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2022 St. Louis Cardinals season

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2022 St. Louis Cardinals
National League Central Champions
LeagueNational League
DivisionCentral
BallparkBusch Stadium
CitySt. Louis, Missouri
Record93–69 (.574)
Divisional place1st
OwnersWilliam DeWitt Jr.
PresidentBill DeWitt III
General managersMike Girsch
ManagersOliver Marmol
TelevisionBally Sports Midwest
(Dan McLaughlin, Jim Edmonds, Brad Thompson)
RadioKMOX NewsRadio 1120
St. Louis Cardinals Radio Network
(John Rooney, Rick Horton, Mike Claiborne)
StatsESPN.com
Baseball Reference
← 2021 Seasons 2023 →

The 2022 St. Louis Cardinals season was the 141st for the St. Louis Cardinals, a Major League Baseball franchise in St. Louis, Missouri. It was the 131st season for the Cardinals in the National League and their 17th at Busch Stadium III. They were managed by first-year manager Oliver Marmol. The season saw the return of Albert Pujols, a former Cardinals star player. Pujols and longtime catcher Yadier Molina announced that the 2022 season would be their last.[1]

On December 2, 2021, Commissioner of Baseball Rob Manfred announced a lockout of players, following expiration of the collective bargaining agreement (CBA) between the league and the Major League Baseball Players Association (MLBPA). On March 10, 2022, MLB and the MLBPA agreed to a new collective bargaining agreement, thus ending the lockout. Opening Day was played on April 7.[2] Although MLB previously announced that several series would be cancelled due to the lockout, the agreement provides for a 162-game season, with originally canceled games to be made up via doubleheaders.[3]

The Cardinals won the National League Central but they were upset in the NLWCS by the Philadelphia Phillies, losing in a two-game sweep.

Offseason

[edit]

Coaching changes

[edit]

On October 14, 2021, the Cardinals fired manager Mike Shildt.[4] On October 25, the team named Oliver Marmol the new manager.[5]

Lockout

[edit]

The expiration of the league's collective bargaining agreement (CBA) with the Major League Baseball Players Association occurred on December 1, 2021, with no new agreement in place.[6] As a result, the team owners voted unanimously to lock out the players, stopping all free agency and trades.[7][8]

The parties came to an agreement on a new CBA on March 10, 2022.[9]

Rule changes

[edit]

Under the new CBA, several new rules were instituted for the 2022 season. The National League will adopt the designated hitter full-time, a draft lottery will be implemented, the postseason will expand from ten teams to twelve, and advertising patches will appear on player uniforms and helmets for the first time.[10][11]

Regular season

[edit]

Summary

[edit]

April

[edit]

On April 27, Nolan Arenado was ejected for inciting a bench-clearing brawl against the New York Mets after yelling at Yoan López for throwing near his head, assuming the throw was retaliation for the Cardinals having hit three Mets batters the night before.[12] Arenado received a two-game suspension for the incident,[13] but the suspension was reduced to one game after an appeal.[14] He was named National League Player of the Month after having batted .375 with five home runs, 17 RBI, 12 extra-base hits and a league-leading 1.125 OPS. The last Cardinals third baseman to win the award was Ken Reitz in May 1977.[15]

May

[edit]

On May 23, Goldschmidt hit a walk-off grand slam in the bottom of the tenth inning versus the Toronto Blue Jays for a 7–3 win. That grand slam extended Goldschmidt's hitting streak to 15 games, during which he had batted .438 with 28 hits, 12 doubles, five home runs, and 22 RBI. Since RBI became an official statistic in 1920, no major leaguer had previously achieved all of those totals during any 15-game span.[16]

For the month of May, Goldschmidt led the major leagues with a 1.288 OPS and 33 RBI, alongside leading the National League with a .404 average. His ten home runs ranked second in the NL. Thus, he was named the NL Player of the Month. It was the third consecutive month a Cardinal had been named a NL Player of the Month, following O'Neill (September 2021) and Arenado (April 2022).[17]

June

[edit]

Goldschmidt continued his hit streak for 25 games until June 4 versus the Chicago Cubs, when he was 0-for-2 with two bases on balls. During the streak, he hit .424 (42-for-99)/.482/.869, 24 extra base hits and 36 RBI. It was the longest hitting streak by a Cardinal since Pujols hit in 30 straight in 2003, and tied for third-longest for the Cardinals since 1963. Albert Pujols became the 10th player in major league history to achieve 3,000 games played on June 4, appearing in the second inning as an injury replacement for Corey Dickerson.[18]

On June 11, 2022, Tommy Edman hit a two-run home run in the bottom of the ninth inning versus the Cincinnati Reds for his first career walk-off home run and RBI, to secure a 5–4 victory. For much of the game, the Reds led, 3–1, but the Cardinals scored four runs in the eighth and ninth innings to rally to win.[19]

July

[edit]

The Cardinals hit four consecutive home runs on July 2, 2022, the 11th such occurrence in major league history. At Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia, Nolan Arenado, Nolan Gorman, Juan Yepez and Dylan Carlson all homered off Phillies starter Kyle Gibson with two outs in the first inning. It was the first time that the Cardinals had accomplished the feat, and the first time that it occurred in the first inning. The last club to do so were the Chicago White Sox on August 16, 2020.[20] Arenado later won the game for St. Louis in the ninth inning with his second home run of the game, 7–6, which was also the 5,000th at bat of his career.[21]

August

[edit]

In August, the Cardinals went 22-7, their best month of the season. They notched their season's first series sweep, of the New York Yankees. They overtook the Milwaukee Brewers in the race for the National League Central division; at one point, their lead stood at 8.5 games.

