Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

1964 St. Louis Cardinals season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Major League Baseball season
This article is about the Major League Baseball team. For the National Football League team, see1964 St. Louis Cardinals (NFL) season.

Major League Baseball team season
1964 St. Louis Cardinals
World Series champions
National League champions
LeagueNational League
BallparkBusch Stadium I
CitySt. Louis, Missouri
Record93–69 (.574)
League place1st
OwnersAugust "Gussie" Busch
General managersBing Devine,Bob Howsam
ManagersJohnny Keane
TelevisionKSD-TV
RadioKMOX
(Harry Caray,Jack Buck, Jerry Gross)
← 1963Seasons1965 →

The1964 St. Louis Cardinals season was the team's 83rd season inSt. Louis, Missouri and its 73rd season in theNational League. TheCardinals went 93–69 during the season and finished first in the National League, edging the co-runners-upCincinnati Reds andPhiladelphia Phillies by one game each on the last day of the regular-season to claim their first NLpennant since1946. They went on to win theWorld Series in 7 games over theNew York Yankees. This is the first season that the team wore their now famous red cap (but only for home games,beginning the next season, the team would make the red cap permanent for both home and away games).

Offseason

[edit]

Regular season

[edit]

Exit Musial, enter Brock

[edit]

The1963 team went 93–69. It was the best record for St. Louis since the 1949 team won 96 games. The Cardinals finished six games behind theLos Angeles Dodgers.

1964 saw the Cardinals without the best hitter in franchise history.Stan Musial, whose 3,630 career hits were second on the all-time list and remain fourth today, retired after the 1963 season, at the age of 42, after 22 years in St. Louis. His absence left a hole in the Cardinal lineup and in left field, and as the early weeks of the 1964 season passed, St. Louis hovered at the .500 mark. Cardinals GMBing Devine, worried about both the team and his own job security, looked for a deal to make before the June 15 trading deadline.[3] He consulted with managerJohnny Keane and they decided that the team needed more speed. Keane and Devine focused onLou Brock, an outfielder with theChicago Cubs that the Cardinals had scouted years before and who had struggled since coming to the big leagues.[4]

In June, with the trading deadline near and the Cardinals still around .500, Devine made the call to the Cubs and the deal was done.[5] On June 15, St. Louis traded star pitcherErnie Broglio, who went 18–8 in 1963 and was having another good year in 1964, toChicago as part ofa six-player deal for Brock. Many people thought the Cubs had gotten the better of the deal, including Chicago sportswriters and many Cardinal players.[6] However, Broglio would have a mediocre half-season for the Cubs and then two more ineffective, injury-riddled years in 1965 and 1966 before disappearing from the big leagues forever. Brock hit .348 for the 1964 Cardinals, and as a Cardinal went on to break the all-time record for stolen bases (since broken byRickey Henderson), amass over 3000 base hits, and go into theBaseball Hall of Fame in 1985.

Busch fires Devine

[edit]

For most of the 1964 season, thePhiladelphia Phillies looked like the team to beat. Philadelphia spent almost the entire first half in first or second place, and in July moved in first place seemingly to stay. The Cardinals, on the other hand, spent much of the season mired in the middle of the pack, and sometimes close to the bottom. As late as June 17, the Cardinals were eighth in a ten-team league, although they were only six back of the lead. Lou Brock joined the team and immediately began to hit but St. Louis still could not dent Philadelphia's lead. The Cardinals called up prized prospectMike Shannon in early July, and still they stagnated.[7][8] They were seventh as late as July 24. One problem was first baseman Bill White; the Cardinal slugger, one of the few power hitters on the team, was bothered by a sore shoulder and struggling badly.[9]

On August 16, with the Cardinals at 61–54 and9+12 games out of first place, an impatient Gussie Busch fired general managerBing Devine.[10] Devine had been GM of the Cardinals since 1957,[11] but would not be around to see how the team he had built would finish. Busch considered firing Keane as well, but held back out of reluctance to further disrupt the team by firing both the manager and GM during the season.[12] Shortly thereafter, however, Busch met withLeo Durocher and made him a verbal offer to manage the Cardinals in 1965. Word soon got out that Keane was alame duck.[13]

