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(Updated Oct. 21, 2018)

As a rookie with the 1995 Cardinals, David Bell hit a magical home run and became friends with John Mabry.

david_bellThe former gave him a special lifetime memory.

The latter helped him reunite with the Cardinals.

Bell and Mabry were Cardinals teammates from 1995-98. Both also played for the Mariners in 1999 and 2000.

Their friendship helped lead to the decision by Bell to join the Cardinals as assistant hitting coach in 2014 when Mabry was the club’s hitting coach. In 2013, Bell was third base coach for the Cubs.

On Nov. 3, 2014, Bell was promoted to bench coach of the Cardinals, replacing Mike Aldrete, who resigned to join the Athletics staff. After the 2017 season, Bell left the Cardinals for a front office position, vice president of player development, with the Giants. On Oct. 21, 2018, Bell was chosen to be manager of the Reds.

Good genes

Bell, whose grandfather, Gus, and father, Buddy, were all-star players in the major leagues, made his big-league debut with the 1995 Indians, appearing in two games before being sent back to the minor leagues. Bell’s best positions were third base and second base, but the 1995 Indians had stellar players at those spots, with Jim Thome at third and Carlos Baerga at second.

On July 27, 1995, the Cardinals traded pitcher Ken Hill to the Indians for Bell, pitcher Rick Heiserman and minor-league catcher Pepe McNeal.

“I like David Bell,” Cardinals general manager Walt Jocketty told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. “He’s a guy who has a chance to be a very good major league player for a long time.

“If, as a scout, you graded out his tools, you’d say he has a little below average speed, that he was an above average hitter with above average power and above average defensively. But he’s the type of player you know is going to get the job done. He’s been around the game for a while and it shows. He’s a character type of player who’s got a winning attitude.”

Asked about his son’s reaction to the trade, Buddy Bell, bench coach for the 1995 Indians, said, “He’s a little nervous. The first time you get traded, you never know what to expect. But he was getting impatient. He felt that no matter what he did at (Class AAA), it wouldn’t be enough to move him up there (to the Indians).”

Said David Bell: “It’s a nice break for me.”

David Bell was born and raised in Cincinnati. His grandfather Gus Bell had been a standout outfielder for the Reds from 1953-61, four times achieving more than 100 RBI in a season. David’s father Buddy Bell was a premier third baseman. He earned six consecutive Gold Glove awards in the American League from 1979-84. Buddy also played for the Reds from 1985-88.

David was the given name of both Gus Bell and Buddy Bell. David Bell was close to both his grandfather and father. On May 7, 1995, four days after David Bell made his major-league debut with the Indians, Gus Bell died.

Hometown home run

In late August 1995, just before the Cardinals went to Cincinnati for the first time since acquiring Bell, Mike Eisenbath of the Post-Dispatch wrote, “David, Gus and Buddy are so much alike. Quiet. Hard-working. Unassuming. Fundamentally sound afield, solid with a little pop in their bats. Respected. By his very nature, David seemed destined to follow Dad and Grandpa.”

On Aug. 30, 1995, playing in Cincinnati before a Riverfront Stadium crowd that included his grandmother, mother and several other family members and friends, Bell came to bat for the Cardinals in the sixth inning against Reds starter Mark Portugal. The score was tied at 2-2 and Ray Lankford was on first base for St. Louis.

Bell hit a Portugal pitch over the left-center field fence for his first big-league home run.

The ball caromed off a wall behind the fence and bounced back onto the field. Reds outfielder Darren Lewis retrieved the ball and threw it into the outfield seats.

Alerted to the significance of the home run, Lewis got another ball and tossed it into the stands in exchange for the ball Bell hit.

The Cardinals won, 4-3. Bell, 22, told the Post-Dispatch he would give the ball to his mother.

“It’s something I’ll remember,” Bell said. Boxscore

Postseason success

Used mostly as a utility infielder, Bell hit .225 with four home runs in four seasons with the Cardinals. In April 1998, the Cardinals, looking to send Bell to the minor leagues, placed him on waivers. He was claimed by the Indians.