September

[edit]

In a September 8 game against the Washington Nationals, Adam Wainwright and Yadier Molina made their 324th start as a battery, tying the Major League record. On September 14, Wainwright and Molina made their record-breaking 325th start, in a game against the Milwaukee Brewers that the Cardinals won 4-1. On September 23, 2022, Albert Pujols hit his 699th and 700th home runs, in a game in which the Cardinals shut out the Los Angeles Dodgers, 11-0.

Game Log

[edit]
2022 St. Louis Cardinals Game Log: 93–69 (Home: 53–29; Away: 40–40) [22]
April: 11–9 (Home: 5–5 ; Away: 6–4)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record Box / Streak
1 April 7 Pirates 9–0 Wainwright (1–0) Brubaker (0–1) 46,256 1–0 W1
2 April 9 Pirates 6–2 Whitley (1–0) Keller (0–1) 45,025 2–0 W2
3 April 10 Pirates 4–9 Yajure (1–0) Matz (0–1) 40,027 2–1 L1
4 April 12 Royals 6–5 Hicks (1–0) Lynch (0–1) Gallegos (1) 40,398 3–1 W1
5 April 14 @ Brewers 1–5 Woodruff (1–1) Wainwright (1–1) 42,794 3–2 L1
6 April 15 @ Brewers 10–1 Mikolas (1–0) Peralta (0–1) 26,874 4–2 W1
7 April 16 @ Brewers 2–1 Matz (1–1) Houser (0–2) Gallegos (2) 26,356 5–2 W2
8 April 17 @ Brewers 5–6 Cousins (1–0) Hudson (0–1) Hader (4) 23,001 5–3 L1
9 April 19 @ Marlins 5–1 Wainwright (2–1) Luzardo (0–1) 8,475 6–3 W1
10 April 20 @ Marlins 2–0 Cabrera (1–0) Bender (0–2) Gallegos (3) 8,655 7–3 W2
11 April 21 @ Marlins 0–5 López (2–0) Hicks (1–1) 9,670 7–4 L1
12 April 22 @ Reds 4–2 Matz (2–1) Greene (1–2) Gallegos (4) 20,470 8–4 W1
13 April 23 @ Reds 5–0 Hudson (1–1) Mahle (1–2) 28,598 9–4 W2
14 April 24 @ Reds 1–4 Lodolo (1–2) Wainwright (2–2) Sims (1) 23,124 9–5 L1
15 April 25 Mets 2–5 May (1–0) Gallegos (0–1) Diaz (2) 35,455 9–6 L2
16 April 26 Mets 0–3 Bassitt (3–1) Hicks (1–2) Diaz (3) 32,215 9–7 L3
17 April 27 Mets 10–5 Woodford (1–0) Carrasco (1–1) 34,822 10–7 W1
18 April 28 Diamondbacks 8–3 Hudson (2–1) Castellanos (1–1) 33,464 11–7 W2
19 April 29 Diamondbacks 2–6 Bumgarner (1–1) Wainwright (2–3) 40,753 11–8 L1
20 April 30 Diamondbacks 0–2 Kelly (2–1) Mikolas (1–1) Kennedy (1) 40,144 11–9 L2
May: 17–12 (Home: 10–6 ; Away: 7–6)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record Box / Streak
21 May 1 Diamondbacks 7–5 Whitley (2–0) Middleton (0–1) Helsley (1) 45,123 12–9 W1
22 May 2 Royals 1–0 Matz (3–1) Greinke (0–2) Gallegos (5) 33,963 13–9 W2
23 May 3 @ Royals 1–7 Keller (1–2) Hudson (2–2) 18,788 13–10 L1
24 May 4 @ Royals 10–0 Wainwright (3–3) Bubic (0–3) 12,774 14–10 W1
25 May 5 @ Giants 7–1 Mikolas (2–1) Littell (0–1) 22,562 15–10 W2
26 May 6 @ Giants 3–2 Helsley (1–0) Doval (0–1) Gallegos (6) 28,898 16–10 W3
27 May 7 @ Giants 7–13 Webb (4–1) Matz (3–2) 40,113 16–11 L1
28 May 8 @ Giants 3–4 Leone (2–0) Cabrera (1–1) Doval (5) 38,193 16–12 L2
29 May 10 Orioles 3–5 Bradish (1–1) Naughton (0–1) Bautista (1) 33,649 16–13 L3
30 May 11 Orioles 10–1 Mikolas (3–1) Watkins (0–1) 34,533 17–13 W1
31 May 12 Orioles 2–3 Akin (1–0) Matz (3–3) Bautista (2) 35,198 17–14 L1
32 May 13 Giants 2–8 Webb (5–1) Hicks (1–3) 39,612 17–15 L2
33 May 14 Giants 4–0 Hudson (3–2) Junis (1–1) 44,537 18–15 W1
34 May 15 Giants 15–6 Wainwright (4–3) Rodón (4–2) 39,703 19–15 W2
35 May 17 (1) @ Mets 1–3 Reed (1–0) Mikolas (3–2) Díaz (9) (See Game 2) 19–16 L1
36 May 17 (2) @ Mets 4–3 Helsley (2–0) Rodríguez (0–2) Gallegos (7) 27,457 20–16 W1
37 May 18 @ Mets 4–11 Scherzer (5–1) Walsh (0–1) 32,798 20–17 L1
38 May 19 @ Mets 6–7 (10) Holderman (1–0) Gallegos (0–2) 28,801 20–18 L2
39 May 20 @ Pirates 5–3 Wainwright (5–3) Thompson (2–4) Gallegos (8) 14,034 21–18 W1
40 May 21 @ Pirates 5–4 VerHagen (1–0) Quintana (1–2) Helsley (2) 24,644 22–18 W2
41 May 22 @ Pirates 18–4 Rondón (1–0) Wilson (0–3) 13,510 23–18 W3
42 May 23 Blue Jays 7–3 (10) Cabrera (2–1) Phelps (0–1) 36,033 24–18 W4
43 May 24 Blue Jays 1–8 Gausman (4–3) Hicks (1–4) 33,797 24–19 L1
44 May 26 Brewers 3–4 Lauer (5–1) Wainwright (5–4) Hader (16) 35,107 24–20 L2
45 May 27 Brewers 4–2 VerHagen (2–0) Woodruff (5–3) Helsley (3) 39,077 25–20 W1
46 May 28 Brewers 8–3 Liberatore (1–0) Houser (3–5) 45,594 26–20 W2
47 May 29 Brewers 0–8 Burnes (3–2) Mikolas (3–3) 44,169 26–21 L1
48 May 30 Padres 6–3 Pallante (1–0) Martinez (2–3) 42,140 27–21 W1
49 May 31 Padres 3–2 (10) VerHagen (2–0) Rogers (0–2) 33,418 28–21 W2
June: 15–14 (Home: 9–5 ; Away: 6–9)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record Box / Streak
50 June 1 Padres 5–2 Hudson (4–2) Darvish (4–3) Wittgren (1) 34,268 29–21 W3
51 June 2 @ Cubs 5–7 Thompson (6–0) Liberatore (1–1) 30,466 29–22 L1
