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05.19.2009 1:38 pm

Cards face a very important week ahead

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THE WATERCOOLER

QUESTION: NL Central division rival Chicago arrives today for a three-game series, followed by a three-game set against cross-state rival Kansas City. In addition to those two important series, the Cards are anticipating the return Wednesday of Chris Carpenter and Rick Ankiel, which in turn will force some roster moves. It’s shaping up to be an important week. All that said, what do you think will be the most important development for the Cardinals in this homestand?

JOE STRAUSS
As big a deal as Carp’s start is Wednesday, Ankiel’s return on the same day potentially helps the team every day. The offense has fallen into a torpor ever since Ankiel’s loss was compounded by Ryan Ludwick’s hamstring strain. The Cardinals have very few ways to win now short of a solid start. Returning Ankiel to the lineup offers Pujols greater protection, allows TLR to drop Yadier Molina to a more comfortable spot in the order, and at least gives another reason to believe the Cards can score more than once in an inning. Carpenter makes the team better the day and the day after he pitches. During one of his offensive binges, Ankiel can be a daily force. In eight years of covering this club, I can’t recall a more difficult time for a Cardinals lineup than the last week.

RICK HUMMEL
It’s always about Carpenter. It’s not only what he brings with his physical ability, but the emotional lift he would give to a team that is kind of confused right now.

DERRICK GOOLD
The most important long-term development for the Cardinals during this homestand is … and how many times have we written this in the past three seasons? … the healthy return and presence of Chris Carpenter. Film at 11. The damning short-term development for the Cardinals in this homestand is how deep a crippled offense leaves them in the standings. Wins could be scarce against the Cubs and the Royals are improved. The Cardinals entered this homestand in first place in the NL Central. They could leave it with Rick Ankiel in the lineup, Chris Carpenter in the rotation, and a serious drop in the standings.

JEFF GORDON
At this point, the Cards need to win some games and stabilize. Period. How they do that is not important. Just having Carpenter and Ankiel back will give the boost, but a LOT of players are struggling all at once. By winning a few of these games, the Cards could release some of their building frustration and build toward a turnaround. This team can’t get everybody out of their funk at once, but a couple of victories against quality opponents would start the process.

KEVIN WHEELER (Host of “Sports Open Line” on KMOX)
I don’t know if it will be a positive development or not, but what I’m most curious about seeing this week is how Tony La Russa will dish out the playing time at SS and 3B. Joe Strauss’ story (in Tuesday’s Post-Dispatch) about Khalil Greene moving into a reserve role for the time being makes you wonder how it’s all going to play out. Does Tyler Greene emerge as a legit option as the regular shortstop? What about Brendan Ryan? Do we see him more at short, at third or will he be on the pine? Are Brian Barden (.083 in May) and Joe Thurston (.195 in May) going to lose at-bats or will they continue to play regularly?

How things develop at those two positions could determine a lot here in the near future because the other offensive issues will fix themselves, to a degree, once Rick Ankiel and Ryan Ludwick return to the lineup. If you’re not getting much out of 3B and SS, however, you’re looking at a lineup that won’t have a threat in the bottom third. In that scenario you would need Yadier Molina to swing the bat more like he did in April (.333/.402/.500) than what he’s doing in May (.222/.387/.329) — and that’s not a fair expectation. Yadi’s gotten better as a hitter but if you’re counting on consistent run production from him in the middle third of the order things are going to continue to be tough on offense.

A little something on offense from SS and 3B would certainly go a long way.

5 comments

Comments are closed.

Rasmus has done a great job in center. He makes plays Ankiel has to dive at (aka the wall crash that put him on the dl) look easy. Their batting averages are only one point different. So Ankiel coming back does not really help. But Ludwig on the other hand is a missing link. His stick has been missed. Robinson did a good job but he is no power hitter. His return will hopefully be the spark that has been missing in the line up. Not to mention what the possibilities will be when Pujols finds his groove again. Even though he has been in the line up his spark has been missing also.

— card fan
2:56 pm May 19th, 2009

I really think that people are expecting too much from Ankiel. Granted the sample size has been small, but so far he has been terrible at the plate this year. Compound that with the fact that he is coming back from injury and the fact that he has only had one full season of AB’s in the Majors, and it becomes clear that we should not expect Ankiel to be the same hitter he was last year. Sure, it is possible and it is something I hope for, but it is NOT a given. We treat Ankiel like he has a track record of being an elite slugger and quite frankly, he does not.

— philip
3:22 pm May 19th, 2009

First of all I love these meetings at the water cooler. We get to have all you guys sharing on one topic. All your points are well taken. I think Joe hit on something in regard to Ankiel. I was just saying today that Ankiel could carry this club if he were to get hot. I agree with Joe, after all, Carp can take us out to dinner on Wednesday night, but Ankiel could bring us supper every night once he is back. If Ankiel can get on an offensive binge, it could loosen everyone else up to the degree that baseball becomes fun again and they all begin to enjoy the fruits of the supper table.

— drelboc
4:44 pm May 19th, 2009

I agree with card fan and others. Expectations are too high for Ank given what he hasn’t accomplished. Rasmus does look more fluid in the field. In fact he seems to be making every play and yet I don’t remember seeing him dive or stumble once. Also, Rasmus is starting to display his power stroke. I think what would bolster this team more than anything is a trade for a right handed hitter with some power that could play 3rd or SS. Easier typed than done, I know.

— Mark
5:31 pm May 19th, 2009

I like Philip’s take on Ankiel. His offensive numbers so far havn’t been that great. On the other hand, I like his aggressive defense in center field (as long as he stays off the walls), and his arm strenth is much better than Rasmus. I know Rasmus has had a nice power surge the last few games, but he is still hitting below .100 against lefties. I think the real keys to getting the offense stoked back up is Ludwick’s return and Albert getting back to his normal ball crushing self.

— Richfromiowa
6:59 am May 20th, 2009