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1968 St. Louis Cardinals season

The 1968 St. Louis Cardinals season was the team's 87th season in St. Louis, Missouri and its 77th season in the National League. The Cardinals went 97–65 during the season, winning their second consecutive NL pennant, this time by nine games over the San Francisco Giants. They lost in 7 games to the Detroit Tigers in the World Series. The Cardinals would not return to the postseason until 1982.

1968 St. Louis Cardinals
National League Champions
LeagueNational League
BallparkBusch Memorial Stadium
CitySt. Louis, Missouri
Record97–65 (.599)
League place1st
OwnersAugust "Gussie" Busch
General managersBing Devine
ManagersRed Schoendienst
TelevisionKSD-TV
RadioKMOX
(Harry Caray, Jack Buck)
← 1967 Seasons 1969 →

Following the season, Major League Baseball announced plans to split both the National and American Leagues into East and West divisions starting with the 1969 season in order to accommodate the inclusion of two new franchises to each league. The Cardinals were assigned to the new National League East division. Originally, the Cardinals were placed in the National League West division. However, the New York Mets, wanting to compensate for the loss of home games against the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Francisco Giants, desired three extra games against the Cardinals, the two-time defending NL champions. The Cardinals were thus moved to the National League East division along with the Chicago Cubs, who wished to maintain their long-standing rivalry with the Cardinals. The Atlanta Braves and Cincinnati Reds were correspondingly shifted to the National League West despite both being east of St. Louis and Chicago, a configuration maintained until 1993.

Offseason edit

Regular season edit

Pitcher Bob Gibson won both the MVP Award and the Cy Young Award this year, with a 1.12 ERA, 22 wins, and 268 strikeouts. From June 2 to July 30, Gibson allowed only two earned runs in 92 innings pitched.[3] For the season, opposing batters only had a batting average of .184, and an on-base percentage of .233 against Gibson. Gibson also won a Gold Glove this year, as did shortstop Dal Maxvill and outfielder Curt Flood.

Season standings edit

National League W L Pct. GB Home Road
St. Louis Cardinals 97 65 0.599 47–34 50–31
San Francisco Giants 88 74 0.543 9 42–39 46–35
Chicago Cubs 84 78 0.519 13 47–34 37–44
Cincinnati Reds 83 79 0.512 14 40–41 43–38
Atlanta Braves 81 81 0.500 16 41–40 40–41
Pittsburgh Pirates 80 82 0.494 17 40–41 40–41
Los Angeles Dodgers 76 86 0.469 21 41–40 35–46
Philadelphia Phillies 76 86 0.469 21 38–43 38–43
New York Mets 73 89 0.451 24 32–49 41–40
Houston Astros 72 90 0.444 25 42–39 30–51

Record vs. opponents edit


Sources: [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10]
Team ATL CHC CIN HOU LAD NYM PHI PIT SF STL
Atlanta 8–10 10–8 11–7 9–9 12–6–1 11–7 6–12 9–9 5–13
Chicago 10–8 7–11 10–8 12–6 8–10 9–9 10–8 9–9–1 9–9
Cincinnati 8–10 11–7 9–9 9–9 10–8 11–7 10–8–1 8–10 7–11
Houston 7–11 8–10 9–9 11–7 10–8 9–9 5–13 8–10 5–13
Los Angeles 9–9 6–12 9–9 7–11 7–11 10–8 10–8 9–9 9–9
New York 6–12–1 10–8 8–10 8–10 11–7 8–10 9–9 7–11 6–12
Philadelphia 7–11 9–9 7–11 9–9 8–10 10–8 9–9 9–9 8–10
Pittsburgh 12–6 8–10 8–10–1 13–5 8–10 9–9 9–9 7–11 6–12
San Francisco 9–9 9–9–1 10–8 10–8 9–9 11–7 9–9 11–7 10–8
St. Louis 13–5 9–9 11–7 13–5 9–9 12–6 10–8 12–6 8–10


