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(Updated July 26, 2020)

In 1970, Cardinals pitcher Steve Carlton could do almost nothing right against the Reds. The Cincinnati hitter who hurt him the most was Johnny Bench.

On July 26, 1970, a muggy Sunday afternoon in Cincinnati, Bench went 4-for-5 with three home runs, seven RBI and three runs scored in the Reds’ 12-5 victory against the Cardinals. All three home runs were hit versus Carlton. Boxscore

To give Bench a break from catching in the midsummer heat, Reds manager Sparky Anderson started the 22-year-old in left field that day. It was one of 17 games Bench started in the outfield in 1970. Pat Corrales, a former Cardinal, was the Cincinnati catcher.

“If that boy didn’t have to catch, there’s no telling what you might see,” Anderson told the Dayton Journal Herald.

Bench said to the Dayton Daily News, “If I can hit like that, I don’t care where I play, but there’s no question I feel stronger when I’m playing in the outfield.”

Hardball tactics

In the first inning, Bench, batting in the cleanup spot, hit a Carlton fastball over the right-center field wall at Riverfront Stadium for a three-run home run. When Bench followed by hitting a slider for a two-run home run to left in the second, Carlton fired a brushback pitch at the next batter, Lee May, sending him sprawling to the dirt.

“Carlton throwing at May is, well, it’s just baseball, but I don’t like anybody throwing at my hitters,” Anderson said to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

Said Cardinals manager Red Schoendienst: “A pitcher doesn’t have a chance any more. There’s the lively ball and the AstroTurf and the smaller strike zone … If you’re a pitcher, you have to brush back those hitters.”

Reds starter Wayne Simpson delivered payback the next inning when Carlton batted and was struck in the right calf by a pitch. Anderson approached Simpson about it between innings. “I told him I didn’t want him bothering with Carlton,” Anderson said. “I don’t like that type of baseball.”

When Simpson came to the plate in the bottom half of the third, Carlton threw a pitch inside. Simpson made a move toward Carlton, but no fight erupted.

Bench let his bat do the talking. He led off the fifth by belting a fastball over the wall in left for his third home run of the game against Carlton. “That’s the best day I’ve had since I hit three homers one day as a nine-year-old playing Little League ball at Cement, Okla.,” Bench told the Cincinnati Enquirer.

Said Anderson: “He’s only 22 and already he’s the best there is. Name me another catcher of our time you’d match him against.”

Fine wine

In his book “Chasing the Dream,” Joe Torre, who was Carlton’s roommate on Cardinals road trips in 1970, recalled, “After the game, Lefty and I commiserated over dinner and a little wine. I guess we had more than a little wine. When we got back to our hotel suite, I think we broke every stick of furniture in the room. When we awoke in the morning and realized what we had done, we tried to glue everything back together.

“When we left the suite, we had to make sure we didn’t close the door too hard because we were afraid the noise would cause everything to fall apart.”

Bench was the first Reds player with seven RBI in a game since Frank Robinson did it in May 1963, and he was the first Reds player with three home runs in a game since Art Shamsky in 1966. Bench went on to lead the National League in home runs (45) and RBI (148) in 1970, winning the Most Valuable Player Award and powering the Reds to the pennant.

Carlton made four starts against the Reds in 1970, posting an 0-4 record and 7.82 ERA. In 25.1 innings versus Cincinnati, Carlton yielded 24 runs and 35 hits.

Three years later, on May 9, 1973, Bench, catching and batting third, again smashed three home runs against Carlton, who was with the Phillies, in Cincinnati’s 9-7 victory at Philadelphia. Boxscore

“I don’t see how a man can cover so much of the plate,” Carlton told The Sporting News. “I threw Bench six inches inside and six inches outside, but it didn’t matter.”

Bench hit .305 (39-for-128) against Carlton in his career. The 12 home runs Bench belted against Carlton were the most he hit in his career against a left-hander.

Both Bench and Carlton are enshrined in the National Baseball Hall of Fame.

