) Franklin (1–0) Cordero (0–2) Pérez (1) 27,664 20–12
33 May 12 @ Pirates 7–1 Duke (4–3) Wellemeyer (3–3) 11,718 20–13
34 May 13 @ Pirates 5–2 Ohlendorf (4–3) Piñeiro (4–3) Capps (6) 10,494 20–14
35 May 14 @ Pirates 5–1 Miller (1–0) Karstens (1–2) 12,347 21–14
May 15 Brewers Postponed
36 May 16 Brewers 1–0 Suppan (3–3) Wainwright (3–2) Hoffman (9) 43,382 21–15
37 May 17 Brewers 8–2 Parra (3–4) Wellemeyer (3–4) 43,042 21–16
38 May 18 Brewers 8–4 Looper (4–2) Lohse (3–3) 39,136 21–17
39 May 19 Cubs 3–0 Piñeiro (5–3) Lilly (5–3) 41,374 22–17
40 May 20 Cubs 2–1 Carpenter (2–0) Dempster (3–3) Franklin (10) 41,703 23–17
41 May 21 Cubs 3–1 Wainwright (4–2) Marshall (2–3) Franklin (11) 44,235 24–17
42 May 22 Royals 5–0 Wellemeyer (4–4) Davies (2–3) 43,429 25–17
43 May 23 Royals 5–0 Lohse (4–3) Hochevar (0–2) 43,829 26–17
44 May 24 Royals 3–2 Bannister (4–1) Piñeiro (5–4) Cruz (2) 44,213 26–18
45 May 25 @ Brewers 1–0 (10) Villanueva (2–3) McClellan (2–2) 43,032 26–19
46 May 26 @ Brewers 8–1 Wainwright (5–2) Suppan (3–4) 37,404 27–19
47 May 27 @ Brewers 3–2 Wellemeyer (5–4) Parra (3–6) Franklin (12) 40,226 28–19
48 May 29 @ Giants 4–2 Cain (6–1) Piñeiro (5–5) Wilson (11) 35,266 28–20
49 May 30 @ Giants 6–2 Carpenter (3–0) Zito (1–6) 35,592 29–20
50 May 31 @ Giants 5–3 Valdéz (2–0) Wainwright (5–3) Wilson (12) 41,440 29–21
JUNE (12–17)
# Date Opponent / Time Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record
51 June 1 Reds 5–3 Lincoln (1–0) Wellemeyer (5–5) Cordero (14) 35,815 29–22
52 June 2 Reds 5–2 Motte (2–1) Arroyo (7–4) Franklin (13) 35,507 30–22
53 June 3 Reds 9–3 Cueto (5–3) Lohse (4–4) 35,811 30–23
54 June 4 Reds 3–1 Carpenter (4–0) Harang (5–6) 39,249 31–23
55 June 5 Rockies 11–4 de la Rosa (1–6) Wainwright (5–4) 41,115 31–24
56 June 6 Rockies 10–1 Cook (4–3) Wellemeyer (5–6) 44,002 31–25
57 June 7 Rockies 7–2 Jiménez (4–6) Piñeiro (5–6) 42,288 31–26
58 June 8 Rockies 5–2 Marquis (8–4) Thompson (0–2) Street (9) 36,748 31–27
59 June 9 @ Marlins 4–3 Lindstrom (2–1) Motte (2–2) 13,103 31–28
60 June 10 @ Marlins 13–4 Wainwright (6–4) Volstad (4–6) 14,624 32–28
61 June 11 @ Marlins 6–5 Miller (2–0) Núñez (2–3) Franklin (14) 19,112 33–28
62 June 12 @ Indians 7–3 Huff (2–2) Piñeiro (5–7) 28,159 33–29
63 June 13 @ Indians 3–1 Thompson (1–2) Ohka (0–1) Franklin (15) 31,754 34–29
64 June 14 @ Indians 3–0 Lee (4–6) Carpenter (4–1) 23,644 34–30
65 June 16 Tigers 11–2 Wainwright (7–4) Verlander (7–3) 44,021 35–30
66 June 17 Tigers 4–3 Wellemeyer (6–6) Jackson (6–4) Franklin (16) 39,699 36–30
67 June 18 Tigers 6–3 Porcello (8-4) Piñeiro (5-8) Rodney (13) 41,323 36-31