Bell played 12 years (1995-2006) in the major leagues for the Indians, Cardinals, Mariners, Giants, Phillies and Brewers. He had a career .257 batting average, with 1,239 hits in 1,403 games.

In 1999, Bell had 31 doubles, 21 home runs and 78 RBI as the second baseman for the Mariners.

Three years later, Bell was the third baseman for the 2002 National League champion Giants. He had 29 doubles, 20 home runs and 73 RBI that year. In the National League Championship Series against the Cardinals, Bell batted .412 and hit a Game 1 home run off Matt Morris. Bell also hit .304 in the 2002 World Series against the Angels.

For pure drama, though, his first home run as a Cardinal is hard to top.

Previously: Buddy Bell almost joined Ozzie Smith in Cardinals’ infield

(Updated April 5, 2025)

Winning the 2006 World Series championship with the Cardinals sealed for Tony La Russa his eventual election to the National Baseball Hall of Fame.

tony_larussa12By joining Sparky Anderson as managers to win World Series titles in both the National League and American League, La Russa elevated himself into a special class.

La Russa and managers Joe Torre and Bobby Cox were elected to the Hall of Fame on Dec. 9, 2013. Each received 16 unanimous votes from the Expansion Era committee. Whitey Herzog, who, like La Russa and Torre, managed the Cardinals, was one of the voters.

La Russa (2,902), Cox (2,504) and Torre (2,326) rank second, fourth and fifth in career wins for managers. Connie Mack is No. 1 (3,731) and John McGraw (2,763) ranks third.

Herzog, Torre and La Russa managed St. Louis from 1980-2011, giving the Cardinals the distinction of having been led by Hall of Fame managers for 31 consecutive years.

High expectations

The Cardinals fired Torre in June 1995 and, after Mike Jorgensen finished that season as interim manager, La Russa joined the Cardinals in October 1995 after resigning as Athletics manager.

La Russa had won a World Series title and three consecutive American League pennants with the Athletics. In his first 10 seasons in St. Louis, he led the Cardinals into the National League playoffs six times and won a pennant in 2004, but the expectation was he would win a World Series title with the Cardinals.

Doing so with the 2006 Cardinals _ a club that won just 83 regular-season games and ranked fifth in the league in pitching and sixth in both batting and defense _ capped La Russa’s reputation for managerial excellence.

The 2006 World Series championship, achieved in five games against the Tigers, was the Cardinals’ first in 24 years (when Herzog led St. Louis against the Brewers in 1982).

Here is what a couple of St. Louis Post-Dispatch columnists wrote of La Russa after the 2006 championship:

_  Jeff Gordon: “If this is the worst team to ever win a World Series championship, as some will argue, then La Russa’s managerial performance ranks as his greatest effort. … By winning the World Series, La Russa has cemented his place in baseball history.”

_ Rick Hummel: “His reputation here this year has been enhanced by his ability to guide a talented yet flawed club through injury, illness and overzealous expectations.”

Classic Cardinal

Four Cardinals players in the Hall of Fame _ Stan Musial, Red Schoendienst, Bob Gibson and Lou Brock _ were on hand to witness the clinching of the 2006 World Series championship in Game 5 at St. Louis. All four “applaud La Russa as an equal,” Hummel wrote.

In a 2014 interview with Cardinals Yearbook, La Russa said, “Winning that Series, and how we did it, was one of the best moments I can recall. What added to it was winning it at home … It contributed something significant to a franchise that is so incredibly steeped in history. For me, the topper was having Bob Gibson walk by in the clubhouse afterward, shake my hand and say, ‘You’re officially in the club.’ That’s the standard the Cardinals have.”

La Russa capped his career with another World Series title with the Cardinals in 2011. That was another exceptional achievement _ La Russa became the first Cardinals manager to win two World Series crowns since Hall of Famer Billy Southworth did it in the 1940s _ but by then his reputation as being of Hall of Fame caliber already was secured because of what he accomplished in 2006.

