BINGO!BrummerStealsHome wrote: ↑04 Aug 2025 10:48 amDamned right they worked. Herzog wanted to remake the team (younger, faster, defense), and the clubhouse. He had some conflict with Simmons (and others). His deals may look questionable on paper, but his rebuilt team finished with the best record in the NL East but was screwed out of the playoffs. The next year he won the World Series after trading Templeton for Ozzie.rockondlouie wrote: ↑04 Aug 2025 10:22 amHe had his reasons and they WORKED.moose-and-squirrel wrote: ↑04 Aug 2025 09:14 amthe trade with the Brewers and signing porter was unnecessary and quite honestly bad. no 2 ways about itrockondlouie wrote: ↑04 Aug 2025 09:06 am"overrated"?cardiological wrote: ↑03 Aug 2025 16:38 pmSigning the prodigious drug abuser Porter and giving him the largest free agent contract in Cardinals history when Simmons, top catching prospect Kennedy and Jody Davis were in the organization was sheer insanity. And trading Simmons, Vukovich and Fingers was nonsense. Fortunately the Cardinals had the most coveted prospect in baseball, Bull Durham, to trade for Sutter who was the key to success. Whitey was vastly overrated as GM, but was without peer as field manager.moose-and-squirrel wrote: ↑03 Aug 2025 12:13 pmman, I hated seeing Kennedy, Simmons, Vuk, Fingers all traded, and was NOT a fan of Portersrockondlouie wrote: ↑03 Aug 2025 11:58 am In December 1980, Whitey Herzog, then the St. Louis Cardinals' general manager and manager, orchestrated a blockbuster 11-player trade with the San Diego Padres. This trade, which involved sending Terry Kennedy, John Littlefield, Al Olmsted, Mike Phillips, Kim Seaman, Steve Swisher, and John Urrea to the Padres, brought Rollie Fingers, Bob Shirley, Gene Tenace, and Bob Geren to St. Louis. This was just the beginning of a series of trades that reshaped the Cardinals roster and set them on a path to success in the 1980s.
Herzog continued to make moves, including trading Fingers, Ted Simmons, and Pete Vuckovich to the Brewers, and acquiring Bruce Sutter from the Cubs.
These trades, along with the signing of Darrell Porter, were instrumental in transforming the Cardinals into a dominant force in the 1980s, culminating in a World Series victory in 1982. -AI Google
I'm beginning to wonder if C. Bloom hasn't already been reaching out to POBO/GM's all around MLB and gauging interest in Donny, Burleson & Noot who were rumored to have received some interest but also in Gorman, Walker, Winn, multiple catchers and several pitchers?
Perhaps that's why none of them were dealt last week?
Did Bloom want to keep his trade chips for the Winter meetings?
Remember this is a fresh start coming and Bloom has no ties whatsover to any of these "Mo" players, he most likely wants to re-shape the roster with "his" type of players players.
Could we see a "Whitey - 1980" like Winter where Bloom deals away many of these current Cardinals?
If Bloom feels the team needs a complete makeover, then I'm starting to think we could.
Could be a really exciting Winter Meetings, can't wait to see what Bloom has planned!
He built a World Series Champion w/those deals from a team that had won nothing for a DECADE.![]()
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And Whitey said multiple times had the NL had the DH at that time, then he never would've dealt Simba.
Like this squad, those Cardinals teams coming out of the 1970's had a stench of losing on them, Whitey knew he needed to clean house and change the culture.
You don't have to "win" every trade to see improvement and that's what we got in the 1980's thanks in no small part to Whitey's 1980 moves as GM.
I've taken c r a p for saying I'd deal M. Winn this winter if he brought back a controlled #2 starting pitcher.
Sometimes you make moves for the long run and betterment of the team.
That's what Whitey did, that's what I hope Bloom does too.