Rick Ankiel's Mustache

jheath:

“To watch Pujols interact with the St. Louis diehards is to watch a prototypical spoiled, arrogant 21st century sports star at his absolute worst. During spring training, it is common for players to wave or smile or nod or (gasp!) talk to fans as they trot from one field to the next during otherwise monotonous drill sessions. Lance Berkman is the king of this practice. Gerald Laird isn’t far behind. Pujols, on the other hand, does nothing. When people call his name, he almost never gazes up. When people ask for an autograph, he doesn’t even bother with a “Not now” or “Try me later.” Instead, he resorts to tactics men like Barry Bonds and Albert Belle perfected in the recent decades—the steel-faced, Why-are-you-even-talking-to-me? ignore-the-world two-step. It’s not that Pujols doesn’t say much—neither does Derek Jeter. It’s not that Pujols is intense—Josh Hamilton is certainly right there with him. No, what rubs an increasing number of people wrongly is his galling frostiness. Or, as one longtime Cardinals usher said to me the other day, “How about looking up at people when they talk to you? How about acknowledging that they exist?””Albert Pujols and the treatment of people - Jeff Pearlman (via sportsnetny)

I’m sorry, but this isn’t fair. Albert Pujols does WAY too much for the community to be lumped in with the likes of Barry Bonds and Albert Belle. No way. What if every single day when you went to the movies, to the grocery store, to work, there was a group of people yelling your name and wanting you to acknowledge them. Eventually someone’s going to call you an asshole because you can’t say hi to everyone. What’s he supposed to do, walk over and start up a 10 minute conversation? He’s at work! All athletes ignore fans at times because otherwise they’d never get any work done. To call out Albert Pujols for this is a lame attempt at vilification.

Agreed. I think I’ve said it earlier but this is going to be a tough season for the Cardinals and media. Regardless of what Albert does or what anyone on the team does I have a feeling that certain non-STL folks are going to do what they can to knock him down from the pedestal that they built for him and placed him on in the first place.

Comments (View)
fuckyeahstlcards:

“What do I want? I want to be a Cardinal forever.”

I don’t doubt this statement for a second.

fuckyeahstlcards:

“What do I want? I want to be a Cardinal forever.”

I don’t doubt this statement for a second.

Comments (View)

I’ve been waiting for someone to do this.

(Source: buenowaino)

Comments (View)
Oh shit. This can’t be good.

Oh shit. This can’t be good.

Comments (View)
probationaryperiod:

For those of you who are not ESPN Insiders, here is the article:
Pujols serious about contract deadline
Logic tells us that the St.  Louis Cardinals and Albert  Pujols will work out their differences, because the first baseman  is to St. Louis what Stan Musial used to be, and Stan The Man has been  omnipresent around the Cardinals in the half century since his career  ended. The folks who run the Cardinals know how much Pujols means to the  franchise and what his departure would mean.
But the deadline  that Pujols gave them to work out a long-term deal — the start of spring training, Derrick Goold writes —  is very real, and if that passes without a contract in place, all bets  are off. Thereafter, the talks would shift from a nice, one-on-one  conversation between the Cardinals and their star player into a straight  bidding war.
Pujols is in position to get the biggest contract  since Alex Rodriguez’s 10-year, $275 million deal, and he intends to  test free agency and get paid. If an offer that comes from the Cubs,  Giants, Dodgers, Angels or Mets in the fall is significantly greater  than the Cardinals’ proposals, well, he’ll become the Stan Musial for  some other franchise.
The Cardinals’ challenge in signing Pujols  probably has gotten more difficult for St. Louis this winter, when Jayson  Werth got $126 million from the Nationals and Carl  Crawford got $142 million from the Red Sox and Cliff  Lee got a $24 million-a-year contract from the Phillies. Pujols has  been better than any of those players in the past decade, better than  anyone, as the greatest of his generation. The Cardinals might have  great difficulty squeezing a $28-30 million salary into a $100  million-range payroll that already includes a significant obligation to Matt  Holliday, but they have to know by now that somebody will  give Pujols what he wants.
Not only is Pujols a great player, but  he also would represent, for some franchise, a shift in direction that  casual fans would notice. If Frank McCourt’s financial issues forced him  to sell the team, can you imagine the impact if the next Dodgers owner  announced his arrival with the signing of Pujols? If the Angels  struggled again in 2011 and Arte Moreno felt compelled to make a bold  move, could there be anyone better than Pujols? If the Cubs flounder in  2011 and the Ricketts family felt the need to invest in a new brand for  its franchise, what could be better than wresting a future Hall of Famer  away from the archrivals? And the Giants, having cashed in on their  investment in Barry  Bonds, know better than anyone the box-office power of landing a  Hall of Fame-caliber slugger who is destined to challenge benchmarks.
So  although the Red Sox and Yankees might not be in play for Pujols  because of their investments in Adrian  Gonzalez and Mark  Teixeira, respectively, there will be a market for a player  as great as Pujols.
What will it take?
A whole lot.
For  the Cardinals, locking themselves into such an enormous contract would  cause a lot of heartburn and might constrict the baseball operations  folks as they try to make other moves in the years ahead.
But they  already must be asking themselves: What if the Cardinals lose him? How  much would that hurt?
A lot of dominoes must fall before that  happens, but the possible departure of Pujols — what it would mean for  the Cardinals if he walked away and what leverage that possibility  creates — has now officially become part of these contract talks.
By  the way: The Cardinals have gotten some feelers from other teams on  Pujols’ availability in the past year but haven’t acted on any of that.  Presumably, their efforts will be focused entirely on signing Pujols  until the start of spring training.
Meanwhile, Chris  Carpenter is in a waiting game on his contract situation. Colby  Rasmus says he must learn from his winter of discontent.