Opening Day lineup edit

Notable transactions edit

Roster edit

Player stats edit

Batting edit

Starters by position edit

Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

Pos Player G AB H Avg. HR RBI
C Tim McCarver 128 434 110 .253 5 48
1B Orlando Cepeda 157 600 149 .248 16 73
2B Julián Javier 139 519 135 .260 4 52
SS Dal Maxvill 119 459 116 .253 1 24
3B Mike Shannon 156 576 153 .266 15 79
LF Lou Brock 159 660 184 .279 6 51
CF Curt Flood 150 618 186 .301 5 60
RF Roger Maris 100 310 79 .255 5 45

Other batters edit

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in

Player G AB H Avg. HR RBI
Bobby Tolan 92 278 64 .230 5 17
Johnny Edwards 84 230 55 .239 3 29
Dick Schofield 69 127 28 .220 1 8
Phil Gagliano 53 105 24 .229 0 13
Ron Davis 33 79 14 .177 0 5
Dick Simpson 26 56 13 .232 3 8
Ed Spiezio 29 51 8 .157 0 2
Dave Ricketts 20 22 3 .136 0 1
Joe Hague 7 17 4 .235 1 1
Floyd Wicker 5 4 2 .500 0 0
Ted Simmons 2 3 1 .333 0 0

Pitching edit

Starting pitchers edit

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

Player G IP W L ERA SO
Bob Gibson 34 304.2 22 9 1.12 268
Nelson Briles 33 243.1 19 11 2.81 141
Steve Carlton 34 231.1 13 11 2.99 162
Ray Washburn 31 215.1 14 8 2.26 124
Larry Jaster 31 153.2 9 13 3.51 70

Other pitchers edit

Note: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

Player G IP W L ERA SO
Dick Hughes 25 63.2 2 2 3.53 49
Mel Nelson 18 52.2 2 1 2.91 16
Mike Torrez 5 19.0 2 1 2.84 6
Pete Mikkelsen 5 16.0 0 0 1.13 8

Relief pitchers edit

Note: G = Games pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts

Player G W L SV ERA SO
Joe Hoerner 47 8 2 17 1.47 42
Ron Willis 48 2 3 4 3.39 39
Wayne Granger 34 4 2 4 2.25 27
Hal Gilson 13 0 2 2 4.57 19

1968 World Series edit

Although essentially the same team as the previous year, they faced a tougher American League opponent in the Detroit Tigers, who had also won their pennant easily, behind the 31-win season of Denny McLain. Even though both Gibson and McLain were league MVPs that season, another Tigers starter, Mickey Lolich, stole the show, becoming the last pitcher to date to win three complete games in a single Series. Gibson excelled again in this World Series, winning Games 1 and 4. He had 17 strikeouts in Game 1 and totaled 35 strikeouts in the Series, both still World Series records. The Cardinals advanced to a 3–1 series lead, but the Tigers completed an improbable comeback by winning the final three games of the series to claim the championship, 4 games to 3. It was St. Louis' last Series appearance until 1982, and their last Series before MLB adopted its divisional format.

AL Detroit Tigers (4) vs. NL St. Louis Cardinals (3)

Game Score Date Location Attendance Time of Game
1 Cardinals – 4, Tigers – 0 October 2 Busch Memorial Stadium 54,692 2:29
2 Tigers – 8, Cardinals – 1 October 3 Busch Memorial Stadium 54,692 2:41
3 Cardinals – 7, Tigers – 3 October 5 Tiger Stadium 53,634 3:17
4 Cardinals – 10, Tigers – 1 October 6 Tiger Stadium 53,634 2:34
5 Tigers – 5, Cardinals – 3 October 7 Tiger Stadium 53,634 2:43
6 Tigers – 13, Cardinals – 1 October 9 Busch Memorial Stadium 54,692 2:26
7 Tigers – 4, Cardinals – 1 October 10 Busch Memorial Stadium 54,692 2:07

Awards and honors edit

Major League Baseball records edit

  • Bob Gibson, major league record, lowest ERA in one season for a pitcher with more than 300 innings pitched (1.12) [3]

League leaders edit

Farm system edit

LEAGUE CHAMPIONS: Tulsa[7]

