Archive for February, 2009

JUPITER, Fla. — Every time St. Louis Cardinals pitching prospect Adam Ottavino would toe the rubber to deliver a pitch there were so many thoughts buzzing between his ears. His arms needed to swing here. His hands needed to be placed there. His shoulder positioned this way. His foot sure that land that way. Not too far back on that back leg. Not too far forward on the release. Don’t do it that way. Be sure to do it this way.

He was consumed by every thought possible about what it took to deliver a pitch.

Every one except actually thinking about the pitch.

“I was a real mess,” Ottavino said. “Now, I’m just done playing that mental game.”

RHP Adam Ottavino, the Cardinals first-round pick in 2006, delivers a pitch Friday during his Live BP. (Photo: Chris Lee — P-D)

Ottavino has impressed the pitching coaches here at Roger Dean Stadium with how he’s come into camp with a simpler delivery, sharper pitches and a general calm and consistency that he hasn’t had since, well, really since the Cardinals picked in the first round of the 2006 draft. Roving pitching Dyar Miller called Friday’s round of live batting practice one of the most impressive days he’s seen at spring training, and the consensus around camp was that one of the pitchers that has consistently stood out is the one they’re all hoping will stand up and reclaim his spot as a prospect: Ottavino.

“This is the best I’ve ever seen him,” pitching coach Dave Duncan said Friday. “His delivery is really improving. The things he’s been working on are all coming together. You can see the benefits of a young pitcher gaining confidence from results.”

Ottavino stormed out of college with the reputation for wearing rose-colored sunglasses and throwing hard. The Cardinals also classified him as one of the pitchers who had ideal mechanics.

That didn’t last.

Ottavino described himself as “liberated” last spring training when he was invited to an early-spring workshop on pitching, one that stressed “natural mechanics” and showed the pitchers such signature deliveries as Sandy Koufax’s and such athletic mechanics as Bob Gibson’s. Ottavino immersed himself in the theory and started adopted all sorts of loose and comfortable mechanics. He also clouded his head with every thought possible but the act of making the pitch. He was devoured by thoughts of where his shoulders went and where his arms would swing and where his feet were going to land.

Forget about remembering to look at where the glove was or what location to target.

The numbers reflected that. Ottavino struggled in the first half of the season, and he finished 3-7 with a 5.23 ERA. He allowed 133 hits and 52 walks against 96 strikeouts in 115 1/3 innings. There wasn’t an aspect of his game that he didn’t struggle with.

“No question,” Ottavino said. “I was pretty down pretty deep that first half. I’ve never had anything like that happen to me. I was going out there hoping something right was going to happen. I needed something to go right to win and I was just hoping it would. I wasn’t myself for most of the season and only started feeling better the second half.

“I guess you’ve got to take a step back sometimes to step forward. I hope to take that step forward.”

He started by gaining some weight.

Ottavino entered spring training last year a rail, vastly slimmed down from his draft frame of just two years before. He said he weighed-in at 210, and that felt like he didn’t have much muscle to get through the spring. He said a combination of trying a new nutrition plan and food poisoning — the latter more than the former — contributed to significant weight loss. It made the entire season physically difficult to get through. This offseason he changed his nutrition, upped his workouts and reported to camp at 240. His frame has noticeably more packed on it, and he feels “just stronger” during his bullpen sessions.

Others are noticing. His fastball has more pep to it, better location.

Instead of the odd arm swing toward the moon that he test-drove last summer, he’s keeping his hands down, his mechanics simple and everything moving toward the plate. His delivery is natural, not overwrought. There’s no thought in his mind but putting that pitch on that target.

And that’s got a few officials thinking Ottavino might be the pitcher expected.

“He’ll never have complete confidence in himself until he has confidence he can execute pitches, and he’s starting look like he can do that,” Duncan said. “When you execute your pitches everything starts falling into place. You do less thinking because you have confidence you know what you’re capable of doing.”

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The Cardinals don’t expect Skip Schumaker to go from outfielder to Gold Glove second baseman overnight, but they’ll count on him to make the routine plays.
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St. Louis Cardinals



I am interested in buying some and I have had some people say they would sell them for what they paid last year but how do I know they are telling me the correct price–some of them seem fairly high.


Bob P
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JUPITER, Fla. — The St. Louis Cardinals first-round pick Brett Wallace, whose bat may be ready for the big leagues before he finishes his first full season as a professional, launched a shot in batting practice Thursday that would be difficult to duplicate — for him or any other hitter.

It was a carnival shot. A game of H-O-R-S-E for baseball. As if somebody handed Michael Jordan and Larry Bird a few bats and told them to recreate their famous commercial in cleats.

And, though it sounded at first like an urban legend, it’s apparently true.

