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Rick Horton, Cardinals broadcaster and former pitcher, says manager Mike Matheny is an outstanding leader and Adam Wainwright could win 20 for St. Louis this year.

Horton, entering his ninth season as a Cardinals broadcaster after pitching for St. Louis from 1984-87 and 1989-90, granted me an interview while taking a break from participating in the Cardinals Legends Camp at Jupiter, Fla. The tape-recorded interview was conducted Friday, Jan. 27, 2012, at Roger Dean Stadium. Horton, smart and personable, was generous with his time and thoughtful with his answers.

Q: Let’s go back to August of last season. Things looked bleak for the Cardinals. What do you think turned it around for them?

Rick Horton: A couple of things happened. One thing you can’t overlook is the trade of Colby Rasmus and getting the bullpen shored up by getting Marc Rzepczynski. Around the same time, the Cardinals got Rafael Furcal to play shortstop. So the defense for the Cardinals improved tremendously.

Defense matters. It’s an absolute fact that if you can’t catch the ball better than the rest, you’re going to lose games you shouldn’t lose. I don’t care how well you hit and how well you pitch. If you can’t catch the ball consistently and make some plays better than the other guy, especially up the middle, it’s really tough to win, and that’s been true in baseball forever.

The Cardinals became better up the middle when they had Furcal at shortstop and Jon Jay in center field, so I think that’s a big piece. And I think the bullpen all came together at the same time. They all kind of got into a flow and got onto a roll.

So the makeup of the team changed. That team always knew they were better than they were showing. When they started to show it, it just raised the bar for them in terms of their own expectations of how they could play.

Q: From a pitcher’s perspective, Game 5 of the Division Series, Chris Carpenter vs. Roy Halladay, a 1-0 victory for the Cardinals over the Phillies. How good was that?

Rick Horton: That’s the game I want to watch. People like offense. I like offense. But the game is more fun to me _ it’s more pure _ when it’s a 2-1 game or a 3-2 game, when every run matters and every decision that a manager makes is critical and every executed little thing matters more.

You get the bunt down in a 17-2 game in the third inning and nobody remembers and nobody cares. So the beauty of the bunt, the beauty of the hit-and-run or the stolen base or taking the extra base or hitting the cutoff man, all those little things about baseball become infinitely more important in a game when you have Carpenter and Halladay pitching.

Q: Game 6 turned out to be the greatest Cardinals comeback in a World Series, culminating with the walkoff home run by David Freese. Where were you for that game?

Rick Horton: For most of the game I was in the ballpark, going from place to place and preparing for the postgame show, which I was doing.

So about the seventh inning, I went to the outside part of the ballpark on the north side where they had set up where we were going to do our postgame set, right next to the ESPN set. I went to the set with Al Hrabosky and was prepared to do the postgame analysis of the Cardinals losing Game 6 of the World Series. We had monitors out there and were watching the last couple of innings. We were writing scripts and preparing conversation about how it was a good season but just didn’t finish well.

A minute before we’re about to go on and do the postgame wrapup of the Cardinals season, things got changed, our scripts got rewritten and baseball changed in a heartbeat for a lot of players, and lives changed in a heartbeat, including David Freese’s. The number of moments that happened from that seventh inning on, so many things critical to the Cardinals winning that game. Phenomenal.

I remember when it was over and we were trying to ad-lib new scripts now that the Cardinals had won it. The thing we kept talking about was you can’t condense Game 6 into a soundbite. I think our postgame show went about two hours and we probably had about two more hours we could have talked about.

Q:  Were you surprised by manager Tony La Russa’s decision to retire or did you have an inkling?

Rick Horton: I did not have an inkling. At the time, it was a shock. But in retrospect I looked back at some things he’d said and some things I’d seen in him and I was less surprised. It seemed like he was a little more relaxed in the second half of the season. Of course, winning had something to do with that. But, even beyond that, I think there was a resignation to stop and smell the roses more. I could see evidence of that in the rearview mirror.

Q: Did Albert Pujols’ decision to leave the Cardinals surprise you?