52 June 3 @ Cubs 14–5 Mikolas (4–3) Stroman (2–5) Thompson (1) 32,482 30–22 W1
53 June 4 (1) @ Cubs 1–6 Swarmer (1–0) Oviedo (0–1) 32,792 30–23 L1
54 June 4 (2) @ Cubs 7–4 (10) Gallegos (1–2) Rucker (0–1) 31,673 31–23 W1
55 June 5 @ Cubs 5–3 (11) Cabrera (3–1) Norris (0–4) 31,424 32–23 W2
56 June 7 @ Rays 2–4 (10) Poche (2–0) VerHagen (3–1) 10,905 32–24 L1
57 June 8 @ Rays 3–11 Kluber (3–2) Naughton (0–2) 12,906 32–25 L2
58 June 9 @ Rays 1–2 McClanahan (7–2) Mikolas (4–4) Adam (2) 14,892 32–26 L3
59 June 10 Reds 2–0 Pallante (2–0) Castillo (2–4) Helsley (4) 45,009 33–26 W1
60 June 11 Reds 5–4 Wittgren (1–0) Kuhnel (0–1) 43,832 34–26 W2
61 June 12 Reds 6–7 Hoffman (1–0) Hudson (4–3) Díaz (2) 43,083 34–27 L1
62 June 13 Pirates 7–5 Gallegos (2–2) Stratton (3–3) Helsley (5) 37,398 35–27 W1
63 June 14 (1) Pirates 3–1 Liberatore (2–1) Brubaker (0–7) Gallegos (9) 31,193 36–27 W2
64 June 14 (2) Pirates 9–1 Mikolas (5–4) Wilson (0–4) 33,977 37–27 W3
65 June 15 Pirates 4–6 Crowe (3–3) Pallante (2–1) Bednar (11) 38,658 37–28 L1
66 June 17 @ Red Sox 5–6 Wacha (5–1) Wainwright (5–5) Houck (3) 35,251 37–29 L2
67 June 18 @ Red Sox 11–2 Hudson (5–3) Crawford (1–2) 36,141 38–29 W1
68 June 19 @ Red Sox 4–6 Pivetta (7–5) Pallante (2–2) Houck (4) 35,989 38–30 L1
69 June 20 @ Brewers 0–2 Burnes (5–4) Mikolas (5–5) Hader (20) 28,100 38–31 L2
70 June 21 @ Brewers 6–2 Thompson (1–0) Gonzalez (0–1) 30,208 39–31 W1
71 June 22 @ Brewers 5–4 Oviedo (1–1) Lauer (6–3) Cabrera (1) 27,986 40–31 W2
72 June 23 @ Brewers 4–6 Alexander (2–0) Hudson (5–4) Hader (21) 32,550 40–32 L1
73 June 24 Cubs 0–3 Hendricks (3–6) Pallante (2–3) Robertson (9) 46,524 40–33 L2
74 June 25 Cubs 5–3 Helsley (3–0) Leiter Jr. (1–2) 45,159 41–33 W1
75 June 26 Cubs 5–6 (10) Robertson (2–0) Thompson (1–1) 44,824 41–34 L1
76 June 27 Marlins 9–0 Wainwright (6–5) López (5–4) 34,701 42–34 W1
77 June 28 Marlins 5–3 Hudson (6–4) Garrett (1–3) Helsley (6) 32,065 43–34 W2
78 June 29 Marlins 3–4 Alcántara (8–3) Helsley (3–1) 35,674 43–35 L1
July: 11–13 (Home: 5–4 ; Away: 6–9)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record Box / Streak
79 July 1 @ Phillies 3–5 Alvarado (2–1) Mikolas (5–6) Hand (3) 36,077 43–36 L2
80 July 2 @ Phillies 7–6 Helsley (4–1) Domínguez (4–2) 27,657 44–36 W1
81 July 3 @ Phillies 0–4 Wheeler (7–4) Wainwright (6–6) 44,225 44–37 L1
82 July 4 @ Braves 3–6 O'Day (2–2) Hudson (6–5) Smith (5) 41,975 44–38 L2
83 July 5 @ Braves 1–7 Anderson (7–5) Pallante (2–4) 35,656 44–39 L3
84 July 6 @ Braves 0–3 Fried (9–2) Mikolas (5–7) Minter (2) 36,718 44–40 L4
85 July 7 @ Braves 3–2 (11) Helsley (5–1) Matzek (0–2) Naughton (1) 37,756 45–40 W1
86 July 8 Phillies 0–2 Wheeler (8–4) Wainwright (6–7) Hand (4) 41,100 45–41 L1
87 July 9 Phillies 0–1 Alvarado (3–1) Gallegos (2–3) Knebel (12) 41,853 45–42 L2
88 July 10 Phillies 4–3 Hicks (2–4) Domínguez (4–3) Helsley (7) 36,112 46–42 W1
89 July 11 Phillies 6–1 Mikolas (6–7) Nola (5–7) 34,399 47–42 W2
90 July 12 Dodgers 7–6 Oviedo (2–1) White (1–2) Gallegos (10) 37,150 48–42 W3
91 July 13 Dodgers 6–7 Kimbrel (3–4) Gallegos (2–4) Phillips (1) 39,292 48–43 L1
92 July 14 Dodgers 0–4 Anderson (10–1) Hudson (6–6) 40,062 48–44 L2
93 July 15 Reds 7–3 Pallante (3–4) Greene (3–11) Helsley (8) 41,221 49–44 W1
94 July 16 Reds 11–3 Mikolas (7–7) Lodolo (2–3) 41,014 50–44 W2
92nd All-Star Game in Los Angeles, California
95 July 22 @ Reds 5–9 Sanmartin (4–4) Wainwright (6–8) 25,547 50–45 L1
96 July 23 @ Reds 6–3 Matz (4–3) Minor (1–7) Helsley (9) 27,190 51–45 W1
97 July 24 @ Reds 3–6 Mahle (4–7) Mikolas (7–8) Strickland (5) 18,813 51–46 L1
98 July 26 @ Blue Jays 3–10 Mayza (5–0) Hicks (2–5) 39,756 51–47 L2
99 July 27 @ Blue Jays 6–1 Wainwright (7–8) Gausman (7–8) 36,666 52–47 W1
100 July 29 @ Nationals 6–2 Mikolas (8–8) Sánchez (0–3) 30,170 53–47 W2
101 July 30 @ Nationals 6–7 Ramírez (3–1) Cabrera (3–2) Finnegan (4) 34,440 53–48 L1
102 July 31 @ Nationals 5–0 Pallante (4–4) Gray (7–7) 28,738 54–48 W1
August: 22–7 (Home: 13–2 ; Away: 9–5)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record Box / Streak
103 August 2 Cubs 6–0 Wainwright (8–8) Thompson (8–5) 44,344 55–48 W2
104 August 4 (1) Cubs 4–3 Helsley (6–1) Uelmen (0–1) 41,734 56–48 W3
105 August 4 (2) Cubs 7–2 Hicks (3–5) Castro (0–1) 44,669 57–48 W4
106 August 5 Yankees 4–3 Pallante (5–4) Holmes (5–3) Helsley (10) 46,940 58–48 W5
107 August 6 Yankees 1–0 Montgomery (4–3) Germán (1–2) Gallegos (11) 48,581 59–48 W6
108 August 7 Yankees 12–9 Stratton (6–4) Abreu (2–1) Helsley (11) 46,472 60–48 W7