The other day, Wallace was taking cuts against BP fastballs from coach Joe Pettini. It’s standard for there to be players or coaches or former players (i.e., Larry Walker) out in the field gathering up the balls that are peppered around the outfield. And Wallace has been doing a lot of peppering this spring. The 13th-overall pick in the most recent June draft has put on a few shows with his smooth left-handed swing and explosive crack. He’s a natural line-drive hitter with more power to come.

And so it was Thursday that he was ripping away at pitches from Pettini and minor-league manager Gaylen Pitts was tooling around in a golf cart out in the outfield, scooping up the baseballs and popping them in the bucket he had on the back of the cart.

According to witnesses, and later confirmed by Wallace, the third baseman mashed a ball to deep center field. Pitts was driving the cart in the same direction of the blast, hugging the warning track as he motored to the next place to pick up a few baseballs. He didn’t show any signs of knowing a ball was headed his way — on the fly.

Nor did he stop when the ball landed … right in the bucket.

“I think so,” Wallace said. “I guess that’s where it went.”

Hey, saved Pitts from making a special trip.

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La Russa, Duncan say they have their rotation for ‘09 as camp begins.
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I have an original 1934 St. Louis Cardinals World Championship picture in the original frame and everything. I was wondering how much something like that would go for?


josh g
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JUPITER, Fla. — They had already survived the ridicule of their teammates for dressing in their home whites on a day there was clearly no game to be played, but wait until the clubhouse gets a look at the picture below. Four Cardinals sporting game-ready jerseys and pants as white as they will be on Opening Day and each wearing a straw hat.

Hey, they could have been the ones who had to wear the fake beards.

Skip Schumaker, the first to don the straw hat, and Ryan Franklin, a ham in the ZZ Top look, were two of a handful of St. Louis Cardinals called on Thursday to star in commercials for the club. As they did last year during spring training (retro blog alert: “Lights, Camera … Cardinals!”), the Cardinals and their marketing firm are in town to shoot new promos that fit the franchise’s adopted marketing theme, “Play Like a Cardinal.” Last spring, with a little film-editing magic they produced a commercial that showed Gold Glove catcher Yadier Molina catching three pitchers a the same time.

This year, they ditched the special effects but increased the challenge for Molina.

This morning, with the help of a coach, the film crew had Molina going through a blocking-balls drill. He blocked hundreds of skipped and spiked and skidding baseballs, all for the benefit of the commercial. The punchline: After a reel of his blocking dozens of balls in the dirt he was going to get up, take off his catcher’s mask and reveal that he’s wearing a blindfold.

Props were big Thursday.

The film staged a group of people putting up plywood to protect the windows of the Cardinals’ second-floor offices here at Roger Dean Stadium. With the Florida sky in the background and the look of spring training all around, it’s supposed to give off the impression of some workers boarding up a building for a hurricane, I suppose. But:

CAMERA PULLS BACK, PANS RIGHT TO FIELD

CAMERA FOCUSES IN AT HOME PLATE

WHERE … Albert Pujols is taking batting practice.

Ryan Ludwick, Brendan Ryan, Brian Barton and Schumaker were called on for maybe the most actor-intensive spot of the campaign. Ludwick went out to the field thinking he was going to have to wear a sombrero for the spot — “Who wants to wear a Golden Sombrero?” he asked — but instead it was Schumaker who got stuck with the straw hat. Typically ebullient infielder Ryan caught the eye of the director, I suppose, and earned himself a speaking part.

“OK, let’s go,” he said as the director and camera moved into place. “Energy everyone.”

The script for the foursome’s scene went a little like this: Ludwick and Barton are watching Schumaker take batting practice while wearing a straw hat. Ryan trots up as only Ryan can trot up and Ryan asks as only Ryan can ask: What’s with the hat? One of the other two players explains that Schumaker wore it the day before and went 5-for-5*.

Cut to the next scene: All four players are wearing straw hats.

Brendan Ryan, Brian Barton and Ryan Ludwick shoot a commercial for the Cardinals with Skip Schumaker. The straw hats are not the new Sunday alternative. (Chris Lee — P-D)

The commercial you’ll have to wait to see to believe the beards features the bullpen trio of Jason Motte, Chris Perez and Franklin. The premise is simple: Franklin is tutoring the young fireballers in the finer points of being a successful reliever for the Cardinals. To make this point he’s borrowed the mojo of one of the greatest Cardinals’ closers of all-time — Bruce Sutter. (The Cardinals had another spot that was going to star Sutter, but more about that after tomorrow’s filming …) How did the trio elect to channel their inner Sutter? Why, with beards, of course. Long, country-fried rocker beards. Franklin, apparently, stole the show.

“If you want to pitch like Bruce Sutter, you’ve got to be Bruce Sutter,” he tells the kids.