On August 23, the Cardinals fell 11 games behind Philadelphia, tied for the farthest back they'd been all year, although they'd actually improved to fourth place in the overall standings. The Cardinals reeled off a six-game winning streak immediately after falling 11 back and continued to play well in September, but the Phillies seemed to be too far ahead to catch. On September 20, the Cardinals were tied with Cincinnati for second place,6+12 games behind Philadelphia. ASports Illustrated article described the Cardinal surge as "far too late".[10]

The "Phillie Phold" and Cardinal comeback

[edit]

Injuries accumulated for the first-place Phillies as the season wore on. SluggerFrank Thomas broke his thumb. Starting pitcherRay Culp hurt his elbow and had to go to the bullpen. Starting pitcherArt Mahaffey was slumping badly.[14] Starting pitcherDennis Bennett was plagued bytendinitis.[15] Philly managerGene Mauch, in a move that has remained controversial ever since, reacted to his rotation's problems by using star pitchersJim Bunning andChris Short on less than normal rest six times down the stretch. Philadelphia lost all six of those games.[16]

Still the Phillies held on to their lead. On September 20, Philadelphia was 90–60 and led the National League by6+12 games with only twelve games to go. A pennant seemed assured. The Phillies even started taking applications forWorld Series tickets.[17] Then came the infamous "Phillie Phold". The Phold started on September 21, when Philadelphia lost 1–0 to Cincinnati with the only run scoring on a steal of home.[18][19] The Phils were swept in three games byCincinnati, who crept to within3+12 games of first place. Then they were swept in four games byMilwaukee. On the 25th the Braves beat Philly in 12 innings. On the 26th they beat Philly by scoring three in the top of the ninth. On the 27th Milwaukee beat the Phils 14–8, extending their losing streak to seven games and dropping them out of first place for the first time in two months. Philadelphia was one game behind Cincinnati, while the Cardinals, who'd gone 6–1 during Philadelphia's streak, were in third place, 1.5 games back. The Phillies were feeling the pressure and making mistakes on the bases; in one fifteen-game stretch, 10 Phillies were thrown out trying to take an extra base.[19]

St. Louis and Philadelphia met for a crucial three-game series starting in St. Louis on September 28. The Cardinals won the first game 5–1, vaulting past Philly into second place, one game behind the idle Reds, with the Phils 1.5 games back. On the 29th the Cards beat the Phils 4–2 behind a strong start from Sadecki, and Cincinnati lost to visiting Pittsburgh. The Cardinals were in first place for the first time all year, tied with the Reds, with Philly 1.5 games back. On the 30th the Cardinals beat the Phillies again, 8–5, with Curt Simmons beating Bunning. Cincinnati lost to Pittsburgh at home again, and the Cardinals had sole possession of first place. Philadelphia had lost ten in a row and the Cardinals had won eight in a row.

The Cardinals lost 1–0 on October 2 at home to the terrible Mets while the Phillies beat the Reds in Cincinnati to finally snap their losing streak. On the 3rd the Cardinals lost again to the Mets while the Phillies and Reds remained idle. St. Louis and Cincinnati were tied for first place with 92–69 records, while Philadelphia was one game behind at 91–70. On the last day of the season, October 4, the Phillies beat the Reds at Cincinnati again, but the Cardinals beat the visiting Mets 11–5 to win the pennant by one game, with a 93–69 record; if the Cardinals had lost that game, the regular schedule would have ended in a 3-way tie for the pennant. The "Phold" is remembered as one of the worst late-season collapses in baseball history.[20] The Cardinals, having won their first pennant since 1946, would go on to face the mighty Yankees in the World Series.