109 August 9 @ Rockies 5–16 Feltner (2–3) Mikolas (8–9) 35,011 60–49 L1
110 August 10 @ Rockies 9–5 Quintana (4–5) Freeland (7–8) 35,164 61–49 W1
111 August 11 @ Rockies 6–8 Gilbreath (1–0) Hicks (3–6) Bard (24) 30,293 61–50 L1
112 August 12 Brewers 3–1 Montgomery (5–3) Lauer (8–4) Helsley (12) 45,669 62–50 W1
113 August 13 Brewers 2–3 (10) Williams (4–2) Gallegos (2–5) Bush (3) 45,905 62–51 L1
114 August 14 Brewers 6–3 Mikolas (9–9) Rogers (1–6) 44,142 63–51 W1
115 August 16 Rockies 5–4 Helsley (7–1) Lamet (1–2) 39,105 64–51 W2
116 August 17 Rockies 5–1 Montgomery (6–3) Márquez (6–10) 38,033 65–51 W3
117 August 18 Rockies 13–0 Wainwright (9–8) Senzatela (3–7) 36,137 66–51 W4
118 August 19 @ Diamondbacks 5–1 Mikolas (10–9) Henry (2–2) 32,183 67–51 W5
119 August 20 @ Diamondbacks 16–7 Cabrera (4–2) Bumgarner (6–13) 34,248 68–51 W6
120 August 21 @ Diamondbacks 6–4 Woodford (2–0) Mantiply (1–4) Gallegos (12) 25,064 69–51 W7
121 August 22 @ Cubs 1–0 Montgomery (7–3) Smyly (5–7) 29,719 70–51 W8
122 August 23 (1) @ Cubs 0–2 Rucker (3–1) Wainwright (9–9) Hughes (3) 27,273 70–52 L1
123 August 23 (2) @ Cubs 13–3 Woodford (3–0) Sampson (1–4) 28,163 71–52 W1
124 August 24 @ Cubs 1–7 Wick (4–6) Mikolas (10–10) 32,012 71–53 L1
125 August 25 @ Cubs 8–3 Hudson (7–6) Stroman (3–6) 28,803 72–53 W1
126 August 26 Braves 4–11 Strider (8–4) Quintana (4–6) 46,027 72–54 L1
127 August 27 Braves 6–5 Helsley (8–1) Jansen (5–1) 46,119 73–54 W1
128 August 28 Braves 6–3 Helsley (9–1) Minter (5–4) Gallegos (13) 42,897 74–54 W2
129 August 29 @ Reds 13–4 Stratton (7–4) Anderson (0–1) 11,051 75–54 W3
130 August 30 @ Reds 1–5 Law (1–1) Hudson (7–7) 13,271 75–55 L1
131 August 31 @ Reds 5–3 (13) Pallante (6–4) Anderson (0–2) 13,613 76–55 W1
September: 15–11 (Home: 10–5 ; Away: 5–6)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record Box / Streak
132 September 2 Cubs 8–0 Montgomery (8–3) Sampson (1–5) 44,491 77–55 W2
133 September 3 Cubs 8–4 Wainwright (10–9) Smyly (5–8) 47,816 78–55 W3
134 September 4 Cubs 2–0 Mikolas (11–10) Hughes (2–2) Helsley (13) 46,642 79–55 W4
135 September 5 Nationals 0–6 Sánchez (2–5) Flaherty (0–1) Thompson (1) 45,779 79–56 L1
136 September 6 Nationals 4–1 Quintana (5–6) Espino (0–7) Helsley (14) 37,629 80–56 W1
137 September 7 Nationals 6–5 Woodford (4–0) Finnegan (5–3) 34,715 81–56 W2
138 September 8 Nationals 6–11 Thompson (1–0) Pallante (6–5) 40,437 81–57 L1
139 September 9 @ Pirates 2–8 Contreras (5–4) Mikolas (11–11) 15,718 81–58 L2
140 September 10 @ Pirates 7–5 Gallegos (3–5) Crowe (5–9) Helsley (15) 22,042 82–58 W1
141 September 11 @ Pirates 4–3 Stratton (8–4) De Jong (4–2) Helsley (16) 10,398 83–58 W2
142 September 13 Brewers 4–8 Perdomo (2–0) Montgomery (8–4) 42,047 83–59 L1
143 September 14 Brewers 4–1 Wainwright (11–9) Burnes (10–7) Helsley (17) 46,459 84–59 W1
144 September 15 Reds 2–3 Anderson (1–3) Mikolas (11–12) Díaz (7) 44,901 84–60 L1
145 September 16 Reds 6–5 Stratton (9–4) Gibaut (1–2) Helsley (18) 47,118 85–60 W1
146 September 17 (1) Reds 5–1 Hudson (8−7) Minor (4−12) 46,678 86–60 W2
147 September 17 (2) Reds 1–0 (11) Matz (5–3) Cruz (0–1) 48,299 87–60 W3
148 September 18 Reds 0–3 Cessa (4–3) Montgomery (8–5) Farmer (2) 47,909 87–61 L1
149 September 20 @ Padres 0–5 Clevinger (6–7) Wainwright (11–10) 39,538 87–62 L2
150 September 21 @ Padres 0–1 Snell (8–9) Mikolas (11–13) Hader (34) 38,643 87–63 L3
151 September 22 @ Padres 5–4 Flaherty (1–1) Martinez (4–4) Gallegos (14) 33,389 88–63 W1
152 September 23 @ Dodgers 11–0 Quintana (6–6) Heaney (3–3) 50,041 89–63 W2
153 September 24 @ Dodgers 2–6 Kershaw (10–3) Montgomery (8–6) 52,527 89–64 L1
154 September 25 @ Dodgers 1–4 Grove (1–0) Wainwright (11–11) Jackson (1) 48,695 89–65 L2
155 September 27 @ Brewers 6–2 Mikolas (12–13) Houser (6–10) 29,341 90–65 W1
156 September 28 @ Brewers 1–5 Woodruff (13–4) Quintana (6–7) 28,835 90–66 L1
157 September 30 Pirates 2–1 Flaherty (2–1) Oviedo (4–3) Helsley (19) 47,032 91–66 W1
October: 2–3 (Home: 1–1 ; Away: 1–2)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record Box / Streak
158 October 1 Pirates 13–3 Montgomery (9–6) Ortiz (0–2) 46,365 92–66 W2
159 October 2 Pirates 5–7 De Jong (6–2) Wainwright (11–12) Bednar (19) 46,680 92–67 L1
160 October 3 @ Pirates 2–3 Ramírez (4–1) Gallegos (3–6) 12,702 92–68 L2
161 October 4 @ Pirates 8–7 (10) Stratton (10–4) De Jong (6–3) 12,842 93–68 W1
162 October 5 @ Pirates 3–5 Bañuelos (2–1) Liberatore (2–2) Ramírez (1) 15,319 93–69 L1
Legend:        = Win        = Loss     
Bold = Cardinals team member

