Unlikely Contributions Help Cardinals to Title

Of course everyone expects big numbers from Albert Pujols, Matt Holliday, and Ryan Ludwick but did anyone expect the performance of say, Brendan Ryan? Colby Rasmus? Julio Lugo? Okay, you're right, this one might be a stretch. Chris Carpenter?

Carpenter, a former Cy Young winner in 2005 got back to such form this year, after being ridden with injuries for the last two. Cardinals fans and management alike hoped Carp would have a strong season, but did they expect this type of campaign from the veteran? Although everyone in baseball is aware of what Carpenter can do, who really thought he would be healthy all year and be able to rebound the way he did? I mean, he got injured early in the season after taking too intense of a swing. Well, he proved his critics wrong. Big time. His 17-4 record speaks for itself, as does the 2.24 ERA which just-so-happens to lead the National League, and is second in the Show. All of this without mentioning the six RBI game he just had, mashing a grand salami, and a two-run double.

Troubled infielder, Julio Lugo, joined the Cardinals after being designated for assignment by the Red Sox from Bean town. All he did was hit .274, score 22 runs, drive in 12, and swipe five bags. Doesn't seem like much, right? Wrong. Lugo came over from the AL and sparked the Cardinals the very first night he was a member of the Rebirds, beating the Phillies 8-1. Lugo gives manager, Tony LaRussa, great versatility. LaRussa can use Lugo at second if a southpaw is on the mound, giving Skip Schumaker a day off if need be. Second or short, Lugo can play them both, which again gives his manager the choice to give everyday shortstop, Brendan Ryan, a day off.

Highly touted, five tool player, compared to Jim Edmonds (some say he'll be better), Colby Rasmus, the 23 year-old rookie. Only 16 jacks, 72 runs scored, and 52 RBIs for the baby-faced center-fielder? He's so young he tried to grow a mustache with the rest of the team, but took about a month longer than anyone else on the club. On a Cubs broadcast, Len Kasper made a comment about this, it would've been funny had it not come from him.  His stingy defense in center shouldn't go overlooked, either. Rasmus only made six errors this season, five in center, and one in right. His speed allows him to roam the outfield like a shark in the ocean. You don't see many diving catches from him simply because he usually gets to everything and gets under the ball, making routine catches which are diving plays for others. Credit a few wins to Rasmus' bat, he has more than one game-winning hit this year. Not bad, rookie. Not bad.
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Speaking of the stache, can anyone say handlebars? Well, Brendan Ryan can. He plans to grow his upper lip toupe into a Rollie Fingers handlebar stache. How cool is that? Credit the success to the stache. Ryan came into Spring Training this year fighting for a bench spot on the roster and bloomed into the starter when Khalil Greene came in and laid an egg. B-Ry has played in 123 games this year, playing short and second. His range placed him on top of many highlight reels, and is in the running for a Gold Glove. His .296 average has him only a 3-3 or 3-4 day away from a .300 season. Ryan's hit all over the lineup, first, second, seventh eighth, ninth and has produced all season long. In 385 at-bats, the stache man has only whiffed 55 times and had 114 hits. Could you really ask for anything more from a guy who came into camp competing for a reserve slot? And whoever thought a stache like that would get the ladies? One piece of advice for you, though, B-Ry, don't shave the stache!      

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