Season standings

[edit]
National League
TeamWLPct.GBHomeRoad
St. Louis Cardinals9369.57448‍–‍3345‍–‍36
Philadelphia Phillies9270.568146‍–‍3546‍–‍35
Cincinnati Reds9270.568147‍–‍3445‍–‍36
San Francisco Giants9072.556344‍–‍3746‍–‍35
Milwaukee Braves8874.543545‍–‍3643‍–‍38
Pittsburgh Pirates8082.4941342‍–‍3938‍–‍43
Los Angeles Dodgers8082.4941341‍–‍4039‍–‍42
Chicago Cubs7686.4691740‍–‍4136‍–‍45
Houston Colt .45s6696.4072741‍–‍4025‍–‍56
New York Mets53109.3274033‍–‍4820‍–‍61

Record vs. opponents

[edit]
1964 National League record

Sources:[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10]
TeamCHCCINHOULADMILNYMPHIPITSFSTL
Chicago6–1211–710–88–1011–76–129–99–96–12
Cincinnati12–612–614–4–19–911–79–98–107–1110–8
Houston7–116–127–1112–69–95–135–137–118–10
Los Angeles8–104–14–111–78–1015–3–18–1010–86–1210–8
Milwaukee10–89–96–1210–814–410–812–69–98–10
New York7–117–119–93–15–14–143–156–127–117–11
Philadelphia12-69–913–510–88–1015–310–810–85–13
Pittsburgh9–910–813–58–106–1212–68–108–106–12
San Francisco9–911–711–712–69–911–78–1010–89–9
St. Louis12–68–1010–88–1010–811–713–512–69–9


Notable transactions

[edit]

