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12.31.2008 9:26 pm

5 Minutes For Blogging, Jan. 1 (updated)

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Happy New Year!

1. ENOUGH ALREADY WITH BASHING ST. LOUIS AS A FOOTBALL TOWN: Did you see that Arizona and Minnesota are struggling to fill the stadium for home playoff games this weekend? What a joke. The Cardinals have never hosted a playoff game in Arizona, and this is the first (home) NFL playoff game for the franchise since 1947. And the Vikings haven’t had a home game in the playoffs since 2000. And yet, as of Wednesday afternoon 6,500 tickets were available in Arizona, and 11,000 were unsold in Minnesota. And people rip St. Louis for being lukewarm about pro football? That’s absurd. This town has stuck by a lot of losing teams, and the Rams drew good crowds over the last two seasons despite a 5-27 record. But whenever there’s a few thousand empty seats in St. Louis during terrible times, the short-attention span crowd begins caterwauling that the Rams are being abandoned, and that it’s inevitable the franchise will move to Los Angeles.  Well, I guarantee you that if the Rams had a home playoff game this weekend the Edward Jones Dome would be completely filled. Vikes RB Adrian Peterson is worth the price of admission, no? Maybe the Vikings ought to consider moving to LA.  And if the Rams had Pro Bowl QB Kurt Warner throwing passes to Larry Fitzgerald and Anquan Boldin, you wouldn’t be able to get a ticket to Rams home game… let alone a Rams home playoff game. Rams fans have nothing to apologize for. This may not be Green Bay or Pittsburgh, but the support for pro football has held up just fine. (Yeah, but if management screws up the coaching search, that could change in 2009).

2. LOSING AARON MILES IS BESIDE THE POINT: OK, so Lil’ Scrappy signed a 2-year deal with the Cubs for $4.9 million. He was a good Cardinal. He did a nice job. But there’s already so much whining from Cardinals fans, you’d think that Miles was Frankie Frisch, or something. Please. We’re talking about a player who has a career OBP of .329, and he doesn’t hit for power. And Miles is an OK second baseman, but you don’t want to use him very often at shortstop or third base. Miles getting nearly $2.5 million a year from the Cubs, and that’s funny.  But here’s the real deal: you should be upset that the Cardinals haven’t lined up someone better than Miles to fill his role, especially since they let Felipe Lopez walk, too. Subtracting Miles doesn’t represent a significant loss. It would be worth nothing more than a shrug if the Cardinals went out and upgraded the infield bench. But the Cardinals’ bench is weaker because of a passive management approach, at least so far. So far this offseason they lost Miles and Lopez and both players were positive contributors offensively last season. (Even with Miles and Lopez the Cardinals were 9th in the NL in OPS among second basemen, at .754. How bad will that be in 2009 if they can’t plug in the offense provided by Miles and Lopez? This means that the second baseman (without a safety net) is Adam Kennedy — the same guy that the manager benched last year, the same guy that the Cardinals tried and failed to trade after he requested a way out. Wow. Again: let Miles walk to be overpaid by the Cubs, and I don’t care. If Lopez goes, fine. But I do protest if you do nothing in response except try to plug in one of Jeff Luhnow’s precious (and overrated) Faberge Egg infield prospects as a Miles-Lopez replacement and try to tell the fans that you’re just as good if not better.

3. BY THE WAY, YOU DO REALIZE THAT BILL DEWITT IS BECOMING JERRY JONES, RIGHT? Go ahead and rip Cardinals GM John Mozeliak if you’d like. But if you really believe that Mozeliak has autonomy on payroll spending and major baseball decisions, then I have one of those old Busch Stadium urinals to sell you for about $3,500. (Let me clarify since this confused some folks: Jones owns the Dallas Cowboys and serves as his team’s de facto GM. DeWitt owns the Cardinals and is very involved in the baseball decisions, and it is my belief that he’s evolving into the team’s de facto GM.)

4. NON-SPORTS NOTE OF THE DAY, ON FOOD: One of my favorite subjects, obviously. And the best dish I’ve had at a St. Louis restaurant over the last three months are the braised short ribs at Herbie’s Vintage ‘72 in the CWE. It’s perfectly tender, and the bleu cheese mashed potatoes are an ideal complement. Try this and you will thank me later.

5. MIKE ANDERSON OR RICK MAJERUS, LET THE DEBATE BEGIN: Anderson is in his third season at Mizzou; Majerus is in his second season at St. Louis U.  While acknowledging that Anderson has a head start on Majerus because of the extra year, I submit this two-part question: (A) which coach will be first to build a consistent presence in the NCAA men’s basketball tournament? (B) And if the answer is “neither,” then which coach will go away first — either through a firing or resignation?

Keep the answers clean, and civil. Thanks.

-Bernie

50 comments

Comments are closed.

Bernie, have you seen Majerus’s team play at Chaifetz this year? Yes, they struggled on the road early on against some mid-majors, but this team looks better and better each game, and Majerus has a great and exciting foundation of freshmen and new recruits coming in next year.
(He has already signed 4 recruits including the top ranked shooting guard from down under, and the top ranked big man from down under has been visiting the team all week.) Majerus is a straight-shooter and believes he is probably two more seasons away from having a NCAA-caliber team (he had a lot of work to recover from over five years of terrible recruiting by his predecessor), but once he gets there you can expect the success to be routine and steadily grow.

I am not a MU fan, but I follow MU and Anderson close enough to know that he will also probably have an NCAA team within the next two years if given a chance. The biggest problem Anderson faces is that he runs a system that is difficult to impose upon top-25 caliber opponents.