68 June 19 @ Royals 10–5 Thompson (2-2) Davies (3-7) 37,660 37-31
69 June 20 @ Royals (Fox) 7–1 Carpenter (5-1) Bannister (5-4) Franklin (17) 38,769 38-31
70 June 21 @ Royals 12–5 Wainwright (8-4) Meche (4-6) 33,805 39-31
71 June 22 @ Mets 6–4 Redding (1-2) Wellemeyer (6-7) Rodríguez (19) 38,488 39-32
72 June 23 @ Mets 3–0 Piñeiro (6-8) Hernández (5-2) 38,903 40-32
73 June 24 @ Mets 11–0 Nieve (3-0) Thompson (2-3) 39,689 40-33
74 June 25 @ Mets 3–2 Santana (9-5) Carpenter (5-2) Rodríguez (20) 41,221 40-34
75 June 26 Twins 3–1 Perkins (3-4) Wainwright (8-5) Nathan (18) 44,159 40-35
76 June 27 Twins 5–3 Kinney (1-0) Slowey (10-3) Franklin (18) 42,986 41-35
77 June 28 Twins 6–2 Liriano (4-8) Piñeiro (6-9) Nathan (19) 42,705 41-36
78 June 29 Giants 10–0 Lincecum (8-2) Thompson (2-4) 37,737 41-37
79 June 30 Giants 6–3 Johnson (8-5) Carpenter (5-3) Wilson (21) 37,174 41-38
JULY (16-11)
# Date Opponent / Time Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record
80 July 1 Giants 2–1 (10) Franklin (2-0) Howry (0-4) 36,928 42-38
81 July 2 Giants 5–2 Wellemeyer (7-7) Zito (4-8) Franklin (19) 41,875 43-38
82 July 3 @ Reds 7–4 Motte (3-2) Herrera (1-4) Franklin (20) 41,349 44-38
83 July 4 @ Reds 5–2 Owings (6-8) Thompson (2-5) Cordero (20) 37,371 44-39
84 July 5 @ Reds 10–1 Carpenter (6-3) Arroyo (8-8) 24,017 45-39
85 July 7 @ Brewers 5–0 Wainwright (9-5) Gallardo (8-6) 36,557 46-39
86 July 8 @ Brewers 5–4 Coffey (4-1) Motte (3-3) Hoffman (19) 33,655 46-40
87 July 9 @ Brewers 5–1 Piñeiro (7-9) Villanueva (2-5) 40,357 47-40
88 July 10 @ Cubs 8–3 Carpenter (7-3) Harden (5-6) 40,687 48-40
89 July 11 @ Cubs (Fox) 5–2 Lilly (9-6) Thompson (2-6) 41,210 48-41
90 July 12 @ Cubs 7–3 Zambrano (5-4) Lohse (4-5) 40,701 48-42
91 July 12 @ Cubs (ESPN Sunday Night Baseball) 4–2 Wainwright (10-5) Wells (4-4) Franklin (21) 41,244 49-42
-- July 14 All-Star Game 7:00pm (Fox) American League 4,   National League 3   (St. Louis, Missouri   Busch Stadium)
92 July 17 Diamondbacks 6–1 Carpenter (8-3) Garland (5-9) 44,781 50-42
93 July 18 Diamondbacks 4–2 Haren (10-5) Wainwright (10-6) Qualls (17) 45,267 50-43
94 July 19 Diamondbacks 2–1 Piñeiro (8-9) Petit (0-4) Franklin (22) 41,759 51-43
95 July 20 @ Astros 3–2 Moehler (7-5) Lohse (4-6) Valverde (10) 36,437 51-44
96 July 21 @ Astros 11–6 Rodríguez (10-6) Wellemeyer (7-8) 33,140 51-45
97 July 22 @ Astros 4–3 Valverde (1-2) Franklin (2-1) 37,619 51-46
98 July 23 @ Nationals 4–1 (6) Wainwright (11-6) Balester (0-1) 25,359 52-46
99 July 24 @ Phillies 8–1 Piñeiro (9-9) Happ (7-1) 45,166 53-46