Roster

[edit]
1964 St. Louis Cardinals
Roster
PitchersCatchers

Infielders

Outfielders

Other batters

Manager

Coaches

Game log

[edit]
Past Games Legend
Cardinals Win
(#bfb)
Cardinals Loss
(#fbb)
Game Postponed
(#bbb)
All-Star Game
(#bbcaff)
Clinched Pennant
(#039)
Bold denotes a Cardinals pitcher
1964 St. Louis Cardinals Game Log (93–69)
April: (8–6)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
1April 14@Dodgers0–4Koufax (1–0)Broglio (0–1)50,4510–1
2April 15@Dodgers6–2Gibson (1–0)Drysdale (0–1)28,0251–1
3April 16@Giants2–0Simmons (1–0)Hendley (0–1)9,8752–1
4April 17@Giants4–5(10)Shaw (1–0)Shantz (0–1)19,5242–2
5April 18@Giants3–2Broglio (1–1)Bolin (0–1)23,4833–2
6April 19@Colt .45s6–1Gibson (2–0)Nottebart (0–1)12,9134–2
7April 20@Colt .45s1–7Farrell (1–0)Sadecki (0–1)7,4414–3
8April 22Dodgers7–6Simmons (2–0)Koufax (1–2)Craig (1)31,4105–3
9April 23Dodgers5–7Perranoski (1–0)Taylor (0–1)10,2765–4
10April 24Colt .45s3–2(11)Burdette (1–0)Woodeshick (0–1)6,7896–4
11April 25Colt .45s2–4Farrell (2–0)Shantz (0–2)Woodeshick (2)11,7966–5
12April 26Colt .45s4–6Owens (1–1)Simmons (2–1)Woodeshick (3)9,7006–6
13April 28Mets8–0Broglio (2–1)Jackson (1–3)3,4717–6
14April 29Mets4–3(11)Shantz (1–2)Bearnarth (0–3)3,8448–6
May: (17–14)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
15May 1Pirates6–2Craig (1–0)Law (0–1)14,7019–6
16May 2Pirates4–5Sisk (1–1)Simmons (2–2)Bork (1)12,5349–7
17May 3Pirates8–12Schwall (2–1)Sadecki (0–2)Face (2)11,0519–8
18May 4Phillies9–2Craig (2–0)Dennis Bennett (2–2)7,43710–8
19May 5Phillies2–1Washburn (1–0)Bunning (3–1)Taylor (1)10,44311–8
20May 6@Pirates0–1Friend (3–0)Sadecki (0–3)8,65911–9
21May 7@Pirates4–2Simmons (3–2)Veale (1–3)Craig (2)7,21912–9
22May 8@Mets4–5Bearnarth (1–3)Shantz (1–3)32,38612–10
23May 9@Mets5–1Gibson (3–0)Cisco (0–2)16,75713–10
24May 10@Mets1–4Stallard (2–4)Craig (2–1)13–11
25May 10@Mets10–1Washburn (2–0)Hinsley (0–1)Taylor (2)30,77614–11
26May 11@Phillies3–2Sadecki (1–3)Culp (1–3)11,20015–11
27May 12@Phillies4–2Simmons (4–2)Mahaffey (2–2)Craig (3)14,41216–11
May 13@PhilliesPostponed (rain); Makeup: September 10
28May 14@Phillies2–3Bunning (4–1)Broglio (2–2)Roebuck (4)16,62616–12
29May 15Braves10–6Craig (3–1)Tiefenauer (1–3)22,40017–12
30May 16Braves6–5Sadecki (2–3)Sadowski (2–3)Taylor (3)13,56418–12
31May 17Braves7–3Simmons (5–2)Fischer (4–2)19–12
32May 17Braves2–4Cloninger (3–2)Washburn (2–1)28,59419–13
33May 19Cubs4–7Ellsworth (3–4)Broglio (2–3)8,54119–14
34May 20Cubs1–0Gibson (4–0)Jackson (5–3)8,61220–14
35May 21Cubs10–3Sadecki (3–3)Hobbie (0–2)7,87721–14
36May 22@Braves6–1Simmons (6–2)Cloninger (3–3)20,48922–14
37May 23@Braves4–8Hoeft (1–0)Craig (3–2)10,56722–15
38May 24@Braves4–7Spahn (4–3)Sadecki (3–4)Sadowski (1)22–16
39May 24@Braves0–10Lemaster (5–2)Broglio (2–4)26,08422–17
May 26GiantsPostponed (rain); Makeup: June 18
40May 27Giants1–2Marichal (7–1)Gibson (4–1)14,78622–18
41May 28Giants1–2Hendley (4–3)Simmons (6–3)Bolin (1)14,09222–19
42May 29Reds4–3Sadecki (4–4)O'Toole (3–2)10,21923–19
43May 30Reds7–1Broglio (3–4)Ellis (3–2)11,05124–19
44May 31Reds0–6Purkey (3–3)Washburn (2–2)24–20
45May 31Reds2–1Gibson (5–1)Tsitouris (1–3)20,24025–20
June: (11–18)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
46June 2@Cubs2–5Jackson (7–4)Simmons (6–4)5,12925–21
47June 3@Cubs7–5Sadecki (5–4)Buhl (5–3)Craig (4)6,71826–21
48June 4@Cubs1–2Ellsworth (7–4)Gibson (5–2)8,01926–22
49June 5@Reds4–5Jay (2–2)Craig (3–3)10,69226–23
50June 6@Reds0–3Tsitouris (2–3)Washburn (2–3)Ellis (1)17,38626–24
51June 7@Reds6–11Nuxhall (5–3)Simmons (6–5)Jay (1)12,92526–25
June 8@GiantsPostponed (rain); Makeup: June 10
52June 9@Giants1–0Sadecki (6–4)Marichal (8–2)14,34827–25
53June 10@Giants0–3Hendley (5–4)Gibson (5–3)Perry (1)27–26
54June 10@Giants2–1Hobbie (1–3)Herbel (3–2)16,68428–26