References edit

  1. ^ Luis Meléndez page at Baseball Reference
  2. ^ Jimy Williams page at Baseball Reference
  3. ^ a b Baseball's Top 100: The Game's Greatest Records, p. 25, Kerry Banks, 2010, Greystone Books, Vancouver, BC, ISBN 978-1-55365-507-7
  4. ^ Bob Forsch page at Baseball Reference
  5. ^ Ramón Hernández page at Baseball Reference
  6. ^ Stolen Bases Single Season National League Leaders by Baseball Almanac
  7. ^ Johnson, Lloyd, and Wolff, Miles, ed., The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball, 2nd and 3rd editions. Durham, North Carolina: Baseball America, 1997 and 2007

External links edit

  • 1968 St. Louis Cardinals at Baseball Reference
  • 1968 St. Louis Cardinals team page at www.baseball-almanac.com

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This article is about the Major League Baseball team For the National Football League team see 1968 St Louis Cardinals NFL season The 1968 St Louis Cardinals season was the team s 87th season in St Louis Missouri and its 77th season in the National League The Cardinals went 97 65 during the season winning their second consecutive NL pennant this time by nine games over the San Francisco Giants They lost in 7 games to the Detroit Tigers in the World Series The Cardinals would not return to the postseason until 1982 1968 St Louis CardinalsNational League ChampionsLeagueNational LeagueBallparkBusch Memorial StadiumCitySt Louis MissouriRecord97 65 599 League place1stOwnersAugust Gussie BuschGeneral managersBing DevineManagersRed SchoendienstTelevisionKSD TVRadioKMOX Harry Caray Jack Buck 1967 Seasons 1969 Following the season Major League Baseball announced plans to split both the National and American Leagues into East and West divisions starting with the 1969 season in order to accommodate the inclusion of two new franchises to each league The Cardinals were assigned to the new National League East division Originally the Cardinals were placed in the National League West division However the New York Mets wanting to compensate for the loss of home games against the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Francisco Giants desired three extra games against the Cardinals the two time defending NL champions The Cardinals were thus moved to the National League East division along with the Chicago Cubs who wished to maintain their long standing rivalry with the Cardinals The Atlanta Braves and Cincinnati Reds were correspondingly shifted to the National League West despite both being east of St Louis and Chicago a configuration maintained until 1993 Contents 1 Offseason 2 Regular season 2 1 Season standings 2 2 Record vs opponents 2 3 Opening Day lineup 2 4 Notable transactions 2 5 Roster 3 Player stats 3 1 Batting 3 1 1 Starters by position 3 1 2 Other batters 3 2 Pitching 3 2 1 Starting pitchers 3 2 2 Other pitchers 3 2 3 Relief pitchers 4 1968 World Series 5 Awards and honors 5 1 Major League Baseball records 5 2 League leaders 6 Farm system 7 References 8 External linksOffseason editPrior to 1968 season Luis Melendez was signed as an amateur free agent by the Cardinals 1 February 8 1968 Jimy Williams and Pat Corrales were traded by the Cardinals to the Cincinnati Reds for Johnny Edwards 2 Regular season editPitcher Bob Gibson won both the MVP Award and the Cy Young Award this year with a 1 12 ERA 22 wins and 268 strikeouts From June 2 to July 30 Gibson allowed only two earned runs in 92 innings pitched 3 For the season opposing batters only had a batting average of 184 and an on base percentage of 233 