In a quest to bolster their starting rotation for the 2006 season, the Cardinals pursued A.J. Burnett and Javier Vazquez. Only after both efforts failed did the Cardinals turn to one of their own, Matt Morris. Too late. Mike Matheny had helped woo Morris to the Giants.
Rejecting the Cardinals’ request to accept a hometown discount, Morris, who had become a free agent, signed with the Giants on Dec. 13, 2005.
Matheny played a significant role in advising Morris.
“I would not discount the presence of Mike Matheny as a factor in Matt’s decision,” Barry Axelrod, Morris’ agent, told the San Francisco Chronicle. “It was not the overwhelming factor, but a factor.”
Slap in the face
As the Cardinals’ starting catcher from 2000 through 2004, Matheny caught Morris each of those seasons, including 2001 when the right-hander led the National League with 22 wins.
“Matt has a tremendous confidence with Mike and they’ve had a good experience together in the past,” Axelrod said.
Matheny became a free agent after the 2004 season. He wanted to remain with St. Louis and the Cardinals wanted to keep him. The Giants, though, made the best financial offer and Matheny accepted.
Morris, who had a 101-62 record and 3.61 ERA in eight seasons with the Cardinals, faced a situation similar to what Matheny had experienced. The Cardinals offered to keep him, but the Giants proposed a more lucrative deal.
“Early on, Matt and I talked and I knew he was going to have some decisions to make,” Matheny said to Joe Strauss of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. “… It didn’t sound like (the Cardinals) were putting him high on their priority list. I know that’s a slap in the face. I’ve been in that same situation.”
Second-half fade
Morris, 31, had been part of a 2005 Cardinals starting rotation that included Chris Carpenter, Jason Marquis, Mark Mulder and Jeff Suppan. In 31 starts for the 2005 Cardinals, Morris was 14-10 with a 4.11 ERA. He placed second on the club in strikeouts (117) but also gave up the second-most hits (209) while pitching the fifth-most innings (192.2).
After posting a 10-2 record and 3.10 ERA before the 2005 all-star break, Morris was 4-8 with a 5.32 ERA in the season’s second half. In five September starts, Morris was 0-4 with a 4.08 ERA.
Morris did start and win the Cardinals’ clincher in the 2005 NL Division Series versus the Padres. However, he was 0-1 with a 5.06 ERA in the NL Championship Series against the Astros.
Bidding game
The Cardinals’ top priority after the 2005 season was to sign Burnett, 28, who had become a free agent after posting 12 wins with 198 strikeouts in 32 starts for the 2005 Marlins.
The finalists for Burnett were the Blue Jays and Cardinals. “The Cardinals are still in this thing,” Darek Braunecker, Burnett’s agent, told the Post-Dispatch on Dec. 1, 2005.
“When I saw them going after A.J. that hard, we got it in our mind that I wasn’t going to be in their plans,” Morris said of the Cardinals. “We started exploring some other options.”
The Cardinals offered Burnett a contract with an annual value of $10 million, but wouldn’t guarantee a fifth year, the Post-Dispatch reported. Burnett accepted the Blue Jays’ offer of a five-year contract for $55 million.
Next, the Cardinals talked with the Diamondbacks about a trade for Vazquez, 29, who had 11 wins with 192 strikeouts in 33 starts for Arizona in 2005. The proposed deal fell apart when the Diamondbacks wouldn’t agree to pay a portion of Vazquez’s salary over the next two years, according to the Post-Dispatch.
Matt matters
Morris suddenly had the Cardinals’ full attention.
“Our interest in maintaining a strong rotation brings us to Matt,” Cardinals general manager Walt Jocketty said.
The Cardinals offered Morris a two-year contract with a club option for a third. The deal would pay Morris $13 million over two years and another $7 million if the option was used for a third, according to the Post-Dispatch.
“I hope Matt would sign for less here than somewhere else,” Jocketty said. “He may not, but we’d like to have him back.”
Feeling wanted
Morris, though, was receiving interest from several teams, most especially the Rangers and Giants.
He informed the Cardinals they were out of the running. “I don’t think they were serious about signing me,” Morris said to Rick Hummel of the Post-Dispatch.
Admitting that “it’s hard to let go,” Morris added, “I think St. Louis (with its offer) made the decision a little easier.”
Morris rejected a three-year, $25 million offer from the Rangers and accepted a three-year, $27 million contract from the Giants.
At a news conference, Morris said, “I had a great run with St. Louis. They’re a class organization and they treated me great throughout my years there.”
Said Matheny of Morris: “He’s intense. He’s one of those guys you know you’re going to get everything he’s got.”
Morris, though, wasn’t the pitcher for the Giants that he had been for the Cardinals. He was 10-15 with a 4.98 ERA in 2006 and 10-11 with a 4.89 ERA in 2007 before finishing his career with the 2008 Pirates.
After losing out on Burnett, Vazquez and Morris, the Cardinals signed Sidney Ponson, who had been released by the Orioles, to join a projected 2006 starting rotation with Carpenter, Marquis, Mulder and Suppan.
Previously: Matt Morris close to perfect at home in 2001
Previously: Why Mike Matheny ended his playing career as a Giant
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