Being a Cardinal “made my career happen,” says Aaron Miles
TOWER GROVE — In a few days, newly-minted Chicago Cubs infielder Aaron Miles will have a reunion of sorts at a charity event with the manager that made him a millionaire. He expects the worst.
“I just talked to him, and Tony said,” Miles said, pausing for effect, “that he’s really going to give it to me.”
Miles, fresh from signing a two-year, $4.9-million deal with the Cubs, will attend an Animal Rescue Foundation benefit in California later this week as a guest of Tony — St. Louis Cardinals manager Tony La Russa, that is, the foundation’s creator. When Miles called La Russa to tell him he had decided to take the more lucrative offer and more lucrative opportunity with the Cubs, the manager understood and then offered a warning. Miles’ defection to the North Side was not going to go without ridicule at the ARF function. Oh, this won’t be Jim Edmonds Revisited. This all so So Taguchi. The humor will be on purpose.
Miles will welcome a shared laugh.
“I beat myself up for a good day or two (before calling La Russa), and I didn’t really feel good about signing elsewhere until even then,” Miles said Friday morning. “Understanding that in the end it was more money, and it seems like the same opportunity — a chance to start at second base, be a good utility guy. What I did in St. Louis — spot starter, quasi-starter, coming off the bench. I’ll be doing the same job, playing as much and maybe even playing more.
“But it was still the toughest decision I’ve had to make because St. Louis was the greatest experience I’ve ever had in baseball,” Miles concluded. “Being with the Cardinals made my career happen. I started in Colorado, but I made a name for myself in St. Louis.”

Former Cardinals utility infielder Aaron Miles handles the pivot during the 2006 World Series. (Source: Getty Images)
After catching wind of how some of his comments to Chicago baseball writers this week played in the message boards and radio studios of St. Louis and keenly aware of the David Eckstein Debacle of last winter, Miles called me on Friday morning to offer some farewell thoughts. Those included his views on how he became the latest in a parade of infielders to leave. Miles had carved out quite a niche with the Cardinals — a utility infielder who played almost as much as a regular and regularly won the starting job at second base despite the Cardinals’ best efforts to put somebody else in the position. Roll call: Junior Spivey. Ronnie Belliard. Adam Kennedy. Felipe Lopez.
Through all of it, Miles remained a favorite of La Russa’s … remains a favorite.
On KSLG/1380 this past Friday, La Russa repeated to baseball writer Joe Strauss an admission he made late last season: Miles earned more playing time than he got. Columnist Bernie Miklasz, whose show had La Russa as a guest, quoted from that interview in this morning’s paper, capturing La Russa’s opinion on Miles’ departure: “We took a big hit with Miles.” Miles set career highs in 2008 across his hitting line, batting .317, slugging .398 and reaching base with a .355 on-base percentage. More telling than his .300 average, Miles personified an essential piece of La Russa’s lineup — a movable beast, so to speak, and more correctly an insurance policy at multiple positions. Shortstop injured? Start Miles. Second baseman struggling? Start Miles.
Utility fielder released? Good thing there’s Miles around.
La Russa was not alone in his fondness for Miles as a scrapper and person. La Russa’s view of Miles as a player, however, was not universally shared by the Cardinals’ brain trust, specifically not at the price of a starter. And certainly not landlocked like they are now with Kennedy under contract for 2009.
“St. Louis was the best time I could have had playing baseball, and it’s the best time I’ve had in my career playing baseball,” Miles said. “I really felt like I had a part of the team there, and that I was a part of the family. I loved playing for Tony La Russa. I understand the finances of it. I know what they have to consider. I know why they non-tendered me each year. I really considered taking less money to go back, even though I knew I wouldn’t be guaranteed to play a lot. It felt like there was always a move to bring in somebody besides me.
“And that’s the business, that’s the game, so it didn’t bother me,” Miles concluded. “But to be non-tendered again, that made me feel so expendable.”
Said his agent: “As excited as he is for the opportunity with the Cubs, he was very melancholy about leaving St. Louis.”
The Cubs pursuit of Miles intensified the weekend after Christmas, and the entire deal hinged around the Cubs being able to deal second baseman/super utility fielder Mark DeRosa. When they completed that swap with Cleveland, they made their offer to Miles formal. The Cardinals entered at the 11th hour, and Miles said the offer was both a surprise and a complication. He spent many hours laboring over the decision. Miles said the offer from the Cardinals was a two-year deal and that the difference between it and the Cubs’ offer could have been $1 million. Several sources described the Cardinals’ offer as worth a total of around $4.3 million, or $600,000 less guaranteed than the Cubs’ contract.
Though neither side is saying it, that seems like the kind of deal that could have been offered and agreed to before the non-tender day. The Cardinals, however, had more moving pieces — namely Kennedy — in play.

Aaron Miles, shown here in the July game he drove in five runs against Pittsburgh, didn't get as much playing time as he deserved, Tony La Russa said. (Source: USAToday)
This was, technically, the third consecutive year that the Cardinals non-tendered Miles, but this was different. For the first time the non-tender notice did not come with an offer, Miles said. In seasons past the Cardinals non-tendered Miles to avoid arbitration with the switch-hitter. A few sources estimated the salary he could get through arbitration at approximately $2.5 million, though there are scenarios where arbitration — which by rule is immune to the market and economic conditions — could set a salary above that estimate.