against Gibson Gibson also won a Gold Glove this year as did shortstop Dal Maxvill and outfielder Curt Flood Season standings edit vteNational League W L Pct GB Home Road St Louis Cardinals 97 65 0 599 47 34 50 31 San Francisco Giants 88 74 0 543 9 42 39 46 35 Chicago Cubs 84 78 0 519 13 47 34 37 44 Cincinnati Reds 83 79 0 512 14 40 41 43 38 Atlanta Braves 81 81 0 500 16 41 40 40 41 Pittsburgh Pirates 80 82 0 494 17 40 41 40 41 Los Angeles Dodgers 76 86 0 469 21 41 40 35 46 Philadelphia Phillies 76 86 0 469 21 38 43 38 43 New York Mets 73 89 0 451 24 32 49 41 40 Houston Astros 72 90 0 444 25 42 39 30 51 Record vs opponents edit 1968 National League recordvteSources 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Team ATL CHC CIN HOU LAD NYM PHI PIT SF STL Atlanta 8 10 10 8 11 7 9 9 12 6 1 11 7 6 12 9 9 5 13 Chicago 10 8 7 11 10 8 12 6 8 10 9 9 10 8 9 9 1 9 9 Cincinnati 8 10 11 7 9 9 9 9 10 8 11 7 10 8 1 8 10 7 11 Houston 7 11 8 10 9 9 11 7 10 8 9 9 5 13 8 10 5 13 Los Angeles 9 9 6 12 9 9 7 11 7 11 10 8 10 8 9 9 9 9 New York 6 12 1 10 8 8 10 8 10 11 7 8 10 9 9 7 11 6 12 Philadelphia 7 11 9 9 7 11 9 9 8 10 10 8 9 9 9 9 8 10 Pittsburgh 12 6 8 10 8 10 1 13 5 8 10 9 9 9 9 7 11 6 12 San Francisco 9 9 9 9 1 10 8 10 8 9 9 11 7 9 9 11 7 10 8 St Louis 13 5 9 9 11 7 13 5 9 9 12 6 10 8 12 6 8 10 Opening Day lineup edit Notable transactions edit June 7 1968 Bob Forsch was drafted by the Cardinals in the 26th round of the 1968 Major League Baseball Draft 4 June 14 1968 Ramon Hernandez was purchased by the Cardinals from the Chicago Cubs 5 Roster edit 1968 St Louis Cardinals Roster Pitchers 34 Nelson Briles 32 Steve Carlton 45 Bob Gibson 47 Hal Gilson 29 Wayne Granger 43 Joe Hoerner 31 Dick Hughes 39 Larry Jaster 46 Pete Mikkelsen 47 Mel Nelson 47 Mike Torrez 44 Ray Washburn 36 Ron Willis Catchers 7 Johnny Edwards 15 Tim McCarver 10 Dave Ricketts 23 Ted Simmons Infielders 30 Orlando Cepeda 16 Phil Gagliano 25 Julian Javier 27 Dal Maxvill 11 Dick Schofield 18 Mike Shannon Outfielders 20 Lou Brock 14 Ron Davis 21 Curt Flood 12 Joe Hague 9 Roger Maris 12 Dick Simpson 26 Ed Spiezio 17 Bobby Tolan Other batters 37 Floyd Wicker Manager 2 Red Schoendienst Coaches 8 Bob Milliken 4 Billy Muffett 3 Joe Schultz 5 Dick SislerPlayer stats editBatting edit Starters by position edit Note Pos Position G Games played AB At bats H Hits Avg Batting average HR Home runs RBI Runs batted in Pos Player G AB H Avg HR RBI C Tim McCarver 128 434 110 253 5 48 1B Orlando Cepeda 157 600 149 248 16 73 2B Julian Javier 139 519 135 260 4 52 SS Dal Maxvill 119 459 116 253 1 24 3B Mike Shannon 156 576 153 266 15 79 LF Lou Brock 159 660 184 279 6 51 CF Curt Flood 150 618 186 301 5 60 RF Roger Maris 100 310 79 255 5 45 Other batters edit Note G Games played AB At bats H Hits Avg Batting average HR Home runs RBI Runs batted in Player G AB H Avg HR RBI Bobby Tolan 92 278 64 230 5 17 Johnny Edwards 84 230 55 239 3 29 Dick Schofield 69 127 28 220 1 8 Phil Gagliano 53 105 24 229 0 13 Ron Davis 33 79 14 177 0 5 Dick Simpson 26 56 13 232 3 8 Ed Spiezio 29 51 8 157 0 2 Dave Ricketts 20 22 3 136 0 1 Joe Hague 7 17 4 235 1 1 Floyd Wicker 5 4 2 500 0 0 Ted Simmons 2 3 1 333 0 0 Pitching edit Starting pitchers edit Note G Games pitched IP Innings pitched W Wins L Losses ERA Earned run average SO Strikeouts Player G IP W L ERA SO Bob Gibson 34 304 2 22 9 1 12 268 Nelson Briles 33 243 1 19 11 2 81 141 Steve Carlton 34 231 1 13 11 2 99 162 Ray Washburn 31 215 1 14 8 2 26 124 Larry Jaster 31 153 2 9 13 3 51 70 Other pitchers edit Note G Games pitched IP Innings