55June 11@Dodgers0–5Drysdale (8–5)Washburn (2–4)29,27228–27
56June 12@Dodgers0–3Koufax (8–4)Broglio (3–5)44,47628–28
57June 13@Dodgers2–3Moeller (4–5)Sadecki (6–5)Perranoski (4)29,19928–29
58June 14@Colt .45s1–4Farrell (10–1)Gibson (5–4)15,34128–30
59June 15@Colt .45s3–9Owens (2–4)Hobbie (1–4)8,58428–31
60June 16@Colt .45s7–1Simmons (7–5)Bruce (6–3)12,38329–31
61June 17@Colt .45s2–1Washburn (3–4)Johnson (5–6)Taylor (4)10,77730–31
62June 18Giants7–6Sadecki (7–5)Marichal (8–3)Taylor (5)14,87631–31
63June 19Giants3–1Gibson (6–4)Herbel (4–3)Taylor (6)24,53332–31
64June 20Giants3–14Hendley (6–4)Hobbie (1–5)Duffalo (1)20,64632–32
65June 21Giants3–7Sanford (5–7)Simmons (7–6)Perry (2)25,84832–33
66June 23Colt .45s5–4Taylor (1–1)Larsen (0–2)Cuellar (1)9,67933–33
67June 24Colt. 45s5–7Owens (3–4)Sadecki (7–6)Woodeshick (15)8,62133–34
68June 25Colt .45s4–2Craig (4–3)Bruce (7–4)Hobbie (1)6,84234–34
69June 26Phillies5–6Roebuck (2–2)Taylor (1–2)18,48434–35
70June 27Phillies9–4Simmons (8–6)Wise (1–1)12,38835–35
71June 28Phillies0–5Short (6–4)Cuellar (0–1)35–36
72June 28Phillies8–2Sadecki (8–6)Culp (4–6)27,80536–36
73June 29Braves4–7Tiefenauer (3–4)Gibson (6–5)11,33636–37
74June 30Braves4–5Sadowski (3–6)Craig (4–4)Tiefenauer (6)7,48436–38
July: (17–11)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
75July 1@Braves6–1Simmons (9–6)Fischer (6–5)13,60837–38
76July 2@Braves4–3Sadecki (9–6)Spahn (5–8)Humphreys (1)6,86338–38
77July 3@Reds1–4Tsitouris (5–5)Gibson (6–6)11,97538–39
78July 4@Reds2–3O'Toole (6–4)Cuellar (0–2)McCool (3)21,32038–40
79July 5@Reds3–1Craig (5–4)Jay (4–5)11,85439–40
35th All-Star Game in Queens, New York City, New York
80July 9@Mets3–4Jackson (5–10)Simmons (9–7)13,80439–41
81July 10@Mets3–1Gibson (7–6)Fisher (5–8)33,63440–41
82July 11@Mets11–4Sadecki (10–6)Stallard (5–11)Taylor (7)19,47541–41
July 12@PiratesPostponed (rain); Makeup: July 13
July 12@PiratesPostponed (rain); Makeup: September 24
83July 13@Pirates5–4(12)Taylor (2–2)Sisk (1–4)42–41
84July 13@Pirates12–5Cuellar (1–2)Law (7–8)Washburn (1)14,77343–41
85July 14Dodgers8–7Taylor (3–2)Perranoski (4–5)24,81744–41
86July 15Dodgers3–13L. Miller (1–1)Gibson (7–7)Perranoski (7)17,30444–42
87July 16Dodgers2–10Moeller (5–7)Sadecki (10–7)B. Miller (3)15,78044–43
88July 17Mets9–8Cuellar (2–2)Stallard (5–13)Gibson (1)10,75945–43
89July 18Mets15–7Taylor (4–2)Wakefield (2–3)Sadecki (1)9,42446–43
90July 19Mets2–3Fisher (6–9)Simmons (9–8)46–44
91July 19Mets7–6Gibson (8–7)Hunter (0–1)18,37747–44
92July 21Pirates4–8Gibbon (7–3)Sadecki (10–8)Bork (2)11,80547–45
93July 22Pirates2–13Veale (11–6)Craig (5–5)11,08947–46
94July 23Pirates5–8Blass (4–6)Cuellar (2–3)Face (3)7,89347–47
95July 24@Phillies1–9Short (9–5)Gibson (8–8)22,62847–48
96July 25@Phillies10–9Simmons (10–8)Dennis Bennett (9–8)Cuellar (2)10,94848–48
97July 26@Phillies6–1Richardson (1–0)Boozer (1–1)49–48
98July 26@Phillies4–1Sadecki (11–8)Mahaffey (9–5)28,11850–48
99July 28@Cubs12–7(10)Taylor (5–2)Jackson (13–9)Cuellar (3)16,05251–48
100July 29@Cubs9–1Simmons (11–8)L. Burdette (7–3)16,78152–48
101July 30@Cubs5–2Sadecki (12–8)Ellsworth (12–12)Craig (5)11,17353–48
102July 31Reds6–7Tsitouris (7–7)Richardson (1–1)Purkey (1)22,13653–49
August: (18–10)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
103August 1Reds5–6Jay (6–8)Gibson (8–9)Ellis (6)13,05753–50
104August 2Reds5–4Cuellar (3–3)McCool (3–2)Taylor (8)14,01054–50
105August 4Cubs0–4L. Burdette (8–4)Sadecki (12–9)12,72354–51
106August 5Cubs4–2Richardson (2–1)Buhl (12–8)Humphreys (2)11,61455–51
107August 6Cubs5–3Gibson (9–9)Ellsworth (12–13)Schultz (1)8,25856–51
108August 7Colt .45s4–0Simmons (12–8)Brown (2–10)14,34457–51
109August 8Colt .45s3–4Nottebart (5–8)Taylor (5–3)Owens (3)14,84257–52