100 July 25 @ Phillies (Fox) 14–6 Lopez (3-0) Motte (3-4) 45,182 53-47
101 July 26 @ Phillies (TBS) 9–2 Blanton (7-4) Wellemeyer (7-9) 45,271 53-48
102 July 27 Dodgers (ESPN) 6–1 Carpenter (9-3) Wolf (5-5) Franklin (23) 43,756 54-48
103 July 28 Dodgers 10–0 Wainwright (12-6) Billingsley (10-6) 40,105 55-48
104 July 29 Dodgers 3–2 (15) Hawksworth (1-0) Weaver (5-4) 40,011 56-48
105 July 30 Dodgers 5–3 (10) McDonald (3-2) Reyes (0-2) Broxton (24) 43,263 56-49
106 July 31 Astros 4–3 Miller (3-0) Arias (2-1) Franklin (24) 43,760 57-49
AUGUST (20-6)
# Date Opponent / Time Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record
107 August 1 Astros 3–1 Carpenter (10-3) Fulchino (4-4) 45,074 58-49
108 August 2 Astros 2–0 Norris (1-0) Wainwright (12-7) Valverde (12) 45,227 58-50
109 August 4 @ Mets 12–7 (10) McClellan (3-2) Feliciano (4-4) 40,354 59-50
110 August 5 @ Mets 9–0 Figueroa (1-2) Lohse (4-7) Parnell (1) 39,781 59-51
111 August 7 @ Pirates 6–4 Carpenter (11-3) Ascanio (0-2) Franklin (25) 24,854 60-51
112 August 8 @ Pirates 5–3 Wainwright (13-7) Morton (2-5) Franklin (26) 38,593 61-51
113 August 9 @ Pirates 7–3 Piñeiro (10-9) Capps (2-7) McClellan (2) 24,369 62-51
114 August 10 Reds 4–1 Lohse (5-7) Wells (0-3) Franklin (27) 40,212 63-51
115 August 11 Reds 5–4 Lehr (2-0) Boggs (1-1) Cordero (25) 40,145 63-52
116 August 12 Reds 5–2 Carpenter (12-3) Bailey (2-4) Franklin (28) 40,328 64-52
117 August 14 Padres 9–2 Wainwright (14-7) Latos (4-2) 42,208 65-52
118 August 15 Padres 7–4 Piñeiro (11-9) Stauffer (1-5) Franklin (29) 44,292 66-52
119 August 16 Padres 7–5 Miller (4-0) Bell (4-2) 40,812 67-52
120 August 17 @ Dodgers 3–2 Carpenter (13-3) Haeger (0-1) Franklin (30) 49,415 68-52
121 August 18 @ Dodgers 7–3 Billingsley (12-6) Boggs (1-2) Broxton (26) 49,052 68-53
122 August 19 @ Dodgers 3–2 McClellan (4-2) Broxton (7-1) Franklin (31) 54,847 69-53
123 August 20 @ Padres 5–1 Piñeiro (12-9) Stauffer (1-6) 19,867 70-53
124 August 21 @ Padres 4–0 Richard (7-3) Lohse (5-8) 27,282 70-54
125 August 22 @ Padres 7–0 Carpenter (14-3) Correia (8-10) 38,156 71-54
126 August 23 @ Padres 5–2 Smoltz (3-5)   [1st GS, 1-0] Carrillo (1-2) Franklin (32) 27,435 72-54
127 August 25 Astros 1–0 Wainwright (15-7) Rodríguez (12-8) Franklin (33) 40,512 73-54
128 August 26 Astros 3–2 Piñeiro (13-9) Oswalt (7-5) Franklin (34) 40,311 74-54
129 August 27 Astros 4–3 Valverde (2-2) McClellan (4-3) 40,348 74-55
130 August 28 Nationals 3–2 Motte (4-4) Bergmann (2-4) 40,033 75-55
131 August 29 Nationals 9–4 Boggs (2-2) Stammen (4-7) 44,028 76-55
132 August 30 Nationals 2–1 Wainwright (16-7) Mock (3-6) Franklin (35) 41,083 77-55
