The Mets and the Cards had fights for the National League Eastern Division title in 1973, 1985 and 1987, and faced each other in the NLCS in 2000 (Mets won) and 2006 (Cards won). As the late, great college football broadcaster Keith Jackson would say, "These two teams just don't like each other." Or, more accurately, their sets of fans don't.
Before You Go. St. Louis is known for its heat. The new Busch Stadium is open, unlike the previous one, which, as Casey Stengel put it, really held the heat well. This will be late April, but the website of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch is predicting that next weekend's temperatures will get progressively higher: Friday, mid-50s by day, low 40s by night, and rain; Saturday, high 60s down to high 40s; and Sunday, high 70s down to high 50s.
St. Louis is in the Central Time Zone, an hour behind New York. Adjust your timepieces accordingly.
Tickets. The Cardinals always sell well, even in off years. They averaged 42,019 fans per home game last season. 3rd in the majors only to the Dodgers and the Yankees. So tickets may be hard to come by.
At least they'll be cheap, compared to the New York teams' tickets: Infield Boxes will be $81, and 1st & 3rd Base Field Boxes $71, Infield Pavilion $36, Infield Terrace (upper deck) $16, Bleachers $31.
Getting There. Busch Stadium is 961 miles from Citi Field, and the same distance from Yankee Stadium. Knowing this, your first reaction is going to be to fly out there. But it's an expensive trip this weekend, probably due to the Easter holiday. If you order on United Airlines, you'll be lucky to get a nonstop flight for under $1,000. (Albert Bond Lambert was a St. Louis golfer and an early aviator.)
MetroLink, St. Louis' light rail system, will get you directly from Lambert to the ballpark. Of course, if you're going for the whole series, you should get a hotel. And whatever you do, if you take a taxi instead, do not call the dispatcher "a slab of meat with mittens" like Steve Martin did at that same airport in Planes, Trains and Automobiles.
Bus? Not a good idea. Greyhound runs 8 buses a day between Port Authority and St. Louis, and only 4 of them are without changes. The average time of these trips is around 24 hours, and costs $442 round-trip, although it can drop to $295 with advanced-purchase. The Greyhound terminal is at Union Station, downtown at 430 S. 15th Street.
Union Station is also their train hub. You could board the Lake Shore Limited at Penn Station at 3:40 Eastern on Wednesday afternoon, arriving at Union Station in Chicago at 9:50 Central on Thursday morning, transfer to the Texas Eagle at 1:45 in the afternoon, and be at St. Louis' Union Station at 7:21 that night. Which would get you there a little under 24 hours before the Friday game. That's 28 hours and 41 minutes. Longer than the bus, but cheaper, and you get to be in Chicago for 4 hours, which is cool. It will be $446 round-trip.
If you decide to drive, it's far enough that it will help to get someone to go with you and split the duties, and to trade off driving and sleeping. You'll need to get on the New Jersey Turnpike, and take Interstate 78 West across New Jersey, and at Harrisburg get on the Pennsylvania Turnpike, which at this point will be both I-70 and I-76. When the two Interstates split outside Pittsburgh, stay on I-70 west.
You'll cross the northern tip of West Virginia, and go all the way across Ohio (through Columbus), Indiana (through Indianapolis) and Illinois. When you cross into Missouri, it will be over the new Stan Musial Veterans Memorial Bridge. Exit 9 will be for the Sports Complex.
The Stan Musial Veterans Memorial Bridge,
a.k.a. the Stan Span.
Once In the City. St. Louis, settled by the French in 1764, was named for Louis IX, the Crusader King, the only monarch of France to have been canonized as a Saint by the Catholic Church. Like Boston, Pittsburgh and New Orleans, it has a history out of proportion to its size. There's a mere 320,000 within the city limits, about half of what it was in 1950.
But, like a lot of cities, especially in the Midwest, the "white flight" went to the suburbs, keeping the population of the metropolitan area roughly the same, in this case 2.9 million. Or, roughly, the population of Brooklyn alone. St. Louis City was 87 percent white in the 1940 Census, still 50 percent white in 1990, but is now down to 44 percent white, and 46 percent black, 4 percent Hispanic and 3 percent Asian. It's almost a full geographic split: Blacks on the North Side, whites on the South Side.
In comparison, St. Louis County -- which is independent of St. Louis City, a confusion we usually don't have, because nobody outside County courthouses and Manhattan Borough Hall refers to Manhattan Island as "New York County" -- is 66 percent white, 25 percent black, 4 percent Asian and 3 percent Hispanic.
Market Street divides the city's north and south street addresses, and on the east-west streets, the numbers increase westward from the Mississippi River. Interstate 270 serves as a beltway on the Missouri side of the River, while Interstate 255 completes it on the Illinois side. The sales tax in the State of Missouri is 4.225 percent, but it's over double that in St. Louis City: 8.49 percent.
Metrolink light rail has a $2.25 base fare, and the Metro buses are $2.00. A Day Pass for the entire system is $7.50. If you're staying for the entire series, a Weekly Pass is $25. Do yourself a favor: Do not, even on Metrolink, go across the river into East St. Louis, Illinois. The joke is that the crime rate has dropped because there's nothing left to steal.
The State Capitol is in Jefferson City, 126 miles west of downtown St. Louis, 147 miles east of downtown Kansas City, and 30 miles south of the University of Missouri campus in Columbia.
The Missouri State House,
on the Missouri River in Jefferson City
ZIP Codes for the St. Louis area start with the digits 630, 631 and 632. The Area Codes are 314 for the city and 636 for the suburbs. No single electric company has a monopoly.
Despite being a majority-black city, St. Louis hasn't had many racial disturbances. The demonstrations in nearby Ferguson, Missouri over police brutality were the first major ones since a riot across the river in East St. Louis in 1917.
The official address of Busch Stadium is 700 Clark Street. Parking is $27.50. The Metrolink station for the stadium is on 8th, between Clark and Spruce, putting you outside the left field gate.
Busch Stadium has real grass. Its predecessor started out that way in 1966, but had artificial turf from 1970 to 1995, before being switched back. The turf was designed to help the traditional Cardinal baseball style: Pitching, defense and speed, as exemplified in the Sportsman's Park era by the likes of Pepper Martin and Enos Slaughter, and in the turf era by Lou Brock, Ozzie Smith and Vince Coleman.
Home plate was moved from Sportsman's Park to the 1966 Busch Stadium, and from that one to the new one. I can't say for sure that it's the same plate from when the last version of Sportsman's Park opened in 1909, but it was definitely used there in the park's last years.
