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(Updated March 27, 2023)

In his first game as a starting catcher for the 1962 Mets, Choo Choo Coleman dared to lead off an inning with a bunt against Bob Gibson.

choochoo_colemanBy challenging the Cardinals’ ace, Coleman played a key role in ending Gibson’s four-game winning streak and snapping the Mets’ 11-game skid.

On July 27, 1962, in the first game of a doubleheader against the Cardinals, Coleman opened the third inning with a bunt single and scored the lone run in the Mets’ 1-0 victory at St. Louis. Coleman’s batterymate, Al Jackson, who hadn’t earned a win in more than a month, pitched the shutout.

It was the only 1-0 win for the 1962 Mets and one of four shutout victories for them. Jackson pitched all four.

Runaway train

Clarence Coleman told an interviewer he got the nickname “Choo Choo” as a boy in his hometown of Orlando because he ran fast like a train.

Small for a catcher at 5 feet 9 and 165 pounds, Coleman entered the big leagues with the 1961 Phillies and batted .128 for them in 34 games.

The Mets selected Coleman in the National League expansion draft, but assigned him to Class AAA Syracuse before the start of the 1962 season. According to The Sporting News, “He didn’t take well to the demotion.”

Coleman batted .195 for Syracuse, but when Mets catcher Sammy Taylor fractured the ring finger on his right hand in July 1962, Coleman was promoted to the big club.

Getting a boost

The Mets had lost 16 of their previous 17 games entering the July 27 doubleheader versus the Cardinals.

Mets manager Casey Stengel, looking to show confidence in Coleman, put him in the starting lineup for the first time. He couldn’t have picked a much tougher opponent than Gibson.

Stengel “is currently embarked upon a psychological campaign designed to instill the big-league attitude into the shy and uncommunicative Choo Choo Coleman,” The Sporting News reported.

In the book “We Played the Game,” Mets outfielder Gene Woodling said Coleman “had the misfortune of coming out of a poor area of Florida and not getting much education … The sorriest thing I ever saw was Casey trying to teach Choo Choo how to count on his fingers. He had to paint them.”

Gibson had limited the Mets to a two-out Felix Mantilla single through the first two innings before Coleman led off the third.

Batting left-handed, Coleman bunted toward third baseman Ken Boyer and raced down the line for a single. Jackson followed with a sacrifice bunt, moving Coleman to second.

Gibson struck out Richie Ashburn for the second out.

The next batter, Rod Kanehl, hit a routine grounder. Shortstop Julio Gotay reached for the ball, but couldn’t come up with it.

Coleman, living up to his nickname, steamed around third base and dashed for home. While Gotay still struggled to field the ball, Coleman streaked across the plate with the unearned run. Boxscore

Off track

Stengel also started Coleman in the second game of the doubleheader. Facing Larry Jackson, Coleman produced the first of his two career triples, but the Cardinals won, 6-5.

Coleman played in 55 games for the 1962 Mets and batted .250. Grasping for a positive, The Sporting News said of the diminutive catcher, “Pitchers say he is one of the most adroit receivers of the low delivery.”

In his final two seasons with the Mets, Coleman hit .178 in 1963 and, after two years of exile in the minors, .188 in 1966. His career batting mark in four seasons in the majors: .197.

After his playing career, Coleman worked as a cook in a Chinese restaurant in Virginia, according to his obituary in the New York Times.

Previously: Cardinals have strong link to original Mets

Previously: Interview with former Cardinals pitcher Al Jackson

With the first grand slam of his major-league career, Mike Shannon slowed the Cubs’ momentum and helped the Cardinals split a four-game series at Wrigley Field.

mike_shannon5On Aug. 15, 1968, Shannon hit a grand slam against reliever Bill Stoneman in the second inning, carrying the Cardinals to an 8-0 victory in the finale of the series and putting a dent in the Cubs’ pennant hopes. Boxscore

Second City showdown

The Cardinals, defending World Series champions, entered the series in first place, 14 games ahead of the second-place Cubs in the National League. After the Cubs won the first two, cutting the Cardinals’ lead to 12, fans in Chicago were fired up, sensing their club was poised to get back into the pennant race.

Cardinals ace Bob Gibson dampened those hopes in Game 3, pitching a complete game in a 3-1 victory.

That set up a scenario in which the Cubs needed to win Game 4 in order to gain any ground on the Cardinals.

Get up, baby

A crowd of 23,116 turned out for the Thursday afternoon series finale and the bleachers were packed with rowdies.

Gibson, in a playful mood, pinned a button with the words “We’re No. 1” to the bill of his cap and bantered with fans in the right-field bleachers before the game. “I led the boos for Roger Maris,” Gibson said to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, referring to his outfield teammate.

In the first inning, the Cardinals scored four runs against starter Ken Holtzman and knocked him out of the game. Shannon contributed a RBI-single.