Rick Horton: Yes, it did. But by a hair. I kind of had it 50-50 the whole time and I was going back and forth 60-40 both ways when I was asked about it all year long. When Tony decided to leave, that started swaying me 60-40 that Albert would go. But as the negotiations were going on I wasn’t sure another team was going to jump up and go to the level that would convince him to go elsewhere. I think had it (the money) been close he would have stayed in St. Louis. He loves St. Louis and St. Louis loves Albert.

If I’m in his shoes and somebody offers me a quarter of a billion dollars, we could all say, ‘I wouldn’t have taken it, I’d stay.’ Well, wait until that happens before you’re sure that you would say no. I hope history sees it as a guy who did what’s best for his career because five years from now he may be a DH anyway, so his value is much higher as an American League commodity than as a National League commodity.

And the way contracts work I think it was just the best business deal for him. It would not have been a good business deal for the Cardinals to pay him a quarter of a billion dollars for 10 years. Nothing against him, it just wouldn’t. Some would say it isn’t a good business deal for the Angels. Time will tell.

Q: Realistically, what can be expected this year from Adam Wainwright on his comeback from Tommy John surgery?

Rick Horton: He’s already throwing. He’s down here working out. He’s thrown some bullpens already. The doctors have said his elbow is more sound than it would be normally. So I don’t think there’s a real concern about reoccurrence.

Adam knows his mechanics well enough and he knows who he is as a pitcher well enough that I think he’s going to get back up on the bicycle and ride it. Some pitchers get hurt and they’re always feeling for their mechanics. He’s so consistent that I don’t think he’ll have any problem getting back to where he was.

I wouldn’t be surprised if he wins 20 games. I just wouldn’t.

Q: Jaime Garcia this year could become just the fourth Cardinals left-hander in the last 50 years to have three consecutive double-digit win seasons. As someone who has the perspective of a left-handed pitcher, where do you see Garcia’s career going?

Rick Horton: I see Garcia at a fork in the road. I don’t mean to imply that I think he’s got anything wrong with him. But I could see him going in two different directions.

I could see him escalating, because he’s got really good stuff. And I could see him getting something that clicks in that makes him go from good to great.

I could see him in that other part of that fork, becoming just an average-to-good left-hander who is productive. I don’t see him going south. But he could stay the same or he could go much better.

Inconsistencies in his pitching mechanics make him feel for the game a little bit, and there are times when it’s really easy for him and times when it’s hard. And there are times when he loses it, he loses it quickly and he doesn’t know how to get it back. So the negative things about him are things that he could fix and figure out and he may never go back there again. That’s possible and that’s what you hope for.

So I would say he has potential to be three notches higher than he is as a pitcher _ and he’s already good _ or he has the potential to be just a good big-league pitcher the rest of his career, which isn’t so bad.

Q: What is your take on Mike Matheny as Cardinals manager?

Rick Horton: Mike Matheny is an outstanding leader of men. I know him very well. He knows baseball. The style he is going to have as a manager and how he handles the things he’s going to have to handle is an unknown to everybody, including him. Because you don’t know until you’re in those shoes.

Every indication would be that he has the intellect, the baseball feel, the leadership ability to be able to handle the position and be good at what he does. I have a lot of confidence in him because I know him as a man. People like him, people will follow him.

Last year in spring training, Tony La Russa brought him in to this clubhouse and Mike Matheny gave a talk to the entire Cardinals team that Tony asked him to give and it was a 20-minute talk about what it means to be a professional player.

As people left that clubhouse _ media was not allowed in there _ one guy after another were coming up and going, “Holy cow. You would not believe how awesome that was.”

These are guys who have heard from five-star generals. They’ve heard from people before. They’re not naive about that. The coaches were saying the same thing. I remember Joe Pettini coming out and saying, “I’ve never heard anything like that.”

For people at spring training to be wowed at 9 o’clock in the morning is pretty impressive. But that’s the kind of guy Mike is. I wouldn’t call him overly dynamic, but he’s a man’s man, a leader and people respond to him.

Q: The Cardinals have a great tradition of ballplayers turning into top-notch broadcasters. Joe Garagiola. Bill White. Bob Uecker. Tim McCarver. Mike Shannon. I see you as the next in carrying on that legacy. Where do you see your career going?