August Anheuser Busch Jr., a.k.a. Gussie Busch, was the grandson of the founders of the Anheuser-Busch breweries: Adolphus Busch and Eberhard Anheuser. When he bought the Cardinals in 1953, he wanted to rename Sportsman's Park "Budweiser Stadium," so he could advertise his flagship beer. Commissioner Ford Frick told him no, it would be too commercial. Imagine that: A Commissioner of a professional sports league prohibiting a team owner from giving his venue's name to a corporation!
Gussie protested: Chewing-gum magnate Philip K. Wrigley let the Cards' geographic rivals, the Chicago Cubs, name their stadium "Wrigley Field." Frick responded that Wrigley was the man's name, and that he didn't rename the ballpark "Doublemint Stadium" for the specific purpose of trying to sell gum. So, instead of a dismissal of his complaint, Gussie accepted that as a hint to take, renamed the old yard "Busch Stadium," and introduced the Busch brand of beer.
Regardless, Gussie Busch -- and especially the man then the voice of the Cardinals, Harry Caray -- did use the team to sell Budweiser. It worked like a charm, as by the time the Cards won their next Pennant in 1964, Budweiser had become America's biggest-selling brand of beer, and pushed a lot of once-big brewing companies out of business or to the local margins.
Given where Bud was in 1953 when Gussie bought the team, and where it was in 1969 when Gussie fired Harry, it can be legitimately said that Harry was the greatest salesman any brand name has ever known in the history of American capitalism -- unless you count the way Coca-Cola used Santa Claus, also white-haired, sometimes wearing glasses, and his age open to question, but a bit thinner than Harry.
All 3 Busch Stadiums have been heavy on Bud advertising. Gussie had the Sportsman's Park/original Busch Stadium scoreboard replaced with one topped by the Anheuser-Bush logo, the giant A with the eagle flying through it. When a Cardinal hit a home run, the scoreboard operator would push a button, and the eagle's mechanical wings would flap. This was in 1953, 7 years before Bill Veeck ordered the fireworks-shooting "exploding scoreboard" for Comiskey Park in Chicago. When Busch Memorial Stadium opened in 1966, the mechanical eagle was replaced by an electronic one.
The original Busch scoreboard, 1953-66
On special occasions, such as Opening Day or World Series home games, the Bud jingle "Here Comes the King" (as in "Budweiser: King of Beers") would play over the speakers, while Gussie himself, waving a big hat with a big peacock feather in it, would ride in the cab of a Budweiser carriage pulled by the company's iconic Clydesdales. You think horse manure looks bad on real grass? Imagine that on the pale green of artificial turf.
Gussie Busch
Gussie died in 1989, leaving the brewery and the team to his son, August Anheuser Busch III, a.k.a. Auggie Busch. Auggie sold the controlling interest in the team in 1996, and the family sold controlling interest in the brewery in 2008, but the Busch family and the brewery still own pieces of the ballclub. The new Busch Stadium, opening in 2006, still has signs featuring A-B brands (Budweiser, Bud Light, Bud Dry, Michelob, et al.) all over the place.
Busch Stadium I (Sportsman's Park) was well north of downtown. Busch Stadium II (Busch Memorial Stadium) was right downtown, and St. Louis' greatest icon, the Gateway Arch, built right before the stadium was, could be seen over its left-field fence, and the idea was incorporated into the park's design, with an arched roof that gave the stadium a very distinctive look that separated it from the other multipurpose concrete circle/oval stadiums of the 1960s and '70s.
Busch Stadium III has a brick look on the outside that suggests an old factory -- or perhaps a brewery. And the Arch is visible beyond straightaway center field, much more so than it was in the preceding stadium, due to the new one's open outfield.
Other than that, though, the view isn't especially impressive: St. Louis has never exactly been known as a city of impressive skyscrapers, unlike such other Midwestern cities as Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland, and, if you want to count Western Pennsylvania as being "Midwestern" instead of "Northeastern," Pittsburgh. Besides which, the stadium is 5 blocks from the River, so there's not a lot of room to build anything especially impressive -- aside from the Arch, which is one block from the River.
But there is one other notable structure that can be seen from the park: The Old Courthouse can be seen beyond the left field fence. This was where 2 of the most infamous court cases in American history began, both later settled unfairly by the U.S. Supreme Court in decisions that were overturned by Constitutional Amendments: Dred Scott v. Sanford, in which a slave sued in 1846 to be declared free after his master took him into a State where slavery had already been abolished; and Minor v. Happersett, in which a woman sued in 1872 to be allowed to vote. These cases both eventually went to the U.S. Supreme Court, and were decided against the plaintiffs, in 1857 and 1875, respectively.
Note the Arch pattern cut into the outfield grass.
The park's outfield distances are 336 feet to the left field pole, 375 to left-center, 400 to straightaway center, 375 to right-center, and 335 to the right field pole. Like its predecessor, the new Busch Stadium is usually regarded as a pitcher's park.
You might guess that Albert Pujols hit the longest home run in the current Busch Stadium, and for a time, that was true. His longest there went 465 feet, in 2011. But in 2012, Matt Holliday topped that with a 469-footer. At the 2nd Busch, Mark McGwire, understandably, hit the longest, in his 1998 asterisk season, hitting one measured at 545 feet. One of the earliest homers hit there, in 1966, is believed to be the longest hit there without cheating, a 515-foot shot by Willie McCovey of the San Francisco Giants.
Figuring out who hit the longest home run at Sportsman's Park/Busch Stadium I is problematic, as both left field (known as the "bleachers") and right field (covered by a roof and known as the "pavilion") had narrow seating sections over which quite a few balls were hit, including by Mickey Mantle in 1953 (to left, supposedly 530 feet) and Babe Ruth several times (to right, who knows for sure).
Before Reggie Jackson in 1977, Ruth was the only man to hit 3 home runs in a World Series game, he did it twice, and both times in a Game 4 at Sportsman's Park against the Cardinals: In 1926 and 1928, the latter being a Series clincher for the Yankees. In 1931, against the Browns, he hit his 600th career home run there.
The only football game played at the current Busch Stadium to date was on September 21, 2013, with Southern Illinois beating Southeast Missouri State 36-19. On January 2, 2017, the NHL Winter Classic was held there, with the St. Louis Blues celebrating their 50th Anniversary by beating their rivals, the Chicago Blackhawks, 4-1.