In the second, the Cardinals loaded the bases with two outs against former teammate Jack Lamabe. With Shannon up, Lamabe was replaced by Stoneman.

Shannon hit Stoneman’s second pitch into the left-field seats. The grand slam _ the only one of his Cardinals career _ was his 500th hit in the big leagues.

“In Wrigley Field, if you get the ball in the air, you have a heck of a chance,” Shannon said.

Last laugh

The Bleacher Bums took out their frustrations on Cardinals outfielders Lou Brock, Curt Flood and Ron Davis.

“They were hitting us with everything,” said Flood. “Ice cubes, burned-out flashbulbs, fruit, tennis balls, paper cups and old sandwiches.”

Said Davis: “If you turned around, then you’d really get it. That’s when they’d start throwing things at you.”

Plotting his revenge, Flood printed a banner that stated, “We’re still No. 1.”

In the bottom of the ninth, with the Cardinals ahead 8-0, Flood took the banner with him to his position in center and spread it on the outfield grass, with the words facing the bleachers.

Knowing what was to come, Brock stuffed his ears with cotton to block out the taunts.

Day shift

Shannon finished the game 3-for-5 with five RBI and two runs scored. The performance gave him a .415 batting average (27-for-45) in day games that season.

“I just can see that ball better in the daytime,” Shannon told the Associated Press.

Nelson Briles pitched the shutout for the Cardinals. It was his fifth consecutive win and boosted his season record to 16-7.

The Cardinals went on to win the 1968 pennant, finishing nine games ahead of the Giants and 13 in front of the third-place Cubs.

Shannon finished his Cardinals career with 68 home runs. He had 16 against the Cubs, including 12 at Wrigley Field.

Previously: Mike Shannon ignited Cards with World Series blast

(Updated Dec. 25, 2018)

Following the advice of hitting coaches Mark McGwire and John Mabry, Matt Holliday made an adjustment in his batting stance and had his most productive game with the Cardinals.

matt_holliday7On June 16, 2012, Holliday had four hits, including two doubles and a home run, five RBI and two runs scored in the Cardinals’ 10-7 victory over the Royals at St. Louis.

In eight years (2009-2016) with St. Louis, Holliday produced 1,048 hits in 982 games, including 156 home runs, 237 doubles and 616 RBI. He batted .293 and produced a .380 on-base percentage in his Cardinals career.

Holliday 13 times had four-hit games for the Cardinals and three times had five-RBI games for them.

Only once, though, did he have four hits and five RBI in a game for St. Louis. It happened while he was in a slump.

Finding a flaw

Holliday had gone hitless in 12 consecutive at-bats before facing the Royals. He hadn’t hit a home run in almost a month.

McGwire and Mabry spotted a flaw in Holliday’s batting stance and told him about it hours before the game.

“Looking at video and working in the batting cage, Holliday was able to right what they saw was wrong,” reported Derrick Goold of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. “He became more upright at the plate and kept from bending at the waist.”

Big bat

Making what he called a “little mechanical adjustment,” Holliday went on a tear against the Royals.

He hit a two-run home run in the first inning off Bruce Chen and a RBI-double against Chen in the second. Video The home run carried 431 feet into the Big Mac section of Busch Stadium. Video

In the seventh, with the Royals ahead 7-6, Holliday hit a RBI-single off Greg Holland, tying the score. Video

Holliday capped his performance with a RBI-double off Kelvin Herrera in the eighth. Boxscore and Video

“It’s been frustrating,” Holliday said. “My swing has felt a little off. I’ve been trying to battle, trying to get a groove, trying to find a comfort zone.”

The four-hit game lifted Holliday’s batting average from .267 to .278. He finished with a stellar season for the 2012 Cardinals, hitting .295 with 27 home runs and 102 RBI.

Previously: Left field leaders: Matt Holliday, Stan Musial

(Updated May 5, 2018)

Two of the best hitters of their era, Ichiro Suzuki and Albert Pujols, were in their sophomore years in the big leagues when they played against one another for the first time in the regular season. Suzuki had the better overall series; Pujols produced the biggest hit.

albert_ichiroIn June 2002, Suzuki went 6-for-12 in helping the Mariners win two of three games versus the Cardinals at Safeco Field in Seattle. Pujols was 2-for-11, but one of those hits was a grand slam that carried the Cardinals to their lone win in the interleague set.

Fourteen years later, in August 2016, Suzuki, playing for the Marlins, capped his U.S. big-league career by getting his 3,000th hit. On May 4, 2018, Pujols, playing for the Angels, got his 3,000th career hit.

Suzuki has a career .333 batting average (27-for-81) against the Cardinals.

Bat man

In 2001, Suzuki won the American League Rookie of the Year Award and Pujols won the National League Rookie of the Year Award.