110August 9Colt .45s8–2Sadecki (13–9)Bruce (11–7)19,65858–52
111August 10Giants2–1Gibson (10–9)Herbel (10–7)Schultz (2)18,77959–52
112August 11Giants3–6Hendley (10–7)Simmons (12–9)Pierce (4)21,07559–53
113August 12Giants6–4Craig (6–5)Shaw (7–5)Schultz (3)17,67660–53
114August 14@Dodgers4–3Sadecki (14–9)Drysdale (13–12)Cuellar (4)33,83561–53
115August 15@Dodgers3–4Moeller (7–11)Gibson (10–10)Perranoski (9)22,21861–54
116August 16@Dodgers0–3Koufax (19–5)Richardson (2–2)61–55
117August 16@Dodgers4–0Simmons (13–9)L. Miller (2–4)38,07262–55
118August 17@Colt .45s3–1Cuellar (4–3)Brown (2–12)Schultz (4)8,05363–55
119August 18@Colt .45s5–2Sadecki (15–9)Larsen (1–6)Schultz (5)8,61764–55
120August 19@Colt .45s7–8(10)Owens (6–7)Schultz (0–1)8,14964–56
121August 21@Giants6–5Taylor (6–3)Duffalo (2–1)Schultz (6)19,64465–56
122August 22@Giants2–4Bolin (5–5)Craig (6–6)22,91065–57
123August 23@Giants2–3(10)O'Dell (6–6)Schultz (0–2)28,71265–58
124August 24Pirates5–1Gibson (11–10)Friend (10–14)10,88166–58
125August 25Pirates7–6(13)Taylor (7–3)McBean (7–2)8,66467–58
126August 26Pirates4–2Cuellar (5–3)Bork (2–1)9,66268–58
127August 28Dodgers5–3Sadecki (16–9)Ortega (6–6)20,18069–58
128August 29Dodgers4–1Gibson (12–10)Reed (1–3)20,00170–58
129August 30Dodgers5–1Simmons (14–9)L. Miller (2–6)24,76671–58
130August 31Dodgers3–12Drysdale (15–13)Cuellar (5–4)16,38771–59
September: (21–8)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
131September 1Braves5–4Taylor (8–3)Lemaster (13–10)8,07972–59
132September 2Braves6–2Gibson (13–10)Fischer (10–9)8,36973–59
133September 3Braves0–7Blasingame (4–4)Craig (6–7)8,22173–60
134September 4Cubs8–5Richardson (3–2)Elston (2–5)10,22074–60
135September 5Cubs5–8Jackson (18–10)Cuellar (5–5)McDaniel (11)12,18574–61
136September 6Cubs5–4(11)Humphreys (1–0)McDaniel (1–7)16,16175–61
137September 7Reds3–2Gibson (14–10)Henry (2–2)76–61
138September 7Reds3–2Schultz (1–2)Nuxhall (8–8)22,18777–61
139September 9@Phillies10–5(11)Humphreys (2–0)Baldschun (6–7)25,33978–61
140September 10@Phillies0–3Short (16–7)Sadecki (16–10)14,55278–62
141September 11@Cubs5–0Gibson (15–10)Broglio (7–12)2,24079–62
142September 12@Cubs2–3Buhl (13–11)Craig (6–8)8,33079–63
143September 13@Cubs15–2Simmons (15–9)Ellsworth (14–15)Washburn (2)11,60680–63
September 14@BravesPostponed (rain); Makeup: September 15
144September 15@Braves11–6Sadecki (17–10)Cloninger (16–13)Schultz (7)81–63
145September 15@Braves3–1Gibson (16–10)Blasingame (5–5)5,84382–63
146September 16@Braves2–3Lemaster (15–11)Taylor (8–4)Tiefenauer (12)3,01982–64
September 18@RedsPostponed (rain); Makeup: September 19
147September 19@Reds5–7Ellis (9–3)Gibson (16–11)82–65
148September 19@Reds2–0Sadecki (18–10)McCool (5–3)Schultz (8)13,22183–65
149September 20@Reds6–9Ellis (10–3)Schultz (1–3)11,54483–66
150September 22@Mets2–1Simmons (16–9)Stallard (10–19)10,44384–66
151September 23@Mets1–2Cisco (6–17)Craig (6–9)Hunter (5)3,94184–67
152September 24@Pirates4–2Gibson (17–11)Wood (0–1)85–67
153September 24@Pirates4–0Sadecki (19–10)Butters (1–2)2,84686–67
154September 25@Pirates5–3Richardson (4–2)Cardwell (1–1)Schultz (9)3,69487–67
155September 26@Pirates6–3Simmons (17–9)Veale (18–12)Schultz (10)4,08588–67
156September 27@Pirates5–0Craig (7–9)Law (12–13)Schultz (11)19,28789–67
157September 28Phillies5–1Gibson (18–11)Short (17–9)Schultz (12)24,14690–67
158September 29Phillies4–2Sadecki (20–10)Dennis Bennett (12–14)Schultz (13)27,43391–67
159September 30Phillies8–5Simmons (18–9)Bunning (18–8)Richardson (1)29,92092–67
October: (1–2)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
160October 2Mets0–1Jackson (11–16)Gibson (18–12)19,01992–68
161October 3Mets5–15Parsons (1–2)Sadecki (20–11)18,65092–69
162October 4Mets11–5Gibson(19–12)Cisco(6–19)Schultz(14)30,14693–69