Hockey setup
The U.S. soccer team won a 2018 World Cup Qualifier against the Caribbean nation of St. Vincent & the Grenadines, 6-1, at Busch Stadium on November 13, 2015. The U.S. women's team beat New Zealand 4-0 in a friendly on April 4, 2015. Argentina with Lionel Messi beat Bosnia with Edin Dzeko 2-0 on November 18, 2013. In "club football," Manchester City beat Chelsea 4-3 on May 23, 2013, and AS Roma of Rome beat Liverpool 2-1 on August 1, 2016.
Soccer setup
Concerts at Busch Stadium have included The Eagles (before Glenn Frey) and The Dixie Chicks in 2010, U2 in 2011, Paul McCartney in 2016, and Metallica and Billy Joel (in separate shows) in 2017. For this Summer, they're preparing for Kenny Chesney, the Def Leppard and Journey tour, Luke Bryan and Ed Sheeran.
Food. St. Louis has a reputation for great barbecue, and Busch Stadium has a stand called Broadway BBQ in Section 509, near the Bleachers.
They also have stands named for Cardinal legends: Dizzy's Diner, for Dizzy Dean, Sections 139, 161 and 446; Gashouse Grill, for the 1934 World Champions known as the Gashouse Gang, Sections 132, 146, 150, 154, 233 and 450; and El Birdos Cantina, for the Latino-influenced 1967 World Champions (if you'll excuse the fact that it should have been "Los Pájaros" or "Los Cardinales"), Sections 141 and 148. They also have Hardee's stands at 135 and 358.
Keeping with the Midwest's rural image -- St. Louis may be a big city, but even the Royals and the Braves may not have as countrified fan base as the Cards -- they have a Farmer's Market at 136, across from Hardee's; and the Prairie Farms Family Pavilion at 507.
Section 144 is home to the Food Network Hot Dog Bar. According to a recent Thrillist article on the best food at each big-league ballpark, the best thing to eat at Busch Stadium is this bar's St. Louis-style hot dog: Potato chips, barbecue sauce and shredded cheese atop a frankfurter..
Team History Displays. The Cardinals fly flags representing their World Championships atop the scoreboard in right field: 1926, 1931, 1934, 1942, 1944, 1946, 1964, 1967, 1982, 2006 and 2011. Those 11 titles are the most of any National League team, and are 2nd in all of MLB, only to the Yankees.
They do not fly flags for their National League Pennants when they went on to lose the World Series: 1928, 1930, 1943, 1968, 1985, 1987, 2004 and 2013. Nor do they fly flags for their 1996, 2000, 2002, 2005, 2009, 2014 and 2015 NL Central Division titles, or for their 2001 and 2012 Wild Card berths. Nor for their 1885, 1886, 1887 and 1888 Pennants in the old American Association, when they had the name that would later be used by the American League team now known as the Baltimore Orioles: The St. Louis Browns. (They became the Cardinals in 1900 with a change of uniform color.)
The Cardinals have their retired numbers on the left field fence:
* 1, Ozzie Smith, shortstop, 1982-96.
* 2, Albert "Red" Schoendienst, 2nd base, 1945-56, and at least a coach almost continuously since 1961, including stints as manager 1966-76 and briefly in 1980 and 1990, and a "special assistant coach" until his death in 2018. He was, essentially, the Cards' Yogi Berra or Johnny Pesky.
* 6, Stan Musial, 1st base and left field, 1941-63.
* 9, Enos Slaughter, right field, 1938-53.
* 10, Tony LaRussa, manager, 1996-2011.
* 14, Ken Boyer, 3rd base, 1955-65, manager, 1978-80.
* 17, Jay "Dizzy" Dean, pitcher, 1930-37.
* 20, Lou Brock, left field, 1964-79.
* 24, Dorrel "Whitey" Herzog, manager and general manager, 1980-90.
* 42, universally retired for Jackie Robinson, but also retired here for Bruce Sutter, pitcher, 1981-84.
* 45, Bob Gibson, pitcher, 1959-75. And...
* 85, Gussie Busch, owner, 1953-89. The Cards' board of directors decided to honor Gussie on his 85th birthday, hence the number. He did not order it retired for himself.
Also honored with the retired numbers are Jack Buck, who broadcast for the Cardinals from 1954 until his death in 2002, represented with a picture of a microphone; and Rogers Hornsby, a 2nd baseman who played in St. Louis with the Cardinals from 1915 to 1926, and again in 1933, and with the Browns from 1933 to 1937.
Hornsby also managed the Cardinals in 1925 and '26, winning the World Series in the latter year; and managed the Browns from 1933 to 1937, and again briefly in 1952. When he had Hall-of-Famer Rogers Hornsby playing for him at or near his peak, Rogers Hornsby the manager won; when he was past his prime as a player, and then retired, he was a lousy manager. He wore a few numbers during a career that predated them, most commonly 4, and so no number is retired for him, an "STL" logo standing in for his number.
Not yet officially retired, but pulled from circulation, are: 5, Albert Pujols, 1st base 2001-11; 51, Willie McGee, center field 1982-90 and 1996-99; and 57, Darryl Kile, pitcher, 2000-02. Kile died of a heart attack in the Cardinals' hotel during a 2002 roadtrip to Chicago. His other teams, the Colorado Rockies and the Houston Astros, have also refused to reissue Number 57. Pujols' 5 will likely be officially retired when he retires as a player.
In addition, while their numbers have been returned to circulation, the 32 of Josh Hancock (pitcher, killed in a 2007 car crash) and the 18 of Oscar Taveras (right field, killed in a 2014 car crash) are honored with small circular logos bearing their initials and numbers on the wall of the Cardinal bullpen. (This is even though Taveras was not a pitcher, and both he and Hancock died because they were driving drunk.)
Outside the Gate 3 entrance stands a bronze statue of Musial. It was first unveiled outside the old Busch Stadium in 1968, and was moved to the new stadium. It shows him in his famed "corkscrew" batting stance, and the base includes a quote delivered by Commissioner Ford Frick at Musial's retirement ceremony at Sportsman's Park on September 29, 1963: "Here stands baseball's perfect warrior. Here stands baseball's perfect knight."
Other statues that previously surrounded Busch Memorial Stadium are now displayed at the corner of 8th & Clark, outside the team store: Cardinal Hall-of-Famers Hornsby, Smith, Schoendienst, Slaughter, Dean, Brock, Gibson and Buck; Browns star George Sisler, 1st base, 1915-27; and James "Cool Papa" Bell, a Negro League star whose teams included the St. Louis Stars. (Sisler remained in the major leagues until 1930, just before uniform numbers were adopted, so no number was ever retired for him; and, besides, since the Browns no longer exist, they couldn't do it for him anyway.)