They brought star power to the Cardinals-Mariners series the following season.

On June 10, 2002, Suzuki was 3-for-5 with three runs scored and two RBI in the Mariners’ 10-0 victory over the Cardinals. Suzuki singled off starter Bud Smith and had a double and triple against Luther Hackman. Boxscore

Before the game, reporter Larry LaRue of the Tacoma News Tribune visited Suzuki in the clubhouse while Suzuki examined new bats. “Each bat shipped to him from Japan comes shrink-wrapped (in cellophane) and once he unwraps a bat it’s kept in a specially-made case beside his locker,” wrote LaRue.

Mariners infielder Bret Boone called the case Suzuki’s humidifier.

Suzuki said, “No matter how well you take care of your bat, eventually moisture gets into the wood. Even clubhouse air-conditioning can effect the wood.”

Before placing a bat in the case, Suzuki tapped the barrel with his palm, then held it to his ear, listening for a tone, LaRue reported. Suzuki said, “High pitch, better wood. Low pitch, it probably gets used for batting practice.”

Pujols pop

In Game 2 of the series, on June 11, 2002, Suzuki had another strong game. He was 2-for-3 _ a double off starter Woody Williams and a single against Steve Kline _ with two walks and a stolen base, but it was Pujols who created the sweetest sound with his swing.

In the sixth inning, with the Mariners ahead 1-0, the Cardinals had runners on second and third with one out. Mariners manager Lou Piniella instructed starter James Baldwin to issue an intentional walk to J.D. Drew and face Pujols with the bases loaded.

“I’m trying to get out of the inning with a double play ball,” Piniella said to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

Said Pujols: “I was surprised.”

Pujols watched two curves sail out of the strike zone. Behind in the count 2-and-0, Baldwin threw a fastball. Pujols pounded it over the center-field fence for the second grand slam of his Cardinals career.

“That young guy has some real pop,” Piniella said to the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.

Pujols added a single and finished 2-for-4 with four RBI and two runs scored in a 7-4 Cardinals triumph. Boxscore

Part of 3,000

In the series finale, June 13, 2002, Suzuki doubled off starter Darryl Kile and finished 1-for-4 in a 5-0 Mariners victory. Pujols was 0-for-3. Boxscore

For the series:

Suzuki’s totals: 6-for-12, three doubles, two singles, one triple, two walks, three runs and two RBI.

Pujols’ totals: 2-for-11, one home run, one single, four RBI, two runs.

Here is how Suzuki fared in his subsequent season series versus the Cardinals:

_ 2004: 3-for-11.

_ 2010: 5-for-13.

_ 2014: 0-for-7.

_ 2015: 3-for-15.

_ 2016: 5-for-14.

_ 2017: 5-for-9.

 

(Updated July 30, 2024)

Facing three of the toughest starters in the National League, Stan Musial produced a spectacular hitting spree that propelled him to his second of seven batting titles.

stan_musial31From Aug. 11-12, 1946, Musial had 12 hits in 14 at-bats over three games against the Reds and Cubs. The surge put him atop the National League batting leaders list, moving his average from .359 to .375. He went on to win the batting crown with a .365 average.

Musial achieved his nearly perfect stretch in games started by Johnny Vander Meer and Ewell Blackwell of the Reds and Claude Passeau of the Cubs. All three would earn multiple all-star berths and were respected as much for their competitiveness as for their skill.

Asked whether he tried to guess what pitch he would get, Musial told Roger Kahn of Sport magazine, “I don’t guess. I know. I can tell by the speed. Every pitcher has a set of speeds. The curve goes one speed and the slider goes at something else.

“If I concentrate, I can pick up the speed of the ball about the first 30 feet it travels. I know the pitcher and I know his speeds. When I concentrate, halfway in I know what the pitch is going to be (and) how the ball is going to move when it gets up to home plate.”

Hard thrower

On Aug. 11, 1946, a Sunday afternoon, the Cardinals played a doubleheader against the Reds before a crowd of 32,288 at Crosley Field in Cincinnati.

The Reds started Vander Meer, a left-hander, in the opener. In his book, “Stan Musial: The Man’s Own Story,” Musial said of Vander Meer, “One of the toughest I ever hit against. An extremely hard thrower and wild. His ball moved up and in on a left-handed hitter. You didn’t know where the ball was going. I don’t think Vandy knew either.”

Musial drew a walk in the first inning, singled in the third, popped out to the catcher in the fourth and drilled a RBI-single in the sixth. After Vander Meer was lifted, Musial singled against Johnny Hetki in the seventh and tripled off former teammate Clyde Shoun in the ninth.