Eight teams had shown interest in Miles leading up to the Cardinals becoming the ninth on the day he signed with the Cubs, his agent said. Of those eight teams, the two best opportunities for playing time were with the Cardinals (where he knew he had the track record of winning at-bats) and the Cubs (who were going to clear a spot for him in the lineup). He may play multiple positions for the Cubs, but he’ll get those at-bats.
He was, after all, a .392 hitter during days games in 2008, and .321 during the day since 2006.
As he stewed over his decision, Miles’ decision broke along simple lines: Stick with the team that made him the player who was now drawing interest in a soft market or go to the team that showed the most interest in signing him.
“It was a tough choice, no question,” Miles said. “But it felt like I was really wanted more by the Cubs. I may only have one crack at making this kind of money in this game. I spent nine years in the minors and now I’ve got six years in the big leagues. I’ve clawed for every inch I can get, and … my earning potential is very, very, very short in this game. I like the security of the deal and that I’m playing for a team that has a chance to win the World Series. I could say the same thing about the Cardinals. I was going to be a Cub because I didn’t have an offer from the Cardinals. When I got one, it made things tougher because of what I was a part of there. The Cardinals made me as a player.
“In the end, I know I went with the team that wanted me more,” he concluded. “I’m sure of that.”
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Derrick Goold said he was going to Mizzou for capital-J journalism, but after growing up in the Time Zone Baseball Forgot he was really drawn to MU sitting between two major-league cities. Goold joined the Post-Dispatch in 2001 after working for The Times-Picayune and Rocky Mountain News, covering sports from LSU to NHL and every level of baseball in between.
Business move all the way. Though I am sad to see Miles leave,I will feel better if they replace him with quality. I’m not sure who that would be that can get starter level at bats as a sub and still muster an above .300 avg.
Aaron a damn good baseball player and a very good waffler , so it seems.
it comes down to kennedy or miles, thats really a no brainer of course the cards make the wrong choice again
it was about money
Miles is not only a good guy but was an asset for the Cardinals everytime he entered the clubhouse and every time he took the field. I was a little surprised at some of the posters remarks but then remembered that most of these nasty remarks are on par for the on line life of these type posters.
Miles did what a lot of us would do and had a right to feel badly after three years of being non tendered and ignored on the third. If similar circumstances occured in our jobs and we found opportunity to move on for more money and longer term security, we would do it. His very effort of wanting to tell the fans of St. Louis how his decision came about and how he felt about the fans and Cardinals defines how classy he is. Miles didn’t have to say anything but simply ignore the whole thing. Yes, Miles is classy and much more so than many of you.
Sad to say, the Cardinals stated goal over the years has not been to “win it all,” but merely be competitive. We’ve heard it time and time again. This has been proven by the way they operate in the off-season. Since they aren’t interested in building a team that can “win it all,” why can’t they be more loyal to players that have given their all for the team, like Miles, who was perfectly content to play the utility role for years.
Although Aaron Miles said that the Cardinals “made his career happen”, I feel that Aaron made the Cardinals happen several times over. His statistics show that he should have been given, at a minimum, one more year to produce (even at a starter salary).
I’m losing more and more confidence in some of Mozeliak’s decisions. No, I have no idea of what the “front office” is dealing with, but I know what they didn’t “Deal” with…….Aaron Miles. Too bad.
What is wrong with you guys? Miles was probably the 3 best offensive player on the Cards last year. He got screwed over. I would gladly take someone who batted 315 last season. Now we are stuck with Khalil Green and Adam Kennedy? You’re telling me Miles is worse than those guys? Than obviously you don’t watch a lot of cardinals ball. Miles was the work horse, the heart, and the soul of this team. Pujols wasn’t even as clutch as Miles last season. The Cubs pursued Miles heavily because of his above average defense, his great bat, and the fact they knew the cardinals needed him. This is just another example of a an inexperienced GM letting a good team fall apart and not doing anything to to help the team…or help stop the bleeding for that matter.
Miles was a top 3 offensive players on the team??? Hmmm. Pujols, Glaus, Ludwick, Schumaker, Ankiel, Molina, maybe even Lopez. I don’t see Miles as top 3. No way.
He was a very good utility player, but in my opinion, most people are overestimating his departure. As far as I’m concerned, the Cubs have downgraded themselves at 2B, replacing DeRosa with Miles.
Wow, I can’t believe how some of you are reacting to this! I live between St. Louis and Chicago, but am not a huge fan of either team, and therefore somewhat impartial. Thus, I feel very comfortable telling some of you fools that Miles was definitely a class act, and deserves your continuing respect, despite signing with the Cubs. Granted, I think the Cubs should have kept DeRosa, and the Cards may have slightly overbid (like the Cards have a clue what a 2nd basemen is worth…think Grudzielanek, Kennedy, etc.), but neither of those are Miles’ problem. I do think he made the choice that was best for himself and his family, despite wanting to be loyal to the Cards, and I think there is an unusual amount of honor to this man. Give him his due as you wave goodbye!