There's another statue of Stan at Lester's Restaurant, at 9906 Clayton Road in Ladue, not far from Stan's longtime home; one of Brock at Lindenwood University in nearby St. Charles (which is where the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers come together); and one of Albert Pujols (who now plays for the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim) at Westport Plaza, at the intersection of Interstate 270 (St. Louis' beltway) and State Route 364. And, as previously noted, a new bridge carrying Interstate 70 across the Mississippi, opened in 2014, was named the Stan Musial Veterans Memorial Bridge, a.k.a. the Stan Span.
There are now 40 inductees in the St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Fame, which is located at Ballpark Village, across Clark Street to the north of the ballpark:
* From their 1880s American Association Pennant winners: None as yet, but players from this team that are in the main Hall of Fame in Cooperstown are 1st baseman and manager Charles Comiskey (later the Chicago White Sox owner) and pitcher James "Pud" Galvin.
* Between their 1888 and 1926 Pennants: Again, none. In Cooperstown are 1st baseman Jake Beckley and left fielder Jesse Burkett. Also during this era, Taylor Spink inherited his family's publication, The Sporting News, then known as "the Bible of Baseball." He ran it for the rest of his life, 1914 to 1962, and the Hall of Fame named its award for sportswriters for him, giving him the first one.
* From their 1926 World Championship: Hornsby, pitcher Jesse Haines, 1st baseman "Sunny Jim" Bottomley, left fielder Charles "Chick" Hafey, owner Sam Breadon and general manager Branch Rickey. Future Pennant-winning manager Billy Southworth was on this team as well. In Cooperstown but not in this Hall: Pitchers Grover Cleveland Alexander and Burleigh Grimes.
* From their 1928 and 1930 Pennants and their 1931 world Championship: Haines, Bottomley, Hafey, Breadon, Rickey, 2nd baseman Frankie Frisch, and 3rd baseman John "Pepper" Martin.
* From their 1934 "Gashouse Gang" World Champions: Haines, Breadon, Rickey, Frisch (now also the manager), Martin, pitcher Jay "Dizzy" Dean and left fielder Joe "Ducky" Medwick (of Carteret, New Jersey). Shortstop Leo Durocher is in Cooperstown, mainly for what he did as a manager for other teams.
* Between their 1934 and 1942 Pennants: 1st baseman Johnny Mize.
* From their 1942, '43, '44 and '46 Pennant winners: Breadon, Dean (as broadcaster), Southworth, Musial, Slaughter, shortstop Marty Marion, center fielder Terry Moore, pitcher Harry Brecheen and scout George Kissell. In 1946, Schoendienst and, as a broadcaster, Caray arrived, although Caray is not yet in the team Hall.
Also playing in this era, and elected to the Hall of Fame in Cooperstown as a broadcaster, was Joe Garagiola. Also elected, to the sportswriters' wing in Cooperstown, is Bob Broeg, who began writing for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch in this era, and is said to have given Musial his nickname, having heard Brooklyn Dodger fans, knowing that he liked to hit at Ebbets Field, say, "Uh-oh, dat man is back in town! Here comes dat man again!" So it was apparently Broeg who dubbed him "Stan the Man." He also pushed for better pensions for ballplayers, and advocated for the Hall elections of Hafey, Slaughter and Schoendienst.
* From their 1964, '67 and '68 Pennant winners: Busch, Schoendienst (coach 1964, manager 1967 and '68), Kissell, Buck, Boyer, Gibson, Brock, center fielder Curt Flood, left fielder Mike Shannon, and catcher Tim McCarver. Elected to Cooperstown, but not yet the Cards' Hall of Fame, are Caray, 1st baseman Orlando Cepeda (better known for what he did with the San Francisco Giants) and pitcher Steve Carlton (better known for what he did with the Philadelphia Phillies).
* From their 1982, '85 and '87 Pennant winners: Busch, Buck, Schoendienst, Kissell, Shannon (now a broadcaster), Herzog, Sutter, Smith, McGee, left fielder Vince Coleman (a rookie in 1985), and pitcher Bob Forsch. Note that 1st baseman Keith Hernandez, 1979 NL batting champion and co-MVP, and 1982 World Series-winning 1st baseman, has not been elected.
* From their 1996 Division title: Schoendienst, Kissell, Buck, Shannon, Smith, McGee, center fielder Ray Lankford, and LaRussa.
* From their 2000 Division title: Schoendienst, Kissell, Buck, Shannon, LaRussa, Lankford, 1st baseman Mark McGwire, and center fielder Jim Edmonds.
* From their 2004 Pennant and their 2006 World Championship: Schoendienst, Kissell, Shannon, LaRussa, Edmonds and pitcher Chris Carpenter. Presumably, Pujols will be elected when he retires as a player.
* From their 2011 World Championship: Schoendienst, Shannon, LaRussa, Pujols and Carpenter.
* From their 2013 Pennant: Schoendienst and Shannon.
It is strange for fans of my generation and later to think of Caray, whose broadcasts and outsized personality symbolized the Chicago Cubs, as being the voice of the Cubs' arch-rivals, the Cardinals. After all, his statue is outside Wrigley Field, not Busch Stadium. Yet he broadcast for the Cards from 1945 to 1969, along with Schoendienst bridging the gap between the Musial Pennants and the Brock-Gibson Pennants. He was fired after allegedly having an affair with Auggie Busch's wife -- which he never denied. (To make matters worse, she had the unfortunate maiden name of Susan Hornibrook.)
The Chicago White Sox picked him up, and, when his contract with them ran out, he had offers from both Chicago teams, but saw the Cubs signed up with WGN's "Superstation" project, and the White Sox hadn't. He later said that if he'd stayed with the White Sox, he'd soon be "Harry Who?" The rest is history.
There is a St. Louis Sports Hall of Fame, but it was moved from the old Busch Stadium to the new Blues arena, now known as the ScotTrade Center. Cardinals elected to it are, in chronological order of their service: Players Hornsby, Frisch, Dean, Medwick, Musial, Marion, Schoendienst, 1950s 1st baseman and later community activist Joe Cunningham, Boyer, Gibson, Brock, Cepeda, Torre, Simmons, 1970s pitcher Al Hrabosky, 1970s-80s 1st baseman Keith Hernandez, Herzog, 1980s 2nd baseman Ken Oberkfell, Ozzie Smith, Sutter, 1990s relief pitcher Lee Smith, Edmonds, Carpenter; managers Hornsby, Frisch, Schoendienst and Herzog; 1990s-2000s coach Dave Duncan, 2000s relief pitcher Jason Isringhausen, and 2000s 3rd baseman Scott Rolen; owners Busch and Bill DeWitt III; and broadcasters Buck, Garagiola, Bob Costas and Hrabosky.