Rick Horton: I appreciate you seeing me in that list of people. I don’t see myself that way. I see myself as a guy who gets the opportunity to talk about the team. I see myself as being more of a conduit to Cardinals fans. That’s where my equity is. That’s where my connection is.

I don’t really think bigger than that. I don’t really have a vision beyond that. I want to be good at what I’m doing. I want to keep getting better at what I’m doing.

The reason I’m doing it in the first place is the right people told me I should try it. And the right person was Jack Buck. He said, “You might want to get into this business.” When Jack Buck says it, you’ve got to try it.

I take it seriously but I don’t try to be serious in the way I do it. It’s a viewership responsibility for me to be a voice for the fans. It’s a pleasure to do it. Every day I get a chance to be a Cardinals broadcaster, it’s an honor.

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(Updated April 26, 2023)

Cardinals catchers sometimes make successful baseball broadcasters.

Tim McCarver was named the 2012 Ford C. Frick Award winner for excellence in broadcasting.

McCarver is one of three former Cardinals players to earn the Frick Award. The others, Joe Garagiola (1991) and Bob Uecker (2003), also were catchers.

_ Garagiola played for the Cardinals from 1946-51 and was a member of their 1946 World Series championship team.

_ Uecker played for the Cardinals as McCarver’s backup from 1964-65 and was a member of their 1964 World Series championship team.

_ McCarver played for the Cardinals from 1959-69 and 1973-74, was a member of their 1964 and 1967 World Series championship teams and was the analyst for Fox during its telecasts of the 2011 World Series that yielded the Cardinals their 11th championship.

In a conference call interview arranged by the Hall of Fame, McCarver said, “There is a natural bridge from being a catcher to talking about the view of the game and the view of the other players. It is translating that for the viewers.”

A 20-member committee consisting of 15 Frick Award winners (including Garagiola and Uecker) and five broadcast historians/columnists (including St. Louis resident Bob Costas) voted for the 2012 Frick Award winner.

McCarver first explored a career in broadcasting in 1975. After he was released by the Red Sox on June 23, McCarver, 33, said he figured his playing career was finished. He went to Philadelphia and auditioned for broadcasting jobs with television stations there. The Phillies surprised him by offering him a playing contract. McCarver signed with them July 1.

In 1977, as the Blue Jays prepared for their inaugural season as an American League expansion franchise in Toronto, they contacted McCarver. Writing about it in October 1979 for The Sporting News, Hal Bodley reported, “The Blue Jays offered McCarver a four-year contract as a member of their radio-TV team. He turned it down. At that time, there was an informal agreement that when he finally decided to retire, he would get some type of a position with the (Philadelphia) club.”

In his Hall of Fame conference call, McCarver confirmed that Phillies executive Bill Giles approached him in 1977 and “told me that when my playing days were over there would be a spot for me in the broadcast booth.”

When McCarver retired as a player after the 1979 season, the Phillies did hire him for their broadcast team, primarily to work with Prism, a fledgling cable television company that did about 30 Phillies games each year.

“I have often said that I was very fortunate to get into the business with the likes of (Phillies broadcasters) Andy Musser, Harry Kalas, Chris Wheeler and, of course, the irrepressible Richie Ashburn,” McCarver said.

By all accounts, McCarver, glib and gabby, was a broadcast natural. Yet, he yearned to become just the 10th player to appear in major-league games stretching over four decades. On Sept, 1, 1980, the Phillies activated him. McCarver had five at-bats in six games. His only hit (a two-run double off Steve Ratzer of the Expos) came at Montreal in his final game, Oct. 5, 1980, 11 days shy of his 39th birthday. Boxscore

After three years as a Phillies broadcaster, McCarver joined the Mets’ broadcast team in 1983 and stayed with them through 1998. He also was a broadcaster for the Yankees, Giants and Cardinals, and with NBC, CBS, The Baseball Network and Fox.

With CBS, he was paired with longtime Cardinals broadcaster Jack Buck, another Frick Award winner (1987).

