won two Triple Crowns with the Cardinals.
First period of extended struggle After the American Association collapsed, the Browns joined the National League along with the
Baltimore Orioles,
Louisville Colonels, and
Washington Senators. St. Louis has had continuous affiliation in the NL since. Unfortunately for the Browns, the AA refugees were forced to place their players in a pool and give the established NL clubs first choice to sign them. By this time, Comiskey had lost patience with von der Ahe, and signed with the
Cincinnati Reds. Without Comiskey's eye for talent, the Browns'
inaugural season in the National League was largely a disappointment. They crumbled to only their second losing record as a fully professional team, finishing 11th; their winning percentage plunged from .625 in 1891 to .373. It would be the start of a quarter-century downturn in the franchise's fortunes. Between 1892 and
1919, St. Louis managed just five winning seasons, finishing in last or next-to-last place 16 times and only finishing higher than fifth three times. They had also had no pennants and four 100-loss seasons. In addition, 26 different managers took the helm totaling 31 changes. In the spring of 1899, the NL board of directors met and expelled the old Sportsman's club and St. Louis Base Ball Association for failure to pay league dues and player transaction fees. A new franchise, the American Base ball and Athletic Exhibition Company of St. Louis, was admitted to the league as a full member in good standing after paying those outstanding debts.
Frank De Haas Robison, also the owner of the
Cleveland Spiders,
purchased the team and became
president of the new association, and Becker the
vice president. Robison's brother,
Stanley Robison, became co-owner. He also renamed the Perfectos' stadium League Park. Agitated by dismal fan attendance in
Cleveland, Robison in turn infused the Perfectos roster with much of the Spiders' marquée talent just weeks before the season opener. Three of Cleveland's future Hall of Famers migrated to St. Louis:
Cy Young,
Jesse Burkett, and
Bobby Wallace. The roster maneuvers successfully switched the teams in the standings but failed to create the powerhouse Robison envisioned as St. Louis finished just fifth in both 1899 and
1900. However, their 84–67 finish in 1899 was the team's best record between the AA era until 1921, after
Sam Breadon purchased the company. Meanwhile, the beleaguered Spiders lost 134 games
that year – easily the worst record in MLB history, one that has not been matched despite incremental increases in the number of games played in a season over the years. After the season, the Spiders were euthanized as part of a league-wide contraction that saw the National League shrink from twelve to eight teams. The new vacancies of professional baseball franchises opened the door for the creation of the
American League (AL), a new major league to rival the National League. Of all leagues formed in an attempt to rival the NL since the days of the American Association, the AL has outlasted every other one and became one of the highest-quality competitive leagues comparable to the NL, effectively replacing the former. During a road trip to Chicago later that season,
St. Louis Republic sportswriter
Willie McHale included an account in a column of a female fan from Chicago remarking about the uniforms, "Oh, isn't that a lovely shade of cardinal." Fans took keenly to the moniker "Cardinals" and, the next year, popularity for the nickname induced an official change to
Cardinals. One effect of the new American League's formation was that it precipitated Young's departure from St. Louis when he "jumped" to the
Boston Americans before the 1901 season – during a time when jumping was commonplace. In spite of Young's departure,
the 1901 team continued its resurgent play with a 76–64 record propelled by the highest-scoring offense in the NL, finishing in fourth place out of eight teams. Burkett, an
outfielder, led the NL in batting average (.376), hits (226),
on-base percentage (.440) and
runs (140). This was their best positional finish from their entrance into the NL
until 1914, when they finished third, and their second-highest winning percentage (.543) between entering the NL and
1921. The three-season period 1899 and 1901 marked the
zenith of their first three decades in the National League in terms of won-lost records.
Another Browns incarnation: A new cross-city rival In 1902, an American League team moved from
Milwaukee into St. Louis and claimed the old moniker of
Browns, striking an instant rivalry that lasted five decades. The new Browns turned out to be a hit in St. Louis and a formidable rival for the Cardinals in spite of similar levels of success on the field into the 1920s. Not only did this version of the Browns usurp the Cardinals' former namesake which symbolized their glory years, the club even built a new stadium on the old site of the
Cardinals' ballpark – then within walking distance of
New Sportsman's Park – and outdrew them at the gate in their first two decades in St. Louis. Further stoking the rivalry, Burkett jumped from the Cardinals to the Browns, although at this point his skill were in decline. In his three seasons with the Cardinals, he batted a combined .378; in three seasons with the Browns he batted a combined .290.
