Cardinals set to face the Mets for four

The St. Louis Cardinals, 47-36 have now survived Albert Pujols’ injury. Chris Carpenter, Adam Wainwright, Mark Mulder, Cezar Izturis, and many others(15 to be exact) have also been on the DL, are still are on the DL. The Cardinals have had nine players make their major league debutes THIS season.  With all that said, the Cardinals are only 2.5 games out of first place, two weeks from the all star break. This is a big week for the Cardinals. The New York Mets, 40-41, come into St. Louis for four games, before the Cubs come in for three over the weekend. The Cubs lead the Cardinals in the NL Central by 2.5 games, but the Cubs have struggled mightily on the road. The Cubs are continuing their three city road trip, for four games in San Fransisco starting tonight.

Kyle Lohse will pitch tonight for the Cardinals. A few months ago the Mets could have signed Lohse for the same deal the Cardinals got him at in March, but Mets GM Omar M. turned down the deal, sighting he felt that was too much for Lohse. Lohse would love to stick it to him and the Mets, like he has the rest of the NL so far this season. Kyle is 9-2 with a 3.94 era so far this season. Lohse has not lost a game since May 8th, where he pitched 4 innings in Colorado. He took a no decision his last time out against Detroit, but before that won his last 6 starts.

John Maine is on the mound for the Mets. Maine has been solid once again with a 8-5 record, and a 3.73 era. Maine has won his last two starts going 6+ innings in each. In his last ten starts, Maine is 5-3. He has pitched well against the Cardinals in his career, making two starts and going 1-0.

The Man, El Hombre, Albert Pujols is 2-6, with 2 homeruns, and 7 rbis in his career off John Maine.

We look for more mash city tonight in St. Louis. The Cardinals are hot, and are ready to have a huge home stand. Go El Hombre! Go Cardinals!

Posted by APCMan on Jun 30 2008 in Cardinals Baseball, Featured, Pujols Club Updates, Pujols Game Day, Pujols Matchups, Pujols News


Albert since his return..

Think the St. Louis Cardinals missed Albert Pujols while he was gone? Think the fans won’t give him an ovation when he comes to the plate tonight in St. Louis? Albert has been back four games, and just mashed the baseball. Just goes to show how much of a hitting stud Albert is.

He came back Thursday in Detroit, and promptly went 4-4, a walk, and a RBI. The RBI was the go ahead RBI in the 9th until the Cardinal bullpen blew his chance.

On Friday in Kansas City, Albert may not have had his best, going 0-2, but the Royal pitchers still walked him twice. Okay, 4-6 since his return.

On Saturday, Albert went a quiet 1-4, but was smoking the baseball. Okay, 5-10 since his return from the DL, and on base in every game.

Sunday, Albert showed he still had some pop. He crushed a homerun in the 6th and almost hit one again later, in the 8th. Albert ended the day 2-4, with a double, and a homerun, driving home two runs, and scoring twice.. Okay 7-14, since his return.

Except Albert to stay hot. As the Mets and the Cubs come to town the Cardinals are only 2.5 games out of first place. Albert smells another opportunity at postseason, and when he gets that smell- LOOK OUT!

Posted by APCMan on Jun 30 2008 in Cardinals Baseball, Pujols News


Pujols is a faith healer

Check out the latest article on Y! Sports by a great writer Jeff Passan. On our guy!

Try to dissect Albert Pujols’ freakish ability to heal from injuries like a superhero, and the issue turns into baseball’s version of intelligent design, a God-vs.-Science debate that even Pujols can’t quite figure out.

First, he defers to the man upstairs. When challenged to put any of his accomplishments into context – say, returning from a calf injury a couple weeks ahead of schedule, then going 4 for 4 in his first game back Thursday and adding a monster home run Sunday in the St. Louis Cardinals’ 9-6 victory – Pujols falls back on faith.

“I give all the credit to God because he puts me on the field,” he said. “God is the only one who knows how quickly I heal.”

Except when Pujols is reminded of how hard he works. Now, there are some players for whom recovering from an injury is a task so Sisyphean, they end up getting crushed beneath the boulder. See: Pavano, Carl; Johnson, Nick; Sweeney, Mike; and other such denizens of the disabled list.

