2015 WAS the pivotal year

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RichieRichSTL
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2015 WAS the pivotal year

Post by RichieRichSTL »

I've been saying it for the last 10 years. When Mo refused to give roster help to a overachieving team that was desparate for it (and looked like they could have been a team of destiny) in 2015, Mo sucked the life out of the team.

Matheny had that team humming. They were well on their way to their 8th best win total in their history. Despite their best starter, Waino, effectively being lost of the season early and their best hitter, injured/inconsistent most of the season, they had the heart of a tiger and managed to pull out victories. It didn't take a genius to see they were having a Cardinal season for the ages (esp. their bullpen, but their overall pitching). They however, offensively needed a good bat (not broken down Brandon Moss) and they needed a good replacement in the rotation for Waino to give them better playoff depth and take the pressure of the other starters. But, Mo would have none of it, he got neither. Instead dopey decided to keep 'dry powder'. They sacrificed a chance at Cardinal history to avoid any risk of a down season over the next few years. Without reinforcements, they were beaten up by the end of the season AND they were easy picking for a healthier, hungrier Cubs (who won the WS the next year). Is anyone suprised the next year, the team fell back 14 games and then 3 more in 2017 and struggled in 2018 until they replaced Matheny.

The team seem to have
* Lost faith in Matheny's ability to have their back.
* Lost faith that it they 'killed themselves' to be competitive that the FO would look out for and/or reward them with good reinforcements.

The team has never been the same since the FO let them down in 2015. Shildt was able to work with a flawed roster and somehow make it to the playoffs in full-season he managed. Then Mo, did the (bleep) thing and fired him. Were it not for Pujols wanting to come back home and him inspiring the team and going out with a bang, they would have fallen flat in 2022. Is it any surprise that the team doesn't have fire in their belly? They know Mo was not playing to win. He was playing to be competitive year in and year out, sacrificing the chance to go big if the team merited it. He was more interested in making sure the turnstiles didn't stop turning and wasn't committed to putting the best team on the field. The players could see that, so why risk injury for a FO whom winning was a secondary priority?

The fact that they kept Oli after the disaster of a 2023 season, showed they were committed to a manager who wouldn't rock the boat, who wouldn't push them.

https://redbirdrants.com/it-sure-sounds ... -offseason
While Lance Lynn publicly criticized Cardinals fans recently for getting upset at Mozeliak for how the last three years have gone, if you zoom out further than even those last three years, you can see the downfall coming for a decade. From 2008-2015, the Cardinals went 728-568 (.562 win%), making the postseason six of the eight campaigns, reaching the NLCS four times, the World Series twice, and winning one World Championship. But for the final ten seasons of Mozeliak's regime, they've gone 789-718 (.524 win%), making the playoffs just four of those ten years, winning four total playoff games, and reaching the NLCS just once.
Absolut
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Re: 2015 WAS the pivotal year

Post by Absolut »

RichieRichSTL wrote: 20 Sep 2025 00:40 am I've been saying it for the last 10 years. When Mo refused to give roster help to a overachieving team that was desparate for it (and looked like they could have been a team of destiny) in 2015, Mo sucked the life out of the team.

Matheny had that team humming. They were well on their way to their 8th best win total in their history. Despite their best starter, Waino, effectively being lost of the season early and their best hitter, injured/inconsistent most of the season, they had the heart of a tiger and managed to pull out victories. It didn't take a genius to see they were having a Cardinal season for the ages (esp. their bullpen, but their overall pitching). They however, offensively needed a good bat (not broken down Brandon Moss) and they needed a good replacement in the rotation for Waino to give them better playoff depth and take the pressure of the other starters. But, Mo would have none of it, he got neither. Instead dopey decided to keep 'dry powder'. They sacrificed a chance at Cardinal history to avoid any risk of a down season over the next few years. Without reinforcements, they were beaten up by the end of the season AND they were easy picking for a healthier, hungrier Cubs (who won the WS the next year). Is anyone suprised the next year, the team fell back 14 games and then 3 more in 2017 and struggled in 2018 until they replaced Matheny.

The team seem to have
* Lost faith in Matheny's ability to have their back.
* Lost faith that it they 'killed themselves' to be competitive that the FO would look out for and/or reward them with good reinforcements.