Also elected are Browns Sisler, Ned Garver, Roy Sievers, Don Larsen and owner Bill DeWitt Sr.; St. Louis natives Yogi Berra, Earl Weaver, Rick Lessman, Sonny Siebert, Gary Gaetti, Kirk Rueter, Ken Sanders, the father-and-son pair Ducky and Dick Schofield, and Erma Bergman, who played for a St. Louis team in the women's league that played during World War II.
There is a Missouri Sports Hall of Fame, but it's all the way across the State in Springfield.
When the 1st All-Star Game was played in 1933, the Cardinals had 4 representatives named to it: Frankie Frisch, Pepper Martin, Bill Hallahan and Jimmie Wilson. To its 100 Greatest Baseball Players in 1999, The Sporting News (which was long based in St. Louis, but has since moved its headquarters to Charlotte) named Cardinals Hornsby, Alexander, Frisch, Dean, Medwick, Musial, Gibson, Brock, Carlton, Smith and McGwire; Browns Sisler and pitcher Satchel Paige; and Bell of the Negro Leagues' St. Louis Stars. In 2006, Cardinal fans, fully over their McGwire bender and hangover, voted Musial in as St. Louis' representative in the DHL Hometown Heroes contest.
The Cardinals lead the Mets in their all-time series, 393-352. Their rivalry with the Chicago Cubs, often considered the National League's equivalent of Yankees vs. Red Sox (though San Francisco and Los Angeles would dispute that), isn't that great of a rivalry: From 1946 onward, there's been only 25 seasons when both teams had a winning record, although that includes the last 4. Surprisingly, the Cubs lead it, 1,230 to 1,171, with 19 ties.
The Cards played the other Missouri team, the Kansas City Royals, in the 1985 World Series, and controversially lost in 7 games. They began playing each other in the regular season with the start of Interleague Play in 1997. Counting that World Series, the Cardinals lead 59-45, and have won 13 season series, the Royals 7, and 2 have been split.
Stuff. Team Stores are located on Level 1, behind the left field and right field corners. The usual items that can be found at a souvenir store can be found there.
Books about the Cardinals are not exactly well-known outside the St. Louis area. Peter Golenbock did his oral-history thing, which he'd previously done for the Yankees, Cubs and Brooklyn Dodgers, with The Spirit of St. Louis, which also included the Browns.
The legendary 1930s club was nicknamed for the Gashouse District, an area of gas tanks and slums which was torn down in the 1940s to make way for Stuyvesant Town. John Heidenry has the best account of that club: The Gashouse Gang: How Dizzy Dean, Leo Durocher, Branch Rickey, Pepper Martin, and Their Colorful, Come-from-Behind Ball Club Won the World Series -- and America's Heart -- During the Great Depression.
Many baseball observers have suggested that, due to his playing away from the media centers of New York, Chicago and Los Angeles, he is one of the most under-appreciated great players ever. But once he approached the age of 90, and more so now that he has died, there have been a few books to boost his historical reputation. The latest is Stan Musial: An American Life, by the legendary New York Times sportswriter George Vescey. It should be as good a guide as any into the 1942-46 Cardinal champions.
David Halberstam's October 1964 does a good job of showing how the Cardinal champions of the 1960s came together, and also how the Yankee dynasty of the 1950s and early '60s began to fall apart, with civil rights and the Cold War as backdrops. Doug Feldmann continues the story with (again, grammatically incorrect, but that's the nickname that was used at the time) El Birdos: The 1967 and 1968 St. Louis Cardinals, which was really the first team to succeed using a well-balanced mixture of white, black and Hispanic players. (The early San Francisco Giants, Cepeda among them, had the mix, but not quite the success, winning just 1 Pennant.)
Whitey Herzog got together with Rob Rains and Alvin Reid to write Whitey's Boys: A Celebration of the '82 Cards World Championship. James Rygelski and Robert Tiemann wrote 10 Rings: Stories of the St. Louis Cardinals World Championship, which became out of date at the end of the season. Rains tells how that happened in Wild Cards: The St. Louis Cardinals' Stunning 2011 Championship Season.
There are 3 World Series highlight films collections for the Cardinals. Since the official highlight films only started with the Yanks-Cards matchup of 1943, the previous year's Cards win over the Yanks is not included. But the 1943, '44 and '46 Series are packaged together, as are the Series of 1964, '67 and '68, and the Series of 1982, '85 and '87 -- even though the Cards lost 4 of those 9. The 1982, 2006 and 2011 Series are packaged separately as well.
There is, as yet, no Essential Games of the St. Louis Cardinals DVD collection, but there is The St. Louis Cardinals - Greatest Games of Busch Stadium. The games are: 1968 World Series Game 1 (Gibson strikes out 17 Tigers to set a Series record), 1982 World Series Game 7, 1985 NLCS Game 5 (Ozzie Smith, of all people, hits a walkoff homer), 1987 World Series Game 3, September 8, 1998 (Mark McGwire's record-breaking 62nd homer), and 2004 NLCS Game 7.
During the Game. A recent Thrillist article on "Baseball's Most Intolerable Fans" listed the Cardinals' fans 2nd -- behind only L.A.'s, and ahead of Boston's, the Yankees', Philly's, San Francisco's, the Cubs' and the Mets', in that order. They explain:
Every last Cardinals fan believes right down to the marrow of their custard-fortified bones that, by golly, the Cards are just a special franchise blessed by whatever deity you believe in (oh, who are we kidding, it's the Christian one) with the capacity to just do things the right way.
They fancy themselves the best fans in baseball to such a degree that it's become a punchline within baseball circles and a dynamic blessed with its own must-read, hypocrisy-exposing Twitter account where you can read all the horribly racist things they continue to say about Jason Heyward for daring to, you know, choose his employer. Oh, and their front office broke federal laws hacking into the Houston Astros computer system, which has somehow received about 1% the attention that Tom Brady's taste for slightly more grippable balls did.