In his eight-year career, Pujols has spent two stints on the DL, and the first was much like the recent: An injury expected to sideline him for up to six weeks took less than three to heal. And as much as he defers to otherworldly beings, Pujols also doesn’t want to shortchange himself.

“It’s not amazing,” he said. “I work hard for it. Why should I be surprised about it?”

Hey, Pujols is batting .356, getting on base at a .483 clip and swatting balls to every part of the field, so let the man have his cake and eat it. What Pujols has done, and continues to do, is play at a level stratospheric among his peers, unique in the purest sense of the word, joyous to partake in.

“He is an amazing player,” Cardinals manager Tony La Russa said. “You’re seeing it. Comes off the disabled list and gets four hits. That’s amazing. If you watch him on a daily basis, he does something good every day. He does some amazing things often.

“I never take him for granted. I don’t take greatness like that for granted. I enjoy it too much.”

Well, that and the production. The Cardinals worried that without Pujols, their surprising start would go for naught. Instead, at 47-36, they own the National League’s second-best record, behind Central Division rival Chicago, are one of only five teams with winning marks at home and on the road, and now get energized by the league’s most fearsome hitter.

All of which makes June 11 laughable in hindsight. The Cardinals’ clubhouse transformed into a wake that night, the mood somber, everyone recounting stories about the deceased: St. Louis’ season. Pujols pulled up lame running to first base, and panic set in. He left the stadium on crutches. A return before the All-Star break was optimistic.

Along the way, something happened. Pujols started to say he would be back soon. No one knew how or why. The Cardinals just trusted him, like recovering from injury was some sort of a skill Pujols had mastered.

“You ever see ‘Rudy’?” Cardinals trainer Barry Weinberg asked. “Rudy asks why he can’t get into Notre Dame. Remember what the priest told him? There are two facts in life. One, there’s a God. Two, I’m not him.”

In other words, Weinberg hasn’t the faintest clue. Nobody understands how Pujols continues to play at such an elite level with a high-grade tear of the ulnar collateral ligament in his right elbow, which, at some point or another, will require Tommy John surgery. They can’t fathom how he shook off his last disabling injury, one to the rib cage, an integral part of a hitter’s swing, as though it were a hangnail.

“I don’t think there’s some magic button or special potion he’s taking,” Cardinals general manager John Mozeliak said. “Albert loves to play the game of baseball. That’s where he gets his joy from. Regardless of whether we’re 15 (games) up or 15 down, in first place or last place, he just wants to play baseball.”

Such has been evident over recent days, when Pujols would retire to his sanctum, the batting cage, and work through the routine that has helped him hone his swing in the fashion Tiger Woods does his. Pujols is, as teammate Jason Isringhausen notes, “a maniac” with his workouts, and he means that in the most complimentary way.

So to see Pujols slash a double down the line in the first inning Sunday astounded no one, and to see Kansas City issue him his 19th intentional walk of the season in the third inning was no shock.

“I think anybody will take the way I’m swinging now,” Pujols said.

True enough, which is why the only flabbergasting moment of the afternoon came when Royals pitcher Joel Peralta actually believed he could throw a 3-2 fastball by Pujols in the sixth inning.

Pujols turned on the 93-mph pitch and sent it soaring into a stiff wind, and it kept going, long over the left-field fence. Nothing in this world was going to stop it, and nothing – neither God nor science – could explain how he did it, either.

Posted by APCMan on Jun 30 2008 in Cardinals Baseball, Pujols News


Playing Today!

Thank God Albert Pujols is most likely playing today.  It’s on now!

Posted by AlbertPujolsClub.com on Jun 26 2008 in Pujols News


Adam Kennedy? A first basemen?

Adam Kennedy- the first basemen of the future?

Posted by APCMan on Jun 25 2008 in Cardinals Baseball, Pujols News


Cardinals beat Tigers 8-4

Brian Barton hit his second homerun of the season, and drove home two, reaching base three times, before being pinch hit for, which turned to gold as Skip Schumaker came up with a 2 run basehit, which put the Cardinals up for good. Nick Stavinoha, and Brendan Ryan also came up with big rbi hits, as the Cardinals knocked out Kenny Rogers and the Tigers 8-4.