The team has never been the same since the FO let them down in 2015. Shildt was able to work with a flawed roster and somehow make it to the playoffs in full-season he managed. Then Mo, did the (bleep) thing and fired him. Were it not for Pujols wanting to come back home and him inspiring the team and going out with a bang, they would have fallen flat in 2022. Is it any surprise that the team doesn't have fire in their belly? They know Mo was not playing to win. He was playing to be competitive year in and year out, sacrificing the chance to go big if the team merited it. He was more interested in making sure the turnstiles didn't stop turning and wasn't committed to putting the best team on the field. The players could see that, so why risk injury for a FO whom winning was a secondary priority?

The fact that they kept Oli after the disaster of a 2023 season, showed they were committed to a manager who wouldn't rock the boat, who wouldn't push them.

https://redbirdrants.com/it-sure-sounds ... -offseason
While Lance Lynn publicly criticized Cardinals fans recently for getting upset at Mozeliak for how the last three years have gone, if you zoom out further than even those last three years, you can see the downfall coming for a decade. From 2008-2015, the Cardinals went 728-568 (.562 win%), making the postseason six of the eight campaigns, reaching the NLCS four times, the World Series twice, and winning one World Championship. But for the final ten seasons of Mozeliak's regime, they've gone 789-718 (.524 win%), making the playoffs just four of those ten years, winning four total playoff games, and reaching the NLCS just once.
Lance defends the guy who paid him $11m to be fat after horrid years. Shocking. Lance also fails to address the bad trades, signings, and stupid statements, and fixates on not being provided enough money.
HorseTrader
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Re: 2015 WAS the pivotal year

Post by HorseTrader »

They sure needed a bat or two that year but the pitching was pretty good. Lackey, Wacha, Martinez, Lynn, and Garcia all had ERAs under 3.40, Maybe another reliever or swing guy would have helped.

Your point tho is correct, Mo/Dewitt failed to add to a winning team.
alw80
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Re: 2015 WAS the pivotal year

Post by alw80 »

Its when I realized we were in trouble. The team was having an amazing but somewhat unsustainable season, the SP staff clearly needed an addition and the offense needed a real bat. The big acquisition was Brandon Moss. I knew we were screwed after that happened. Then in the offseason the Cubs "stole" Heyward from Mo and he pouted for two years and didn't even try.
Carp4Cy
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Re: 2015 WAS the pivotal year

Post by Carp4Cy »

RichieRichSTL wrote: 20 Sep 2025 00:40 am I've been saying it for the last 10 years. When Mo refused to give roster help to a overachieving team that was desparate for it (and looked like they could have been a team of destiny) in 2015, Mo sucked the life out of the team.

Matheny had that team humming. They were well on their way to their 8th best win total in their history. Despite their best starter, Waino, effectively being lost of the season early and their best hitter, injured/inconsistent most of the season, they had the heart of a tiger and managed to pull out victories. It didn't take a genius to see they were having a Cardinal season for the ages (esp. their bullpen, but their overall pitching). They however, offensively needed a good bat (not broken down Brandon Moss) and they needed a good replacement in the rotation for Waino to give them better playoff depth and take the pressure of the other starters. But, Mo would have none of it, he got neither. Instead dopey decided to keep 'dry powder'. They sacrificed a chance at Cardinal history to avoid any risk of a down season over the next few years. Without reinforcements, they were beaten up by the end of the season AND they were easy picking for a healthier, hungrier Cubs (who won the WS the next year). Is anyone suprised the next year, the team fell back 14 games and then 3 more in 2017 and struggled in 2018 until they replaced Matheny.

The team seem to have
* Lost faith in Matheny's ability to have their back.
* Lost faith that it they 'killed themselves' to be competitive that the FO would look out for and/or reward them with good reinforcements.

The team has never been the same since the FO let them down in 2015. Shildt was able to work with a flawed roster and somehow make it to the playoffs in full-season he managed. Then Mo, did the (bleep) thing and fired him. Were it not for Pujols wanting to come back home and him inspiring the team and going out with a bang, they would have fallen flat in 2022. Is it any surprise that the team doesn't have fire in their belly? They know Mo was not playing to win. He was playing to be competitive year in and year out, sacrificing the chance to go big if the team merited it. He was more interested in making sure the turnstiles didn't stop turning and wasn't committed to putting the best team on the field. The players could see that, so why risk injury for a FO whom winning was a secondary priority?