SEPTEMBER (13-13)
# Date Opponent / Time Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record
133 September 1 Brewers 7–6 Piñeiro (14-9) Weathers (3-5) Franklin (36) 40,119 78-55
134 September 2 Brewers 10–3 Carpenter (15-3) Bush (3-6) 40,214 79-55
135 September 3 Brewers 4–3 Parra (10-10) Smoltz (3-6) Hoffman (30) 37,791 79-56
136 September 4 @ Pirates 14–7 Wainwright (17-7) Hart (4-5) 15,258 80-56
137 September 5 @ Pirates 2–1 (10) Hawksworth (2-0) Capps (3-8) Franklin (37) 27,071 81-56
138 September 6 @ Pirates 6–5 Chavez (1-4) Franklin (2-2) 19,274 81-57
139 September 7 @ Brewers 3–0 Carpenter (16-3) Bush (3-7) 35,360 82-57
140 September 8 @ Brewers 4–3 Hawksworth (3-0) Hoffman (1-2) McClellan (3) 36,172 83-57
141 September 9 @ Brewers 5–1 Wainwright (18-7) Suppan (6-9) 26,559 84-57
142 September 11 Braves 1–0 Jurrjens (11-10) Piñeiro (14-10) Soriano (23) 43,984 84-58
143 September 12 Braves (Fox) 7–6 Gonzalez (4-4) Franklin (2-3) Soriano (24) 43,869 84-59
144 September 13 Braves 9–2 Vázquez (13-9) Carpenter (16-4) 41,179 84-60
145 September 14 Marlins 11–6 Hawksworth (4-0) Nolasco (11-9) 43,582 85-60
146 September 15 Marlins 2–1 West (7-5) Wainwright (18-8) Núñez (21) 42,895 85-61
147 September 16 Marlins 5–2 Johnson (15-4) Piñeiro (14-11) Núñez (22) 43,020 85-62
148 September 18 Cubs 3–2 Franklin (3-3) Heilman (3-4) 45,959 86-62
149 September 19 Cubs (Fox) 2–1 Franklin (4-3) Mármol (2-4) 46,506 87-62
150 September 20 Cubs (ESPN) 6–3 (11) Caridad (1-0) Boggs (2-3) Mármol (14) 44,937 87-63
151 September 21 @ Astros 7–3 Lohse (6-8) Rodríguez (13-11) 34,705 88-63
152 September 22 @ Astros 11–2 Piñeiro (15-11) Bazardo (0-2) 32,644 89-63
153 September 23 @ Astros 3–0 Norris (6-3) Smoltz (3-7) Valverde (24) 38,732 89-64
154 September 25 @ Rockies 2–1 Street (4-1) Miller (4-1) 48,847 89-65
155 September 26 @ Rockies 6–3 Wainwright (19-8) Jiménez (14-12) Franklin (38) 47,741 90-65
156 September 27 @ Rockies 4–3 de la Rosa (16-9) Lohse (6-9) Street (34) 42,032 90-66
157 September 29 @ Reds 7–2 Bailey (7-5) Piñeiro (15-12) 12,026 90-67
158 September 30 @ Reds 6–1 Arroyo (15-13) Smoltz (3-8) 11,930 90-68
OCTOBER (1-3)
# Date Opponent / Time Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record
159 October 1 @ Reds 13–0 Carpenter (17-4) Wells (2-5) 11,861 91-68
160 October 2 Brewers 12–6 Looper (14-7) McClellan (4-4) 44,331 91-69
161 October 3 Brewers 5–4 Villanueva (4-10) Lohse (6-10) Hoffman (37) 43,977 91-70
162 October 4 Brewers 9–7 (10) Hoffman (3-2) Wellemeyer (7-10) Axford (1) 43,464 91-71