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(Updated Dec. 27, 2024)

In August 2001, the Cardinals began a transformation from underachievers to postseason qualifiers when they acquired pitcher Woody Williams from the Padres for outfielder Ray Lankford.

After winning the National League Central championship in 2000, the Cardinals were expected to contend in 2001, but they entered August in third place at 53-51 _ 8.5 games behind the first-place Cubs and four behind the Astros.

With the emergence of rookie Albert Pujols, the Cardinals had a surplus of outfielders, including Jim Edmonds, J.D. Drew and Lankford. Complaining about a lack of respect, Lankford, 34, was falling out of favor with team management. It didn’t help that he was hitting .235 with 105 strikeouts in 264 at-bats. Lankford had missed on 36 percent of his swings.

On Aug. 2, 2001, the Cardinals sent Lankford (who agreed to waive his no-trade clause) and more than $2.8 million to the Padres for Williams. Andy Benes was struggling (7.06 ERA entering August) and the Cardinals needed a fifth starter to join a rotation of Matt Morris, Darryl Kile, Dustin Hermanson and Bud Smith.

“We’re extremely happy,” Cardinals general manager Walt Jocketty said to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. “Woody Williams is a quality pitcher and a quality person.”

Williams, who would turn 35 Aug. 19, didn’t appear to be the obvious solution. He was 8-8 with a 4.97 ERA for the Padres, yielding 170 hits in 145 innings.

“I’m going to use this as a steppingstone that will allow me to get back to where I want to be,” Williams said.

Relying on a change of speeds and sharp location, Williams made his first Cardinals start on Aug. 4, 2001, against the Marlins at St. Louis and pitched six shutout innings. He left the game to a standing ovation from the crowd of 42,312. Luther Hackman and Gene Stechschulte combined to pitch three shutout innings in relief, preserving the win for Williams in a 3-0 victory. Boxscore

Starting with that game, the Cardinals went 38-16 the remainder of the season, finishing in a tie for first place with the Astros at 93-69 and qualifying for the playoffs for a second consecutive season.

The Cardinals couldn’t have done it without Williams, who was 7-1 with a 2.28 ERA for them, limiting batters to 54 hits in 75 innings.

Looking back on his Cardinals days, Williams told Stan McNeal of Cardinals Magazine in 2024, “When I got to St. Louis, I’d had a problem with giving up the long ball in my career … In St. Louis, my mentality became, ‘I’m going to attack the zone and keep the ball in the ballpark.’ I’ll be doggone if those guys behind me didn’t support me like crazy and make me look like a much better pitcher.”

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(Updated Aug. 5, 2023)

Among the top five on the Cardinals career strikeout list, one name stands out as a shining example of why persistence and reliability matter. Bob Forsch hardly was a strikeout artist, but he ranks with Bob Gibson, Adam Wainwright, Dizzy Dean and Chris Carpenter as being among the best in franchise history.

Of the top five strikeout pitchers among Cardinals, Forsch is the only one who never recorded as many as 190 strikeouts in a season. He never even came close.

In 15 seasons with the Cardinals, Forsch struck out 100 or more batters three times. His high was 114 in 1978. That also was the season he had his worst won-loss record with the Cardinals: 11-17.

The top Cardinals strikeout leaders are Gibson (3,117), Wainwright (2,186), Dean (1,095), Carpenter (1,085) and Forsch (1,079).

Gibson struck out 200 or more batters nine times. His career best was 274 in 1970. He led the National League with 268 in 1968. Gibson won the NL Cy Young Award in both years.

Dean achieved 190 or more strikeouts in five consecutive seasons: 1932 (191), 1933 (199), 1934 (195), 1935 (190) and 1936 (195). He led the NL for four consecutive years (1932-35).

Carpenter’s career high in strikeouts (213) helped earn him the Cy Young Award in 2005 with the Cardinals.

Wainwright had more than 200 strikeouts in a season three times: 212 in 2009, 213 in 2010 and 219 in 2013.

Forsch never led the Cardinals, let alone the NL, in strikeouts in any season.