“My beard is itchy,” Perez replies.

“That means,” Franklin drawls, “it’s working.”

* Mind you, Schumaker did have a six-hit game last year in New York. He did it sans straw hat.

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Barring something unforeseen, manager Tony La Russa says he’s prepared to go
into the 2009 season with the following rotation. A look at the pitchers and
their 2008 numbers:
Name……………………….IP……………………….W…………
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TAMPA, Fla. — After he praised the drug-testing policy that Major League Baseball has now, New York Yankees general manager Brian Cashman was asked if he heard enough today in Alex Rodriguez’s lengthy press conference here to be sure his star — and, heck, other stars — were now playing the game clean.

“I hope so,” Cashman said.

It’s what he now refuses to say that truly echoed.

For the second consecutive spring training and the third time under his watch as Yankees general manager, Cashman sat in front of the media and a few feet away from one of his players as they answered questions about past use of banned substances. First, it was Jason Giambi. Then, last year, it was Andy Pettitte. And today it was Rodriguez, the game’s once-golden slugger. Cashman said when he negotiated a record-setting, 10-year deal with Rodriguez last offseason — a contract complete with about $30 million in incentives for reaching historic home run marks — he did so assuming that Rodriguez was free and clear of the Steroid Era. He assumed Rodriguez was clean.

He’s done assuming.

“The guy I used to be would have crawled out on that limb. I’m not doing that anymore,” Cashman said. “A lot of bad stuff took place and we’re all dealing with it.”

Rodriguez spoke to the media for more than 30 minutes this afternoon at George M. Steinbrenner Field (nee Legends Field). He gave details about the type of banned substance he used, how he received the drugs (”injected”), and offered a rough estimate of how many times he used from 2001 to ‘03 (20 to 30). He presented apologies and he bit back tears as he turned to address the roster load of Yankees who showed up to offer support at the press conference.

Cashman agreed that the motivation for the players was probably “a blend” of those who genuinely cared about Rodriguez the person and those who genuinely understand the value to the team of Rodriguez the player.

“First bear with me,” Rodriguez said before reading a prepared statement. “I’m a little nervous, or a lot nervous.”

Rodriguez went on to say:

“I know I’m in position to earn … trust back.”
“It was pretty evident (when taking the substances) that we didn’t know what we were doing.”
“I’m not sure what the benefit was.”
“I’m here to take my medicine.”
“I knew we weren’t taking Tic Tacs.”
“Look, for a week here I’ve been looking for people to blame and I keep looking at myself.”

He said much more and already articles are popping up all over the Internet (including this live blog of the press conference at USAToday). I’ll be writing a story shortly for tomorrow’s Post-Dispatch, and you can be sure every morsel of Rodriguez’s press conference today will be available somewhere by dinner time — complete with a heaping side of analysis and opinion.

Afterward, Cashman held court and he talked candidly about his hopes and worries entering today.

The Yankees general manager said he hoped Rodriguez wouldn’t hold a “short and sweet” press conference because it wouldn’t satisfy the masses, wouldn’t stem the doubt. Rodriguez needed to be detailed and answer questions, Cashman said, and he did. Cashman also acknowledged the “shelf life” of this story — even pointing out how it will be the headline every time the Yankees go into a new town. “Yankees go to Chicago, Yankees go to Oakland, Yankees go to Texas… ,” he recited.

Cashman said the Rodriguez who came to the Yankees from Texas couldn’t have handled today’s press conference and this controversy as well as the Rodriguez he knows now.

“If you want to use that analogy — this is Humpty Dumpty,” Cashman said. “We’ve got to put him back together again and get him back up on the wall.”

As part of the press conference, Rodriguez said he and Don Hooton have entered into a partnership to help support the Taylor Hooton Foundation’s educational goals. The Foundation was established by the Hooton after their linked their son’s death to his steroid use. There are many lessons that he can learn from this experience, Rodriguez repeatedly said during the press conference. And there are lessons here for baeball, too.

Cashman talked about the testing in place right now gives him the feeling that what he’s watching on the field “is real.” But can he be sure? Can he really know? Fool me once …

There is also the lesson of Tuesday’s press conference. Cashman hopes that other players or young players saw Rodriguez’s attempt to save his reputation as a warning. This is the punishment that awaits. Not the suspension. Not the fines. Not the asterisks or lost statistics. But shame. Shame awaits.

“More of a deterrent is this public bloodletting of the stars, the fallen stars,” Cashman said. He hopes young players think “‘I don’t want to go through that. I don’t want to be the poster child.’ They might make a different choice (about using) now than they would have a generation ago.”

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Albert Pujols officially notified the Cardinals and Dominican Republic baseball officials Monday that he will not participate in the World Baseball Classic.
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