Record vs. opponents


Source: MLB Standings Grid – 2009
Team AZ ATL CHC CIN COL FLA HOU LAD MIL NYM PHI PIT SD SF STL WSH AL
Arizona 3–4 4-2 1–5 7-11 5–3 5–4 7-11 2–5 5–2 1–5 6–1 11-7 5-13 2–4 1–5 5–10
Atlanta 4–3 4–2 3–6 4–4 8-10 3-3 4–3 3–3 13–5 10-8 3–4 3–3 3–4 4–2 10-8 7–8
Chicago 2-4 2–4 10-5 2–4 4–3 11–6 3–5 10-7 3-3 1–5 10-4 4–5 4-2 6-10 5–2 6–9
Cincinnati 5-1 6-3 5-10 0-7 3-3 12-4 1-5 8-7 2-4 2-5 13-5 1-6 3-3 8-8 3-4 6-9
Colorado 11-7 4-4 4-2 7-0 2-4 2-5 4-14 6-0 3-4 2-4 6-3 10-8 8-10 6-1 6-0 11-4
Florida 3-5 10-8 3-4 3-3 4-2 4–3 3-3 3-4 11-7 9-9 2-4 4-2 3-4 3-3 12-6 10-8
Houston 4–5 3-3 6-11 4-12 5-2 3-4 4–3 5-10 1-5 6-2 10-5 6-1 2-4 6-9 3-3 6-9
Los Angeles 11-7 3-4 5-3 5-1 14-4 3-3 3-4 3–3 5-1 4-3 4-3 10-8 11-7 2-5 3-2 9-9
Milwaukee 5-2 3-3 7-10 7-8 0-6 4-3 10-5 3-3 3-3 4-3 9-5 2-4 4-5 9-9 5-3 5-10
New York 2-5 5-13 3-3 4-2 4-3 7-11 5-1 1-5 3-3 6-12 4-3 2-5 5-3 4-5 10-8 5–10
Philadelphia 5-1 8-10 5-1 5-2 4-2 9-9 2-6 3-4 3-4 12-6 4-2 5-2 3-4 4-1 15-3 6-12
Pittsburgh 1-6 4-3 4-10 5-13 3-6 4-2 5-10 3-4 5-9 3-4 2-4 3-4 2-4 5-10 5-3 8–7
San Diego 7-11 3-3 5-4 6-1 8-10 2-4 1-6 8-10 4-2 5-2 2-5 4-3 10-8 1-6 4-2 5–10
San Francisco 13-5 4–3 2–4 3–3 10-8 4–3 4–2 7-11 5-4 3–5 4–3 4–2 8-10 4–3 4–2 9–6
St. Louis 4-2 2-4 10-6 8-8 1-6 3-3 9-6 5-2 9-9 5-4 1-4 10-5 6-1 3-4 6–1 9–6
Washington 5-1 8-10 2-5 4-3 0-6 6-12 3-3 2-3 3-5 8-10 3-15 3-5 2-4 2-4 1-6 7–11


Roster

2009 St. Louis Cardinals
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders Manager

Coaches

Players

Player stats

Batting

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; R = Runs; H = Hits; 2B= Doubles; 3B = Triples; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; BB = Walks; Avg. = Batting average; OBP = On-base percentage; SLG = Slugging percentage

(through October 4)

2009 St. Louis Cardinals batting stats at Baseball Reference

2009 St. Louis Cardinals hitting stats at Baseball Almanac

Player G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO Avg. OBP SLG
Albert Pujols 160 568 124 186 45 1 47 135 115 64 .327 .443 .658
Skip Schumaker 153 532 85 161 34 1 4 35 52 69 .303 .364 .393
Ryan Ludwick 139 486 63 129 20 1 22 97 41 106 .265 .329 .447
Yadier Molina 140 481 45 141 23 1 6 54 50 39 .293 .366 .383
Colby Rasmus 147 474 72 119 22 2 16 52 36 95 .251 .307 .407
Brendan Ryan 129 390 55 114 19 7 3 37 24 56 .292 .340 .400
Rick Ankiel 122 372 50 86 21 2 11 38 26 99 .231 .285 .387
Joe Thurston 124 267 27 60 17 4 1 25 33 56 .225 .316 .330
Chris Duncan ^ (4/6-7/21) 87 260 25 59 15 2 5 32 41 67 .227 .329 .358
Mark DeRosa ^ (6/28-10/4) 68 237 31 54 10 1 10 28 18 58 .228 .291 .405
Matt Holliday ^ (7/24-10/4) 63 235 42 83 16 2 13 55 26 43 .353 .419 .604
Khalil Greene 77 170 21 34 7 0 6 24 15 35 .200 .272 .347
Julio Lugo ^ (7/24-10/4) 51 148 24 41 9 4 2 13 17 27 .277 .351 .432
Tyler Greene 48 108   9 24 5 0 2 7 4 32 .222 .270 .327
Jason LaRue 51 104 10 25 3 0 2 6 3 22 .240 .288 .298
Brian Barden 52 103 13 24 3 0 4 10 6 21 .233 .286 .379
Adam Wainwright 39   89 7 16 5 1 2 4 1 26 .180 .189 .326
Nick Stavinoha 39   87 6 20 7 0 2 17 2 15 .230 .242 .379
Joel Piñeiro 32   66 4 9 2 0 0 4 4 33 .136 .186 .167
Chris Carpenter 26   63 3 11 3 0 1 7 2 13 .175 .212 .270
Todd Wellemeyer 30   39 1 5 0 0 0 0 0 16 .128 .128 .128
Kyle Lohse 23   37 3 8 0 0 0 2 1 7 .216 .275 .216
David Freese 17   31 3 10 2 0 1 7 2 7 .323 .353 .484
Troy Glaus 14   29 2 5 2 0 0 2 3 8 .172 .250 .241
Shane Robinson 11   25 1 6 1 0 0 1 0 2 .240 .231 .280
Mitchell Boggs 16   14 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 6 .071 .071 .143
John Smoltz   7   13 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 5 .077 .143 .077
Jarrett Hoffpauir   8   12 1 3 2 0 0 2 4 2 .250 .438 .417
Brad Thompson 31   12 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 7 .083 .083 .083
P.J. Walters 8 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 .000 .000 .000
Kyle McClellan 64 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 .000 .000 .000
Josh Kinney 17 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 .000 .000 .000
Jason Motte 66 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 .000 .000 .000
Clay Mortensen 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 .000 .000
Blaine Boyer 15 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 .000 .000 .000
TOTALS 162 5,465 730 1,436 294 29 160 694 528 1,041 .263 .332 .415