pitched W Wins L Losses ERA Earned run average SO Strikeouts Player G IP W L ERA SO Dick Hughes 25 63 2 2 2 3 53 49 Mel Nelson 18 52 2 2 1 2 91 16 Mike Torrez 5 19 0 2 1 2 84 6 Pete Mikkelsen 5 16 0 0 0 1 13 8 Relief pitchers edit Note G Games pitched W Wins L Losses SV Saves ERA Earned run average SO Strikeouts Player G W L SV ERA SO Joe Hoerner 47 8 2 17 1 47 42 Ron Willis 48 2 3 4 3 39 39 Wayne Granger 34 4 2 4 2 25 27 Hal Gilson 13 0 2 2 4 57 191968 World Series editMain article 1968 World Series Although essentially the same team as the previous year they faced a tougher American League opponent in the Detroit Tigers who had also won their pennant easily behind the 31 win season of Denny McLain Even though both Gibson and McLain were league MVPs that season another Tigers starter Mickey Lolich stole the show becoming the last pitcher to date to win three complete games in a single Series Gibson excelled again in this World Series winning Games 1 and 4 He had 17 strikeouts in Game 1 and totaled 35 strikeouts in the Series both still World Series records The Cardinals advanced to a 3 1 series lead but the Tigers completed an improbable comeback by winning the final three games of the series to claim the championship 4 games to 3 It was St Louis last Series appearance until 1982 and their last Series before MLB adopted its divisional format AL Detroit Tigers 4 vs NL St Louis Cardinals 3 Game Score Date Location Attendance Time of Game 1 Cardinals 4 Tigers 0 October 2 Busch Memorial Stadium 54 692 2 29 2 Tigers 8 Cardinals 1 October 3 Busch Memorial Stadium 54 692 2 41 3 Cardinals 7 Tigers 3 October 5 Tiger Stadium 53 634 3 17 4 Cardinals 10 Tigers 1 October 6 Tiger Stadium 53 634 2 34 5 Tigers 5 Cardinals 3 October 7 Tiger Stadium 53 634 2 43 6 Tigers 13 Cardinals 1 October 9 Busch Memorial Stadium 54 692 2 26 7 Tigers 4 Cardinals 1 October 10 Busch Memorial Stadium 54 692 2 07Awards and honors editRed Schoendienst Associated Press NL Manager of the Year Major League Baseball records edit Bob Gibson major league record lowest ERA in one season for a pitcher with more than 300 innings pitched 1 12 3 League leaders edit Lou Brock National League stolen base leader 62 6 Farm system editSee also Minor League Baseball Level Team League Manager AAA Tulsa Oilers Pacific Coast League Warren Spahn AA Arkansas Travelers Texas League Vern Rapp A Modesto Reds California League Joe Cunningham A St Petersburg Cardinals Florida State League Ron Plaza A Cedar Rapids Cardinals Midwest League Jack Krol A Short Season Lewiston Broncos Northwest League Roy Majtyka Rookie GCL Cardinals Gulf Coast League George Kissell and Ray Hathaway LEAGUE CHAMPIONS Tulsa 7 References edit Luis Melendez page at Baseball Reference Jimy Williams page at Baseball Reference a b Baseball s Top 100 The Game s Greatest Records p 25 Kerry Banks 2010 Greystone Books Vancouver BC ISBN 978 1 55365 507 7 Bob Forsch page at Baseball Reference Ramon Hernandez page at Baseball Reference Stolen Bases Single Season National League Leaders by Baseball Almanac Johnson Lloyd and Wolff Miles ed The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball 2nd and 3rd editions Durham North Carolina Baseball America 1997 and 2007External links edit1968 St Louis Cardinals at Baseball Reference 1968 St Louis Cardinals team page at www baseball almanac com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1968 St Louis Cardinals season amp oldid 1196270868, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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