Forsch’s single-game high in strikeouts came on April 12, 1978, in his second start of the season. Forsch pitched a complete-game four-hitter and struck out nine in the Cardinals’ 5-1 victory over the Pirates at St. Louis. In the ninth, the Pirates had two on with two outs when Forsch struck out third baseman Phil Garner with a hard slider for the third time to seal the win. Boxscore

“He was just showing us the fastball and going with a lot of off-speed stuff to get us out,” Pirates outfielder Dave Parker told the Associated Press.

Said Forsch to a reporter for United Press International: “I don’t think I gave in to anybody.”

Four days later, Forsch pitched the first of his two career no-hitters. On April 16, 1978, at St. Louis, Forsch struck out three and allowed no hits in the Cardinals’ 5-0 victory over the Phillies. Boxscore

(In his other no-hitter, Sept. 26, 1983, Forsch struck out six in the Cardinals’ 3-0 victory over the Expos at St. Louis. The sixth victim, pinch-hitter Terry Crowley, was ejected by umpire Harry Wendelstedt for arguing a called third strike leading off the ninth. Boxscore ).

Perhaps Forsch’s most dominant strikeout performance came against the Cubs on Sept. 20, 1987. Forsch started, pitched 5.2 innings before leaving with a groin strain and got the win in the Cardinals’ 10-2 victory over Greg Maddux in St. Louis. Of the 17 outs recorded by Forsch, eight were by strikeouts, an unusually high number for a 37-year-old right-hander better known for pitching to contact. Boxscore

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(Updated July 22, 2019)

The intensity got turned up to maximum levels when Whitey Herzog managed the Cardinals against counterpart Roger Craig of the Giants.

On July 22, 1986, a scuffle involving the Cardinals and Giants in St. Louis was sparked by a war of words between Herzog and Craig.

The Cardinals, powered by an eight-run fourth inning, led, 10-2, in the bottom of the fifth when their speedster, Vince Coleman, swiped second and third.

After a walk to Ozzie Smith, reliever Juan Berenguer threw a wild pitch to Willie McGee. As Coleman broke for home plate, catcher Bob Melvin recovered the ball and threw to Berenguer, who applied a hard tag on Coleman. Berenguer voiced his displeasure with Coleman for stealing bases with his team ahead by eight runs.

When Coleman next batted in the seventh, reliever Frank Williams spun him away from the plate with an inside pitch. Umpire Bob Davidson issued a warning to both teams. With his next delivery, Williams hit Coleman in the left leg.

Herzog and Craig, a former Cardinals pitcher, had a heated exchange at home plate and “got shoves in as umpire John McSherry tried to restrain them,” the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported. Craig accused Herzog of ordering Coleman to steal in order to embarrass the Giants.

“Whitey is a great manager,” Craig said to the San Francisco Examiner, “but I told him that was bush.”

Herzog told the Post-Dispatch, “I guess he thinks he invented the damn game or something.”

Both benches emptied and skirmishes broke out.

Giants pitcher Mike Krukow butted Coleman with his head and Coleman wrestled him to the ground, according to The Sporting News. When Giants utility player Joel Youngblood tackled Cardinals pitcher Ricky Horton, Herzog grabbed Youngblood by the neck. Giants infielder Randy Kutcher tried to pry Herzog off Youngblood, and Herzog tangled with Kutcher.

According to the Post-Dispatch, Herzog said to Kutcher: “Oh, you want some of me?”

Someone spiked Cardinals second baseman Tommy Herr in the face and neck. He needed eight stitches to close the wound.

Craig, Williams and Giants third baseman Chris Brown were ejected.

“It’s an outrage,” Herzog told the Associated Press. “I’m talking about Roger Craig. It’s bush league. If he wants us to stop running, he can send over a note promising to stop trying to hit home runs.”

Replied Craig: “I’m glad it happened. It showed me what (the Giants) are made of.”

The players followed the lead of their managers.

“Vince is going to run regardless of what point of the game we’re in,” Herr said. “That’s his game.”