Later, with Fox, McCarver worked with Jack’s son, Joe Buck. In a 2012 interview with Cardinals Magazine, Joe Buck said of McCarver, “As an analyst, he’s the best at first-guessing, the best at looking ahead as to what could happen. I think he’s the best in the history of the medium. I don’t think anybody is better at looking forward or giving the options than Tim McCarver.”

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While Bill White visited his former teammate, Mike Shannon, in the broadcast booth at Busch Stadium on April 5, 2011, Albert Pujols stepped to the plate in the bottom of the first inning of the Pirates-Cardinals game.

As he did in his March 2011 phone interview with me, White said he hadn’t seen Pujols play much.

Shannon interrupted to say that:

_ The smartest player he ever saw was Giants outfielder Willie Mays. “I never took my eyes off of him on the field,” Shannon said.

_ The second-smartest player he ever saw was Pujols. “He is very intelligent on the field,” Shannon said.

White, in St. Louis to promote his autobiography “Uppity: My Untold Story About The Games People Play” (2011, Grand Central Publishing), chatted with Shannon and his Cardinals broadcast partner, John Rooney, during the first and second innings.

Teammates on the 1964 Cardinals team that won the World Series championship, White and Shannon clearly enjoy one another.

White said of Shannon, “This guy kept us alive (in 1964). Mike came in (from the minor leagues) … and had a lot of fun.”

“We had a lot of fun,” Shannon confirmed.

You had a lot of fun,” White said, tweaking the free-spirited Shannon.

That prompted Shannon to launch into a story about conducting an interview with Phillies third baseman Mike Schmidt. According to Shannon, Schmidt told him, “I really admired you … You had so much fun when you played.”

Shannon said he stopped the interview, turned off the tape recorder, and pointed out to Schmidt that he hit 548 home runs and Shannon hit only 68. “And you didn’t have any fun?” Shannon said incredulously. “No,” Schmidt replied.

“Mike (Schmidt) was a very serious person,” White said.

Shannon later chortled, to a clearly amused White, that he still sometimes goes to bed at 5 a.m. and still sometimes awakes at 5 a.m.

When the conversation turned to Johnny Keane, the manager who led the Cardinals to the 1964 World Series title and then resigned to join the Yankees, Shannon said, “I knew when he went over there (to New York) it would kill him.” (Keane died in January 1967, eight months after the Yankees fired him).

After explaining that Keane inherited a New York team that “was too old and couldn’t run,” White revealed that Yankees scout Mayo Smith (who later managed the 1968 Tigers in the World Series against St. Louis) used to ride on the Cardinals’ team bus in the latter part of the 1964 season.

“We should have realized then that he was there to talk to John about managing the Yankees,” White said.

With two out in the top of the second inning, Shannon turned over the microphone to a surprised White and tried to coax him into doing play-by-play. White was a good sport and tried to describe a pitch or two, but, clearly uncomfortable, told Shannon he hadn’t done any play-by-play since the 1980s when he and Phil Rizzuto were the Yankees’ broadcasters.

“It’s like riding a bike,” Shannon implored. “You never forget.”

White politely declined. “Besides,” he said slyly, “you’re not Rizzuto.”

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(Updated Nov. 30, 2021)

The Cardinals gave Elston Howard a chance to become the first black broadcaster of a major-league team.

Howard rejected the offer because he had hopes of becoming the first black big-league manager.

Manager material

Howard, a St. Louis native who played against the Cardinals in the 1964 and 1967 World Series, retired after the 1968 season, ending a 14-year major-league playing career as a catcher and outfielder with the Yankees and Red Sox.

He joined the Yankees coaching staff in 1969. After that season, the Cardinals offered him a chance to join Jack Buck on their broadcasting team, replacing Harry Caray. Howard had broadcast high school football games in 1969 for a New York television station.

Howard thought he had a good chance to eventually replace Ralph Houk as Yankees manager, so he opted to remain a coach rather than take the Cardinals’ offer.

Jim Woods, who had been on the Pirates broadcast team with Bob Prince, replaced Caray in St. Louis. It wasn’t until two years later that Howard revealed the Cardinals’ offer.

“Yankees coach Elston Howard said he was offered a job on the Cardinals play-by-play broadcast team after the 1969 season, but decided against it,” The Sporting News reported in February 1971.