The fact that they kept Oli after the disaster of a 2023 season, showed they were committed to a manager who wouldn't rock the boat, who wouldn't push them.

https://redbirdrants.com/it-sure-sounds ... -offseason
While Lance Lynn publicly criticized Cardinals fans recently for getting upset at Mozeliak for how the last three years have gone, if you zoom out further than even those last three years, you can see the downfall coming for a decade. From 2008-2015, the Cardinals went 728-568 (.562 win%), making the postseason six of the eight campaigns, reaching the NLCS four times, the World Series twice, and winning one World Championship. But for the final ten seasons of Mozeliak's regime, they've gone 789-718 (.524 win%), making the playoffs just four of those ten years, winning four total playoff games, and reaching the NLCS just once.
It’s not like the team hasn’t passed 2 dozen off-ramps since that year and refused to take them and turn this around. 2015 could have happened and Mo still turned it around later. He didn’t.
Hazelwood72
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Re: 2015 WAS the pivotal year

Post by Hazelwood72 »

Every one of you wrote good and correct posts. I’ve been saying much of the same after that 2015 season. I couldn’t say it any better than you all have — Mozo the Clown and the Cards front office has been a disaster for a full decade.

It’s going to take several seasons for Chaim Bloom to turn this Titanic around.
ecleme22
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Re: 2015 WAS the pivotal year

Post by ecleme22 »

I disagree with the premise that the FO didnt try in 2015 and somehow that was a turning point. In essence, Grichuk, Adams and an older holliday had injuries, and were coming back from injuries. 2015 was an example of overvaluing marginal players (and undervaluing useful players like Pham). Bourjos and Piscotty were other examples of overvaluing.

Did the FO not try in 2022 when they signed Dickerson and didn’t try at the deadline to grab a bat? No. Mo overvalued Carlson and ONeill.


To me, the first noticeable blunder was signing wiggy to a 2 year deal. It made no sense. The next was the Freese trade and then the total overvaluing of Bourjos and Grichuk. Then of course the undervaluing of Pham, signing Fowler for way too much money, and all but abandoning the 1-year deal (a great way to bolster the roster without breaking the bank and trading prospects).

So no, 2015 wasn’t about the FO not trying. It was probably just the first time the OP noticed they weren’t that savvy..
RichieRichSTL
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Re: 2015 WAS the pivotal year

Post by RichieRichSTL »

Carp4Cy wrote: 20 Sep 2025 10:10 am
RichieRichSTL wrote: 20 Sep 2025 00:40 am I've been saying it for the last 10 years. When Mo refused to give roster help to a overachieving team that was desparate for it (and looked like they could have been a team of destiny) in 2015, Mo sucked the life out of the team.

Matheny had that team humming. They were well on their way to their 8th best win total in their history. Despite their best starter, Waino, effectively being lost of the season early and their best hitter, injured/inconsistent most of the season, they had the heart of a tiger and managed to pull out victories. It didn't take a genius to see they were having a Cardinal season for the ages (esp. their bullpen, but their overall pitching). They however, offensively needed a good bat (not broken down Brandon Moss) and they needed a good replacement in the rotation for Waino to give them better playoff depth and take the pressure of the other starters. But, Mo would have none of it, he got neither. Instead dopey decided to keep 'dry powder'. They sacrificed a chance at Cardinal history to avoid any risk of a down season over the next few years. Without reinforcements, they were beaten up by the end of the season AND they were easy picking for a healthier, hungrier Cubs (who won the WS the next year). Is anyone suprised the next year, the team fell back 14 games and then 3 more in 2017 and struggled in 2018 until they replaced Matheny.

The team seem to have
* Lost faith in Matheny's ability to have their back.
* Lost faith that it they 'killed themselves' to be competitive that the FO would look out for and/or reward them with good reinforcements.