Okay, they can be annoying. And, because they've got a lot of Eastern Missouri, Southern Illinois, Western Kentucky, Northern Arkansas and Western Tennessee people, there may be some Tea Party, neo-Confederate bigotry going on. And I wouldn't go onto the streets of St. Louis or into Busch Stadium wearing Chicago Cubs gear.But most Cardinal fans are fine. Because of their Great Plains/Heartland image, they like a "family atmosphere." They don't much like New York, but they won't bother Met fans just for being Met fans. They will not directly antagonize you. At least, they won't initiate it. But don't call them rednecks, hicks, hillbillies or (to borrow a term from British soccer) sheep-shaggers.
Cardinal fans wear red. Bright red. Cardinal red. Nearly all of them. This seems to be a requirement. The entire stadium seems to be covered in it, and not just because the seats at Busch are red (as they were at its predecessor).
The Friday game will be Adult Fleece Vest Night, for the 1st 30,000 fans age 14 and up; and Boy Band Night: The team website says, "Hopefully, it won't be 98 degrees." The Saturday game will be Adult Road Alternate Embroidered Jersey Day, featuring the horrible powder-blue road togs of the late 1970s and early '80s. And, as Sunday is Easter, it will be Cardinals Build-A-Bear Workshop Bunny Day.
The Cards have a mascot, with perhaps the dumbest name of any mascot in the big four major league sports: Fredbird the Redbird. He's no Phillie Phanatic, or even a Mr. Met. He does, however, have a bevy of young lady assistants.
Interestingly, Auggie Busch, while running Busch Gardens in Tampa in 1974, donated a tiger born there to Louisiana State University, to use as their mascot, becoming Mike IV.
The Cardinals hold auditions for National Anthem singers, instead of having a regular, following the retirement of their former singer, Charles Glenn. hey don't play a song after "Take Me Out to the Ballgame" during the 7th stretch. But, as I said earlier, in the middle of the 8th inning they play the old Budweiser TV commercial jingle "Here Comes the King," as in "Budweiser, King of Beers." "When you say Budweiser... you've said it all!"
After the game, win or lose, they play "Meet Me in St. Louis," the theme from the 1944 Judy Garland film about the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair. (So, even that long ago, it was already a nostalgia piece.)
After the Game. St. Louis has a bit of a crime problem, but since the stadium is right downtown, this will probably not affect you. As I said, leave the home fans alone, and they'll probably leave you alone.
"Ballpark Village" has been built, across Clark Avenue to the north of the stadium, with bars and restaurants. A similar project, with the same name, has been planned for the area around Yankee Stadium since the renovation project for the old Stadium 40 years ago, but has never happened. Hopefully, the Cardinals will have more luck.
On April 29, 2018, an argument in Ballpark Village led to the shooting death of one man and the wounding of another. The shooter turned himself in 3 days later. This appears to be an isolated incident, so the Village can be considered safe.
Mike Shannon's Steaks and Seafood, owned by the 1960s Cardinal right fielder and longtime broadcaster, is at 620 Market Street at 7th Street, 2 blocks north of Busch Stadium.
If you want to be around other New Yorkers, Bar Louie is the home of the local Giant fans. 14 Maryland Plaza at Euclid Avenue, on the West Side. MetroLink to Central West End, then a short walk. The local Jet fans' hangout is BoBecks, but it's 20 miles south of downtown St. Louis, across the River in Waterloo, Illinois. 1234 Jamie Lane. MetroLink to 5th & Missouri, then switch to 2X bus, then walk a mile south.
If your visit to St. Louis is during the European soccer season, which is nearing its completion, the best place to watch your club is at the Amsterdam Tavern, 3175 Morganford Road, in the Tower Grove South area, about 6 miles southwest of downtown. Bus 30 to Arsenal Street and Morganford Road. (However, don't be fooled by that street name: Fans of London club Arsenal meet at Barrister's, 7923 Forsyth Blvd., about 9 miles west of downtown. MetroLink to Clayton.)
Sidelights. Busch Memorial Stadium, home of the Cardinals from 1966 to 2005, the NFL Cardinals from 1966 until 1987 when they moved to Arizona, and the Rams for 3 games in 1995 because the new dome wasn't ready, was across Clark Avenue from the new stadium.
While it was never a major venue for football -- unless you count those "Bud Bowl" commercials during Super Bowls, where the arched roof of old Busch was easily recognizable -- there were 6 World Series played there, with the Cardinals winning in 1967 and 1982.
But only in 1982 did they clinch there. The Detroit Tigers clinched there in 1968, and the Boston Red Sox did so in 2004, with Drew Barrymore and Jimmy Fallon filmed by the Farrelly Brothers in their improvised rewritten ending to the U.S. version of Fever Pitch, with Major League Baseball giving them permission to film on the field after the game.
The 1980s, the era of the White Rat,
the Wizard of Ozz, 3 Pennants and artificial turf.
Busch Memorial Stadium hosted 7 games by the U.S. national soccer team, and the Stars & Stripes were undefeated in them, winning 5 and tying 2.
* The Dome at America's Center. Formerly known as the Edward Jones Dome, this was home to the NFL's Rams from 1995 until 2016. It has a St. Louis Football Ring of Fame, but most of the honorees are ex-football Cardinals. The Rams have gone back to Los Angeles, meaning that St. Louis has now lost 2 NFL teams in less than 30 years. Meaning that, regardless of how hard they try to get a replacement for the Dome built, the NFL won't try to put another team there.
St. Louis area fans seem to have fallen back into the pattern they had in the 1988-94 interregnum: Fans on the Missouri side of the Mississippi River favor the Missouri team, the Kansas City Chiefs; while those on the Illinois side favor the Illinois team, the Chicago Bears.
The Dome has hosted the Big 12 Conference Championship Game, and the 2005 NCAA Final Four, with North Carolina beating Illinois in the Final. The Dome is at 6th Street & Broadway, 9 blocks north of Busch Stadium. Metrolink to Convention Center.
* Site of Sportsman's Park. From 1866 onward, several ballparks stood on this site, including the one used by the Cardinals, then known as the St. Louis Browns, when they won 4 straight Pennants in the old American Association from 1885 to 1888.
Those Browns were owned by Chris von der Ahe (VAHN der AH-hee), a German immigrant (as were thousands of people in St. Louis at the time), and he was an outsized personality owning a baseball team decades before George Steinbrenner, Charlie Finley or Gussie Busch were born.
"Der boss president of der Browns," as he called himself in his accent, built one of the first amusement parks, adjacent to the ground, and a beer garden which could be called the first sports bar -- though this is disputed by Bostonians stumping for Michael "Nuf Ced" McGreevy's Third Base Saloon, which also opened in the 1880s. But the ballpark burned down in 1898, and von der Ahe was ruined. The new owners moved the team to Robison Field.