In the book “Elston and Me: The Story of the First Black Yankee,” authors Arlene Howard (Elston’s widow) and Ralph Wimbish wrote, “Someone from the Cardinals called and asked if he was interested in becoming a broadcaster … He (Howard) turned down an offer to work with Jack Buck doing St. Louis Cardinals games.”

Bill White, the former Cardinals first baseman and a friend of Howard, became the first black broadcaster of a big-league team, joining the Yankees crew in 1971. White told me in a 2011 interview he also was offered a broadcasting job with the Cardinals when Caray was fired after the 1969 season. White said he initially accepted the offer but reconsidered.

In the “Elston and Me” book, the authors said White and Howard were friends. When White became the Yankees’ broadcaster, he turned to Howard, the Yankees’ coach, for advice.

“Elston made my job much easier because he had great knowledge of the players,” White said in the book. “I had to depend on him. He was my eyes and ears on the field.”

When Houk stepped down as manager after the 1973 season, the Yankees bypassed Howard and hired former Cardinals outfielder Bill Virdon as manager for 1974.

“I knew Ellie wanted to manage,” White said in the Howard biography. “He should have. He had as much experience as anybody out there. There is no reason he couldn’t have been a manager.”

In 1975, Frank Robinson became the first black big-league manager, with the Cleveland Indians.

Cardinals tryout

Howard had hoped, even expected, to begin his big-league playing career with his hometown Cardinals. After graduating from Vashon High School in the late 1940s, he attended a four-day tryout camp at St. Louis’ Sportsman’s Park and performed well, but the Cardinals never made an offer.

“The Cardinals once had Howard all set for signing,” The Sporting News reported in 1971, “but that was just before they began signing Negroes.”

In the “Elston and Me” book, Howard recalled, “I did as good as anybody else at the tryout. I pumped about three of them out of the park and I made it to the final day of the tryout, then they said they’d send me a letter.”

According to the book, “Elston would have signed with the Cardinals, but he never heard back from them. They were not ready to sign any black players.”

After playing for the Negro American League Kansas City Monarchs, Howard signed with the Yankees in 1950. When he made it to the big leagues with them in 1955 at 26, he was the first black Yankees player _ eight years after Jackie Robinson had broken the color barrier with the Dodgers and one year after the first black, Tom Alston, played for the Cardinals.

After Howard was named Most Valuable Player of the International League while a Yankees prospect in 1954, the Cardinals tried to trade for him. Cardinals general manager Dick Meyer confirmed the Cardinals submitted a list of shortstops for the Yankees to choose from in exchange for Howard, but the negotiations ended when the Yankees asked for third baseman Ken Boyer, The Sporting News reported.

Howard played in 10 World Series (nine with the Yankees) and won the American League Most Valuable Player Award in 1963.

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(Updated Sept. 27, 2019)

Bob Uecker, unable to supplant Joe Torre as the starting catcher, was traded by the Braves to the Cardinals for outfielder Gary Kolb and catcher Jim Coker on April 9, 1964.

bob_ueckerThe Cardinals needed a backup for Tim McCarver and they liked Uecker’s throwing arm.

“We got Uecker to help Timmy and make our catching solid,” St. Louis manager Johnny Keane told The Sporting News. “We’re certainly not vulnerable behind the plate anymore. Our bench could be stronger, too, with Uecker available.”

Though Uecker, 29, was used sparingly during the season, he strongly contributed to a significant win against his former team in the Cardinals’ late surge to the 1964 National League pennant.

On Sept. 1, 1964, in a game at St. Louis, the Braves took a 4-0 lead in the second inning against the Cardinals and knocked out starter Ray Sadecki. Behind the relief pitching of Ron Taylor, the Cardinals fought back. Uecker hit his only home run of the season, a solo shot in the fourth off Denny Lemaster, to get the Cardinals within a run at 4-3.

In the bottom of the ninth, with the score tied at 4-4, Julian Javier laced a one-out double and Lemaster intentionally walked Carl Warwick to get to Uecker, hoping to induce a double play.

