However, when the season began, the
Philadelphia Phillies took a stranglehold on first place. The Cardinals were trying a variety of young players in Musial's old left-field position, and none were taking hold. At the June 15 trading deadline, Devine sprang.
Lou Brock, a 25-year-old
outfielder with great speed (and deceptive power as a hitter) in his third year with the
second-division Chicago Cubs, was not living up to his projected potential. Devine offered the Cubs Broglio, his 18-game winner from the previous year, plus outfielder
Doug Clemens and pitcher
Bobby Shantz, for Brock and two marginal pitchers. The Cubs agreed, and one of the
most significant (and one-sided) trades in baseball history was made. Brock hit .348 for the remainder of the season, and led the Cardinals to their three pennants and two world titles over the next five years. He played the rest of his career with St. Louis (retiring in 1979), and would
steal 938 bases (breaking
Ty Cobb's record, and currently second all-time to
Rickey Henderson), exceed the 3,000
hit mark (with 3,023), bat .424 with 34 hits and 14 stolen bases in 21 World Series games, and become a member of the
Baseball Hall of Fame. Ironically, Brock's impact on the Cardinals' won-lost mark or position in the standings was not felt immediately. The team continued to trail the Phillies by a large margin and it looked to all as though the club's pennant drought would extend to 18 years; by August 17, the Redbirds were mired in fifth place, nine games behind the Phillies. Owner Busch was bitterly disappointed, and decided to clean out his front office. On the advice of his special assistant, legendary
Branch Rickey, Busch fired Devine and business manager Art Routzong, and accepted the resignation of director of player personnel
Eddie Stanky. Manager
Johnny Keane was temporarily spared, but
Leo Durocher, then the bench coach of the Dodgers, was secretly negotiating with Busch to take over for 1965. Meanwhile, Devine's old job went to Rickey protégé
Bob Howsam. As events unfolded, Busch had acted in haste. The Cardinals began to win, while the Phillies suffered an epic September collapse, losing a -game lead with a dozen games to play, sparking a wild, four-team, 11th hour scramble for the pennant. On the final day of the season, after sweeping the Phillies to take first place, the Cardinals prevailed, clinching the NL championship for the first time since 1946 by beating the lowly Mets after losing the first two games of the series. Led by Gibson, the undisputed ace of the staff since Broglio's trade, and McCarver, the Cardinals then defeated the
New York Yankees in a seven-game World Series. Even though he had been on the sidelines since August 17, Devine again was cited as the top executive in baseball by
The Sporting News. Meanwhile, Keane resigned after the World Series triumph (and became skipper of the Yankees). Instead of Durocher, Cardinal
coach Red Schoendienst was named as manager for 1965. ==Building the Miracle Mets==