Musial’s line: 4-for-5 with a walk, three runs scored and one RBI in the Cardinals’ 15-4 victory. Boxscore

The Whip

In the second game, the Reds started Blackwell, a right-hander with a wicked sidearm delivery. “Blackie was one of the fastest and greatest pitchers I’ve seen.” said Musial. “He was big and gangly and because of his whip-like delivery you could hardly pick up the ball until it was in on you. He had natural stuff, including a terrific sinker.”

Musial had a double and a single in his two at-bats against Blackwell. Joe Beggs relieved and Musial reached him for a solo home run and a single. That gave Musial hits in seven consecutive at-bats over two games in the doubleheader.

In Musial’s fifth at-bat of Game 2, against Bob Malloy, he flied out to left.

Musial’s line: 4-for-5 with two runs scored and one RBI in a 7-3 Cardinals triumph. Boxscore

Suspicious sinker

The Cardinals boarded a train for Chicago and opened a series against the Cubs on Monday, Aug. 12, at Wrigley Field. The Cubs started Passeau, a right-hander. “His ball really went down,” Musial said. “I thought it was a spitter, just as others did, but Passeau, a mean competitor, always insisted it was a sinker. Wet or dry, it was a hell of a pitch.”

Musial singled against Passeau in the first inning. In the third, Passeau was lifted because of a back injury. Emil Kush relieved and Musial got three hits against him: a RBI-double in the third, a single in the fifth and a RBI-single in the seventh.

Musial’s line: 4-for-4 with two RBI and a run scored in a 5-0 Cardinals victory. Boxscore

Musial achieved his third consecutive four-hit game.

His three-game totals: 12-for-14, eight singles, two doubles, one triple, one home run, one walk, six runs scored and four RBI.

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch hailed Musial as “the National League’s closest approach to Ted Williams.”

A humble Musial told the Associated Press, “I guess it’s just a streak that comes along for everybody if they keep swinging.”

The next day, Aug. 13, Musial cooled off a bit. He was 1-for-4 against Johnny Schmitz, a Cubs left-hander.

Musial finished the 1946 season with a major league-leading 228 hits.

Mike Laga, a premier power hitter in the minor leagues, produced a long ball that became part of Cardinals lore.

mike_lagaOn Aug. 10, 1986, the Cardinals traded catcher Mike Heath to the Tigers for pitcher Ken Hill and a player to be named. Three weeks later, on Sept. 2, the Tigers sent Laga, a first baseman, to the Cardinals, completing the trade.

Laga, 26, was chosen by the Tigers in the first round of the 1980 draft. A left-handed slugger, Laga three times hit 30 or more home runs in a season in the Tigers’ minor-league system, including 34 for Class AAA Evansville in 1982. However, in parts of five seasons (1982-86) with the Tigers, Laga hit just eight home runs.

The Cardinals, who won the National League pennant in 1985, were out of contention in September 1986. With first baseman Jack Clark injured, manager Whitey Herzog put Laga into the Cardinals’ lineup.

High riser

On Sept. 15, 1986, Laga was the first baseman when the Cardinals played the first-place Mets at Busch Memorial Stadium in St. Louis. Laga hit a double off Ron Darling in the second inning.

In the third, Laga was batting against Darling for the second time when he swung at a pitch and lofted it high and foul on the first-base side. The ball carried about 150 feet into the air and landed outside the stadium.

Laga became the first player to hit a ball out of Busch Stadium since it opened in May 1966. Video

“A Cardinals official said that the distance of the stadium roof from the field was 130 feet and that the ball was found in a flower bed near the employees parking lot,” the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported.

Fans gave Laga a standing ovation.

Said Laga: “It was pretty funny … I really didn’t think about it until the people got louder and louder. I said, ‘What the heck is going on here?’ I didn’t know it was the first one.”

After the ovation, Darling struck out Laga.

“Last year, the cheering was for a pennant winner,” wrote columnist Kevin Horrigan of the Post-Dispatch. “This year, it’s for foul balls. Lo, how the mighty have fallen.” Boxscore

Coleman challenged

Later, Herzog teasingly told Cardinals speedster Vince Coleman, “If you ever hit one out (of Busch Stadium), even behind home plate, fair or foul, I’ll buy you a Rolls-Royce.”

Teammate Ozzie Smith, overhearing Herzog’s challenge, told Coleman, “And I’ll pay for the chauffeur.”

Laga added, “If I hit it right and get it up in the air, I can hit it out of any ballpark.”

Laga hit three home runs for the Cardinals in 1986 and one each in 1987 and 1988. He spent most of the Cardinals’ 1987 championship season with Louisville, hitting .304 with 29 home runs and 91 RBI for the Class AAA club.

After the 1988 season, Laga was released by the Cardinals and was signed by the Giants. He hit three home runs in parts of two seasons with the Giants, giving him a total of 16 in the major leagues.

Previously: Why Cardinals pounced on offer for Joaquin Andujar