Said Cardinals outfielder Any Van Slyke: “To throw at Vince for running is like throwing at Mickey Mantle for hitting home runs.”

Said Youngblood: “You never want to humiliate your opponent. If you do, you have to be prepared to accept the consequences. It’s almost like an unwritten rule. It’s baseball.”

Giants first baseman Bob Brenly said to the Post-Dispatch, “They were kicking the snot out of us. There was no need to rub it in. I feel (Coleman) was trying to show us up.”

Said Coleman: “I wasn’t there to show anybody up.”

The fracas seemed to inspire the Giants. After pulling to within three runs, 10-7, the Giants had two runners on base with two outs in the ninth before Todd Worrell got Candy Maldonado on a flyout to right. Boxscore and Video

“They had the tying run at the plate in the ninth,” Herzog told The Sporting News. “That’s why we run.”

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From 1964 through 1966, Bob Gibson compiled a 12-1 record against the Mets. His only loss in that period was by the score of 1-0.

Gibson posted records against the Mets of 4-1 in 1964, 5-0 in 1965 and 3-0 in 1966.

Here is a look at Gibson’s wins in that stretch:

1964

Cardinals 5, Mets 1, May 9, at New York: Gibson had a shutout until catcher Jesse Gonder hit a home run in the eighth. Gibson, who improved to 3-0, also singled, walked and scored a run. Boxscore

Cardinals 3, Mets 1, July 10, at New York: After a RBI-single by Joe Christopher gave the Mets a 1-0 lead in the first, Gibson outdueled Jack Fisher. The Mets had one extra-base hit (a double by Ed Kranepool) and five singles. Boxscore

Cardinals 7, Mets 6, July 19, at St. Louis: The Cardinals erased a 6-3 Mets lead by scoring four runs in the ninth and salvaging a split of a Sunday doubleheader. Dick Groat’s RBI-single off Mets reliever Darrell Sutherland broke a 6-6 tie. Gibson struck out 11, including Gonder three times after the catcher belted a two-run homer in the first. Boxscore

Cardinals 11, Mets 5, Oct. 4, at St. Louis: Two days after Gibson had pitched eight innings in a 1-0 loss to Al Jackson and the Mets, the Cardinals entered the last day of the regular season in a first-place tie with the Reds. With St. Louis trailing 3-2 in the fifth, Gibson relieved Curt Simmons, pitched four innings, held New York to two hits and two runs, and earned the win. With the Reds losing 10-0 that day to the Phillies, St. Louis clinched its first pennant since 1946. Boxscore

1965

Cardinals 4, Mets 3, May 11, at New York: Warren Spahn, 44, was matched against Gibson, and the Mets staked the left-hander to a 3-0 lead through six innings. Sparked by Lou Brock’s two-run homer off Spahn, the Cardinals rallied, enabling Gibson to boost his record to 6-0 despite allowing 10 hits and six walks. Boxscore

Cardinals 6, Mets 3, July 2, at New York: Gibson struck out 13, matching what was then his career high. Twice, he struck out the side in order (in the second and in the fourth). Boxscore

Cardinals 8, Mets 5, July 16, at St. Louis: The Cardinals erased a 4-2 Mets lead with a six-run sixth. Gibson went seven innings and allowed four home runs. Charlie Smith, Jesse Gonder, Johnny Lewis and Jim Hickman all went deep for New York. Boxscore

Cardinals 8, Mets 1, Aug. 20, at New York: Gibson pitched a three-hitter and struck out 11. Charlie Smith’s homer accounted for the New York run. In the fifth, two innings after Gibson had hit Mets shortstop Roy McMillian with a pitcher, Al Jackson hit Gibson with a pitch. After advancing to second on a single, Gibson swiped third and scored on catcher Jimmie Schaffer’s throwing error. Boxscore