Mike Shannon, the club broadcaster who played for Cardinals teams that won two World Series titles and three pennants in the 1960s, provided the Post-Dispatch with the most concise and astute analysis of La Russa after the 2006 World Series. “There’s no doubt he’s going into the Hall of Fame as a manager,” Shannon said in October 2006. “… The people who really understand the game know his worth, his greatness. His value and his greatness will be appreciated more in his absence than in his presence.”

 

(Updated April 5, 2025)

In the span of 21 years, from August 1990 to October 2011, the Cardinals had two fulltime managers: Joe Torre and Tony La Russa.

larussa_torreBoth entered the National Baseball Hall of Fame together.

Torre managed the Cardinals from August 1990 until June 1995 and, after Mike Jorgensen filled in for three months as interim manager, was replaced by La Russa after the 1995 season.

Torre, La Russa and fellow manager Bobby Cox were elected to the Hall of Fame on Dec. 9, 2013, by the Expansion Era committee. A candidate needed 12 of the votes from the 16-member committee that included Hall of Fame manager Whitey Herzog, who preceded Torre as Cardinals manager.

With Herzog, Torre and La Russa, the Cardinals have the distinction of being led by Hall of Fame managers for 31 consecutive years (1980-2011).

In regular-season head-to-head competition, La Russa had a 15-11 record versus Torre. In the only time they faced one another in the postseason, Torre was 3-0 against La Russa.

Mutual respect

Though their managing styles and personalities differed, La Russa and Torre had a respect and fondness for one another.

In May 2008, when Torre was in his first season as Dodgers manager, he told Joe Strauss of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch he had accepted La Russa’s request to appear in an Animal Rescue Foundation calendar.

“He’s always been very open and congenial,” Torre said. “I’ve had dinner with him on occasions. I’ve worked his charity. I enjoy Tony a great deal. … He’s had great success. The players play hard for him.”

Said La Russa of Torre: “He’s always been a class act, somebody you have a great deal of respect for.”

Asked about differences between the two, Torre replied, “The fact that he’s smarter than I am. He used that ability to gain an edge with technology at times. … And I think he probably controls the game more than I do.”

In a 2014 interview with Cardinals Yearbook, Torre also said of La Russa, “He’s got a heart. He doesn’t let you in until he trusts who you are, but you know that once you’re in the door, it’s straightforward.”

Clash of the titans

Twice, La Russa and Torre were within a win of facing one another in a World Series, but each saw his team falter.

In 1996, when Torre led the Yankees to an American League pennant, La Russa and the Cardinals won three of the first four games against the Braves in the National League Championship Series. The Braves rallied and won the last three games to reach the World Series versus the Yankees.

In 2004, when La Russa and the Cardinals won the National League pennant, Torre and the Yankees beat the Red Sox in three of the first four games of the American League Championship Series. The Red Sox won the last three games and got to the World Series against the Cardinals.

Asked in 2009 by Post-Dispatch writer Rick Hummel about a potential World Series matchup with La Russa, Torre replied, “We came close in ’96 and, of course, in ’04. La Russa messed it up in ’96 and I messed it up in ’04.”

La Russa and Torre first faced one another in June 2003 when the Cardinals played at Yankee Stadium. The Yankees swept the three-game series, outscoring the Cardinals, 23-8.

Afterward, La Russa told the Post-Dispatch, “I really don’t think the Yankees or Yankee fans think we’re all that good.”

Wrote Post-Dispatch columnist Bernie Miklasz: “The anticipated clash of the titans never really materialized. Both franchises qualify as baseball royalty, but only the Yankees played up to their heritage.”

Two years later, in June 2005, the Yankees entered a three-game series at St. Louis a game below .500, having lost nine of their last 11. Media speculation in New York was Torre’s job might be in jeopardy, even though he had won four World Series titles and six American League pennants with the Yankees.

When the Cardinals won the opener, 8-1, an embarrassed Torre told Miklasz, “We were too nonchalant. I was very surprised at how we let them (the Cardinals) run us off the field. We weren’t ready to play.” Boxscore

The Cardinals won two of the three games in that series. La Russa came to Torre’s defense, telling Miklasz, “He’s got more rings than anybody whose managed over the last 10 years. There isn’t anything different about his managing.”