Languishing financially With limited financial resources, the club could ill-afford to sign the amount of the caliber of players required to field a competitive team.
Kid Nichols briefly pitched and managed for the Cardinals, sporting a 2.02 ERA in 317 innings in
1904.
Player–
manager (
Second base)
Miller Huggins twice led the league in walks and on-base percentage with .432 in
1913.
Slim Sallee pitched for the Cardinals from
1908 to
1916, winning 106 games with a 2.67 ERA while leading the league in
shutouts twice. Led by the surprising pitcher
Bill Doak's and his
spitball forerunning the NL with a 1.76 ERA, the
1914 team's third-place finish with a league-leading team 2.38 ERA caused a stir as a St. Louis team had not fared that well in the National League since 1876. It was also their best positional placement since 1891, a second-place finish in the final year of the American Association. In addition to his ERA title, Doak finished second in
shutouts (7) and wins (19). Throwing 30 career
shutouts, he ranks second in franchise history. However, the next
year, Doak and the Cardinals failed to parlay their previous season's success as they lost nine more games and dropped into sixth place. Meanwhile, the fan-controlled club continued to lack a point man with substantial baseball operations experience to run the club. However, the club found their operations manager in 1917 when the Cardinals ownership group persuaded new Browns
owner Phil Ball to release
Branch Rickey, then-Browns president, from his contract to become president and
business manager of the Cardinals. After dropping even further toward the bottom of the NL in
1916, the
1917 Cardinals toiled to match their third-place finish in 1914. In part inquesting his own financial relief, Rickey took a
commission in the
Army from August to November 1918 in World War I in France serving in the
Chemical Warfare Service. He returned to a team that had only waded into even greater financial danger than before he left. The club's financial burden was further strained as few stockholders were willing to invest more. One exception was Warren "Fuzzy" Anderson, Breadon's partner in the Pierce-Arrow dealership, who confided with him had more $15,000 invested in the Cardinals. Anderson decided he, too, wanted to invest more in the Cardinals. He requested financial assistance from Breadon who complied, loaning more than $18,000 to the franchise and for Anderson to purchase more stock. Because Anderson held the second-largest share in the club, he reasoned that he should be named vice president. However, Breadon balked. Dejected at his refusal to share power, Anderson sold Breadon all his remaining stock, ending his baseball ownership career. Perceiving that Rickey may have been miffed at his removal from the position of team president, Breadon instead offered him the position of vice president, which he accepted. With a loan from Breadon, he purchased a stake in the team amounting to less than 20%. At this point, Rickey was firmly entrenched in nearly all front office decisions. Also that year, the league moved to ban pitching with the spitball due in part to it giving the pitcher an unfair advantage over the hitter. However, he helped lead an initiative to which the owners eventually agreed to a provision that allowed himself and 16 other spitballers to
grandfather use of the pitch until the end of their careers. Due to possessing an apparent genius for player development, Jones initially attempted to persuade Rickey to surrender his in-game managerial duties to concentrate fully on the front office. However, he insisted upon remaining the field manager while carrying on his front office duties and continued to do so
until 1925. Breadon also recognized Rickey's acumen, and – along with his proclivity for signing players as cheaply as possible – the two men united into a mutually workable arrangement as one of Rickey's chief motives was also to sign as talented of players as inexpensively as possible. Unlike many owners who seemed content to dabble in front office affairs, Breadon was comfortable deferring the player management and development decisions to Rickey. This owner-executive combination catalyzed into one of the most powerful duos in sports. In the years ensuing, Rickey stumbled upon a relatively untapped
player development model that he established ahead of its time and helped actuate the Cardinals' second golden era later in the 1920s.
For the next historic period, see: 1920–1952. 1875–1919 |
1920–1952 |
1953–1989 |
1990–present ==References==