Kolten Wong confirmed his retirement on Sunday
Posted: 19 May 2025 07:43 am
Retired at 34 years of age. A decent player for a period of time.
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Sadly for him, his WS pickoff will likely be how he's MOST remembered in STL. lol3dender wrote: ↑19 May 2025 08:02 am I liked him and pulled for him. He was generally a fun player who oscilated between exciting (with spectacular defense) and frustrating (never put the whole offensive potential together, and had mental lapses like booting easy plays, or that infamous WS pickoff). Rarely boring though.
I have two favorite memories of him. One is a collective memory of all of the RF pop-ups that he ranged back to snag facing the OF in often spectacular fashion. The other is when he stole a base off Yadi while with the Brewers (iirc), then took the base with him as a memento. It was a simultaneously funny and touching thing to do, which imo is probably the most respectful gesture any player has ever made to Yadi on the field.
Video here: https://x.com/AugieNash/status/1924438640282734825
Work on your thread titles prolly
I read that as him understanding that teams now prefer to pay young guys the minimum to be backup IFs rather than pay a couple million for old vetty MI bench guys like TLR and Matheny loved.
To each their own, but he was a two-time GG winner.Bomber1 wrote: ↑19 May 2025 09:11 am I didn’t really care for Wong.
He griped about not being the leadoff guy.
He got picked off first base to end a WS game.
He made other boneheaded mistakes at critical times.
I always felt that Wong thought he was a lot better than he really was.
All JMO.
And please, no red jacket.
How many postseason walk off home runs have been hit in Cardinals history? I can think of 3, and Kolten hit one of them.blackinkbiz wrote: ↑19 May 2025 08:54 amSadly for him, his WS pickoff will likely be how he's MOST remembered in STL. lol3dender wrote: ↑19 May 2025 08:02 am I liked him and pulled for him. He was generally a fun player who oscilated between exciting (with spectacular defense) and frustrating (never put the whole offensive potential together, and had mental lapses like booting easy plays, or that infamous WS pickoff). Rarely boring though.
I have two favorite memories of him. One is a collective memory of all of the RF pop-ups that he ranged back to snag facing the OF in often spectacular fashion. The other is when he stole a base off Yadi while with the Brewers (iirc), then took the base with him as a memento. It was a simultaneously funny and touching thing to do, which imo is probably the most respectful gesture any player has ever made to Yadi on the field.
Video here: https://x.com/AugieNash/status/1924438640282734825
I can think of at least 3 famous ones and Kolten’s wasn’t one of them.sp25 wrote: ↑19 May 2025 09:29 amHow many postseason walk off home runs have been hit in Cardinals history? I can think of 3, and Kolten hit one of them.blackinkbiz wrote: ↑19 May 2025 08:54 amSadly for him, his WS pickoff will likely be how he's MOST remembered in STL. lol3dender wrote: ↑19 May 2025 08:02 am I liked him and pulled for him. He was generally a fun player who oscilated between exciting (with spectacular defense) and frustrating (never put the whole offensive potential together, and had mental lapses like booting easy plays, or that infamous WS pickoff). Rarely boring though.
I have two favorite memories of him. One is a collective memory of all of the RF pop-ups that he ranged back to snag facing the OF in often spectacular fashion. The other is when he stole a base off Yadi while with the Brewers (iirc), then took the base with him as a memento. It was a simultaneously funny and touching thing to do, which imo is probably the most respectful gesture any player has ever made to Yadi on the field.
Video here: https://x.com/AugieNash/status/1924438640282734825