Stan vs. Albert

Welcome to STLtoday.com's forum for fans of the St. Louis Cardinals.

Moderators: STLtoday Forum Moderators, Cards Talk Moderators

jbrach
Forum User
Posts: 624
Joined: 23 May 2024 13:33 pm

Re: Stan vs. Albert

Post by jbrach »

JohnTudor1985 wrote: 21 Nov 2025 22:46 pm Stan also missed the 1945 season during his prime due to WW II. His OPS in 1944/46 was over 1.000 combined.

Of course, Albert's Cardinals stats were significantly better than the time he spent with the Angels.

Cards' only OPS plus:

Albert 169
Stan 159

Would love to have another Stan or Albert in my lifetime.
difference is stan maintained the 159 over 24 seasons...albert declined dramatically...11 otherworldly seasons and then the second half of his career was that of a journeyman
rockondlouie
Forum User
Posts: 13458
Joined: 23 May 2024 12:41 pm

Re: Stan vs. Albert

Post by rockondlouie »

Perhaps a better way to comp these two Cardinals greats is by their same age during their Cardinals Careers:

Stan vs Albert
Age 21 - 30 (Stan goes to age 31 since he lost a full season to WW2)

Slash/OPS+:

Stan - .346 .431 .579 1.010/172 OPS+
Albert - .328 .420 .617 1.037/170 OPS+

HR/RBI:

Stan - 226/1007
Albert - 445/1329

Hits/Runs:

Stan - 2003/1141
Albert - 2073/1291

Doubles/Triples:

Stan - 411/133
Albert - 455/15

SB:

Stan - 59
Albert - 84

Walks/KO's:

Stan - 844/303
Albert - 975/704
Cardinals4Life
Forum User
Posts: 4696
Joined: 05 Nov 2022 18:19 pm

Re: Stan vs. Albert

Post by Cardinals4Life »

rockondlouie wrote: 22 Nov 2025 09:17 am
JohnTudor1985 wrote: 22 Nov 2025 08:26 am Ted Williams missed 4 prime years for WWII and Korea. Making him the all time leader in WAR.
8O

BABE RUTH by a mile JT:

182.6 -vs- 121.8

Even if we gave Teddy Ball game four years at his highest WAR (10.6 X 4 = 42.4 resulting in a 164.2 career) he falls 18.4 WAR points short of The Babe.
I think he was making a joke, Rock! :D
rockondlouie
Forum User
Posts: 13458
Joined: 23 May 2024 12:41 pm

Re: Stan vs. Albert

Post by rockondlouie »

Cardinals4Life wrote: 22 Nov 2025 10:35 am
rockondlouie wrote: 22 Nov 2025 09:17 am
JohnTudor1985 wrote: 22 Nov 2025 08:26 am Ted Williams missed 4 prime years for WWII and Korea. Making him the all time leader in WAR.
8O

BABE RUTH by a mile JT:

182.6 -vs- 121.8

Even if we gave Teddy Ball game four years at his highest WAR (10.6 X 4 = 42.4 resulting in a 164.2 career) he falls 18.4 WAR points short of The Babe.
I think he was making a joke, Rock! :D
:wink:
12xu
Forum User
Posts: 3898
Joined: 23 May 2024 15:46 pm

Re: Stan vs. Albert

Post by 12xu »

jbrach wrote: 22 Nov 2025 10:07 am
JohnTudor1985 wrote: 21 Nov 2025 22:46 pm Stan also missed the 1945 season during his prime due to WW II. His OPS in 1944/46 was over 1.000 combined.

Of course, Albert's Cardinals stats were significantly better than the time he spent with the Angels.

Cards' only OPS plus:

Albert 169
Stan 159

Would love to have another Stan or Albert in my lifetime.
difference is stan maintained the 159 over 24 seasons...albert declined dramatically...11 otherworldly seasons and then the second half of his career was that of a journeyman
The second half of Albert's career was sub par compared with his first 11 seasons, that is true. Calling it "journeyman" is not really accurate, he hit 258 HR in his final 11 seasons. Stan only hit 248 in his last 11 years. Stan also declined in his later years, his age 38-40 seasons were rather poor by his standards, but he did rebound to have a very strong season in 1962.

