DG’s 10@10: The Pace of Albert Pujols
CREVE COEUR — San Francisco Giants lefthander, future Hall of Famer and 303-game winner Randy Johnson left a 0-2 pitch over the plate and Albert Pujols pounced. He launched the ball some 445 feet — more on that shortly — on a trajectory that, to the first-glance eye, appeared to go where no ball had gone before.
At first, it looked bound for the undiscovered country of Clark Street.
“I think the ball will probably be landing sometime shortly,” Johnson joked with reporters after the game.
Harder to tell is when the St. Louis Cardinals will find some footing. Losers of three straight, losers of seven of nine and in danger of losing three of their previous four series, the Cardinals are looking for a stopper — and looking to stop squandering what is probably the best run of production by the game’s best hitter. It’s hard to ignore the big-number pace Pujols is on. Could be 60 homers. Could be a franchise record for RBIs. Would be a shame not to channel all of that into a long-run at October.
Pujols has 30 home runs by the end of June, which is only the 10th time in baseball history that someone has reached that number by that date. The list is a motley group. It’s got folks who sat before Congress and one guy who bragged about making more than the President because he had a better year. Here’s what it doesn’t have: A guy who finished the 30-by-July season with less than 40 home runs.
Most finished with much, much more. And that’s where today’s experimental live 10@10 begins:
1. Pujols is the seventh player to reach 30 homers by the end of June, and he’s the first since two National Leaguers did it in 2001. Here is the list, but not just the list. Included with the names is how many homers they had as of June 30 and … how many homers they had in that season.
- 2001 … Barry Bonds … 39 … 73
- 2001 … Luis Gonzalez … 32 … 57
- 1999 … Sammy Sosa … 30 … 63
- 1998 … Ken Griffey Jr. … 33 … 56
- 1998 … Mark McGwire … 37 … 70
- 1998 … Sosa … 33 … 66
- 1994 … Griffey … 32 … 40
- 1930 … Babe Ruth … 30 … 49
- 1928 … Babe Ruth … 30 … 54
What stands out here — more than the names, more than the stains — is the 64-year gap between Ruth and Griffey. And then not a gap of less than four years until today, when baseball went eight years.
2. The Cardinals have faced in three consecutive nights three candidates — two for performance, one for history — to start for the National League in a few weeks here at Busch Stadium in the 80th All-Star Game. Tim Lincecum, according to the Giants, is on turn to be available for the honor. Even if he’s the most-dominant, he may not be the most-deserving … on his own team. The game is here, so that’s today’s poll:
3. The invaluable Web site Hit Tracker has already worked its magic on Pujols’ first home run from Tuesday night. The in-house estimate of the homer was 445 feet. Hit Tracker calculates it at 465 feet — what would be the longest home run this season by a Cardinal and the longest home run yet at Busch Stadium. It breaks the record held, according to the site, by Pujols’ 457-foot shot in 2006. (Check his scatterplot from 2009 here.) Hit Tracker draws out the “actual path” of the home run to show how it would clank off the fence separating Busch from Clark.
Projected path of Pujols' home run off Randy Johnson. (Courtesy: Hit Tracker)
4. Voting ends tomorrow for the All-Star Game. Log on. Vote now. Vote often. Some of the positions — particularly in the American League — are still close to call, and we’ve seen late-surges sweep a player into the starting lineup before. (Yes, I mean Milwaukee.) … And, speaking of voting. ESPN has a poll this morning asking, “Who is the best hitter in Cardinals history?” There are three options. Click away.
5. Pujols’ 30 home runs by the end of June make him only the second Cardinals to reach the mark. The other, of course, is Mark McGwire. He had 37 by the end of June in 1998. Barry Bonds holds the record for most homers by the end of June. He had 39 in 2001. McGwire coupled 87 RBIs with his homer binge by July in that polarizing season of 1998.
6. The breakdown of Pujols’ home runs this season:
- 17 solo home runs
- 9 two-run home runs
- a three-run homer
- 3 grand slams
7. The Cardinals had been involved in four of the most economical games of the season — what with Cliff Lee and Lincecum throwing ones against them, and Joel Pineiro throwing two for them — so it’s fitting that arguably the best game pitched this season in the National League was thrown by … a former Cardinal. Jason Marquis twirled a two-hit shutout against the best team in the league, blanking the LA Dodgers on Tuesday. What sets Marquis’ two-hitter apart from, say, Lincecum’s two-hitter earlier this week and Pineiro’s two-hitter last week in New York is the opponent, sure, but also the unbridled expediency of it. Marquis dispatched the Dodgers in 86 pitches. More than just sweetening his bid for an All-Star selection, Marquis also moved into the lead as the NL’s only 10-game winner. Manager Jim Tracy called it as “special” as anything he’s seen in 7 1/2 years “behind the desk,” and closer Huston Street stumped for Marquis as an All-Star.