Postseason duel

Torre stayed with the Yankees through the 2007 season before joining the Dodgers in 2008. The move to the National League guaranteed La Russa and Torre would face one another.

La Russa and the Cardinals won four of six against Torre and the Dodgers in the 2008 regular season and five of seven in the 2009 regular season.

In the 2009 National League Division Series, Torre and the Dodgers swept the Cardinals. “Torre warrants praise for winning the duel of future Hall of Fame managers,” Miklasz wrote.

The last season La Russa and Torre faced one another was 2010. The Cardinals won four of seven regular-season games that year against the Dodgers.

La Russa ranks second in career wins for managers at 2,902 and Torre is fifth at 2,326.

 

(Updated April 12, 2025)

Ted Simmons was a key to Joe Torre being able to return to big-league managing in 1990 after a six-year hiatus. Without help from Simmons, Torre might never have gotten the chance to revive his career.

simmons_torreOn Dec. 9, 2013, three managers, Tony La Russa, Bobby Cox and Torre, were elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame by the Expansion Era committee. A candidate needed 12 of the votes from the 16-member committee to earn election. Hall of Fame manager Whitey Herzog was one of those voters.

It was Herzog who triggered the chain of events that led to Torre becoming manager of the Cardinals.

Support for Simmons

On July 6, 1990, Herzog, the Cardinals’ manager since 1980, abruptly resigned.

Cardinals coach Red Schoendienst was named interim manager while general manager Dal Maxvill launched a search for Herzog’s replacement.

There was media speculation and popular sentiment for Simmons to get the job. The former St. Louis catcher was the Cardinals’ director of player development, overseeing the minor-league system.

Five days after Herzog quit, St. Louis Post-Dispatch columnist Bernie Miklasz opined that Simmons should be the manager.

“Simmons makes sense for a lot of reasons,” Miklasz wrote. “The manager must be a motivator, someone who can communicate with the millionaires in the dugout. Simmons … has fresh perspective on what makes today’s players click. And he’s wired. His high energy level is bound to be contagious. Maxvill said the new man must be intelligent … Simmons would beat Tony La Russa at ‘Jeopardy.’ ”

Two days later, in an interview with Vahe Gregorian of the Post-Dispatch, Simmons ended the speculation. “It’s flattering to have people asking me every five minutes if I’m going to be the next manager,” Simmons said. “But, however flattering, it’s not my objective. It’s safe and fair to say I won’t be the next manager. I don’t have any interest.”

After that, attention turned to Torre.

Friends in high places

Fired by the Braves in 1984, Torre became an Angels broadcaster. Six years later, he admitted he largely had abandoned hope of managing again.

Herzog’s surprise resignation provided the opportunity; Maxvill and Simmons provided the support.

Torre and Maxvill were friends and former teammates. They had played together for the Cardinals from 1969-72. Maxvill was on his coaching staffs when Torre managed the Mets and Braves.

Simmons was a Cardinals rookie when St. Louis acquired Torre from the Braves in March 1969. Torre, a five-time all-star catcher before converting to first baseman, became a mentor to Simmons, who was being groomed to replace Tim McCarver as the everyday catcher. Torre and Simmons were Cardinals teammates from 1969-74 and often batted back-to-back in the St. Louis order.

In late July 1990, Torre told the Los Angeles Times he would enjoy working with Maxvill and Simmons. “It would be the first time I’d be working with somebody instead of for somebody,” Torre said. “That can only be ideal.”

Maxvill told the Post-Dispatch he had seven candidates: Torre, big-league coaches Don Baylor, Hal Lanier, Pat Corrales and Gene Tenace, Class AAA Louisville manager Gaylen Pitts and Cardinals minor-league hitting instructor Mike Jorgensen. Torre, though, was the leading candidate all along.

When Torre was named Cardinals manager on Aug. 1, 1990, Herzog told Rick Hummel of the Post-Dispatch, “I don’t know why they didn’t do it on July 7 (the day after Herzog’s resignation). He was going to be the guy.”