Player stats

[edit]

Batting

[edit]

Starters by position

[edit]

Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

PosPlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI
CTim McCarver143465134.288952
1BBill White160631191.30321102
2BJulián Javier155535129.2411265
3BKen Boyer162628185.29524119
SSDick Groat161636186.292170
LFLou Brock103419146.3481244
CFCurt Flood162679211.311546
RFMike Shannon8825366.261943

Other batters

[edit]

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

PlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI
Charlie James8823352.223517
Carl Warwick8815841.259315
Bob Skinner5511832.271116
Bob Uecker4010621.19816
Johnny Lewis409422.23427
Doug Clemens337816.20519
Phil Gagliano405815.25919
Jeoff Long284310.23314
Jerry Buchek35306.20001
Dal Maxvill37266.23104
Ed Spiezio12124.33300
Joe Morgan330.00000

Pitching

[edit]

Starting pitchers

[edit]

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

PlayerGIPWLERASO
Bob Gibson40287.119123.01245
Curt Simmons34244.01893.43104
Ray Sadecki37220.020113.68119
Ernie Broglio1169.1353.5036

Other pitchers

[edit]

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

PlayerGIPWLERASO
Roger Craig39166.0793.2584
Ray Washburn1560.0344.0528
Gordie Richardson1947.0422.3028
Glen Hobbie1344.1124.2618
Bobby Shantz1617.1133.1212
Lew Burdette810.0101.803

Relief pitchers

[edit]

Note: G = Games pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

PlayerGWLSVERASO
Barney Schultz3013141.6429
Ron Taylor638484.6269
Mike Cuellar325544.5056
Bob Humphreys282022.5336
Harry Fanok40005.8710
Dave Bakenhaster20006.000
Jack Spring20003.000
Dave Dowling10000.000

1964 World Series

[edit]
Main article:1964 World Series

Playing in their first Series in eighteen years, and one that resembled a rematch of the two franchises' first encounter in1926, the upstart "Redbirds" took on the veteranNew York Yankees, featuring Ken Boyer's younger brotherClete, also an All-Star third baseman. Ken Boyer's stunninggrand slam home run in Game 4 atYankee Stadium, along with Gibson's overpowering pitching, was a key in a 4 games to 3 win by the Cardinals – their seventhWorld Series championship. This marked the end of theYankee dynasty that saw 15 pennants in 18 seasons from1947 to1964. The Cardinals are the only one of the original eight National League teams to hold an overall World Series edge against the Yankees, 3 Series to 2.