The team has never been the same since the FO let them down in 2015. Shildt was able to work with a flawed roster and somehow make it to the playoffs in full-season he managed. Then Mo, did the (bleep) thing and fired him. Were it not for Pujols wanting to come back home and him inspiring the team and going out with a bang, they would have fallen flat in 2022. Is it any surprise that the team doesn't have fire in their belly? They know Mo was not playing to win. He was playing to be competitive year in and year out, sacrificing the chance to go big if the team merited it. He was more interested in making sure the turnstiles didn't stop turning and wasn't committed to putting the best team on the field. The players could see that, so why risk injury for a FO whom winning was a secondary priority?

The fact that they kept Oli after the disaster of a 2023 season, showed they were committed to a manager who wouldn't rock the boat, who wouldn't push them.

https://redbirdrants.com/it-sure-sounds ... -offseason
While Lance Lynn publicly criticized Cardinals fans recently for getting upset at Mozeliak for how the last three years have gone, if you zoom out further than even those last three years, you can see the downfall coming for a decade. From 2008-2015, the Cardinals went 728-568 (.562 win%), making the postseason six of the eight campaigns, reaching the NLCS four times, the World Series twice, and winning one World Championship. But for the final ten seasons of Mozeliak's regime, they've gone 789-718 (.524 win%), making the playoffs just four of those ten years, winning four total playoff games, and reaching the NLCS just once.
It’s not like the team hasn’t passed 2 dozen off-ramps since that year and refused to take them and turn this around. 2015 could have happened and Mo still turned it around later. He didn’t.
Agreed but it was the change in tone year. Mo has not deviated from the I don't care what kind of shot we have, I am not going to risk the golden goose of attendance in future. In other words, i wont make a bold move thst has any appreciable attendance risk (down future team), even if it gives us a legitimate shot at baseball immortality.

So he 'risks' just enough that he can field a 'competitive' team, but won't do more even if the competitive team proves they are worthy of more. Even in 2018, dummy made a move that screamed 'all in' and then stopped halfway. Hence we got to the NLCS ans we utterly humiliated there.

The irony of this tone is that his cautiousness blew up in his face anyway and we've been nowhere near a title since, struggling to win in the playoffs or even to make it.
Talkin' Baseball
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Re: 2015 WAS the pivotal year

Post by Talkin' Baseball »

alw80 wrote: 20 Sep 2025 09:28 am Its when I realized we were in trouble. The team was having an amazing but somewhat unsustainable season, the SP staff clearly needed an addition and the offense needed a real bat. The big acquisition was Brandon Moss. I knew we were screwed after that happened. Then in the offseason the Cubs "stole" Heyward from Mo and he pouted for two years and didn't even try.
Heyward leaving to go to the Cubs seemed like a turning point to me.
swatski
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Re: 2015 WAS the pivotal year

Post by swatski »

Be real guys, what was the year Mo was born?
Rojo Johnson
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Re: 2015 WAS the pivotal year

Post by Rojo Johnson »

alw80 wrote: 20 Sep 2025 09:28 am Its when I realized we were in trouble. The team was having an amazing but somewhat unsustainable season, the SP staff clearly needed an addition and the offense needed a real bat. The big acquisition was Brandon Moss. I knew we were screwed after that happened. Then in the offseason the Cubs "stole" Heyward from Mo and he pouted for two years and didn't even try.
Moe has a bust of Brandon Moss smack dab in the middle of his backyard. He is really proud of that acquisition. Daddy Bill gave him a number of atta boys all the while the fans were going WTF?
JohnnyMO
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Re: 2015 WAS the pivotal year

Post by JohnnyMO »

2015 could have been an I-70 series part two if St Louis had bolstered the team at the deadline the way KC did with Zobrust and Cueto. That’s what The Mets did and they made it to the Workd Series because of it as well.
ICCFIM2
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Re: 2015 WAS the pivotal year

Post by ICCFIM2 »

RichieRichSTL wrote: 20 Sep 2025 00:40 am I've been saying it for the last 10 years. When Mo refused to give roster help to a overachieving team that was desparate for it (and looked like they could have been a team of destiny) in 2015, Mo sucked the life out of the team.