Tips from Ted

With eight Cardinals eligible for free agency after the 1990 season, Herzog also said Torre would have to rely on Simmons for advice on which prospects were ready to contribute at the big-league level.

Torre agreed, telling the Post-Dispatch, “I’m going to pretty much take the rest of this season to work with Dal and Ted Simmons and make sure that when we go out there in 1991 we’re going in the right direction.

“I’m looking to Ted Simmons to see where it’s coming from.”

Wrote Miklasz: “Simmons will develop the prospects for Maxvill. Maxvill will pass them … along to Torre. Torre will manage. Presenting: The Three Amigos. United, they stand.”

Said Torre: “It’s going to be very comfortable working with people that I know so well. We were teammates. We were taught the game the same way. We played together and now we’re working together.”

Maxvill elaborated to the Post-Dispatch about the relationship between Torre and Simmons. “When Ted came up, Joe was his mentor,” Maxvill said. “Joe told him about the league, about opposing pitchers, about what to expect in situations, told him how to handle our pitching staff. I knew they had a good relationship and that their baseball philosophy was pretty much the same.

“That’s helpful. If we go through our minor-league system, we don’t like to have eight or 10 different opinions about the way cutoffs or rundowns or relays should be done. With all of us being pretty much brought up on the Cardinal Way _ through George Kissell, all of us _ I think we’ll be able to pull the wagon in the same direction from that standpoint.”

The Three Amigos, however, didn’t stay together long.

Simmons left the Cardinals in 1992 to become general manager of the Pirates. Maxvill was fired in 1994 and, a year after that, Torre was fired by Maxvill’s successor, Walt Jocketty (who selected La Russa to manage the Cardinals).

Maxvill and Simmons brought Torre back into managing and, in so doing, opened a path to his Hall of Fame election. After leaving the Cardinals, Torre was hired by the Yankees. He managed them to four World Series titles and six American League pennants in his first eight years in New York.

“Basically, I’m not in the Hall of Fame if Dal Maxvill doesn’t make that call,” Torre told Cardinals Yearbook in 2014. “Because once you’re out of the game, people don’t know you’re around. He got me back in the game.”

In 29 years managing the Mets, Braves, Cardinals, Yankees and Dodgers, Torre compiled 2,326 wins, ranking fifth all-time.

(Updated April 14, 2025)

Cardinals coach George Kissell was the most influential mentor in Joe Torre’s transformation from all-star player to manager.

joe_torre3Torre, who won four World Series titles and six American League pennants as Yankees manager, earned election to the National Baseball Hall of Fame on Dec. 9, 2013.

The path toward that achievement began when Torre, then a catcher and first baseman, was traded by the Braves to the Cardinals in March 1969 and connected with Kissell.

In his book “Chasing the Dream,” Torre credited Kissell with creating the foundation for his managing career and teaching him a style that helped Torre earn a World Series championship in his first season (1996) with the Yankees.

Torre also said he learned from Red Schoendienst, who managed the Cardinals during Torre’s playing tenure with St. Louis (1969-74).

Successful skippers

Torre, who managed the Mets, Braves, Cardinals, Yankees and Dodgers, joined another former Cardinals manager, Tony La Russa, and fellow manager Bobby Cox in being elected by the Expansion Era committee. La Russa (second at 2,821), Cox (fourth at 2,504) and Torre (fifth at 2,326) rank in the top five in career wins for managers. Connie Mack (3,731) is first and John McGraw (2,763) is third.

A candidate needed 12 of the votes from the 16-member committee. Hall of Fame managers Whitey Herzog and Tom Lasorda were on the committee.

According to Hall of Fame rules, a candidate must have been a big-league manager for 10 or more years and have been retired for at least five years before he is eligible for election. However, if the retired manager is 65 or older, he becomes eligible just six months after retiring.

Cardinals classics

Torre was 20 when he debuted in the majors with the Braves in 1960. “Warren Spahn and Lew Burdette took me under their wings,” Torre recalled to Cardinals Yearbook in 2014. “They were like big brothers to me. They took me to the movies the first time we came to St. Louis.”

