Question: When's the last time we had a team this young?
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Question: When's the last time we had a team this young?
I can't remember.
Wonder what the average age is of our team and compare that to the league.
This is a very young team.
Wonder what the average age is of our team and compare that to the league.
This is a very young team.
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mattmitchl44
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Re: Question: When's the last time we had a team this young?
According to Baseball Reference, maybe the late 1970s.
As they calculate it, the Cardinals had an average batter's age around 27 and an average pitcher's age of 25-26 in the late 1970s. Of course that was in the run up to when the Cardinals started having considerable success in the 1980s.
As they calculate it, the Cardinals had an average batter's age around 27 and an average pitcher's age of 25-26 in the late 1970s. Of course that was in the run up to when the Cardinals started having considerable success in the 1980s.
Last edited by mattmitchl44 on 27 Feb 2026 07:57 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Question: When's the last time we had a team this young?
That could be.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑27 Feb 2026 07:54 am According to Baseball Reference, maybe the late 1970s.
As they calculate it, the Cardinals had an average batter's age around 27 and an average pitcher's age of 25-26 in the late 1970s.
I know it must be a long time ago, because I sure can't recollect any time they were this young.
So far ST is going pretty well.
This rebuild is growing on me.
Re: Question: When's the last time we had a team this young?
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
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
Re: Question: When's the last time we had a team this young?
Yeah, those are definitely glass half empty quotes.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
And they may ultimately be correct.
I kind of like what I've seen in ST thus far.
Hope it continues all year.
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sikeston bulldog2
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Re: Question: When's the last time we had a team this young?
This one i like. We’re pushing the needle to the red. Who cares who’s right. It’s only feelings that linger.Bully4you wrote: ↑27 Feb 2026 07:56 amThat could be.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑27 Feb 2026 07:54 am According to Baseball Reference, maybe the late 1970s.
As they calculate it, the Cardinals had an average batter's age around 27 and an average pitcher's age of 25-26 in the late 1970s.
I know it must be a long time ago, because I sure can't recollect any time they were this young.
So far ST is going pretty well.
This rebuild is growing on me.
Saturated infield and young staff. Expectations- an Ace emerges , a couple starters emerge, or they fail. I like the idea.
Next- outfield.
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mattmitchl44
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Re: Question: When's the last time we had a team this young?
1997-1999 may have been a transition period, but at least by how Baseball Reference figures it, the Cardinals we're actually younger from about 2013-2020 (27-29) than they were in the late 1990s (29-30).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
Re: Question: When's the last time we had a team this young?
What does this even mean? Compared to what? Are there STs that are NOT "going well" right now? I mean besides the Twins?Bully4you wrote: ↑27 Feb 2026 07:56 amSo far ST is going pretty well.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑27 Feb 2026 07:54 am According to Baseball Reference, maybe the late 1970s.
As they calculate it, the Cardinals had an average batter's age around 27 and an average pitcher's age of 25-26 in the late 1970s.
Re: Question: When's the last time we had a team this young?
You: "This rebuild is growing on me."Bully4you wrote: ↑27 Feb 2026 07:56 amThat could be.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑27 Feb 2026 07:54 am According to Baseball Reference, maybe the late 1970s.
As they calculate it, the Cardinals had an average batter's age around 27 and an average pitcher's age of 25-26 in the late 1970s.
I know it must be a long time ago, because I sure can't recollect any time they were this young.
So far ST is going pretty well.
This rebuild is growing on me.
If the Cards keep looking promising, your next quote should be:
"I was wrong. Sorry for all my negative, blowhard OPs in the offseason."
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rockondlouie
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Re: Question: When's the last time we had a team this young?
The 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.
Re: Question: When's the last time we had a team this young?
Their hitters were also very young last year and they'll be much younger on the pitching side after the off-season departures.
Re: Question: When's the last time we had a team this young?
Wow.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.
This also may be the youngest team in all of MLB today.
Re: Question: When's the last time we had a team this young?
Hey, if I'm wrong I will admit it.ecleme22 wrote: ↑27 Feb 2026 08:32 amYou: "This rebuild is growing on me."Bully4you wrote: ↑27 Feb 2026 07:56 amThat could be.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑27 Feb 2026 07:54 am According to Baseball Reference, maybe the late 1970s.
As they calculate it, the Cardinals had an average batter's age around 27 and an average pitcher's age of 25-26 in the late 1970s.
I know it must be a long time ago, because I sure can't recollect any time they were this young.
So far ST is going pretty well.
This rebuild is growing on me.
If the Cards keep looking promising, your next quote should be:
"I was wrong. Sorry for all my negative, blowhard OPs in the offseason."
Now, it's too early to tell just yet
But I like what I see so far.
ST can be a fallacy
Let's wait and see.
Re: Question: When's the last time we had a team this young?
I think the players are looking good.3dender wrote: ↑27 Feb 2026 08:25 amWhat does this even mean? Compared to what? Are there STs that are NOT "going well" right now? I mean besides the Twins?Bully4you wrote: ↑27 Feb 2026 07:56 amSo far ST is going pretty well.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑27 Feb 2026 07:54 am According to Baseball Reference, maybe the late 1970s.
As they calculate it, the Cardinals had an average batter's age around 27 and an average pitcher's age of 25-26 in the late 1970s.
Some of the pitching we picked up looks good.
Re: Question: When's the last time we had a team this young?
That 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.
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rockondlouie
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Re: Question: When's the last time we had a team this young?
According to A.I.:Bully4you wrote: ↑27 Feb 2026 09:30 amWow.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.
This also may be the youngest team in all of MLB today.
The Washington Nationals entered the 2026 season with the youngest active roster in Major League Baseball, with an average age of 25.8 years.
ChiSox 26.2 yrs old..........Angels 26.4
So you're right, they could be in the Top 3 given how the final roster shakes out.