Matheny had that team humming. They were well on their way to their 8th best win total in their history. Despite their best starter, Waino, effectively being lost of the season early and their best hitter, injured/inconsistent most of the season, they had the heart of a tiger and managed to pull out victories. It didn't take a genius to see they were having a Cardinal season for the ages (esp. their bullpen, but their overall pitching). They however, offensively needed a good bat (not broken down Brandon Moss) and they needed a good replacement in the rotation for Waino to give them better playoff depth and take the pressure of the other starters. But, Mo would have none of it, he got neither. Instead dopey decided to keep 'dry powder'. They sacrificed a chance at Cardinal history to avoid any risk of a down season over the next few years. Without reinforcements, they were beaten up by the end of the season AND they were easy picking for a healthier, hungrier Cubs (who won the WS the next year). Is anyone suprised the next year, the team fell back 14 games and then 3 more in 2017 and struggled in 2018 until they replaced Matheny.

The team seem to have
* Lost faith in Matheny's ability to have their back.
* Lost faith that it they 'killed themselves' to be competitive that the FO would look out for and/or reward them with good reinforcements.

The team has never been the same since the FO let them down in 2015. Shildt was able to work with a flawed roster and somehow make it to the playoffs in full-season he managed. Then Mo, did the (bleep) thing and fired him. Were it not for Pujols wanting to come back home and him inspiring the team and going out with a bang, they would have fallen flat in 2022. Is it any surprise that the team doesn't have fire in their belly? They know Mo was not playing to win. He was playing to be competitive year in and year out, sacrificing the chance to go big if the team merited it. He was more interested in making sure the turnstiles didn't stop turning and wasn't committed to putting the best team on the field. The players could see that, so why risk injury for a FO whom winning was a secondary priority?

The fact that they kept Oli after the disaster of a 2023 season, showed they were committed to a manager who wouldn't rock the boat, who wouldn't push them.

https://redbirdrants.com/it-sure-sounds ... -offseason
While Lance Lynn publicly criticized Cardinals fans recently for getting upset at Mozeliak for how the last three years have gone, if you zoom out further than even those last three years, you can see the downfall coming for a decade. From 2008-2015, the Cardinals went 728-568 (.562 win%), making the postseason six of the eight campaigns, reaching the NLCS four times, the World Series twice, and winning one World Championship. But for the final ten seasons of Mozeliak's regime, they've gone 789-718 (.524 win%), making the playoffs just four of those ten years, winning four total playoff games, and reaching the NLCS just once.
I have also called 2015 the watershed year as well. But, I remember it a bit differently. The pitching staff was going great. However, it ran out of gas after the deadline. MO needed to add a bullpen arm and probably a swing starter to take some innings. They also needed a bat. I remember the collective groan when the bat was Moss. I went back and looked to see what players were moved at the deadline, Zobrist would have been the best get for a bat. He put up a solid 800+ OPS after the Royals acquired him. It was a massive miss by MO and the start of the downfall, I agree. It seemed like the team just won 100 games with no name players that year. MO seemed to think that would last forever without any particular rhyme or reason to it. As we all know, that ended...
RichieRichSTL
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Re: 2015 WAS the pivotal year

Post by RichieRichSTL »

ICCFIM2 wrote: 21 Sep 2025 00:16 am
RichieRichSTL wrote: 20 Sep 2025 00:40 am I've been saying it for the last 10 years. When Mo refused to give roster help to a overachieving team that was desparate for it (and looked like they could have been a team of destiny) in 2015, Mo sucked the life out of the team.

Matheny had that team humming. They were well on their way to their 8th best win total in their history. Despite their best starter, Waino, effectively being lost of the season early and their best hitter, injured/inconsistent most of the season, they had the heart of a tiger and managed to pull out victories. It didn't take a genius to see they were having a Cardinal season for the ages (esp. their bullpen, but their overall pitching). They however, offensively needed a good bat (not broken down Brandon Moss) and they needed a good replacement in the rotation for Waino to give them better playoff depth and take the pressure of the other starters. But, Mo would have none of it, he got neither. Instead dopey decided to keep 'dry powder'. They sacrificed a chance at Cardinal history to avoid any risk of a down season over the next few years. Without reinforcements, they were beaten up by the end of the season AND they were easy picking for a healthier, hungrier Cubs (who won the WS the next year). Is anyone suprised the next year, the team fell back 14 games and then 3 more in 2017 and struggled in 2018 until they replaced Matheny.