A five-time all-star with the Braves, Torre was traded to the Cardinals for first baseman Orlando Cepeda on March 17, 1969.

Kissell was a coach on Schoendienst’s staff during Torre’s six seasons as a Cardinals player. He converted Torre into a third baseman with St. Louis.

When Tim McCarver, the catcher for three pennant-winning Cardinals clubs in the 1960s, returned to St. Louis to play in 1973 and 1974, he, Torre and Kissell spent much time together.

In his book, Torre said, “Timmy and I were almost always the first ones at the ballpark … Kissell always was there early, too. The three of us would spend hours talking about baseball. Looking back on it, that’s when I started to get the foundation for my managing career.”

Torre said he and McCarver “talked a lot about managing in those days” and discussed the possibility of operating as co-managers of a team.

“I learned more baseball from George Kissell than from anyone else in my life,” Torre said. “He used to have a great saying: The most important word in the baseball dictionary is why. And that’s pretty much what Timmy, George and I would do. We’d constantly ask ourselves why things had happened in games. Sometimes (Bob Gibson) and (Dal Maxvill) would sit in, too. They were very stimulating and enlightening sessions.”

McCarver, in his book “Few and Chosen,” said of Torre, “I came to know Joe as a man of intelligence, grace and compassion. His knowledge of baseball and his unique people skills made him a good bet to succeed as a manager.”

Lessons learned

Torre cited specific examples of how he was helped by Kissell.

“George showed me how to create runs by stealing bases and moving runners,” Torre related. “He taught me that while running to first base you should run through the bag and not to it. He taught me that outfielders should reposition themselves according to the count on the hitter and not just plant themselves in the same spot.

“And he taught me an unorthodox defense with a runner on third when it’s time to bring the infield in: With a right-handed hitter, and with the count in his favor, you leave your third baseman back at normal depth. That puts pressure on the runner and third-base coach in whether to decide to break for home on a ground ball.”

In an interview with Stan McNeal of Cardinals Magazine, Torre said Kissell “put in the most time with me and I learned the most baseball from him. There were a lot of things I never thought to think about until I associated with Kissell.”

Schoendienst, Torre’s only manager in St. Louis, was “perfect” for the Cardinals, Torre said. Schoendienst’s style helped Torre in his first season with the Yankees.

“As a manager, sometimes you assume a lot _ that your players know what they are supposed to do and that they understand your moves,” Torre said in his book. “Red was able to take that approach because he had such a smart, seasoned bunch. Luckily so did I with the (1996) Yankees. It was the first year that kind of approach worked for me. The Yankees’ professionalism really made me think back to those classy Cardinal teams.”

Schoendienst “was definitely an influence for me,” Torre told Cardinals Magazine.

In his 2014 interview with Cardinals Yearbook, Torre said Schoendienst “basically trusted the players. He knew what he wanted from them, and it was only to go out and do the best you can and not beat yourself. I took a great many things from his philosophy going forward. I was a little different from other managers. I didn’t try to micromanage everything. i trusted my players to go out there and hopefully be in a position to want the same things I wanted.”

When Torre managed the Cardinals from 1990-95, Kissell was a Cardinals instructor and Torre had him coordinate the team’s spring training.

“He questioned everything,” Torre said. “He had a favorite line: ‘Joe, who wrote the book?’ And I’d say, ‘Nobody, George. Nobody wrote the book.’ That was George’s way of reminding me that I could make any move I wanted as a manager as long as I had the right reasons for it _ whether it was unpopular or unorthodox. That style helped me in the 1996 World Series. I surprised some people with moves like benching Wade Boggs against a right-handed pitcher, letting my pitcher bat in the ninth inning and putting the potential winning run on base intentionally.”

In 2011, Fernando Salas was the coolest and calmest Cardinal amid the chaos of a bullpen collapse.

fernando_salasWithout the poise Salas displayed in effectively filling the closer role for most of the 2011 season, the Cardinals never would have been in position to make their late-season run for the wild-card playoff berth that put them on the path to a World Series championship.

