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02.29.2008 7:19 am

Leap Day Lineup: Off to the circus

JUPITER, Fla. — The Cardinals head north to Port St. Lucie, Fla., to complete a home-and-home series with the absolutely reeling New York Mets, who have continued their September spiral with an 0-2 start to spring. Egads.

But hope takes the mound for the Mets today.

Lefty and two-time Cy Young Award winner Johan Santana makes his debut.

One New York paper dubbed it the start of the Johan Santana Era, writing that “a meaningless game doesn’t get any bigger.” Adam Rubin, the exceptional Mets beat writer for the Daily News, pegged it best with his lede this morning:

JUPITER, Fla. - It’s not quite March, and already Johan Santana is being called upon to be the stopper.

To face the changeup-chucking lefty and biggest offseason acquisition this side of Rusty Hardin, manager Tony La Russa is taking a righthanded-heavy lineup north. Brian Barton and Ryan Ludwick, for example, are in the outfield. There is a notable exception: Chris Duncan. La Russa has said he’d like to see both Duncan and Rick Ankiel get at-bats against lefthanded pitchers this spring — and this season — unless the lefty is of the “wipe-away variety” (i.e., Randy Johnson). The manager did a similar thing last season when he took Duncan across the state to Fort Myers, Fla., and started him at designated hitter against a lefty.

The lefty was Santana.

Duncan went 0-for-4 in the game and Santana — in mid-March form — walked two, allowed two hits, struck out four and matched Kip Wells zero for zero over four innings.  The recap of the game focuses on a MVP-Cy Young showdown that became a fizzle.

Albert Pujols gets another crack at Santana today.

The Cardinals (1-0) 

  1. Brian Barton, CF
  2. Chris Duncan, LF
  3. Albert Pujols, 1B
  4. Troy Glaus, 3B
  5. Juan Gonzalez, DH
  6. Ryan Ludwick, RF
  7. Yadier Molina, C
  8. Aaron Miles, 2B
  9. Brendan Ryan, SS

Starting pitcher: RHP Adam Wainwright. Others traveling: LHP Ron Flores, LHP Jaime Garcia, LHP Tyler Johnson, RHP Ryan Franklin, RHP Mike Parisi, RHP Tyler Herron and RHP Kyle McClellan.

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5 comments

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for all the love i have for the man and i know its based purely on encouragement, if you click on the link to espn and read the very last comment la russa makes about kip wells, its very entertaining that ‘he has pitched very well’..
even with all of our pitching woes, i’m so glad he’s not part of our rotation..

great job DG, always the first thing i click to in the morning!

— juan gone's eye
8:20 am February 29th, 2008

i was hoping rasmus would get the start after not starting yesterday. hopefully he will still get to play half the game since it is on mlb.tv. it would also be nice to see garcia or herron get an inning or two.

— fewgoodcards
8:51 am February 29th, 2008

Now this is a lineup to get excited about. Throw Ankiel in there (even though I’m really intrigued by Barton) and you have an everyday roster that can compete with any in the league.

If we can just get Larussa to bench (hopefully release) Izturis and Kennedy against righties as well.

— rgosche20
9:34 am February 29th, 2008

RE#3

I hear that! Granted, I’d love to see our prospects get as much time as possible in the field and at the plate this Spring, but that lineup gets you excited for the regular season. Anyone that thinks it can’t compete against the mediocre pitching in the NL Central has been huffing too much paint.

Now, if only I had more faith in our rotation.

Is it March 31st yet…?

— BirdFanInBabylon
10:16 am February 29th, 2008

They really need to pin down and sign Weaver. To start, he stays healthy. One of the Cardinals biggest problems is they stock up on cheap health issue pitchers. What faith can we really have in Clement and Mulder and for that matter Carpenter as well? At the time I thought it was a smart move to avoid re-signing Suppan to an overpriced contract, but now that I look back I’m ticked. What price can you put on consistent healthy production, even if it’s not blow away talent? Weaver has his issues, but he’s 30 and Duncan seemed to pin down and use his ability. Add Weaver to Wainwright and Reyes (sounds like he’s ready for a breakout year), and you have 3/5’s of a decent starting rotation. I think Mulder is a lost cause and it’s impossible to gauge Clement, but I wouldn’t count chickens yet. Carpenter is the only unhealthy that deserves the expectation of decent contribution when he returns, plus he’s ace material. Add him in and you have 4/5’s of a good rotation. Wipe away Mulder and Clement (assuming he doesn’t work out) and assume Pinerio is not a long term contributor, then all the Cards need is one #2 or 3 arm to have a great rotation next season. 1-Carp 2/3 - Wainwright 4-Reyes 5 - Weaver. Find the right name for that other 2/3 spot and I’ll feel comfortable. In the meantime, develop young arms to resupply when money is low. Focuson defense to help these guys and develop a few more young offensive players and the Cards are right back at the top of the list in a year or two. Sign Weaver now. Banish Thompson and Wellemeyer to the pen. I’d love to have Wellemeyer throwing fire out of the pen.

I’ll say this. I’m jazzed about this season, if only for seeing new faces and young talent. I hope Duncan can bat a full season. I hope Barton sticks. I want to see what Ankiel does with a full season. I want to know if Ryan will supplant a vet up the middle. If Rasmus sticks thats even better.

Considering media expectations, it’ll be hard for the Cardinals not to over achieve this season. But they need to sign and start Weaver.

— RCJ
1:22 pm February 29th, 2008