G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO Avg. OBP SLG -->

Note: Pitchers batting stats included (at least one at-bat).

^ Traded to or away from Cardinals dates

BOLD = Leading NL

Pitchers

Note: G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; SV = Saves; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; H = Hits allowed; HR = Home runs allowed; BB = Walks allowed, SO = Strikeouts; WHIP = (Walks + Hits) per innings pitched; HBP = Hit by pitch; BF = Batters faced

(FINAL through October 4)

2009 St. Louis Cardinals pitching stats at Baseball Reference

2009 St.Louis Cardinals pitching stats at Baseball Almanac

Player G GS SV IP W L ERA H HR BB SO WHIP HBP BF
Adam Wainwright 34 34 0 233.0 19 8 2.63 216 17 66 212 1.210 3 970
Joel Piñeiro 32 32 0 214.0 15 12 3.49 218 11 27 105 1.145 8 865
Chris Carpenter 28 28 0 192.2 17 4 2.24 156 7 38 144 1.007 7 750
Todd Wellemeyer 28 21 0 122.1 7 10 5.89 160 19 57 78 1.774 3 561
Kyle Lohse 23 22 0 117.2 6 10 4.74 125 16 36 77 1.368 3 512
Brad Thompson 32 8 0 80.0 2 6 4.84 85 8 23 34 1.350 7 345
Kyle McClellan 66 0 3 66.2 4 4 3.38 56 4 34 51 1.350 2 288
Ryan Franklin 62 0 38 61.0 4 3 1.92 49 2 24 44 1.147 1 250
Mitchell Boggs 16 9 0 58.0 2 3 4.19 71 3 33 46 1.793 4 268
Jason Motte 69 0 0 56.2 4 4 4.76 57 10 23 54 1.412 2 244
Trever Miller 70 0 0 43.2 4 1 2.06 31 5 11 46 0.962 2 173
Dennys Reyes 75 0 1 41.0 0 2 3.29 35 2 21 33 1.366 3 180
Blake Hawksworth 30 0 0 40.0 4 0 2.03 29 2 15 20 1.100 1 160
John Smoltz 7 7 0 38.0 1 3 4.26 36 3 9 40 1.184 0 158
Chris Perez 29 0 1 23.2 1 1 4.18 17 3 15 30 1.352 3 106
Blaine Boyer 15 0 0 16.1 0 0 4.41 14 1 5 9 1.163 1 70
P. J. Walters 8 1 0 16.0 0 0 9.56 21 6 9 14 1.875 0 80
Josh Kinney 17 0 0 15.1 1 0 8.80 23 2 11 8 2.217 2 81
Clayton Mortensen 1 0 0 3.0 0 0 6.00 5 1 1 2 2.000 1 16
Jess Todd 1 0 0 1.2 0 0 10.80 3 1 2 2 3.000 0 10
TOTALS 162 162 43 1,440.2 91 71 3.66 1,407 123 460 1,049 1.296 53 6,087 G GS SV IP W L ERA H HR BB SO WHIP HBP BF -->