Braden Looper picked up his 9th win, pitching 6 innings, allowing 7 hits and 4 runs. Looper has had t hree straight games of pitching exceptionally well. Kenny Rogers picked up the loss for the Tigers, falling to 5-5, as he could not get out of the 6th inning, going 5.1 innings, yielding 9 hits, 5 runs- all earned.

The Cardinals and Tigers will be back at it today with 9-2 Kyle Lohse taking on 7-2 Armando Galarraga.

Go Cardinals! This could be the last time the Cardinals are without Albert’s services!

Posted by APCMan on Jun 25 2008 in Cardinals Baseball, Pujols News


Cardinals set to face Detroit

The best news is Albert Pujols is set to return on Thursday. That should give the Cardinals a little hop in their step for the remaining three weeks before the All Star break. First things first though. The St. Louis Cardinals, 44-33, and 4.5 games out in the NL Central will take on the Detroit Tigers, 36-39, 5 games out in the AL Central this week at Comerica Park. This series will be the first time these two teams have played since the 2006 World Series, in which the Cardinals won in five games.

On Tuesday, Braden Looper gets the call for the Cardinals. Looper is 8-5 on the season with a 4.10 era. He has pitched well his last two starts, throwing a complete game shutout against the Reds, and most recently pitching seven solid innings in a no decision against Kansas City. Looper is 2-1 in his career against Detroit, and has made one start. His career era is a hefty 7.45. A few g uys that have decent numbers off Looper are Miguel Cabrera, .273- Magglio Ordonez is 2-3 with a homerun, Placido Polanco, .286, and Edgar Renteria .300. This should be a good test for Looper.

Kenny Rogers, the lefthander has pitched well lately for Detroit. He is 5-4 on the season with a 4.36 era. He has went 7 or more in his last five outings, only garnering one win in that time. His last time out, Rogers threw 7 innings, allowing just one run on five hits in a win over San Fransisco. Kenny is 0-0 with 2 career regular season starts against St. Louis. He threw really well in the 2006 World Series, against St. Louis.

Wednesday features nine game winner, Kyle Lohse for St. Louis, who has won six straight starts, and has not lost since May 8. He will take on the youngster for Detroit, Armando Galarraga. Galarraga is 7-2 with a 3.03 era. Armando has never faced St. Louis is his career.

The last game of the series on Thursday features Todd Wellemeyer, who was roughed up in his last start against Philadelphia, but hasn’t pitched since. He will face another lefthander for the Tigers in Nate Robertson. Robertson is 6-6, while Wellemeyer comes in 7-2.

Good luck to the Cardinals! We cannot wait to see Albert back in the lineup!

Go Cardinals!

Posted by APCMan on Jun 24 2008 in Cardinals Baseball, Pujols Club Updates, Pujols Game Day, Pujols News


Pujols set to return Thursday!

GREAT NEWS! Albert Pujols is set to return on Thursday! That is excellent news for all Cardinal fans! The Cardinals should get a g reat shot in the arm in Detroit and in Kansas City!

GO Albert and Go Cardinals!

Posted by APCMan on Jun 22 2008 in Featured, Pujols Club Updates, Pujols News


Cardinals fail to sweep, fall in 13.

In a epic battle in Boston, the Cardinals fell 5-3 in 13 innings, at the hands of the Boston Red Sox.

Brian Barton and Ryan Ludwick got the scoring started early with basehits. The Cardinals, and Joel Piniero, led 2-0 through 6, until Kevin Youkilis hit a solo homerun in the 7th.

Boston then got 2 runs in the 8th, but the Cardinals got hit a 2 out double from Adam Kennedy in the 9th off Johnathon Paplebon to tie the game at 3.

The scored stayed at 3-3 until the 13th inning when Youkilis went deep again, a 2 run shot to win the game for the Red Sox 5-3.

Posted by APCMan on Jun 22 2008 in Cardinals Baseball, Pujols News


Cardinals knock out Dice K, win big

The Cardinals scored 8 runs in 2 innings off 8-0 Dice K, and cruised to a 9-3 win over Boston. Troy Glaus’ grand slam was the key, in the second inning.  Mitchell Boggs picked up his second career win for the Cardinals.  Aaron Miles, Rick Ankiel, Troy Glaus, and Jason LaRue all picked up 2 hits.

Posted by APCMan on Jun 22 2008 in Cardinals Baseball, Pujols News