The team's name became the Cardinals with a change in uniform color in 1900, and the American League's Browns arrived in 1902, after spending the AL's 1st season in Milwaukee. The AL Browns set up shop at the existing Sportsman's Park, and built a new one on the site, the last one, in 1909.
The ballpark was home to St. Louis' 1st 2 NFL teams, the All-Stars, who played only the 1923 season; and the Gunners, who played from 1931 to 1940.
Those Browns remained until 1953, when Bill Veeck realized that Gussie Busch's purchase of the Cards meant the Browns simply couldn't compete. The Cards had moved back to the site in 1920 and by 1926 had set the tone: The Browns were the landlords but legendary losers, while the Cardinals were the tenants but wildly successful.
Ten World Series were played in that ballpark, from 1926 to 1964, including the all-St. Louis "Trolley Series" of 1944, when the Browns led the Cards 2 games to 1 but the Cards won the next 3 straight to take it, ruining the Browns' best (and perhaps last) chance to take the city away.
Gussie knew that his Cards -- and the NFL's Cardinals, who played there after moving from Chicago in 1960 -- couldn't stay in a 30,804-seat bandbox tucked away on the North Side with no parking and no freeway access, so he got the city to build him the downtown stadium.
Sportsman's Park, the 1st Busch Stadium, the home of George Sisler, the Gashouse Gang and Stan the Man, was demolished shortly after the Cards left in 1966. The Herbert Hoover Boys Club is now on the site, and, unlike most long-gone ballpark sites, there is a baseball field there.
Oddly, the two teams had different addresses for their offices: The Cards at 3623 Dodier Street, the Browns at 2911 North Grand Blvd. Metrolink to Grand station, transfer to Number 70 bus. Definitely to be visited only in daylight.
* Site of Robison Field. Home of the Cardinals from 1898 to 1920, it was the last mostly-wooden ballpark in the major leagues. Moving out was the best thing the Cards could have done, as -- hard to believe, considering what happened to them over the next quarter-century -- they were the town's joke club, while the Browns were the more highly-regarded franchise. It was torn down in 1926 to make way for Beaumont High School, which still stands on the site.
3836 Natural Bridge Avenue, at Vandeventer Avenue. Six blocks north and two blocks west of the site of Sportsman's Park. Again: Do not visit at night.
* Site of Handlan's Park. The St. Louis Terriers played in the Federal League, finishing last in 1914, but nearly winning the Pennant in 1915. They had Hall of Fame pitchers Eddie Plank and Mordecai "Three-Finger" Brown. When the FL folded after the 1915 season, the team's owner, Phil Ball, was invited to buy the Browns, and he owned them until his death in 1933, with his estate continuing to do so until selling in 1936.
They played at Handlan's Park. The spot is now occupied by Marchetti Towers, housing for Saint Louis University, whose Hermann Stadium and Chaifetz Arena are within a 5-minute walk. 3520 Laclede Avenue at Grand Blvd., about 2 1/2 miles west of downtown. MetroLink to Grand.
* Enterprise Center, site of Kiel Auditorium, and St. Louis Sports Hall of Fame. The NHL's Blues moved into this new arena in 1994, after 27 years at the old Arena. They've only reached the Conference Finals once since moving in, but at least they're stable, and not in danger of being moved.
Originally, the arena was known as the Kiel Center, in honor of the previous building on the site, and then the Savvis Center, after a company that would go bust in the tech bubble. Then it became the ScotTrade Center, and then last year, Enterprise Rent-a-Car bought the naming rights. Neither the arena nor the company has anything to do with Star Trek.
The building also hosts the Missouri Valley Conference tournament, known as "Arch Madness" instead of "March Madness." It hosted the NCAA Frozen Four in 2007.
The previous building was built in 1934, as the Municipal Auditorium, and in 1943 was renamed for the late Mayor Henry Kiel, who got it built. Saint Louis University played its home basketball games there for its entire existence, 1934 to 1991, before moving temporarily to the Arena and then to the Scottrade Center, before opening its new on-campus Chaifetz Arena in 2008.
The NBA's Hawks played there from their 1955 move from Milwaukee until their 1968 move to Atlanta, winning the Western Conference title in 1957, '58, '60 and '61 and the NBA Title in 1958. Elvis Presley sang there on January 1, 1956; March 29, 1957; September 10, 1970; June 28, 1973; and March 22, 1976.
1401 Clark Avenue (known on that block as Brett Hull Way in honor of the Blues legend) at 14th Street, 5 blocks west of Busch Stadium. Metrolink to Civic Center.
On May 12, 2014, the New York Times printed a story that shows NBA fandom by ZIP Code, according to Facebook likes. Being between several NBA cities but not especially close to any of them (242 miles to Indianapolis, 284 to Memphis, 295 to Chicago, 498 to Oklahoma City), the St. Louis area divides up its fandom among the "cool" teams: The Bulls, the Los Angeles Lakers and the Miami Heat -- or, possibly, now that LeBron James has gone back to them, the Cleveland Cavaliers. However, not far into St. Louis' Illinois suburbs, you begin to get into solid Bulls territory. If St. Louis had an NBA team, its metropolitan area would rank 22nd in population among NBA markets.
* Chaifetz Arena. The aforementioned home of Saint Louis University basketball (they always spell "Saint" out, never abbreviate it as "St.") is at 1 S. Compton Avenue, at the southwest corner of Laclede Avenue. Across from it, at the southeast corner, was Stars Park, home of the Negro Leagues' St. Louis Stars, Pennant winners in 1928, 1930 and 1931 -- just like their white counterparts.
SLU's teams are called the Billikens. Along with another Catholic school known for basketball but not football, Washington, D.C.'s, Georgetown Hoyas, this is one of the odder nicknames in college sports. In 1911, a local sportswriter said that the school's football coach at the time, John R. Bender, resembled a "Billiken," a charm doll popular at the time, resembling a Buddha, but with pointed ears. His team became known as Bender's Billikens, and the name stuck. Bender's predecessor as SLU football coach, Eddie Cochems, was the 1st coach to legally utilize the forward pass, in 1906. MetroLink to Grand.
* Site of 1904 World's Fair and St. Louis Arena. The Louisiana Purchase Exposition was held at Forest Park in honor of the centennial of the start of Meriwether Lewis and William Clark heading out from St. Louis to explore the Louisiana Purchase.
