22 yr old Stan the Man was the "baby" on that team!tgharris wrote: ↑27 Feb 2026 09:45 amThat surprises me, considering it was during WWII. I would have thought that the available talent would have been older.rockondlouie wrote: ↑27 Feb 2026 08:39 amThe average age of the 2026 St. Louis Cardinals projected roster is approximately 26.5 years old.
Historically, the 1943 St. Louis Cardinals hold the distinction for the lowest average age for both batters (26.5) and pitchers (27.6).
-A.I.
Question: When's the last time we had a team this young?
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rockondlouie
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Re: Question: When's the last time we had a team this young?
Re: Question: When's the last time we had a team this young?
1999 Cardinals:earp wrote: ↑27 Feb 2026 08:06 am 1997–1999 Last major youth movement; few stars; transitional years
The 2026 Cardinals are described as:
One of MLB’s weakest projected lineups (ranked 6th worst)
A roster with no All‑Stars, no household names, no Hall‑of‑Fame‑track players
A team defined by youth and player development, not contention
A franchise in identity transition, not a win‑now mode
Mark McGwire
Ray Lankford
Eric Davis
Willie McGee
Sean Dunstan
This definately wasn't a cut all veterans team - those guys had playing time.
We also did have a healthy mix of youth to learn from those vets, while we also made an agressive trade for true MLB ready young star (not a lotto ticket) in Edgar Renteria, while retaining our top 2 prospects Rick Ankiel and JD Drew.
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BrummerStealsHome
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