tl; dr
I just want it be over.

probationaryperiod:

For those of you who are not ESPN Insiders, here is the article:

Pujols serious about contract deadline

Logic tells us that the St. Louis Cardinals and Albert Pujols will work out their differences, because the first baseman is to St. Louis what Stan Musial used to be, and Stan The Man has been omnipresent around the Cardinals in the half century since his career ended. The folks who run the Cardinals know how much Pujols means to the franchise and what his departure would mean.

But the deadline that Pujols gave them to work out a long-term deal — the start of spring training, Derrick Goold writes — is very real, and if that passes without a contract in place, all bets are off. Thereafter, the talks would shift from a nice, one-on-one conversation between the Cardinals and their star player into a straight bidding war.

Pujols is in position to get the biggest contract since Alex Rodriguez’s 10-year, $275 million deal, and he intends to test free agency and get paid. If an offer that comes from the Cubs, Giants, Dodgers, Angels or Mets in the fall is significantly greater than the Cardinals’ proposals, well, he’ll become the Stan Musial for some other franchise.

The Cardinals’ challenge in signing Pujols probably has gotten more difficult for St. Louis this winter, when Jayson Werth got $126 million from the Nationals and Carl Crawford got $142 million from the Red Sox and Cliff Lee got a $24 million-a-year contract from the Phillies. Pujols has been better than any of those players in the past decade, better than anyone, as the greatest of his generation. The Cardinals might have great difficulty squeezing a $28-30 million salary into a $100 million-range payroll that already includes a significant obligation to Matt Holliday, but they have to know by now that somebody will give Pujols what he wants.

Not only is Pujols a great player, but he also would represent, for some franchise, a shift in direction that casual fans would notice. If Frank McCourt’s financial issues forced him to sell the team, can you imagine the impact if the next Dodgers owner announced his arrival with the signing of Pujols? If the Angels struggled again in 2011 and Arte Moreno felt compelled to make a bold move, could there be anyone better than Pujols? If the Cubs flounder in 2011 and the Ricketts family felt the need to invest in a new brand for its franchise, what could be better than wresting a future Hall of Famer away from the archrivals? And the Giants, having cashed in on their investment in Barry Bonds, know better than anyone the box-office power of landing a Hall of Fame-caliber slugger who is destined to challenge benchmarks.

So although the Red Sox and Yankees might not be in play for Pujols because of their investments in Adrian Gonzalez and Mark Teixeira, respectively, there will be a market for a player as great as Pujols.

What will it take?

A whole lot.

For the Cardinals, locking themselves into such an enormous contract would cause a lot of heartburn and might constrict the baseball operations folks as they try to make other moves in the years ahead.

But they already must be asking themselves: What if the Cardinals lose him? How much would that hurt?

A lot of dominoes must fall before that happens, but the possible departure of Pujols — what it would mean for the Cardinals if he walked away and what leverage that possibility creates — has now officially become part of these contract talks.

By the way: The Cardinals have gotten some feelers from other teams on Pujols’ availability in the past year but haven’t acted on any of that. Presumably, their efforts will be focused entirely on signing Pujols until the start of spring training.

Meanwhile, Chris Carpenter is in a waiting game on his contract situation. Colby Rasmus says he must learn from his winter of discontent.

tl; dr

I just want it be over.

(Source: justamanandhisblog)

Comments (View)
If he doesn’t want to be here next year, we need to figure out a way to get him out of here and find somebody that wants to be here and play.

Albert Pujols on Colby Rasmus’ trade demand.

(Via Yahoo!)

Albert could be talking about anyone on this team or even TLR for that matter.

(Source: tinkersghost)

Comments (View)
400th

400th

Comments (View)
battingcleanup:

Albert Pujols hits his 399th career home run against the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Pujols and Yadier Molina batted 3-5 in the Cardinals’ win over the Pirates with a score of 10-2.

battingcleanup:

Albert Pujols hits his 399th career home run against the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Pujols and Yadier Molina batted 3-5 in the Cardinals’ win over the Pirates with a score of 10-2.

Comments (View)
These don’t get old.

These don’t get old.

Comments (View)
Better.

Better.

Comments (View)