Season standings

[edit]

National League Central

[edit]
NL Central
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
St. Louis Cardinals 93 69 .574 53‍–‍28 40‍–‍41
Milwaukee Brewers 86 76 .531 7 46‍–‍35 40‍–‍41
Chicago Cubs 74 88 .457 19 37‍–‍44 37‍–‍44
Pittsburgh Pirates 62 100 .383 31 34‍–‍47 28‍–‍53
Cincinnati Reds 62 100 .383 31 33‍–‍48 29‍–‍52

National League Wild Card

[edit]
Division leaders
Team W L Pct.
Los Angeles Dodgers 111 51 .685
Atlanta Braves 101 61 .623
St. Louis Cardinals 93 69 .574
Wild Card teams
(Top 3 teams qualify for postseason)
Team W L Pct. GB
New York Mets 101 61 .623 +14
San Diego Padres 89 73 .549 +2
Philadelphia Phillies 87 75 .537
Milwaukee Brewers 86 76 .531 1
San Francisco Giants 81 81 .500 6
Arizona Diamondbacks 74 88 .457 13
Chicago Cubs 74 88 .457 13
Miami Marlins 69 93 .426 18
Colorado Rockies 68 94 .420 19
Pittsburgh Pirates 62 100 .383 25
Cincinnati Reds 62 100 .383 25
Washington Nationals 55 107 .340 32