Uecker, who hit .198 that season, foiled the strategy by pulling a single to left, scoring Javier from second and giving the Cardinals a 5-4 walkoff victory.  Boxscore

“I wasn’t trying extra hard just because we were playing the Braves,” Uecker said to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. “I was just happy to get some hits. I’d been hitting the ball good, but right at somebody.”

In the clubhouse after the game, as Uecker waited to be interviewed on television, his road roommate, pitcher Roger Craig, playfully approached him with a handful of shaving cream and a razor. “You’ve got to look right when you’re going on television,” Craig said to Uecker.

Spurred by the comeback, the Cardinals posted a 21-8 record in September, clinched the pennant on the final day of the regular season and won the World Series championship in a seven-game classic with the Yankees.

In his 1987 book, “Oh, Baby, I Love It,” McCarver recalled the scene in the clubhouse after the Cardinals beat the Yankees in Game 7 of the 1964 World Series: “I remember Bob Uecker, without a stitch of clothing on, dancing to the dumbest song I’d ever heard _ ‘Pass the Biscuits, Miranda.’ He was dancing all by himself, somehow putting modern moves to this idiotic song that, for some reason, had been the 1946 Cardinals’ rallying song. Uke could dance, too.”

Uecker was McCarver’s backup again in 1965, batting .228 in 53 games. Uecker hit two homers that season, against future Hall of Famers Gaylord Perry of the Giants and Sandy Koufax of the Dodgers.

On Oct. 27, 1965, the Cardinals traded first baseman Bill White, shortstop Dick Groat and Uecker to Philadelphia for outfielder Alex Johnson, pitcher Art Mahaffey and catcher Pat Corrales.

In his book “The Spirit of St. Louis,” author Peter Golenbock said Uecker was traded because he routinely entertained his teammates with humorous imitations of Cardinals general manager Bob Howsam, who wasn’t amused.

Howsam also was a protege of Branch Rickey, who had opposed the deal that brought Uecker to the Cardinals.

“When it came time to deal Bill White to the Phils,” Golenbock wrote, “Howsam refused to OK the trade unless Philadelphia accepted Uecker as well. For Howsam, it was addition by subtraction.”

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Buster Posey of the Giants may bring comparisons to other hard-hitting catchers such as Ted Simmons or Mike Piazza.

But how about Joe Garagiola?

Posey has joined Garagiola as the only rookie catchers in big-league history to have 4 hits and at least 2 RBI in a postseason game.

Posey did it on Oct. 20, 2010, going 4-for-5 with 2 RBI in San Francisco’s 6-5 Game 4 win against Philadelphia in the National League Championship Series.

Garagiola did even better for the Cardinals in 1946, going 4-for-5 with 3 RBI in St. Louis’ 12-3 Game 4 win against Boston in the 1946 World Series.

Posey was the fifth rookie to get 4 hits and 2 RBI in a big-league postseason game, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. The others: Jacoby Ellsbury of the Red Sox (2007), Miguel Cabrera of the Marlins (2003), Garagiola and Freddie Lindstrom of the Giants (1924).

Garagiola, best known as a broadcaster and humorist, was a 20-year-old rookie catcher for the Cardinals in 1946. He joined the Cardinals in May after completing service with the Army in the Phillipines. He hit .237 in 74 regular-season games for a St. Louis team that won the National League pennant.

In Game 4 of the World Series at Boston, Garagiola had 3 singles and a double. Boxscore

His RBI-single to center in the third scored Stan Musial. He singled again in the fifth. In the seventh, Garagiola drove a double to left, scoring Enos Slaughter. In the ninth, Slaughter scored again on a Garagiola single to right.

The 1946 World Series, won by the Cardinals in seven games, would be Garagiola’s only postseason appearance. He hit .316 (6-for-19) in five games, and did almost all of his damage at Fenway Park. Garagiola hit .417 at Boston in that Series (5-for-12) and .143 (1-for-7) at St. Louis.

In its recap of the 1946 World Series, The Sporting News wrote that St. Louis native Garagiola “was extremely popular with fellow players who frequently were his guests at spaghetti dinners cooked by Mom.”

The report concluded that “Joe is destined to become one of the game’s catching greats, in the opinion of (manager Eddie) Dyer and others.”

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