When the Cardinals traded third baseman David Freese and Salas to the Angels for center fielder Peter Bourjos and outfield prospect Randal Grichuk on Nov. 22, 2013, Freese, hitting hero of the 2011 World Series, deservedly received countless fond farewells.

Salas virtually was ignored.

Often overlooked is that Salas was “the stabilizing force” in the Cardinals’ 2011 season, according to teammate Lance Berkman.

S.O.S. for Salas

Sid Monge, a former big-league reliever who became a pitching coach in the Cardinals’ minor-league system, had seen Salas pitch in the Mexican League and recommended St. Louis sign him in 2007.

After making his big-league debut with St. Louis in 2010, Salas gave up just one run during the Cardinals’ entire spring training camp in 2011, but failed to make the Opening Day roster. He reported to Memphis and earned two saves in three scoreless relief appearances for the Class AAA club.

Meanwhile, Ryan Franklin, the Cardinals’ veteran closer, was blowing leads at an alarming rate. Desperate, the Cardinals turned to Mitchell Boggs and then Eduardo Sanchez as the closer and called up Salas to bolster the bullpen.

When neither Boggs nor Sanchez could hold down the job, the Cardinals tried Salas.

Unflappable, the spring training reject blossomed as the closer, earning 16 saves in his first 18 chances.

Berkman, the Cardinals’ veteran right fielder, told Derrick Goold of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch that Salas is “the single stabilizing force on this team.”

“He’s stepped up and been a consistent performer in the back of the bullpen,” Berkman said. “… Consequently, everybody else has settled into a good role. Now we have a pretty solid group. But the key is him.”

Wrote Joe Strauss of the Post-Dispatch: “Salas has become an unexpected answer to a ninth-inning riddle that once jeopardized an entire season.”

Mixing a changeup with his fastball, Salas, who turned 26 on May 30, 2011, was 3-0 with 11 saves and a 1.88 ERA on June 7 that season.

Strong, silent type

Cardinals manager Tony La Russa told the Post-Dispatch that Salas had “a good coolness to him.”

“He’s got great guts,” La Russa said.

Added pitching coach Dave Duncan: “He hasn’t been in any situation yet where it’s like he’s emotionally affected by it.”

Said general manager John Mozeliak: “The one thing about him is that he’s always remained calm and cool. That quality serves him well.”

Salas’ skills were best illustrated in a May 19, 2011, game against the Astros. Brought in to protect a two-run lead, Salas faced former Cardinals prospect Brett Wallace with one on and one out in the ninth.

After throwing three consecutive pitches outside the strike zone, Salas was in danger of walking Wallace and putting the tying run on base. He got Wallace to foul off three pitches and then struck him out swinging on an off-speed offering. The Cardinals won, 4-2. Boxscore

“My favorite pitch of the whole game was that 3-and-2 off-speed pitch,” La Russa said to the Post-Dispatch. “… It’s one of those that if you miss a little bit all kinds of bad things can happen. One of the things Fernando can do is control his off-speed stuff.”

Said Mozeliak: “Over the last three years, his ability to pitch has evolved. He has shown the ability to get big outs. It’s not something you can trace on a radar gun. It’s a credit to him.”

Using teammate and fellow Mexican Jaime Garcia as an interpreter, Salas said simply, “I feel really good. I’m basically down for whatever they want me to do.”

The Cardinals utilized Salas as the closer until power pitcher Jason Motte took over the role in the last month. Still, Salas helped down the stretch, posting a 2.19 ERA with one save in 12 September appearances.

Salas finished the 2011 season with 24 saves and a 2.28 ERA in 68 games. He struck out 75 batters in 75 innings and yielded only 50 hits.

Right-handed batters hit .164 (25-for-152) against Salas in 2011. With runners in scoring position, all batters hit .203 (13-for-64) off him.

Though he couldn’t repeat that success _ he was 1-4 with a 4.30 ERA in 2012 and 0-3 with a 4.50 ERA in 2013, with no saves in either season _  Salas’ rescue of the Cardinals in 2011 should be better appreciated.

Previously: Roger Craig, Ron Taylor: great relief for Cardinals