Bold = leading NL


Relief pitchers

(FINAL through October 4)

22–17, 3.61 ERA, 1.32 WHIP, 432.0 IP, 379 H, 193 R, 173 ER, 42 HR, 191 BB, 335 SO[98]

(FINAL through October 4)

Saves / Opp: 43/58 (74%)   1st Batter / Retired: 338/474 (71%)
Holds: 86         Inherited Runners / Scored: 56/242 (23%)[98] 22-17, 3.61 ERA, 1.32 WHIP, 432.0 IP, 379 H, 193 R, 173 ER, 42 HR, 191 BB, 335 SO

Saves / Opp: 43/58 (74%) 1st Batter / Retired: 338/474 (71%)
Holds: 86 Inherited Runners / Scored: 56/242 (23%)
-->

Blown Saves by bullpen: 17   Franklin (5), McClellan (4), Perez (1), Kinney (1), Miller (2), Motte (4)
Games lost by bullpen:   16

Scoring by inning

(FINAL through October 4)

INNING 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 TOTAL
CARDINALS 97 43 82 95 92 92 80 87 52 8 1 0 0 0 1 730
OPPONENTS 92 62 58 68 78 81 88 62 39 6 6 0 0 0 0 640

Cardinals Record When

(FINAL through October 4)

Home   46-35
Away   45-36

Scoring first       71-25
Opp. scores first 20-46

Scoring more than 3 runs   66-19
      Scoring 3 runs             17-17
Scoring fewer than 3 runs     8-35

Leading after 7 innings       72-5
      Tied after 7 innings       9-7
Trailing after 7 innings         9-59

Leading after 8 innings     79-3
      Tied after 8 innings     7-9
Trailing after 8 innings      4-59

Blown Saves by bullpen: 17 (Franklin (5), McClellan (4), (Perez [1], Kinney [1], (Miller [2], Motte [4])
Games lost by bullpen:   16

In errorless games   56-33
Extra innings             5-6
Shutouts                   11-10

One-run games       24-21

Out-hit opponents           62-12
Same hits as opponents 13-5
Out-hit by opponents     16-54

Runs via HR         249
Opp. Runs via HR 213

By Day

Mon. 8-9
Tue. 14-11
Wed. 15-10
Thu. 14-5
Fri.   15-10
Sat. 15-11
Sun. 10-15

By Opponent
DIVISION
                HOME ROAD TOTAL

NL Central   24-16   22-18   46-34
NL East        7-7     10-9    17-16
NL West     10-8       9-7   19-15
AL Central     5-4      4-2      9-6

TOTALS     46-35   45-36   91-71
(Interleague 9-6)

Busch Stadium (Indexes)

(FINAL through October 4)

2009   (100 = Neutral Park, > 100 Ballpark favors, < 100 Ballpark inhibits
  81 HOME G; Cardinals: 2,654 AB;   Opponents: 2,790 AB)
  81 AWAY G: Cardinals: 2,811 AB;   Opponents: 2,670 AB)

R 92   H 98   HR 74  

(Cardinals batting: HOME .263   ROAD .263   OVERALL .263)
(Opponents batting: at StL .254   on ROAD .261   OVERALL .258)

2007–2009 Index (3-yr. composite)

HOME 243 G; Cardinals: 8,089 AB;   Opponents: 8,503 AB)

BA 100   R 93   H 99   2B 93   3B 90   HR 80   BB 99   SO 95   E 107   E-inf. 108   LHB-BA 101   LHB-HR 82   RHB-BA 99   RHB-HR 78[99]


Draft picks

St. Louis' picks at the 2009 Major League Baseball draft at MLB Network Studios, New York City on June 9 – 11, 2009.[100][101]

For the entire draft, the Cardinals selection breakdown was as follows: 29 pitchers (21-RHP, 8-LHP), 11 infielders, six catchers and four outfielders. The Cardinals second-round pick, Robert Stock out of USC, will begin his pro career as a catcher and that is reflected in these numbers. St. Louis selected 43 college players and seven high school prospects.[101]

bold = agreed to terms[101]