Record vs. opponents

[edit]

Source: MLB Standings Grid – 2022

Team AZ ATL CHC CIN COL LAD MIA MIL NYM PHI PIT SD SF STL WSH AL
Arizona 2–4 4–3 3–4 9–10 5–14 5–1 4–3 2–4 3–3 4–3 5–14 10–9 2–5 4–3 12–8
Atlanta 4–2 3–3 4–3 6–1 2–4 13–6 3–3 10–9 11–8 7–0 3–4 4–3 4–3 14–5 13–7
Chicago 3–4 3–3 11–8 3–4 0–7 4–2 10–9 4–3 6–0 10–9 2–5 2–5 6–13 4–2 6–14
Cincinnati 4–3 3–4 8–11 2–4 0–7 4–3 6–13 1–5 1–6 7–12 0–6 4–2 7–12 3–4 12–8
Colorado 10–9 1–6 4–3 4–2 8–11 2–4 3–4 2–5 2–5 3–3 10–9 5–14 2–4 3–4 9–11
Los Angeles 14–5 4–2 7–0 7–0 11–8 6–1 4–3 3–4 3–4 1–5 14–5 15–4 4–2 3–3 15–5
Miami 1–5 6–13 2–4 3–4 4–2 1–6 4–3 6–13 7–12 4–3 3–4 3–4 2–4 15–4 8–12
Milwaukee 3–4 3–3 9–10 13–6 4–3 3–4 3–4 2–4 2–4 11–8 3–4 3–4 9–10 3–3 15–5
New York 4–2 9–10 3–4 5–1 5–2 4–3 13–6 4–2 14–5 6–1 2–4 4–3 5–2 14–5 9–11
Philadelphia 3–3 8–11 0–6 6–1 5–2 4–3 12–7 4–2 5–14 6–1 4–3 1–5 4–3 16–3 9–11
Pittsburgh 3–4 0–7 9–10 12–7 3–3 5–1 3–4 8–11 1–6 1–6 2–4 1–5 6–13 4–3 4–16
San Diego 14–5 4–3 5–2 6–0 9–10 5–14 4–3 4–3 4–2 3–4 4–2 13–6 2–4 4–3 8–12
San Francisco 9–10 3–4 5–2 2–4 14–5 4–15 4–3 4–3 3–4 5–1 5–1 6–13 3–4 4–2 10–10
St. Louis 5–2 3–4 13–6 12–7 4–2 2–4 4–2 10–9 2–5 3–4 13–6 4–2 4–3 4–3 10–10
Washington 3–4 5–14 2–4 4–3 4–3 3–3 4–15 3–3 5–14 3–16 3–4 3–4 2–4 3–4 8–12

Updated with the results of all games through October 5, 2022.

Roster

[edit]
2022 St. Louis Cardinals
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders Manager

Coaches

Postseason

[edit]

Postseason Game log

[edit]
2022 Postseason (0–2)
National League Wild Card Series (0–2)
Game Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Attendance Record
1 October 7 Phillies 3–6 Robertson (1–0) Helsley (0–1) 45,911 0–1
2 October 8 Phillies 0–2 Nola (1–0) Mikolas (0–1) Eflin (1) 48,515 0–2

Postseason rosters

[edit]
Playoff rosters

Statistics

[edit]

Batting

[edit]

(through October 5, 2022)
Players in bold are on the active roster.
Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; R = Runs; H = Hits; 2B = Doubles; 3B = Triples; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; SB = Stolen bases; BB = Bases on balls; SO = Strikeouts; BA = Batting average; OBP = On-base percentage; SLG = Slugging percentage; OPS = On-base percentage plus slugging; TB = Total bases

Player G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS TB
Nolan Arenado 148 557 73 163 42 1 30 103 5 52 72 .293 .358 .533 .891 297
Harrison Bader 72 246 35 63 7 3 5 21 15 13 47 .256 .303 .370 .673 91
Alec Burleson 16 48 4 9 1 0 1 3 1 5 9 .188 .264 .271 .535 13
Conner Capel 9 17 1 3 0 0 1 2 0 1 2 .176 .211 .353 .563 6
Dylan Carlson 128 432 56 102 30 4 8 42 5 45 94 .236 .316 .380 .695 164
Paul DeJong 77 210 19 33 9 0 6 25 3 21 79 .157 .245 .286 .530 60
Ben DeLuzio 22 20 3 3 1 0 0 0 0 3 5 .150 .292 .200 .492 4
Corey Dickerson 96 281 28 75 17 1 6 36 0 12 48 .267 .300 .399 .698 112
Brendan Donovan 126 391 64 110 21 1 5 45 2 60 70 .281 .394 .379 .773 148
Tommy Edman 153 577 95 153 31 4 13 57 32 46 111 .265 .324 .400 .725 231
Paul Goldschmidt 151 561 106 178 41 0 35 115 7 79 141 .317 .404 .578 .981 324
Nolan Gorman 89 283 44 64 13 0 14 35 1 28 103 .226 .300 .420 .721 119
Iván Herrera 11 18 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 2 8 .111 .190 .111 .302 2
Andrew Knizner 96 260 28 56 10 0 4 25 0 26 62 .215 .301 .300 .601 78
Yadier Molina 78 262 19 56 8 0 5 24 2 5 40 .214 .233 .302 .535 79
Lars Nootbaar 108 290 53 66 16 3 14 40 4 51 71 .228 .340 .448 .778 130
Tyler O'Neill 96 334 56 76 11 1 14 58 14 38 103 .228 .308 .392 .700 131
Albert Pujols 109 307 42 83 14 0 24 68 1 28 55 .270 .345 .550 .895 169
Kramer Robertson 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 .000 .000 .000 .000 0
Austin Romine 11 26 2 4 1 0 0 0 0 2 7 .154 .214 .192 .407 5
Edmundo Sosa 53 122 17 23 4 3 0 8 3 4 38 .189 .244 .270 .515 33
Cory Spangenberg 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .--- .--- .--- .--- 0
Juan Yepez 76 253 27 64 13 0 12 30 0 16 61 .253 .296 .447 .742 113
TEAM TOTALS 162 5,496 772 1,386 290 21 197 739 95 537 1,226 .252 .325 .420 .745 2,309