The team seem to have
* Lost faith in Matheny's ability to have their back.
* Lost faith that it they 'killed themselves' to be competitive that the FO would look out for and/or reward them with good reinforcements.

The team has never been the same since the FO let them down in 2015. Shildt was able to work with a flawed roster and somehow make it to the playoffs in full-season he managed. Then Mo, did the (bleep) thing and fired him. Were it not for Pujols wanting to come back home and him inspiring the team and going out with a bang, they would have fallen flat in 2022. Is it any surprise that the team doesn't have fire in their belly? They know Mo was not playing to win. He was playing to be competitive year in and year out, sacrificing the chance to go big if the team merited it. He was more interested in making sure the turnstiles didn't stop turning and wasn't committed to putting the best team on the field. The players could see that, so why risk injury for a FO whom winning was a secondary priority?

The fact that they kept Oli after the disaster of a 2023 season, showed they were committed to a manager who wouldn't rock the boat, who wouldn't push them.

https://redbirdrants.com/it-sure-sounds ... -offseason
While Lance Lynn publicly criticized Cardinals fans recently for getting upset at Mozeliak for how the last three years have gone, if you zoom out further than even those last three years, you can see the downfall coming for a decade. From 2008-2015, the Cardinals went 728-568 (.562 win%), making the postseason six of the eight campaigns, reaching the NLCS four times, the World Series twice, and winning one World Championship. But for the final ten seasons of Mozeliak's regime, they've gone 789-718 (.524 win%), making the playoffs just four of those ten years, winning four total playoff games, and reaching the NLCS just once.
I have also called 2015 the watershed year as well. But, I remember it a bit differently. The pitching staff was going great. However, it ran out of gas after the deadline. MO needed to add a bullpen arm and probably a swing starter to take some innings. They also needed a bat. I remember the collective groan when the bat was Moss. I went back and looked to see what players were moved at the deadline, Zobrist would have been the best get for a bat. He put up a solid 800+ OPS after the Royals acquired him. It was a massive miss by MO and the start of the downfall, I agree. It seemed like the team just won 100 games with no name players that year. MO seemed to think that would last forever without any particular rhyme or reason to it. As we all know, that ended...
Yeah, a credible bat and someone who was able to give the rotation a breather would have helped tremendously. What Mo didnt seem to take into account was morale. They knew that they were a very good team. They knew they were doing something historical (100+ win type season). They knew that they needed and really earned that. When Mo failed to get then what they needed and they ran out of gas in the first round, I think that told the team that Matheny couldnt go to the bat or them. They knew Mo wouldn't. Is it any surprise they fell to earth the next season, esp after signing Leake.


I think 2015 showed the team the FO wasn't serious about winning. Signing Leake emphasized that point. The buzz was gone on the team. The sense that the FO had a higher purpose wasn't there. It hasn't been there since. Just build enough to have a good shot at a playoff spot, not build a serious contender.
imadangman
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Re: 2015 WAS the pivotal year

Post by imadangman »

RichieRichSTL wrote: 22 Sep 2025 13:53 pm
ICCFIM2 wrote: 21 Sep 2025 00:16 am
RichieRichSTL wrote: 20 Sep 2025 00:40 am I've been saying it for the last 10 years. When Mo refused to give roster help to a overachieving team that was desparate for it (and looked like they could have been a team of destiny) in 2015, Mo sucked the life out of the team.

Matheny had that team humming. They were well on their way to their 8th best win total in their history. Despite their best starter, Waino, effectively being lost of the season early and their best hitter, injured/inconsistent most of the season, they had the heart of a tiger and managed to pull out victories. It didn't take a genius to see they were having a Cardinal season for the ages (esp. their bullpen, but their overall pitching). They however, offensively needed a good bat (not broken down Brandon Moss) and they needed a good replacement in the rotation for Waino to give them better playoff depth and take the pressure of the other starters. But, Mo would have none of it, he got neither. Instead dopey decided to keep 'dry powder'. They sacrificed a chance at Cardinal history to avoid any risk of a down season over the next few years. Without reinforcements, they were beaten up by the end of the season AND they were easy picking for a healthier, hungrier Cubs (who won the WS the next year). Is anyone suprised the next year, the team fell back 14 games and then 3 more in 2017 and struggled in 2018 until they replaced Matheny.