Before the regular season had ended, both the owners of the Cardinals and the Yankees had decided to replace their managers, Keane andYogi Berra, after the season – regardless of outcome. When these two teams happened to meet in the World Series, this plan received a great deal of attention.

NL St. Louis Cardinals (4) vs. ALNew York Yankees (3)
GameScoreDateLocationAttendanceTime of Game
1Yankees – 5,Cardinals – 9October 7Busch Stadium30,8052:42
2Yankees – 8, Cardinals – 3October 8Busch Stadium30,8052:29
3Cardinals – 1, Yankees – 2October 10Yankee Stadium67,1012:16
4Cardinals – 4, Yankees – 3October 11Yankee Stadium66,3122:18
5Cardinals – 5, Yankees – 2October 12Yankee Stadium65,6332:37
6Yankees – 8, Cardinals – 3October 14Busch Stadium30,8052:37
7Yankees – 5, Cardinals – 7October 15Busch Stadium30,3462:40

Thirty years later,David Halberstam would chronicle the 1964 Cardinals and their World Series opponents the 1964 Yankees in the bookOctober 1964.

After the season

[edit]

Gussie Busch changed his mind about Durocher and attempted to rehire his Series-winning manager, but Keane, angry at the way Busch had treated him and Devine, quit and became manager of the Yankees.[25]Red Schoendienst took over as manager and led the team to two pennants and a championship in 1967 on his way to twelve seasons at the helm.The Sporting News named Bing DevineBaseball Executive of the Year a few months after he was fired and KeaneManager of the Year.[26]

Awards and honors

[edit]

Farm system

[edit]
See also:Minor League Baseball
LevelTeamLeagueManager
AAAJacksonville SunsInternational LeagueHarry Walker
AATulsa OilersTexas LeagueGrover Resinger
ARaleigh CardinalsCarolina LeagueGeorge Kissell
AWinnipeg GoldeyesNorthern LeagueRon Plaza
ARock Hill CardinalsWestern Carolinas LeagueHal Smith
RookieSRL CardinalsSarasota Rookie LeagueFred Koenig

[27]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Jimmie Coker Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More".Baseball-Reference.com. RetrievedMarch 21, 2025.
  2. ^Carl Sawatski atBaseball-Reference
  3. ^Halberstam 133
  4. ^Halberstam 134–5
  5. ^Halberstam 135–6
  6. ^Halberstam 136–7
  7. ^Mike Shannon 1964 game log
  8. ^Halberstam 194–6
  9. ^Halberstam 198
  10. ^ab"Futile Surge",Sports Illustrated, September 21, 1964
  11. ^Halberstam 17
  12. ^Halberstam 253
  13. ^Halberstam 265–7
  14. ^Halberstam 303
  15. ^Halberstam 303, 311
  16. ^Halberstam 303–4, 306
  17. ^Halberstam 305
  18. ^Reds 1, Phils 0
  19. ^abLeggett, William (October 5, 1964)."The Big Red Surge".Sports Illustrated. RetrievedJanuary 16, 2021.
  20. ^1964 Sports Illustrated cover
  21. ^Gary Kolb atBaseball-Reference
  22. ^Walt Williams atBaseball-Reference
  23. ^Ernie Broglio atBaseball-Reference
  24. ^Mike Torrez atBaseball-Reference
  25. ^Halberstam 351–2
  26. ^Halberstam 354
  27. ^Johnson, Lloyd, and Wolff, Miles, ed.,The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball, 2nd and 3rd editions. Durham, North Carolina: Baseball America, 1997 and 2007

External links

[edit]
American League
National League
Franchise
History
Ballparks
Spring training:
Culture
Lore
Rivalries
Key personnel
Minor league
affiliates
World Series
Championships
pre-MLB
MLB
League pennants
American Association
National League
Division titles
National League East
1982
1985
1987
National League Central
1996
2000
2002
2004
2005
2006
2009
2013
2014
2015
2019
2022
Wild card titles
All Star Games hosted
Seasons (145)
1880s
1890s
1900s
1910s
1920s
1930s
1940s
1950s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
2010s
2020s
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1964_St._Louis_Cardinals_season&oldid=1311870291"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp