Kendrick Turner stops for a prayer at the Lou Brock statue outside Busch Stadium after the St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Famer died on Sunday, Sept. 6, 2020. Cardinals fans had already gathered at Ballpark Village to watch them play the Cubs. Photo by Robert Cohen, rcohen@post-dispatch.com
Cardinals Red Jacket Hall of Famer Lou Brock rides in a parade of greats on Friday, April 5, 2019, during opening day ceremonies before game against the San Diego Padres at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Mo. Photo by Christian Gooden, cgooden@post-dispatch.com
St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Fame player and manager Red Schoendienst (right) jokes with Hall of Fame outfielder Lou Brock during a pregame ceremony honoring the 1967 World Series Championship Cardinals team before a game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Boston Red Sox on Wednesday, May 17, 2017, at Busch Stadium in St. Louis. Photo by Chris Lee, clee@post-dispatch.com
Hall of Famer Lou Brock, who died at age 81 at a local hospital Sunday afternoon after being in ill health, will be remembered for many accomplishments. He was the National League’s all-time leader in stolen bases with 938. He had 3,023 hits. He was a first-ballot electee into the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. He was the “Base Burglar,” who came to the Cardinals in 1964 via a trade in which the Cardinals ripped off the Chicago Cubs.
But he also was known as one of the toughest baseball players that his former teammates had ever seen and that was before he encountered diabetes which caused him to have his left leg amputated. Before he suffered multiple myeloma (bone marrow cancer), before he suffered a stroke, before he suffered a heart ailment.
None of those medical foes were able to vanquish Brock. Death was the first and only opponent to defeat him. “Isn’t that the truth?” said former Cardinals catcher Tim McCarver.
“Toughest SOB I’ve ever seen,” said former Cardinals manager Red Schoendienst, who died two years ago at age 95.
“Never saw him in the training room,” said McCarver, a Cardinals Hall of Famer and a member of the National Baseball Hall of Fame broadcast wing. This included Brock playing with a broken shoulder after being hit by a pitch from Hall of Famer Sandy Koufax when the Los Angeles Dodgers lefthander had taken exception to Brock bunting on him.
“If Bob Gibson weren’t in the National League all those years, Lou would have been the toughest guy I ever saw, met on a baseball field. He and Bob were 1-2, as far as I was concerned,” McCarver said.
Brock’s former teammates, both from the 1960s and 1970s — he played 16 seasons here before retiring in 1979 — took news of his death hard. The 85-year-old Gibson, battling his own demon in pancreatic cancer, declined comment. McCarver had to stop a couple of times during a conversation to compose himself and former first baseman Keith Hernandez broke down.
“Quote it with a heavy heart,” said McCarver.
Hernandez said, “No one was more crucial to me on the big-league level than Lou.
“I don’t think I would have made it without Lou,” said Hernandez, the 1979 co-Most Valuable Player in the National League.
“For him to be a superstar and I, as a young kid, who was struggling, to take me under his wing and offer all his advice is a testament to who he was. He was an extraordinary man.
“He never babied me. If I was pouting, he’d get on me. It was tough love.”
Cardinals chairman Bill DeWitt Jr. said in a statement, “Lou Brock was one of the most revered members of the St. Louis Cardinals organization and one of the very best to ever wear the Birds on the Bat.
“He will be deeply missed and forever remembered.”
On June 15, 1964, the Cardinals acquired Brock, a raw, 24-year-outfielder from the Chicago Cubs in a trade that cost them popular righthander Ernie Broglio, who had been a 18-game winner for them the prior season although he was 3-5 in 1964 and perhaps injured.
Immediately, the trade was not well received by the Cardinals’ players. “We thought it was the worst trade ever,” said Gibson at the time.
After all, Southern University product Brock had batted only .263, .258 and .251 in his 2½ years with the Cubs, albeit hitting some prodigious home runs.
But Brock, not counted on for power but as a table setter for the Cardinals, would hit .348 the rest of the 1964 season and steal 33 bases as the Cardinals rallied to win the National League pennant on the last day of the regular season and went on to beat the New York Yankees in a seven-game World Series to bring St. Louis its first World Series title since 1946.
Brock hit .300 in that World Series and then, showing he was at his best when the lights were brightest, batted .414 with seven stolen bases in the 1967 World Series, which the Cardinals won in seven games from Boston. He also hit .464 with seven more steals and a record 13 hits in the 1968 World Series loss against Detroit.
Bill White, the first baseman on the 1964 team, took Brock under his wing, to a degree, by allowing him to live with White at the latter’s home in Des Peres after Brock had come here from Chicago. “We couldn’t have won in ’64 without him,” said White. “No way.
“He was a good teammate, one of the best anybody could have. One hundred percent all the time. Two hundred percent.”
McCarver, who was on all of those clubs, beginning with 1964, said, “We were so close to Broglio. Our friendship blinded us to what kind of effect Lou would have on the team — until we saw him run.”
Brock, who would establish himself as one of the greatest leadoff hitters ever, recalled his teammates asking him after he got hot in the second half of the 1964 season, “Are you sure you were a Cub?’
“I had gone to another dimension as a ball player,” he said. “When you go to another dimension, you may be the same guy, look the same, act the same, but you play a lot different.”
McCarver said he had encountered only three players who “infinitely changed” their teams by their play. “One was Koufax,” said McCarver. “Gibson … and Brock.”
From 1965, Brock began a stretch of 12 seasons where he averaged 65 steals and 99 runs scored a year, featuring his record-setting season in 1974 when he set the then major-league stolen-base record of 118 while finishing second in the voting for National League MVP.
In 1977, Brock passed Ty Cobb’s all-time stolen base mark of 892 and he led the league in steals every year but one from 1966-74. He once said the only sure way to stop him was to “don’t let me reach first base.”
Brock considered basestealing a philosophic, as much as a physical action.
“First base is useless,” he said in 1974. “And most of the time it is useless to stay there.
“On the other hand, second base is really the safest place on the field. When I steal second, I practically eliminate the double play. And I can score on any ball hit past the infield.”
To Brock, “the most important thing about base stealing is not the steal of the base, but distracting the pitcher’s concentration. If I can do that, then the hitter will have a better pitch to swing at and I will get a better chance to steal.”
Mike Shannon, the Cardinals’ radio voice who played with Brock on three World Series clubs, said that Brock’s mathematics training in college paid off in how he approached base stealing. “But he kept all those secrets to himself. He never divulged a lot of those things, that I was aware of,” Shannon said.
“He might have to guys who were capable of comprehending what he was talking about. The great thing about Lou Brock was that three or four days we came into town, the starting pitcher for the other team was already worried about him.”
And Brock never took a night off, said McCarver. “He ran every ball out, even balls right back at the pitcher. It was exemplary. It was phenomenal.
“I don’t think I’ve ever seen a player like that on any team, in my experience, treat a routine ball like Lou Brock did in running balls out. Lou would be on second before most guys would get to first today.”
For 16 seasons here, Brock galvanized fans here. When he would steal a base or leg out a triple, or really do almost anything positive, the Busch Stadium crowds would chant, “Lou! Lou! Lou!”
His enormous popularity even spread to other sports. In 1980, the year after Brock retired, young pro bowler Alvin Lou was trying for his first tour victory at Dick Weber Lanes in Florissant when those in attendance broke into shouts of “Lou! Lou! Lou!” At first, taken aback by the attention, Alvin Lou, once it was explained to him that people had been yelling that for years, went on to win the championship.
In 1978, Brock hit a .career 221 low for the Cardinals and often was benched in the second half of the season by manager Ken Boyer, his former teammate. Brock took that personally and also articles that had speculated that he was finished. Brock proudly announced the next spring that he was “orchestrating his own exodus.” This meant that 1979 would be his last season but that he would go out with a bang.
Brock was spot on. He hit .304 at age 40 and stole 21 bases. One of his 123 hits that year was No. 3,000 for his career, a single off the hand of Cubs righthander Dennis Lamp, at Busch Stadium II. He stole his final base with a week to go in the season.
“The violence he had running the bases was nonpareil,” McCarver said. “I’d never seen anybody like that. Ever. (Willie) Mays was close. Lou had a straight-in slide and, if your hand or glove was anywhere near there … too bad. You were lucky that no finger was missing.
“But for anybody as violent a base runner as he was, he was as gentlemanly a man and one of the nicest people ever.”
Brock’s No. 20 was retired by the Cardinals in 1979. He later became a businessman, a broadcaster, a special base running instructor, a minister and, finally a survivor.
“He’ll be missed by anyone who knew him,” said catcher Ted Simmons, a Hall of Fame electee in 2020 who played with Brock for more than a decade. “Everyone who knew him loved Lou.”
Simmons said the importance of Brock to a team was “that he had this presence. When Lou was around he had such a happy and vibrant face. You couldn’t miss him. And, on the field he had the capacity to ignite and actually carry a team offensively, which he did time and time again. He impacted everybody. He was a remarkable man and a remarkable player.
“I never knew him to be hurt the whole time I was around him when he played.”
Dick Zitzmann, Brock’s representative for more than 25 years, said, “Lou was the happiest Hall of Famer ever. He never took for granted what God had given him.”
Former Cardinals great Albert Pujols, now with the Anaheim Angels, tweeted, “Lou Brock was one of the finest men I have ever known.
“He was always willing to help and to share his unlimited knowledge of hitting and the game of baseball with me as a young player. Most importantly, he showed us all how to live our lives on and off the field with character and integrity.
“He was a dear friend to me. I loved him very much. My prayers are with Jackie and the Brock family tonight.
“Lou now enters into the glory of his Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. Well done, thy good and faithful servant.
“You will be missed, my brother. Until we meet again.”
Commissoner Rob Manfred said, in part, “Lou was an outstanding representative of our National Pastime and he will be deeply missed.”
The Hall of Fame also passed along its condolences, reprising something Brock had once said. “Baseball and have a mutual respect for each other,” said Brock. “I have given a lot. It has given me a lot.”
Brock, who lived in St. Charles, is survived by his wife, Jackie, daughter Wanda, sons Lou Jr. and Emory, and stepchildren Marvin Hay and Jacqueline Means, in addition to five grandchildren. Brock's youngest son, Daniel Brock, died at age 39 in 2018.
Services for Lou Brock are pending.
In 2015, Brock had his left leg amputated below the knee due to a diabetes-related infection. His life in some jeopardy at one point, Brock rebounded less than six months later to stand, unaided, as he threw out the ceremonial first pitch on Opening Day 2016.
Not surprisingly, a full house at Busch Stadium III — he had played in the other two — screamed, “Lou! Lou! Lou!”
Memories of Lou Brock

Kendrick Turner stops for a prayer at the Lou Brock statue outside Busch Stadium after the St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Famer died on Sunday, Sept. 6, 2020. Cardinals fans had already gathered at Ballpark Village to watch them play the Cubs. Photo by Robert Cohen, rcohen@post-dispatch.com
Lou Brock - 1974

Lou Brock steals his 105th base, beating Philly Larry Bowa's tag as umpire John McSherry makes it official. Photo by Sam Leone/St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Sept. 10, 1974

CARDINALS PADRES BROCK

St. Louis Cardinals left fielder Lou Brock is surrounded by his teammates as he holds second base plate after breaking Ty Cobb's all-time record of 892 stolen bases in San Diego, Ca., Monday night, August 29, 1977. Brock tied the record in the first inning and broke the record in the seventh by stealing second against the San Diego Padres. At left is team manager Vern Rapp. (AP Photo)
Sept. 10, 1974

Lou Brock, who set a major league record by stealing his 105th base September 10, 1974, thanks the crowd at Busch Stadium as James "Cool Papa" Bell raises his hands to silence the cheers by calling Brock "the greatest". The second base stolen by Brock to set the record was presented to him during a halt in the game with Philadelphia. (AP Photo)
Sept. 10, 1974

Sept. 10, 1974

St. Louis Cardinals' Lou Brock slides under the tag of Philadelphia Phillies' Larry Bowa to set a new stolen base record of 105 stolen bases in a season in the seventh inning of game, Sept. 10, 1974. Phillies' Dave Cash backs up Bowa on the throw from catcher Bob Boone. (UPI photo)
BROCK FANS-1974

St. Louis Cardinals base stealing Lou Brock has his own fan club in the Cards left field bleachers, August 11, 1974. T-shirts with LOU! LOU! LOU! written on them are now being seen around the stadium as Brock closes in on the stolen base record. Brock now has 77 stolen bases for the year and 712 career. These young members of the Brock fan club are from the St. Louis area. (AP Photo/stf)
Lou Brock - 1967

FILE 10/8/1967- BUSCH STADIUM -- Frederick Musial DeGeorge, 8, Newburgh, NY, feels the bat of Lou Brock before Game 4 of the 1967 World Series. Frederick's parents drove more than 1,000 miles to see series games. UPI Telephoto
Lou Brock Arriving At Home Plate

Lou Brock scores the first run of the 1964 World Series.
Lou Brock - 1967

Outfielder Lou Brock's headlong slide beats Red Sox catcher Elston Howard's desperate tag for the run that gave the Cardinals a 2-1 lead in the third inning of the sixth game of the World Series in Boston. Brock scored from second on a single by Curt Flood. (UPI Telephoto)
Lou Brock - 1967

Lou Brock of the Cardinals celebrates after the Cardinals defeated the Boston Red Sox in Game 1 of the 1967 World Series at Fenway Park. Brock had a record-tying four hits, stole two bases and scored both runs in the Cards' 2-1 victory. (AP Photo)
1967 World Series between Cardinals and Red Sox

Lou Brock of the St. Louis Cardinals slides head first into third base as Boston Red Sox third baseman Joe Foy waits for the ball in the fifth inning, Oct. 12, 1967 in Boston. This was Brock’s sixth stolen base in the 1967 World Series. (AP Photo)
1967 World Series between Cardinals and Red Sox

Lou Brock of the St. Louis Cardinals slides safely into second base with his seventh stolen base as Boston Red Sox second baseman Mike Andrews awaits throw from catcher Elston Howard in the ninth inning of final game of 1967 World Series at Fenway Park, Oct. 12, 1967 in Boston. Brock set a series record of seven stolen bases and tied two more marks with three in one game and two in an inning. The Cardinals won final game 7 to 2. (AP Photo)
1967 World Series between Cardinals and Red Sox

Lou Brock (left), Julian Javier (center) and Bob Gibson celebrate defeating the Boston Red Sox 7-2 to win the World Series, in Boston on Oct. 12, 1967. (AP Photo)
Lou Brock - 1968

Oct. 3, 1968---Cardinal speedster Lou Brock digs for second base in the sixth inning of Game 2 of the World Series against the Detroit Tigers. Tiger pitcher Mickey Lolich hurried his delivery because of Brock's quick start and thrheww a wild pitch. Brock had two stolen bases in the Cardinals 8-1 Game 2 loss. The Series went seven games, with the Cardinals losing 4-3. Scott Dine | Post-Dispatch
Lou Brock - 1968

** FILE ** St. Louis Cardinals general manager Bing Devine, right, and lead off hitter Lou Brock hold a baseball bat after Brock signed his 1968 contract with a substantial raise on this Jan. 5, 1968 file photo in St. Louis. Devine, the St. Louis Cardinals general manager who helped build teams that won three NL pennants and two World Series in the 1960s, died Saturday, Jan. 27, 2007. He was 90. Devine, who had been ill since Christmas, died at Barnes-Jewish Hospital in St. Louis, said his widow, Mary Devine. (AP Photo)
Lou Brock - 1972

FILE PHOTO 1972 -- Early on, Lou Brock, OF, St. Louis Cardinals, predicted that Rickey Henderson would one day break Brock's career stolen base record.
Lou Brock - 1974

FILE PHOTO 1974 -- Lou Brock, former St. Louis Cardinal.
Lou Brock - 1976

May 15, 1976 -- (BROCKABRELLA, BROCK-A-BRELLA) "St. Louis Cardinals fleet-footed outfielder Lou Brock knew what to do Friday night when the game between the Cards and the San Francisco Giants has halted by rain for about 40 minutes. Brock, an old-timer, put on his umbrella, miniature-type, picked up a camera to photograph his teammates and totally enjoyed the delay. After the delay the Cardinals went on to win 3-1. AP Wirephoto/FILE
Lou Brock - 1979

FILE PHOT FIRST PUBLISHED SEP. 30, 1979-- Lou Brock in his last days as an active player, relaxes as he talks with friends in the Cardinal Clubhouse. J.B. Forbes | Post-Dispatch
Lou Brock - 1979

June 8,1979--The Cardinals greet Lou Brock with affection during his final season with the Redbirds. Wayne Crosslin | Post-Dispatch
August Busch Jr., Lou Brock

St. Louis Cardinals president August A. Busch Jr., left, embraces outfielder Lou Brock during a news conference in St. Louis, Missouri on April 9, 1979 at which it was announced that Brock would retire at the end of the current season. Brock, 39, holds the major league records for most stolen bases in a single season and in a career. Busch said it was hoped Brock would continue an association with the Cardinals. (AP Photo/Fred Waters)
Lou Brock - 1985

POST-DISPATCH FILE PHOTO JUNE 24, 1985 -- Lou Brock reacts after seeing roastmaster Dan Dierdorf in one of his Broccabrellas at a roast for the former Cardinals star Monday at the Marriott Pavillion Hotel. The roast was held by the Advertising Club of Greater St. Louis. POST-DISPATCH PHOTO BY ODELL MITCHELL, JR.
Lou Brock - 1999

Sunday 29 August, 1999 -- Lou Brock (left) and his wife (center) laugh during the bronze statue presentation prior to Sunday's game against Atlanta. The presentation was halted by rain. POST-DISPATCH PHOTO BY CHRIS LEE
Lou Brock - 1999

St. Louis Cardinals Hall-of-Famer Lou Brock admires a statue of his likeness unveiled by the Cardinals Sunday, Aug. 29, 1999, at Busch Stadium in St. Louis. The statue honoring the "base burglar" joins several others surrounding Busch Stadium. (AP Photo/Tom Gannam)
Lou Brock 2001

Thursday November 22, 2001--St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Famer Lou Brock greets the crowd as he rolls down Market Street in convertible during the Thanksgiving Day Parade on Thursday. Brock served as the honorary grand marshall for the parade. Photo By David Carson/PD
Lou Brock - 2004

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2004 - Former Cardinal greats Red Schoendienst (left) and Lou Brock meet during opening ceremonies before game four of the World Series Wednesday between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Boston Red Sox at Busch Stadium in St. Louis. PHOTO BY J. B. FORBES/ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH Photos from game four of the World Series Wednesday between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Boston Red Sox at Busch Stadium in St. Louis.
Lou Brock - 2005

3 November, 2005 -- Former Cardinals manager Whitey Herzog whispers to Hall of Famer Lou Brock at the entrance before a funeral for former Post-Dispatch sports editor Bob Broeg at St. Joseph's Church in Clayton, Mo. POST-DISPATCH PHOTO BY CHRIS LEE
Lou Brock - 2010

The Cardinals' Lou Brock throws out a ceremonial first pitch while wearing a "Brockabrella" on July 2, 2010 at Busch Stadium. "Brockabrella" replicas were given to fans in a promotion that day. Brock popularized the umbrella hats in the 1970s. (Post-Dispatch file photo by Chris Lee)
Cardinals v. Yankees

(From left) Red Schoendienst, Lou Brock and other members of the 1964 World Series Champions team are introduced before the game against the Yankees on Monday, May 26, 2014 at Busch Stadium in St. Louis. Photo by Huy Mach, hmach@post-dispatch.com
Birthday message in fence

Jackie and Wanda Brock sent this picture of a house along Interstate 70 that had a birthday message for Lou Brock. He saw the message this afternoon.
St. Louis Cardinals home opener

Hall of Famer Lou Brock wears a smile during pre-game festivities before the St. Louis Cardinals home opener against the Cincinnati Reds on Monday, April 7, 2014, at Busch Stadium. Photo by Laurie Skrivan, lskrivan@post-dispatch.com
Lou Brock birthday celebrated by friends, neighbors, family, fans

Baseball Hall of Fame Cardinal Lou Brock, with wife, Jacqueline, enjoy a visit by well wishers on Thursday, June 18, 2020, who gathered to sing Happy Birthday to him in the front yard of his St. Charles home. Brock turned 81. Photo by Christian Gooden, cgooden@post-dispatch.com
Lou Brock birthday celebrated by friends, neighbors, family, fans

Friends and neighbors of baseball Hall of Fame Cardinal Lou Brock gather at his St. Charles home Thursday June, 18, 2020, for a front-yard serenade for his 81st birthday. Photo by Christian Gooden, cgooden@post-dispatch.com
Lou Brock birthday celebrated by friends, neighbors, family, fans

Baseball Hall of Fame Cardinal Lou Brock arrives to hear a birthday serenade on Thursday, June 18, 2020, from family neighbors, friends gathered to sing Happy Birthday to him in the front yard of his St. Charles home. Brock turned 81. Photo by Christian Gooden, cgooden@post-dispatch.com
Lou Brock birthday celebrated by friends, neighbors, family, fans

Baseball Hall of Fame Cardinal Lou Brock, with wife, Jacqueline, enjoy a visit by well wishers on Thursday, June 18, 2020, who gathered to sing Happy Birthday to him in the front yard of his St. Charles home. Brock turned 81. Photo by Christian Gooden, cgooden@post-dispatch.com
Lou Brock birthday celebrated by friends, neighbors, family, fans

Friends and neighbors of baseball Hall of Fame Cardinal Lou Brock gather at his St. Charles home Thursday June, 18, 2020, for a front-yard serenade for his 81st birthday. Photo by Christian Gooden, cgooden@post-dispatch.com
CD CL BASEBALL STAMPS

Thursday 4 May, 2000 -- Former Cardinals players Lou Brock and Ozzie Smith walk out of the dugout to present two of a new series of stamps honoring the All-Century Baseball team by the USPS in a ceremony before a game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Pittsburgh Pirates at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Missouri on Thursday afternoon. POST-DISPATCH PHOTO BY CHRIS LEE ( Former Cardinals stars Lou Brock (left) and Ozzie Smith present two stamps honoring the All-Century baseball team Thursday at Busch Stadium. The U.S. Postal Service's series of 20 stamps will be available July 6. )
AL GIBSON

FILE--St. Louis Cardinals instructors Bob Gibson, left, and Lou Brock stand in the team dugout in Jupiter, Fla. in this March 12, 1998 file photo, during the national anthem prior to a game against the Baltimore Orioles. Gibson will advise AL president Gene Budig on disciplinary decisions next season, the league said in a statement on Wednesday, Nov. 18, 1998. Gibson was appointed as a special adviser to the league earlier this year. (AP Photo/Roberto Borea)
WHITE HOUSE T BALL

President Bush, right, members of the first family and Baseball Hall of Famers watch a game of T-ball on the South Lawn of the White House Sunday, June 3, 2001. Watching the game are, from rear left, Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, former President George H. W. Bush, first lady Laura Bush, President Bush. Front row from left is Lou Brock of the St. Louis Cardinals, Commerce Department staff Kathy Martin, and Bob Feller of the Cleveland Indians. This is the second T-ball game at the White House since Bush becamePresident. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)
Snow day in St. Louis

February 1, 2011 -- Lou Brock's Hall of Fame statue outside Busch Stadium looks more frozen in time than usual as an ice storm precedes a snow storm Tuesday afternoon in St. Louis, Mo. Chris Lee clee@post-dispatch.com
St. Louis Cardinals v Milwaukee Brewers

St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Famers Lou Brock (left) and Bob Gibson talk during Opening Day festivities before a game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Milwaukee Brewers on Monday, April 11, 2016, at Busch Stadium in St. Louis. Photo by Chris Lee, clee@post-dispatch.com
Lou and Jackie Brock for Old Newsboys Day

Cardinals Hall of Famer Lou Brock and his wife, Jackie, started early selling editions of Old Newsboys, a charity drive to benefit children charities, on Thursday, Nov. 21, 2013 at the intersection of Brentwood Boulevard and Clayton Road in Clayton. Photo by Huy Mach, hmach@post-dispatch.com
MLB CUBS CARDINALS

Members of the Busch Stadium grounds crew arrange the dirt behind second base with a number 20 to honor former St. Louis Cardinals and member of the National Baseball Hall of Fame member Lou Brock on "Lou Brock Night" before a game against the Chicago Cubs at Busch Stadium in St. Louis on April 19, 2016. Photo by Bill Greenblatt/UPI
Scan016.JPG-21127356

St. Louis Cardinals' Lou Brock, the new base-stealing champ, is amused by sign placed on back of car by friends before being driven to Shea Stadium for a game against the New York Mets on Sept. 11, 1974.
St. Louis Cardinals home opener

Hall of Famer Lou Brock wears a smile during pre-game festivities before the St. Louis Cardinals home opener against the Cincinnati Reds on Monday, April 7, 2014, at Busch Stadium. Photo by Laurie Skrivan, lskrivan@post-dispatch.com
CD DC FORMER CARDINALS OZZIE

Saturday July 27, 2002--Former St. Louis Cardinals players, front left to right, Red Schoendienst, Ozzie Smith, Bob Gibson, and in the back row, Vince Coleman, Lou Brock, and Willie McGee pose for picture before the start of the a golf tournament at The Leatherstocking Golf Course in Cooperstown on Saturday. Schoendienst, Smith, Gibson, and Brock represent 4 of 5 living Cardinals hall of fame members, Stan Musial, not pictured, is the other. Photo By David Carson-PD
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

Cardinal speedster Lou Brock digs for second base in the sixth inning of Game 2 of the 1968 World Series, against Detroit. Tigers pitcher Mickey Lolich hurried his delivery because of Brock's quick start and threw a wild pitch. Brock had two stolen bases in an 8-1 loss. The Cardinals lost the Series in seven games.
St. Louis Cardinals v Milwaukee Brewers

St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Famer Lou Brock and his wife, Jackie, arrive on a golf cart for Opening Day festivities before a game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Milwaukee Brewers on Monday, April 11, 2016, at Busch Stadium in St. Louis. Photo by Chris Lee, clee@post-dispatch.com
St. Louis Cardinals Opening Day 2018

Former St. Louis Cardinals players Baseball Hall of Famer Ozzie Smith, Baseball Hall of Famer Bob Gibson, Baseball Hall of Famer Lou Brock, and Cardinals Hall of Famer Willie McGee ride in into Busch Stadium on opening day of the 2018 season in St. Louis on Thursday, April 5, 2018. Photo by David Carson, dcarson@post-dispatch.com
Happy Birthday, Red 30

Cardinal Hall of Famers Red Schoendienst and Lou Brock throw out the first pitch of Game 2 of the World Series between the Texas Rangers and the St. Louis Cardinals Thursday, Oct. 20, 2011, at Busch Stadium in St. Louis. Photo by Robert Cohen, Rcohen@post-dispatch.com
St. Louis Cardinals v Milwaukee Brewers

St. Louis Cardinals hall of famer Lou Brock throws out a ceremonial first pitch before a game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Milwaukee Brewers on Monday, April 11, 2016, at Busch Stadium in St. Louis. Photo by Chris Lee, clee@post-dispatch.com
mn2hastie1118

The statue of St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Fame player Lou Brock is bathed in evening light Wednesday August 1, 2012, in front of Busch Stadium. Of the ten statues outside of the stadium, four are of black players. Photo by J.B. Forbes jforbes@post-dispatch.com
Cardinals Hall of Fame induction

Former Cardinals left fielder Lou Brock (left) and former manager Whitey Herzog (center) congratulate former catcher Ted Simmons during the Cardinals Hall of Fame induction ceremony on Saturday, Aug. 15, 2015 at Ballpark Village in St. Louis. Photo by Huy Mach, hmach@post-dispatch.com
(Photos only) REVISITING HISTORY

FILE 10/8/1967- BUSCH STADIUM -- Frederick Musial DeGeorge, 8, Newburgh, NY, feels the bat of Lou Brock before Game 4 of the 1967 World Series. Frederick's parents drove more than 1,000 miles to see series games. UPI Telephoto
CARDINALS BROCK

Lou Brock, outfielder for the St. Louis Cardinals, is shown on March 6, 1968. (AP Photo)
St. Louis Cardinals Opening Day 2019

Baseball Hall of Famer Lou Brock (left) walks up to greet other Cardinals greats being honored at home plate during pre-game Opening Day ceremonies at Busch Stadium in St. Louis on Friday, April 5, 2019. Photo by David Carson, dcarson@post-dispatch.com
World Series Game 6

Stan Musial, Lou Brock, and Red Schoendienst on the field after being introduced before the start of Game 6 of the World Series between the Texas Rangers and St. Louis Cardinals at Busch Stadium on Thursday October 27, 2011 in St. Louis. Photo by Laurie Skrivan, lskrivan@post-dispatch.com
Cardinals induct new Hall of Famers

AP Member Exchange -- Cardinals Hall of Famer Lou Brock (center) is applauded by Mike Shannon (left) and Whitey Herzog as he arrives for the 2018 induction ceremony for new members Vince Coleman, Ray Lankford and Harry Brecheen at Ballpark Village on Saturday, Aug. 18, 2018. Photo by Robert Cohen, rcohen@post-dispatch.com
World Series Game 6

Lou Brock, left, and Stan Musial ride off the field after being introduced to the crowd before the start of Game 6 of the World Series between the Texas Rangers and St. Louis Cardinals at Busch Stadium on Thursday October 27, 2011 in St. Louis. Photo by Chris Lee, clee@post-dispatch.com
Lou Brock Baseball Hall of Fame

Lou Brock jokes with the guys in his group as he plays round of golf at Leatherstocking Golf Course in Cooperstown, N.Y. on Saturday, July 26, 2014. Photo By David Carson, dcarson@post-dispatch.com
The clouds part for Opening Day in St. Louis

Cards Hall of Famer Lou Brock throws out the first ceremonial pitch to former catcher Ted Simmons during the pre-game ceremonies on opening day at Busch Stadium on Monday, April 11, 2016, in St. Louis. Photo by J.B. Forbes, jforbes@psot-dispatch.com
St. Louis Cardinals v Milwaukee Brewers

St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Famer Lou Brock and his wife, Jackie, ride in the back of a golf cart as they leave the field following Opening Day festivities before a game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Milwaukee Brewers on Monday, April 11, 2016, at Busch Stadium in St. Louis. Photo by Chris Lee, clee@post-dispatch.com
The clouds part for Opening Day in St. Louis

Cards Adam Wainwright greets Hall of Famer Lou Brock during the pre-game ceremonies on opening day at Busch Stadium on Monday, April 11, 2016, in St. Louis. Photo by J.B. Forbes, jforbes@psot-dispatch.com
BROCK

Former St. Louis Cardinals and Baseball Hall of Fame member Lou Brock along with wife Jackie accept the Lifetime Achievement Award from the St. Louis Post Dispatch Old Newsboys Campaign for Children's Charities in Wright City, Missouri on February 21, 2019. Photo by Bill Greenblatt/UPI
World Series Game 6

St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Famers Red Schoendienst, Bob Gibson, Lou Brock, and Ozzy Smith wait for Stan Musial to come out on to the field for pregame ceremonies before the start of Game 6 of the World Series between the Texas Rangers and St. Louis Cardinals at Busch Stadium on Thursday October 27, 2011 in St. Louis. Photo by Chris Lee, clee@post-dispatch.com
St. Louis Cardinals Opening Day 2018

Former Cardinals player and Baseball Hall of Famer Lou Brock rides into Busch Stadium during St. Louis Cardinals 2018 Opening Day ceremonies in St. Louis on Thursday, April 5, 2018. Photo by David Carson, dcarson@post-dispatch.com
St. Louis Cardinals v Milwaukee Brewers

St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Famer Lou Brock walks between World Series trophies during Opening Day festivities before a game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Milwaukee Brewers on Monday, April 11, 2016, at Busch Stadium in St. Louis. Photo by Chris Lee, clee@post-dispatch.com
Cardinals Brock Baseball

File-This April 11, 2017, file photo shows former St. Louis Cardinals great Lou Brock being introduced before the start a baseball game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Milwaukee Brewers. Brock was recently diagnosed with bone cancer and will miss a scheduled upcoming appearance at Bush Stadium. Brock, 77, was supposed to appear at the stadium on April 25th, but that has been cancelled while he is undergoing treatment for Multiple Myeloma. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson, File)
Memories of Lou Brock

Ralph Krummenacher pauses at the statue of Lou Brock outside Busch Stadium after the St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Famer died on Sunday, Sept. 6, 2020. "I was 8-years-old in 1964 and in Sportsman's Park when they came back and beat the Mets," said Krummenacher. "None of that happens if they didn't get Lou in that trade. It was pure joy." Photo by Robert Cohen, rcohen@post-dispatch.com
Memories of Lou Brock

Kendrick Turner stops for a prayer at the Lou Brock statue outside Busch Stadium after the St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Famer died on Sunday, Sept. 6, 2020. Cardinals fans had already gathered at Ballpark Village to watch them play the Cubs. Photo by Robert Cohen, rcohen@post-dispatch.com
Memories of Lou Brock

Ray Bhrens and her sister Carla Holloway (not pictured) came to dress up the Lou Brock statue and leave a tiny helmet outside Busch Stadium after the St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Famer died on Sunday, Sept. 6, 2020. "Oh my God, he's a legend," said Holloway. Photo by Robert Cohen, rcohen@post-dispatch.com
2014 class of the Baseball Hall of Fame Lou Brock

Lou Brock waves the crowd as his is introduced before the start of the Baseball Hall of Fame induction speeches in Cooperstown, N.Y. on Sunday, July 27, 2014. Photo By David Carson, dcarson@post-dispatch.com