Bottom line, Stan Musial was the better hitter, Albert Pujols was the better slugger.
OldRed
Forum User
Posts: 2945
Joined: 23 May 2024 15:53 pm

Re: Stan vs. Albert

Post by OldRed »

12xu wrote: 22 Nov 2025 16:33 pm
jbrach wrote: 22 Nov 2025 10:07 am
JohnTudor1985 wrote: 21 Nov 2025 22:46 pm Stan also missed the 1945 season during his prime due to WW II. His OPS in 1944/46 was over 1.000 combined.

Of course, Albert's Cardinals stats were significantly better than the time he spent with the Angels.

Cards' only OPS plus:

Albert 169
Stan 159

Would love to have another Stan or Albert in my lifetime.
difference is stan maintained the 159 over 24 seasons...albert declined dramatically...11 otherworldly seasons and then the second half of his career was that of a journeyman
The second half of Albert's career was sub par compared with his first 11 seasons, that is true. Calling it "journeyman" is not really accurate, he hit 258 HR in his final 11 seasons. Stan only hit 248 in his last 11 years. Stan also declined in his later years, his age 38-40 seasons were rather poor by his standards, but he did rebound to have a very strong season in 1962.

Bottom line, Stan Musial was the better hitter, Albert Pujols was the better slugger.
Good post. I just wish Albert hadn't chased the money.
CCard
Forum User
Posts: 1364
Joined: 21 Aug 2024 08:39 am

Re: Stan vs. Albert

Post by CCard »

fullswing wrote: 21 Nov 2025 21:19 pm I know that you can't compare stats from different eras but this is just for fun. Yes, I did cherry pick these stats.

Stan AB
10,972
Albert AB
11,421

Stan WAR
129
Albert WAR
101

Stan Hits
3630
Albert Hits
3384

Stan BA
.331
Albert BA
.296

Stan Runs
1949
Albert Runs
1914

Stan OBP
.417
Albert OBP
.374

Stan SLG
.559
Albert SLG
.546

Stan OPS
.976
Albert OPS
.918

Stan ASG
24
Albert ASG
11

Stan Batting Title
7
Albert Batting Title
1

Stan SO
696
Albert SO
1404

Also, Albert made more money than Stan did in their careers in 32 ABs or 8 games.
I must say that I'm rather surprised that Stan slugged more than Albert. I would have assumed that Albert had more power. I guess all those doubles make up the difference. The SO is an amazing stat. Stan really was "The Man". It's too bad we couldn't have put these two on the field playing at the same time. LOL
ICCFIM2
Forum User
Posts: 648
Joined: 23 May 2024 14:24 pm

Re: Stan vs. Albert

Post by ICCFIM2 »

ramfandan wrote: 22 Nov 2025 06:52 am
fullswing wrote: 21 Nov 2025 23:06 pm
JohnTudor1985 wrote: 21 Nov 2025 22:46 pm Stan also missed the 1945 season during his prime due to WW II. His OPS in 1944/46 was over 1.000 combined.

Of course, Albert's Cardinals stats were significantly better than the time he spent with the Angels.

Cards' only OPS plus:

Albert 169
Stan 159

Would love to have another Stan or Albert in my lifetime.
He probably would have got to 500 home runs, too.
Regarding lost HR's for Stan, I wonder how many more he would have had if the right field pavillion at Busch Stadium 1 (formerly Sportsman Park ) didn't have a 33 ft. high fence to clear. There was an 11 ft. concrete wall with an additional 22 ft. fence extending above that .
The RF was short 310 ft. ? down the line . However, I can remember being at games when I was kid there where Stan would hit a scorching rising line drive that would hit high off the upper part of the fence (surely a HR if no fence would extend that high ). In fact, I remember a couple times Stan hitting a scorcher like that and the RF player played it off the fence and held Stan to a single. It was not always an automatic double.
No way to know how many HR's that high fence cost him . A few of those balls rocketed off his bat probably were 375+ ft. HR's.

Very few on this forum are around that saw Stan play at Busch Stadium 1 on Grand Ave. Very seldom does that 33ft. RF fence get discussed but I witnessed it at games in person. I am trying to recall how far that high fence extended from the foul line in the field of play. . Somewhere toward right center is my memory but that has been 67 years ago.
I had not heard that before about Sportsman Park. I was born in 1964, so this was before my time. I tried to find pictures of this, as it is different from my memory. The best picture I could find is this. https://images.search.yahoo.com/search/ ... 1946WS.jpg What I was reading was that the fence, which is hard to see in any picture was there some years and was of varying height. Fascinating insight. Sounds like it could have cost Stan 3-5 HRs a year at least.
Post Reply