Within the span of only a few hours, the Cardinals demoted two of their top prospects from the past decade, sending in separate moves their top left-handed slugging prospect and one of the top right-handed hitting prospects in all of the minors.
What gives and what does it mean for the Cardinals ongoing, completely confounding "riddle" when it comes to developing young hitters?
To explore this defining question for the current era of Cardinals baseball, the Best Podcast in Baseball turns to a Hall of Famer. BPIB co-founder and former Post-Dispatch sports columnist Bernie Miklasz joins podcast host Derrick Goold to discuss a week that featured Nolan Gorman and Jordan Walker returning to Class AAA Memphis just a few months after they were supposed to emerge as the next core contributors in the Cardinals' lineup. Urgency rules as the Cardinals try to capture magic from a series win against Milwaukee and turn it into a last-gasp run for a playoff spot. But is that same urgency, that same pressure to produce and perform and contend every day also contributing to a cycle the Cardinals cannot escape?
People are also reading…
With an upcoming stretch of right-handed starters and a likelihood of diminishing playing time in the majors, the Cardinals optioned Jordan Walker and recalled Luken Baker.
The opportunity gap persists and now two of the most highly prized young prospects the Cardinals have had in the past decade are caught in the conversation on whether they must go elsewhere to thrive.
Young hitters arrive. Some young hitters struggle. Some young hitters are traded. Those young hitters thrive elsewhere. Miklasz describes the conversations he's had with MLB sources about where and how the Cardinals' infrastructure is lacking, and Goold details where the answers might come from the young hitters, like Masyn Winn or Alec Burleson, who have thrived after alterations to their approach or swing encouraged by the Cardinals.
The Best Podcast in Baseball, sponsored by Closets by Design of ºüÀêÊÓƵ, is a production of the ºüÀêÊÓƵ, , and Derrick Goold.
Not all bases taken are stolen bases. Cardinals swipe four but take much more in a 6-1 win against Minnesota that shows how offensive help can come in different sizes.
Andre Pallante tightened his grip on the game in the third and retired the final 13 Twins he faced while Cardinals offense seized on anything given in 6-1 victory.
Paul Goldschmidt has a big decision to make after this season. The Cardinals should have an easy one that feels hard.Â