8. FARMNIK REPORT: Abbreviated today because of time constraints. It’s enough to say that Brett Wallace, the first-round pick who is as beloved as a backup quarterback in these parts, extended his hitting streak to 14 games. He went 3-for-4 with a home run for Class AAA Memphis. His average is up to .291.
9. And today’s CUBS IN CHAOS report, direct from Chicago: Aramis Ramirez could return to the lineup as soon as Monday, according to Paul Sullivan’s report in the Chicago Tribune. Ramirez has been on the disabled list since May with a dislocated left shoulder. And as Cardinals fans will happily tell their cousins third baseman returning from shoulder injuries always go smoothly. Always. No doubt. Power returns in a snap. Absolutely.
10. Pinch-hit as a co-host Wednesday with FSN Midwest’s uber-anchor Pat Parris on his 101 FM/ESPN show, which can be heard streaming at the radio station’s home page from 9 a.m. to noon. I’ll be sitting in for Manny-happy Post-Dispatch sports columnist Bryan Burwell while he continues his quest for the Golden Adverb, the writing tool that allows all who hold it to “hit the hole”.
Welcome to an in-progress 10@10, updated throughout the morning …
-30-


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.
I was just thinking how ironic it would be for Haren to start the All-Star Game
Stan is the man! C’mon Saint Louis, go to the ESPN site and vote for Stan.
Albert is getting there but Stan is still the best hitter in Card’s history.
Saint Louis needs to show the rest of the world we haven’t forgotten baseball’s perfect warrior!
I’m not hopeful about any additional moves this season…..they seem content with wasting Pujol’s prime production years, which seems to me to be too much contentment with the 04 WS appearance and 06 WS win. .D-Ro is a nice acquisition, but they need a bat to protect Pujols….D-Ro (13 hrs, 50 RBIs) is not that bat although I like the move from a clubhouse standpoint and it’s always nice to stick it to the cubbies.
I wonder how Holliday would do in The LOU coming back closer to home, but that seems like a long shot now….and he may not even be the answer.
I just can’t figure out how they can draw 3 million peeps a year, build a new ballpark, and then will not spend the dollars to help Albert. I absolutley get frustrated watching him go yard twice last night and then think they are still going to lose because he can’t make up the entire 5 run deficit by himself. Seeing him hit homeruns is not even enjoyable at that moment.
We need a Larry Walker…………tear……..
What bat is available? DeRosa was the best available, and Mozeliak got him.
Marquis to start the all-star game? That’s a ludicrous thought. Absolutely ludicrous. We’ve all known that he has good stuff, but I have yet to be convinced he’s a good pitcher. And a half season certainly doesn’t hack it.
jamesk
wasn’t doubting you being a fan. and never did i say that i don’t take losses hard. i take them very hard and its very frustrating when the cards don’t win. being a great fan and an observant fan is great as i appreciate someone like myself but if you want to dissect something on this team maybe it shouldn’t be pujols. maybe the need to cut wellemeyer from the team, banish joe thurston to the bench, or many other things should be discussed. DVR or not Pujols has not struggled low and away more this year. sorry
It’s interesting to note that the Cardinals’ other history-making super star–Stan Musial–played 23 years, but the Cards won pennants in only four of his first six years on the team, 1942-1944 and 1946. While the team finished second in 1947-49, it faded badly thereafter. The last 14 seasons, Musial was playing for a team which was rarely competitive. Let’s hope that’s not Pujols’ fate.
That list of players who have hit 30 homers by the end of June is interesting. It makes one remember just how good Junior was. If he hadn’t caught the injury bug he might have gone down as the 2nd greatest hitter in history.
What an embarrassment of riches for an organization to be able to select from Hornsby, Musial, an Pujols for the greatest franchise hitter. That leaves out at least two 3000 hit guys in Schoendienst and Brock. As Mel Allen would say “How about that!”
I have no idea how this team is even competitive this year given the incredibly poor performances of Wellemeyer, Duncan, Ankiel, and Ludwick. The failed dependencies on Glaus and K. Greene have created between 3 and 5 holes in the lineup any given night. Molina is NOT a run-producing bat despite the good AVG and OBP. Rasmus is still too young to be relied upon, yet. With any luck, DeRosa can help fill at least one hole, and B. Ryan has been helpful, when healthy. They have wasted the fact that Pineiro has kept them in most of the games that he has started.
There are so many holes on this team it should be combined with ham and put on bread. This team is going to have to rid itself of Duncan and Ankiel in the offseason to have an opportunity to get better. Maybe Wallace can provide some additional “pop” as well next year. We might as well start looking to 2010, though.
ASince Duncan is always regarded as such a great pitching coach, I wonder why he couldn’t get more out of Marquis, among MANY others