Round # Player Position Class, Bats/Throws, Ht/Wt., birthdate (birthplace) College
  1   19 Shelby Miller[102][103] P Senior (HS), R/R, 6' 3" / 195 lb., Oct 10, 1990 (Brownwood, Texas) Brownwood High School (TX)
  2   67 Robert Stock C Junior, L/R, 6' 1" / 195 lb., Nov 21, 1989 (Westlake Village, California) USC
  3   98 Joseph Kelly[104] RP Junior, R/R, 6' 1" / 170 lb., Jun 9, 1988 (Corona, California) University of California-Riverside
  4 129 Joseph Bittle[105] P 5S, R/R, 6' 2" / 190 lb., Aug 27, 1986 (Texarkana, Texas) University of Mississippi
  5 159 Ryan Jackson[105][106] SS Junior, R/R, 6' 2" / 175 lb., May 10, 1988 (Miami Springs, Florida) University of Miami
  6 189 Virgil Hill CF J2, R/R, 6' 0" / 185 lb., September 9, 1989 (Valencia, California) Los Angeles Mission College
  7 219 Kyle Conley[105] RF Senior, R/R, 6' 4" / 215 lb., May 7, 1987 (Richland, Washington) University of Washington
  8 249 Jason Stidham[105] SS Junior, L/R, 5' 11" / 170 lb., Feb 26, 1988 (Palm Bay, Florida) Florida State University
  9 279 Nick McCully[105] P Junior, R/R, 5' 10" / 195 lb., September 5, 1988 (Lakeland, Florida) Coastal Carolina University
10 309 Héctor Hernández P Senior (HS), S/L, 6' 1" / 198 lb., Feb 20, 1991 (Carolina, Puerto Rico) Puerto Rico Baseball Academy and High School
11 339 Alan Ahmady[105] 1b Junior, R/R, 5' 11" / 195 lb., Dec 14, 1987 (Fresno, California) Fresno State University
12 369 Pat Daugherty[105] P J2, L/L, 6' 5" / 215 lb., Aug 30, 1988 (Bailey, Mississippi) Pearl River Community College
13 399 Matt Carpenter[105] 3b Senior, L/R, 6' 3" / 200 lb., Nov 26, 1985 (Sugar Land, Texas) Texas Christian University
14 429 Ross Smith CF J3, R/R, 6' 2" / 200 lb., Oct 6, 1987 (Eastman, Georgia) Middle Georgia College
15 459 David Washington 1b Senior (HS), L/L, 6' 5" / 200 lb., Nov 20, 1990 (University City, California) University City High School (San Diego, California)
16 489 Daniel Bibona[105] P Junior, L/L, 5' 11" / 165 lb., Jun 19, 1988 (Lake Forest, California) University of California-Irvine
17 519 Jonathan Rodriguez[105] 1b J2, R/R, 6' 2" / ? lbs., Aug 21, 1989 (San Juan, Puerto Rico) Manatee Community College (FL)
18 549 Anthony Garcia C Senior (HS), R/R, 6' 0" / 180 lb., Jan 4, 1992 (Carolina, Puerto Rico) San Juan Educational School (PR)
19 579 Travis Tartamella[105] C Junior, R/R, 6' 0" / 205 lb., Dec 17, 1987 (Alta Loma, California) California State University, Los Angeles
20 609 Scott Schneider[105] P Junior, R/R, 6' 0" / 175 lb., Jun 7, 1988 (Fallbrook, California) St. Mary's College (xx)

Farm system

Level Team League Manager
AAA Memphis Redbirds Pacific Coast League Chris Maloney
AA Springfield Cardinals Texas League Ron Warner
A Palm Beach Cardinals Florida State League Tom Spencer
A Quad Cities River Bandits Midwest League Steve Dillard
A-Short Season Batavia Muckdogs New York–Penn League Mark DeJohn
Rookie Johnson City Cardinals Appalachian League Mike Shildt
Rookie GCL Cardinals Gulf Coast League Steve Turco

LEAGUE CHAMPIONS: Memphis

Draft selections

St. Louis Cardinals 2009 Draft Selections

References

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