by thetallguy747 » Mon Oct 17, 2011 10:01 pm
Where's the luv for my beloved Redbirds?!!
My condolences to Phillies phans, but your boys and their manager should have stopped reading the newspapers that said the world championship was theirs to lose. When you start believing that, you start playing to not lose. The Cardinals, on the other hand, played to win and they did.
My condolences to Brewers fans. What's not to like about your team? They're young, personable, likeable, and brimming with enthusiasm. And then the post season began and it looked like someone spiked their water cooler with prozac. They had at least three close calls go against them and and hardly a peep of protest. Throughout the series, Roenicke looked like he was proctoring GRE exams instead of leading a team on a quest. While the Brewers waited for walks and a gopher ball to launch, the Cardinals drove the ball to all fields, bunted, hit and ran, took extra bases, backed each other up in the field, and just generally played to win. While the Brewers do have a few more fielders who can bend over than the Tigers have, I was appalled at their apparent disinterst in using a little extra effort to try to overcome all the iron gloves, thick bellies, and slow feet that populate their defense.
I hate Tony LaRussa. He's the antipathy of what I think makes a good leader. He's paranoid, has an extreme bunker mentality and fosters internal fueds. Plus, he's an aging pretty boy, who would rather be with the pretty people in Florida or California than going to backyard barbeques in St. Louis the way Whitey Herzog did.
But since the only thing that really matters in competitive sports is winning, I love the fact the LaRussa has once again this year shown why he's one of the best managers ever. Talent is exceptional across the board in MLB. In the end, the difference is made by what's between the ears. And LaRussa always leads his teams into the post season like a mongul horde. And without doubt the difference between the Cardinals and their opponents this post season has been what's going on between the ears.
It seems fitting to me that they'll be facing the Rangers in the World Series, since Nolan Ryan is building a winning tradition than stresses tenacity and resilience equally with talent.
Kevin A