The team seem to have
* Lost faith in Matheny's ability to have their back.
* Lost faith that it they 'killed themselves' to be competitive that the FO would look out for and/or reward them with good reinforcements.

The team has never been the same since the FO let them down in 2015. Shildt was able to work with a flawed roster and somehow make it to the playoffs in full-season he managed. Then Mo, did the (bleep) thing and fired him. Were it not for Pujols wanting to come back home and him inspiring the team and going out with a bang, they would have fallen flat in 2022. Is it any surprise that the team doesn't have fire in their belly? They know Mo was not playing to win. He was playing to be competitive year in and year out, sacrificing the chance to go big if the team merited it. He was more interested in making sure the turnstiles didn't stop turning and wasn't committed to putting the best team on the field. The players could see that, so why risk injury for a FO whom winning was a secondary priority?

The fact that they kept Oli after the disaster of a 2023 season, showed they were committed to a manager who wouldn't rock the boat, who wouldn't push them.

https://redbirdrants.com/it-sure-sounds ... -offseason
While Lance Lynn publicly criticized Cardinals fans recently for getting upset at Mozeliak for how the last three years have gone, if you zoom out further than even those last three years, you can see the downfall coming for a decade. From 2008-2015, the Cardinals went 728-568 (.562 win%), making the postseason six of the eight campaigns, reaching the NLCS four times, the World Series twice, and winning one World Championship. But for the final ten seasons of Mozeliak's regime, they've gone 789-718 (.524 win%), making the playoffs just four of those ten years, winning four total playoff games, and reaching the NLCS just once.
I have also called 2015 the watershed year as well. But, I remember it a bit differently. The pitching staff was going great. However, it ran out of gas after the deadline. MO needed to add a bullpen arm and probably a swing starter to take some innings. They also needed a bat. I remember the collective groan when the bat was Moss. I went back and looked to see what players were moved at the deadline, Zobrist would have been the best get for a bat. He put up a solid 800+ OPS after the Royals acquired him. It was a massive miss by MO and the start of the downfall, I agree. It seemed like the team just won 100 games with no name players that year. MO seemed to think that would last forever without any particular rhyme or reason to it. As we all know, that ended...
Yeah, a credible bat and someone who was able to give the rotation a breather would have helped tremendously. What Mo didnt seem to take into account was morale. They knew that they were a very good team. They knew they were doing something historical (100+ win type season). They knew that they needed and really earned that. When Mo failed to get then what they needed and they ran out of gas in the first round, I think that told the team that Matheny couldnt go to the bat or them. They knew Mo wouldn't. Is it any surprise they fell to earth the next season, esp after signing Leake.


I think 2015 showed the team the FO wasn't serious about winning. Signing Leake emphasized that point. The buzz was gone on the team. The sense that the FO had a higher purpose wasn't there. It hasn't been there since. Just build enough to have a good shot at a playoff spot, not build a serious contender.
All true but I'll say I expected 2016 to go better. I thought Leake would have been a better signing and I didn't expect Wainwright to completely blow his (donkey) all season. I was expecting to see the Wainwright of old. Michael Wacha had carried his wacked shoulder from the season before and didn't do very well (but he did bounce back in 2017). Carlos Martinez pitched very well. And until the last game of that season I was fully expecting the team to make the playoffs (I think I remember the last game actually counting, with SF and NYM securing the WC spots on the last day).
ecleme22
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Re: 2015 WAS the pivotal year

Post by ecleme22 »

RichieRichSTL wrote: 22 Sep 2025 13:53 pm
ICCFIM2 wrote: 21 Sep 2025 00:16 am
RichieRichSTL wrote: 20 Sep 2025 00:40 am I've been saying it for the last 10 years. When Mo refused to give roster help to a overachieving team that was desparate for it (and looked like they could have been a team of destiny) in 2015, Mo sucked the life out of the team.