To answer your questions above, I believe both programs should see the NCAA the season after next, and I hope both coach is given the chance to last until then.

— billikenguy
10:25 pm December 31st, 2008

EXCELLENT comment about St. Louis as a football town. I tire of having to explain to friends from other cities how good St. Louis football fans can be, and how overrated those from some “football” towns can be as well. St. Louis supports bad teams, and VEHEMENTLY supports good or great ones.

— Patrick39
10:27 pm December 31st, 2008

I had season tickets for the grid birds from 1966 to 1987. The team averaged over 80% capacity and never hosted one playoff game. Mr Bidwell may have been a generous man but he was a terrible owner.
I have had season tickets for the billikens for 10 years starting with Lorezo Romar. Mr Majerus may be a genuius but I don’t see it. I realize he was starting literally from scratch but these freshmen are his kids. Conklin, Reed and Mitchell are keepers the rest will be gone. The non conference home schedule since BC has been a joke. Compare it to what Gray-Miller has brought to play the lady bills. May and Majerus have wasted the first year of a magnificent facility. Bernie unless I missed it neither you or Mr Burwell have written one story about the Bills. They are boring.

— jerele
11:05 pm December 31st, 2008

Anderson will never be able to get enough talent to Columbia to win his way. Majerus will build SLU into one of the top 25 teams in the nation.

St. Louis is a great sports town. Remember it was just a few years ago when we were the #1 sports town in the United States. I believe that the St. Louis fans will always support their teams if they believe the owners are trying. It will be interesting to see who will be able to win over the fan dollars in 09.

Losing Miles was no big deal. Not signing anyone after tell everyone that this off season would be different may come back to haunt Mr. Dewitt. How long does he think Pujols will be willing to put up with this? If Luhnow’s
young farm system does not start cranking out GREAT talent by 2010 things are going to get ugly in St. Louis. It will be like the early 90’s or late 70’s again at Busch. You will be able to sit where ever whenever.
I find it really hard to believe that year after year the Cardinals fail to sign any top FA’s. Mr. DeWitt quickly changed his ways after the 04 season.

— janeandjohn
12:47 am January 1st, 2009

what do you expect of dewitt? he’s a buddy of dubya,and we’re hosting an all star game with a soggy hole in the ground!

— dennymojo
1:01 am January 1st, 2009

dennymojo - You are what is wrong with the modern sports fan. You fail to realize how stupid your comments are because you are in such a hurry to puke out the usual anti-rich guy rant.

— The Tim Van Galder Orchestra
1:15 am January 1st, 2009

The answer is that neither Mizzou nor SLU will compete with the Illini in years to come.

Ten (and likely many more) years straight is in your future…

— Pitchers Hit Eighth
3:33 am January 1st, 2009

Bernie, you haven’t been as right in the last year as you have been about point #1. We are a mid major market and we did right by ALL our teams until they (be it the franchise, Rams, or the sport, NHL) did wrong by us. I will quibble with #2 to the point that, one has to give the farm hands a chance to win a spot, sometimes they force themselves in, McClellen last year, and some times they earn the spot.

— beardedfish
4:02 am January 1st, 2009

Regarding points 1 & 2, I agree with your comments regarding St Louis fans and Aaron Miles. We have supported some weak teams over the years in all sports here in St. Louis. No need to apologize for the support given to St. Louis teams. We’re no different than any other city in that regard. Miles is older and wasn’t going to help us all that much this year. He was a pop gun hitter with limited range in the field. I would hope we could do better using one of the young kids. It’s time to see if the scouting reports are accurate on some of these kids. If the Cubs are so smart regarding player acquisitions why haven’t they won a World Series in a hundred years? Regarding point 3 it now appears that Bill DeWitt outright lied to the fans of St. Louis. The claim was made that a new stadium was needed to help keep the Cardinals competitive. True they have been competitive until last year, but it certainly seems as though their run is going to end for some time. Let’s face it they really were not competitive last year. Leading the division in April-August doesn’t count. If you’re still competitive in September then you can make that claim. The Cards were done by Sept. 1 last year for all intents and purposes. If we started the season today our team looks pretty weak with regard to pitching. In fact right now the pitching appears to be in a shambles. I realize we have a ways to go before Spring training starts, but things certainly do not look promising for this year.

— radsxw7
6:40 am January 1st, 2009

So, let me get this straight. By pointing other cities that don’t show full support for their football team, justifies St. Louis’s lack of support? Bernie, Bernie Bernie. Face it, St. Louis was, is, and always will be a Baseball town. Football is a side dish for most of the fans.

And if you want to use towns for example, I can do that too. What about a team that went 0-16? That’s right, Detroit still packed a stadium at 0-15. What about Cleveland? What about Cincinnati? What about the Bills? What about the Chiefs? I can go on and on.

Had the Rams moved to Baltimore instead of St. Louis, I would have bought season tickets and gladly make the three hour drive each way to see them play at least eight times a year, even if they had a losing record. This is what the people of St. Louis don’t understand. All they care about is how much money they spend for an inferior product. Please! It’s football! You fans of St. Louis should be just happy to have a football team in your town. I live 1500 miles away and still make it to the dome twice a year.

Personally, I believe this town was spoiled by the Rams winning a Superbowl so soon after moving to St. Louis. Then back in the Superbowl two years later. The fans didn’t have to go through the misery of having to follow a team the was so dismal for so many years. But I wouldn’t trade those years for anything. That is why is was so sweet to see the Rams win a championship.

— Ram-Man
7:28 am January 1st, 2009

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