Source[23]

Pitching

[edit]

(through October 5, 2022)
Players in bold are on the active roster.
Note: W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; WHIP = Walks plus hits per inning pitched; G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; SV = Saves; IP = Innings pitched; H = Hits allowed; R = Runs allowed; ER = Earned runs allowed; BB = Bases on balls allowed; SO = Strikeouts

Player W L ERA WHIP G GS SV IP H R ER BB SO
Aaron Brooks 0 0 7.71 1.39 5 0 0 9.1 11 8 8 2 7
Génesis Cabrera 4 2 4.63 1.32 39 0 1 44.2 39 24 23 20 32
Corey Dickerson 0 0 0.00 3.00 1 0 0 1.0 2 0 0 1 0
Junior Fernández 0 0 2.93 1.63 13 0 0 15.1 17 6 5 8 12
Jack Flaherty 2 1 4.25 1.61 9 8 0 36.0 36 18 17 22 33
Giovanny Gallegos 3 6 3.05 1.02 57 0 14 59.0 42 23 20 18 73
Ryan Helsley 9 1 1.25 0.74 54 0 19 64.2 28 11 9 20 94
Jordan Hicks 3 6 4.84 1.32 35 8 0 61.1 46 33 33 35 63
Dakota Hudson 8 7 4.45 1.45 27 26 0 139.2 141 71 69 61 78
Andrew Knizner 0 0 0.00 1.50 1 0 0 0.2 1 0 0 0 0
Matthew Liberatore 2 2 5.97 1.73 9 7 0 34.2 42 23 23 18 28
Steven Matz 5 3 5.25 1.25 15 10 0 48.0 50 28 28 10 54
T. J. McFarland 0 0 6.61 1.62 28 0 0 32.2 42 26 24 11 16
Miles Mikolas 12 13 3.29 1.03 33 32 0 202.1 170 81 74 39 153
Yadier Molina 0 0 18.00 3.00 2 0 0 2.0 6 4 4 0 1
Jordan Montgomery 6 3 3.11 1.08 11 11 0 63.2 56 24 22 13 61
James Naile 0 0 5.00 1.11 7 0 0 9.0 8 5 5 2 5
Packy Naughton 0 2 4.78 1.44 26 3 1 32.0 39 17 17 7 31
Johan Oviedo 2 1 3.20 1.30 14 1 0 25.1 26 9 9 7 26
Andre Pallante 6 5 3.17 1.42 47 10 0 108.0 113 39 38 40 73
Albert Pujols 0 0 36.00 4.00 1 0 0 1.0 3 4 4 1 0
José Quintana 3 2 2.01 1.12 12 12 0 62.2 54 18 14 16 48
JoJo Romero 0 0 3.77 1.26 15 0 0 14.1 9 6 6 9 16
Ángel Rondón 1 0 0.00 0.80 1 0 0 5.0 1 0 0 3 4
Chris Stratton 5 0 2.78 1.50 20 0 0 22.2 22 8 7 12 23
Zack Thompson 1 1 2.08 0.98 22 1 1 34.2 20 9 8 14 27
Drew VerHagen 3 1 6.65 1.89 19 0 0 21.2 27 18 16 14 18
Adam Wainwright 11 12 3.71 1.28 32 32 0 191.2 192 80 79 54 143
Jake Walsh 0 1 13.50 1.88 3 0 0 2.2 3 4 4 2 5
Kodi Whitley 2 0 5.68 1.58 14 0 0 12.2 11 8 8 9 12
Nick Wittgren 1 0 5.90 1.55 29 0 1 29.0 35 19 19 10 17
Jake Woodford 4 0 2.23 1.12 27 1 0 48.1 43 13 12 11 24
TEAM TOTALS 93 69 3.79 1.27 162 162 37 1,435.2 1,335 637 605 489 1,177

Source[23]

Awards and achievements

[edit]

Awards

[edit]

Milestones

[edit]

Minor league system and first-year player draft

[edit]

Teams

[edit]
Level Team League Division Manager W–L/Stats Standing Refs
Triple-A Memphis Redbirds International League West Ben Johnson 73–77 6th of 10 [26]
Double-A Springfield Cardinals Texas League North José Leger 68–70 4th of 5
High-A Peoria Chiefs Midwest League West Patrick Anderson 56–76 5th of 6
Single-A Palm Beach Cardinals Florida State League East Gary Kendall 67–61 2nd of 4,
Lost in Semifinals
Rookie FCL Cardinals Florida Complex League East Roberto Espinoza 25–29 5th of 6
Foreign Rookie DSL Cardinals Dominican Summer League South Fray Peniche 33–26 4th of 9

Major League Baseball draft

[edit]

The 2022 Major League Baseball (MLB) First-Year Player Draft began on Sunday, July 17, and ended on Tuesday, July 19. The draft assigned amateur baseball players to MLB teams.

