Tagged: st. louis

St. Louis Sandlot Baseball Update

St. Louis Sandlot Baseball has adopted the “Y” Baseball Field at Carondelet Park as our new field (which is not as confined as Fox Park). We will continue meeting up and playing there through the fall and on & off over the winter, weather permitting of course.

Part of our goal, in addition to playing ball, will be to restore and upgrade the field conditions so that it can more easily be used by the community. Interested in joining us? Please follow @stlouissandlot on Instagram for updates!

Sandlot Baseball in St. Louis

Several weeks back I saw a post on Facebook from a guy looking to get a bunch of people together on an upcoming Saturday at a local park to play some sandlot baseball, with the intention of not only playing a game but also to discuss the formation of an actual sandlot league in St. Louis. My eyes lit up and I immediately posted my interest in attending and went about spreading the invite among my followers on my personal Facebook page as well as other social media sites that I’m plugged into.

For me, playing some kind of ball has been in the back of my mind ever since I last played corkball at Tower Grove Park back in 2009. While the corkball thing was fun, it was also *really* difficult to get people to participate in. It seemed like, at best, we’d have maybe two or three people show up, and oftentimes it was just me and maybe my son there. So despite my best efforts at the time, I decided to throw in the towel. The arrival of another kid in the winter of 2010 also extinguished a good portion of my free time to continue the endeavor into subsequent summers. So that was pretty much the end of Tower Grove Corkball.

So fast-forward to the pandemic and I began to catch wind of pickup or “sandlot” baseball teams and even leagues forming across the U.S. and Canada. The first of these that I found was through my connection with the baseball-punk band the Isotopes, and that was the East Van Baseball in Vancouver, BC. I liked what I saw and, even though I was rapidly aging through my 50s, longed to see something like this form in St. Louis. Well, lo and behold, we have something now! Born out of a post on the Cherokee Park Hit & Catch All-Stars Facebook group is St. Louis Sandlot! Headed up by a Twin Cities export, Josh Stulen, this new group of ballplayers and its Southside Slingers offshoot (the only “team” to spring forth thus far) have begun playing on random-if-not-more-regularly-as-of-late Saturdays or Sundays at Fox Park in the city of St. Louis. There’s a really nice baseball diamond there that rarely ever gets used called PAL Memorial Park (the Cardinals built it over 20 years ago using money from a grant from the late Daryl Kyle). Still very casual but we run the bases, keep score, etc. Will try to play into December if the weather allows for it.

If you’re interested in playing, follow @stlouissandlot on Instagram (where it’s also recommended to follow the #sandlotrevolution tag in general). Apparently Instagram is the go-to app for finding all things sandlot baseball-related as far as social media is concerned… so far. Longer term goal is to get involved with the Sandlot Revolution next summer. Anyway, if you’d like to come out and play some ball, please join us! Bring your gloves, bats (wood only), and drink(s) of your choice. Our next gathering is this coming Sunday morning (November 12) at 10am at Fox Park.

Cards have a history of losing ugly!

By Anonymous

Losing isn’t supposed to be pretty, but the Cardinals always seem to find a way to lose ugly.

In 1968, The Cards blew a 3-1 lead to the Detroit Tigers in World Series with Bob Gibson pitching Game 7… ouch!

In 1985, the Cards blew a 3-1 game lead against the Kansas City Royals in the World Series, losing a one-run lead in the bottom of the ninth in Game 6, after one of the worst umpiring calls in baseball history, and then got blown out in Game 7, 11-0, with their ace John Tudor on the mound. 21-game winner Joaquin Andujar and manager Whitey Herzog both had meltdowns and were ejected from the game with Cards down 11-0, in what has to be one of the most infamous games in Cardinals history… ouch!

In 1987, after coming back to beat the scum baby Giants in Games 6 and 7 in St. Louis, the Cards blew a 5-1 lead to the Minnesota Twins in Game 6 of the WS with a 3-games-to-2 lead and their ace John Tudor on the mound… ouch!

In 1996, the Cards blew a 3-games-to-one led to the Atlanta Braves in the NLCS, and were outscored 18-1 in Games 6 and 7 at home… ouch!

In 2002, the Central Division champion Cardinals lost to the wild-card Giants in 5 Games the same year that Jack Buck and starting pitcher Darryl Kile died… ouch!

In 2004, the Cards won 105 games in the regular season, then batted .190 in the World Series and got swept by the Red Sox… ouch!

In 2012, the Cards blew a three-games-to-one lead to the Giants in the NLCS by a combined score of 20-1… ouch!

In 2013, the Cards blew a two-games-to-one lead over the Red Sox in the WS by losing Games 4 and 5 in St. Louis. Pitching phenom and NLCS MVP Michael Wacha finally ran out of gas in Game 6 and got rocked in Boston… ouch!

In 2014, the Cards gift-wrapped 3 straight wins to the Giants in Games 3, 4, and 5 in SF. After a classic Wainwright performance, a 1-run lead, and 6 outs to go, the Cards somehow managed to give the Giants 4 more runs in the 8th and 9th innings, including an epic 3-run walk-off blast in the bottom of the ninth by a mediocre hitter—at best… ouch! ouch! ouch!