Cardinals 3, Mets 0, Sept. 5, at. St. Louis: In a Sunday doubleheader opener that lasted just 2:01, Gibson pitched a two-hit shutout. The Mets got singles by Johnny Lewis in the first and Joe Christopher in the fourth. After being held to one hit (an infield single by Curt Flood) through seven innings by Mets rookie starter Tug McGraw, the Cardinals struck for three unearned runs in the eighth. Boxscore

1966

Cardinals 5, Mets 4, April 21, at New York: Curt Flood’s two-run, two-out home run in the ninth off ex-Cardinal Gordon Richardson overcame a 4-3 New York lead before a Thursday afternoon gathering of only 4,261 at Shea Stadium.  Gibson struck out 11 and held New York to one earned run on four hits. Boxscore

Cardinals 4, Mets 1, Aug. 7, at New York: Ed Kranepool’s eighth-inning homer was the only run against Gibson in the first game of a Sunday doubleheader. With one on and one out in the ninth, Hal Woodeshick relieved Gibson and got Cleon Jones to ground into a double play. Boxscore

Cardinals 9, Mets 6, Aug. 13, at St. Louis: The Cardinals built leads of 5-1 in the second and 8-3 in the sixth as Gibson cruised to his 15th win of the season. Gibson contributed a single and a stolen base. Boxscore

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Carl Taylor and Roger Freed are the only Cardinals to achieve one of the rarest of big-league baseball feats: the ultimate grand slam, a game-ending, four-run home run that erases a three-run deficit with one swing.

Big thrill

Taylor, acquired by the Cardinals from the Pirates in October 1969 for pitcher Dave Giusti and catcher Dave Ricketts, was expected to compete for the starting right field position in 1970. Instead, the job went to Leron Lee and Taylor primarily was used as a pinch-hitter.

On Aug. 11, 1970, the Padres led the Cardinals, 10-7, in the ninth inning at St. Louis. With two outs, the bases loaded and pitcher Harry Parker due to bat, Cardinals manager Red Schoendienst sent in Taylor.

Padres reliever Ron Herbel delivered a thigh-high fastball and Taylor drove it about two feet beyond the left-field wall, giving the Cardinals an 11-10 victory.

“I figured he’d go to the fastball to try getting ahead of me,” Taylor told the Associated Press. “It’s got to be the biggest thrill I’ve ever had, because this one won the ballgame. Heck, it’s my first grand slam ever, even in Little League.”

It also was the last big-league homer Taylor would hit in a six-year career. Boxscore

“I hit the ball off the end of the bat,” Taylor told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. “I thought it might be another one that would just reach the warning track. I hit a lot of those in batting practice, so many that the guys rib me about it.”

Making a contribution

Nine years later, on May 1, 1979, the Astros and Cardinals were involved in a see-saw game at St. Louis.

In the top of the 11th, with a 3-3 score, the Astros struck for three runs and led, 6-3.

Left-hander Joe Sambito loaded the bases with one out in the bottom half of the 11th, but when Garry Templeton struck out for the second out, the Cardinals’ hopes dimmed.

Jerry Mumphrey was due up next, and he hit right-handers better than he did left-handers, so manager Ken Boyer sent Freed to bat for him.

Freed, hitless in five at-bats that season, was keenly aware of reports his demotion to the minors could be imminent.

Sambito got ahead on the count, 1-and-2, but Freed worked the count back to his favor.

“My knees were shaking and sweat kept pouring into my eyes,” Freed told United Press International. “I asked the ump (Dave Pallone) for time and took a few deep breaths. I felt a bit strange because I’d only been up two or three times in the last three weeks.”

Freed launched Sambito’s 3-and-2 pitch over the left-field fence, giving the Cardinals a 7-6 victory. Boxscore

“This is the biggest, most pleasing experience anyone could have in a lifetime,” Freed said to the Post-Dispatch. “Something like this really makes me feel like a part of the ballclub, like I’m an asset to the team. You get to feeling like dead weight when you’re not contributing in some way.”

Freed said Sambito’s full-count pitch “was away, but out over the plate. I’m sure he got more of the plate, maybe four or five inches, than he wanted.”

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