2022 Draft Order

2022 Draft Tracker (STL Cardinals)

2022 St. Louis Cardinals complete draft list
Round Pick Name, Age Pos / Bats School (State) Signing bonus
1 22 Cooper Hjerpe, 21 LHP / L Oregon State University (OR) $3.18 million
2 59 Brycen Mautz, 21 LHP / L University of San Diego (CA) $1.10 million
3 97 Pete Hansen, 21 LHP / R University of Texas (TX) $629,800
4 127 Jimmy Crooks, 21 C / L University of Oklahoma (OK) $470,300
5 157 Victor Scott II, 21 OF / L West Virginia University (WV) $350,400
6 187 Max Rajcic, 20 RHP / R UCLA (CA) $600,000
7 217 Alex Iadisernia, 21 OF / L Elon University (NC) $212,000
8 247 Cade Winquest, 22 RHP / R University of Texas at Arlington (TX) $174,600
9 277 Joseph King, 21 RHP / R University of California (CA) $125,000
10 307 Tanner Jacobson, 22 RHP / R Queens University of Charlotte (NC) $25,000
11 337 Nathan Church, 21 OF / L University of California, Irvine (CA) $125,000
12 367 Michael Curialle, 21 SS / R UCLA (CA) $150,000
13 397 Chandler Arnold, 22 RHP / R Dallas Baptist University (TX) $175,000
14 427 D.J. Carpenter, 22 RHP / R Oregon State University (OR) $100,000
15 457 Matt Hickey, 23 RHP / L Tarleton State University (TX) $25,000
16 487 Hunter Hayes, 21 RHP / R University of the Pacific (CA) $100,000
17 517 Brody Moore, 21 SS / R Auburn University (AL) $50,000
18 547 John Lynch, 21 LHP / L Xavier University (OH) $125,000
19 577 Chris Rotondo, 23 OF / R Villanova University (PA) $25,000
20 607 Gavin Van Kempen, 18 RHP / R Maple Hill High School (NY) Did not sign

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Salvador, Joseph. "Albert Pujols Makes Decision About Career After 2022 Season". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
  2. ^ Feinsand, Mark (March 10, 2022). "MLB, MLBPA agree to new CBA; season to start April 7". Retrieved March 10, 2022.
  3. ^ Lacques, Gabe (March 10, 2022). "Baseball is back: MLB, players agree on new CBA to salvage 162-game 2022 season". USA Today. Retrieved March 13, 2022.
  4. ^ "Cardinals fire Mike Shildt over 'philosophical differences'". AP NEWS. October 14, 2021. Retrieved November 1, 2021.
  5. ^ "Cardinals name Oliver Marmol new manager; 35-year-old becomes youngest MLB skipper". CBS Sports. Retrieved November 1, 2021.
  6. ^ Baumann, Michael (December 2, 2021). "All the Questions—and Answers—About the Most Important Details of the MLB Lockout". The Ringer. Retrieved December 2, 2021.
  7. ^ Nightengale, Gabe Lacques and Bob. "MLB lockout is on after collective bargaining agreement expires, owners agree to freeze out players". USA TODAY. Retrieved December 2, 2021.
  8. ^ Selbe, Nick. "MLB Owners Vote Unanimously to Institute Lockout". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved December 2, 2021.
  9. ^ "Play Ball! 2022 MLB season will start April 7 with full 162-game schedule; spring training games begin March 17". SportsLine. March 10, 2022. Retrieved March 11, 2022.
  10. ^ Conti, Kristen. "Here Are the New MLB Rules for the 2022 Season". NBC Chicago. Retrieved March 11, 2022.
  11. ^ "MLB to add jersey advertising for first time in league history as part of new CBA, per report". CBS Sports. Retrieved March 11, 2022.
  12. ^ "Arenado ejected as Cardinals brawl with Mets in 10–5 victory". USA Today. April 27, 2022. Retrieved May 3, 2022.
  13. ^ Axisa, Mike (April 28, 2022). "Cardinals' Nolan Arenado, Génesis Cabrera suspended for benches-clearing incident vs. Mets". CBS Sports. Retrieved May 3, 2022.
  14. ^ "Cardinals' Nolan Arenado: Suspension reduced to one game". CBS Sports. April 30, 2022. Retrieved May 7, 2022.
  15. ^ Miller, Corey (May 2, 2022). "Cardinals star Nolan Arenado named NL Player of the Month for April". KSDK.com. Retrieved May 29, 2022.
  16. ^ Grathoff, Pete (May 24, 2022). "Paul Goldschmidt's stats in 15-game hit streak haven't been seen in MLB in 100 years". The Kansas City Star. Retrieved June 4, 2022.
  17. ^ Harrigan, Thomas (June 3, 2022). "Judge, Goldschmidt named Players of the Month". MLB.com. Retrieved June 3, 2022.
  18. ^ a b Goold, Derrick (June 4, 2022). "As one hitting streak comes to an end, another continues for Cardinals 'remarkable' Goldschmidt". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Retrieved June 5, 2022.
  19. ^ Murphy, Alex (June 11, 2022). "Cardinals' Tommy Edman Hits Walk-Off Two-Run Homer v. Reds". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved June 11, 2022.
  20. ^ Murphy, Alex (July 2, 2022). "St. Louis Cardinals hit four consecutive home runs". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved July 3, 2022.
  21. ^ a b Denton, John (July 2, 2022). "Cards hit 4 straight HRs! 11th time in history". MLB.com. Retrieved July 3, 2022.
  22. ^ "2022 St. Louis Cardinals sortable schedule". St. Louis Cardinals.[dead link]
  23. ^ a b "2022 St. Louis Cardinals Statistics". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved January 29, 2023.
  24. ^ "Major League Baseball Players of the Month". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved June 5, 2022.
  25. ^ "Major League Baseball Players of the Week". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved June 5, 2022.
  26. ^ "St. Louis Cardinals Minor League Affiliates". Baseball Reference. Retrieved July 14, 2023.
[edit]