Matheny had that team humming. They were well on their way to their 8th best win total in their history. Despite their best starter, Waino, effectively being lost of the season early and their best hitter, injured/inconsistent most of the season, they had the heart of a tiger and managed to pull out victories. It didn't take a genius to see they were having a Cardinal season for the ages (esp. their bullpen, but their overall pitching). They however, offensively needed a good bat (not broken down Brandon Moss) and they needed a good replacement in the rotation for Waino to give them better playoff depth and take the pressure of the other starters. But, Mo would have none of it, he got neither. Instead dopey decided to keep 'dry powder'. They sacrificed a chance at Cardinal history to avoid any risk of a down season over the next few years. Without reinforcements, they were beaten up by the end of the season AND they were easy picking for a healthier, hungrier Cubs (who won the WS the next year). Is anyone suprised the next year, the team fell back 14 games and then 3 more in 2017 and struggled in 2018 until they replaced Matheny.

The team seem to have
* Lost faith in Matheny's ability to have their back.
* Lost faith that it they 'killed themselves' to be competitive that the FO would look out for and/or reward them with good reinforcements.

The team has never been the same since the FO let them down in 2015. Shildt was able to work with a flawed roster and somehow make it to the playoffs in full-season he managed. Then Mo, did the (bleep) thing and fired him. Were it not for Pujols wanting to come back home and him inspiring the team and going out with a bang, they would have fallen flat in 2022. Is it any surprise that the team doesn't have fire in their belly? They know Mo was not playing to win. He was playing to be competitive year in and year out, sacrificing the chance to go big if the team merited it. He was more interested in making sure the turnstiles didn't stop turning and wasn't committed to putting the best team on the field. The players could see that, so why risk injury for a FO whom winning was a secondary priority?

The fact that they kept Oli after the disaster of a 2023 season, showed they were committed to a manager who wouldn't rock the boat, who wouldn't push them.

https://redbirdrants.com/it-sure-sounds ... -offseason
While Lance Lynn publicly criticized Cardinals fans recently for getting upset at Mozeliak for how the last three years have gone, if you zoom out further than even those last three years, you can see the downfall coming for a decade. From 2008-2015, the Cardinals went 728-568 (.562 win%), making the postseason six of the eight campaigns, reaching the NLCS four times, the World Series twice, and winning one World Championship. But for the final ten seasons of Mozeliak's regime, they've gone 789-718 (.524 win%), making the playoffs just four of those ten years, winning four total playoff games, and reaching the NLCS just once.
I have also called 2015 the watershed year as well. But, I remember it a bit differently. The pitching staff was going great. However, it ran out of gas after the deadline. MO needed to add a bullpen arm and probably a swing starter to take some innings. They also needed a bat. I remember the collective groan when the bat was Moss. I went back and looked to see what players were moved at the deadline, Zobrist would have been the best get for a bat. He put up a solid 800+ OPS after the Royals acquired him. It was a massive miss by MO and the start of the downfall, I agree. It seemed like the team just won 100 games with no name players that year. MO seemed to think that would last forever without any particular rhyme or reason to it. As we all know, that ended...
Yeah, a credible bat and someone who was able to give the rotation a breather would have helped tremendously. What Mo didnt seem to take into account was morale. They knew that they were a very good team. They knew they were doing something historical (100+ win type season). They knew that they needed and really earned that. When Mo failed to get then what they needed and they ran out of gas in the first round, I think that told the team that Matheny couldnt go to the bat or them. They knew Mo wouldn't. Is it any surprise they fell to earth the next season, esp after signing Leake.


I think 2015 showed the team the FO wasn't serious about winning. Signing Leake emphasized that point. The buzz was gone on the team. The sense that the FO had a higher purpose wasn't there. It hasn't been there since. Just build enough to have a good shot at a playoff spot, not build a serious contender.
You: "Leake signing showed the Cards' FO wasn't interested in winning."

Me: Totally disagree. It showed, actually, they were still serious about winning, but lacked the savviness they once had. I mean, 5yr/80mil has to be the richest deal in Cards' history for a pitcher not named Waino.

Leake signing showed the FO cared.
Fowler signing showed the FO cared.
Ozuna trade showed the FO cared.

But it also showed that the TLR-era savviness and ability to evaluate talent and build a roster was no more.
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