The Exposition is remembered as the birthplace of the hamburger, the hot dog, iced tea, peanut butter, cotton candy and Cracker Jacks. While they may have all been nationally popularized at that place and at that time, all of these claims of origin are dubious at best, except for Cracker Jacks, which are definitely a St. Louis creation. Equally dubious was the 1904 Olympics, which were essentially a sideshow of the World's Fair; it wasn't until London in 1908 that they became an institution in and of themselves.
Very little of the Fair remains. The Administration Building is now Brookings Hall, a major building of Washington University. The Palace of Fine Art is now the St. Louis Art Museum.
The Arena opened in 1929 across Oakland Avenue from Forest Park. At 14,200 seats, it was then one of the largest arenas outside the Northeast Corridor, and in terms of floor space only the recently-built "old" Madison Square Garden was larger. It hosted a Heavyweight Championship fight on August 4, 1941, with Joe Louis beating Tony "Baby Tank" Musto with an 8th round TKO.
It was the home of several minor league hockey teams until the NHL expansion of 1967 brought in the Blues. At first, the NHL purposely put all the new teams in the same division, thus giving them an equal chance of reaching the Stanley Cup Finals. The Blues reached the Finals in their first 3 seasons, 1968, '69 and '70, due to having signed some legends at the end of their careers, such as Jacques Plante, Doug Harvey, Dickie Moore and Glenn Hall. They haven't reached the Finals since, and only reached the NHL's round of 4, under whatever name, 3 times in the last 46 years.
In 1977, the Arena had been expanded to 17,188 seats, and with Ralston Purina then being majority owners of the Blues, their "Checkerboard Square" logo was plastered everywhere, and the building was renamed the Checkerdome until 1983.
It hosted the NCAA Final Four in 1973 (Bill Walton hitting 21 of 22 shots for UCLA over Memphis State) and 1978 (Jack Givens' Kentucky defeating Mike Gminski's Duke); and the hockey version, the "Frozen Four," in 1975.
It was the home of the Spirits of St. Louis in the American Basketball Association's last 2 seasons, 1974-75 and 1975-76, before they folded with the league, and were not absorbed into the NBA. That team featured Marvin Barnes and future Basketball Hall-of-Famers Maurice Lucas and Moses Malone, all 3 of whom were later named to the ABA All-Time Team. The Spirits were also the 1st major league sports team for whom Bob Costas broadcast.
The Arena was seen as being inadequate for a modern sports team, and the Blues moved out in 1994. It was demolished in 1999, and apartments and a Hampton Inn are on the site today. 5700 Oakland Avenue at Parkview Place. Metrolink to Central West End, then Number 59 bus.
Elvis also sang at the Missouri Theater on October 21, 22 and 23, 1955, at the intersection of N. Grand Blvd. and Lucas Avenue, a block away from he Fox Theatre. Parking is on the site now.
In addition to the preceding, Elvis sang in Eastern Missouri in 1955 at the National Guard Armory in Sikeston on January 21 and September 7; at the Armory in Poplar Bluff on March 9; at the B&B Club in Gobler on April 8 and September 28; and at the Arena Building in Cape Girardeau on July 20.
* World Wide Technology Soccer Park. This 5,500-seat facility opened in 1982 as St. Louis Soccer Park, and hosted 2 games of the CONCACAF Gold Cup in 1989. Since 2015, it has been home to Saint Louis FC of the United Soccer League Championship.
1 Soccer Park Road, on the bank of the Meramec River in Fenton, Missouri, 16 miles southwest of downtown St. Louis. Not reachable by public transit.
St. Louis once had a very distinguished soccer history, but it has pretty much been forgotten. Of the 11 players on the U.S. team that shocked England at the 1950 World Cup in Brazil, 5 were from St. Louis.
Goalkeeper Frank Borghi, centre-half Charlie Colombo, inside right Gino Pariani and outside right Frank Wallace played for St. Louis Simpkins-Ford. Reserve defender Bob Annis also played for that team and was selected for the World Cup, but did not play in the tournament.
Right back Harry Keough played for St. Louis McMahon. Unlike Simpkins-Ford, this team still exists, but only as a youth program called St. Louis Kutis Soccer Club, proudly calling itself "the oldest soccer club in the United States" and the "proud holder of 13 National Championships." Their home is at Rockwood Summit High School, also in Fenton, at 1780 Hawkins Road, 21 miles south of downtown St. Louis.
UPDATE: St. Louis has been granted a Major League Soccer expansion franchise that will begin play in the 2022 season, and will be the league's 1st team with female majority ownership (several women, not just one). The 22,500-seat stadium will be adjacent to the Union Station complex, at the southwest corner of 20th and Pine Streets. No name has yet been selected for either the team or the stadium, nor has a playing site in the event that the stadium is not ready. (It's a little over 2 years from now.)
Until this team begins play, the nearest MLS teams will be Sporting Kansas City, 263 miles to the west; and the Chicago Fire, 296 miles to the northeast. Chicago and Kansas City, along with Indianapolis, 242 miles to the northeast, are also home to the nearest NFL teams since the move of the Rams back to Los Angeles. Chicago, Indianapolis, and Memphis, 284 miles to the south, are home to the nearest NBA teams.
In spite of the St. Louis-Chicago rivalry, the Bulls' 1990s success makes them the most popular NBA team in St. Louis. In spite of the St. Louis-Kansas City rivalry, the Chiefs' success, including their new Super Bowl win (some Missourians are printing up "State of Champions" paraphernalia with the Chiefs' and Blues' logos), makes them the most popular NFL team in St. Louis.
* World Wide Technology Soccer Park. This 5,500-seat facility opened in 1982 as St. Louis Soccer Park, and hosted 2 games of the CONCACAF Gold Cup in 1989. Since 2015, it has been home to Saint Louis FC of the United Soccer League Championship.
1 Soccer Park Road, on the bank of the Meramec River in Fenton, Missouri, 16 miles southwest of downtown St. Louis. Not reachable by public transit.
St. Louis once had a very distinguished soccer history, but it has pretty much been forgotten. Of the 11 players on the U.S. team that shocked England at the 1950 World Cup in Brazil, 5 were from St. Louis.
Goalkeeper Frank Borghi, centre-half Charlie Colombo, inside right Gino Pariani and outside right Frank Wallace played for St. Louis Simpkins-Ford. Reserve defender Bob Annis also played for that team and was selected for the World Cup, but did not play in the tournament.
The U.S. XI, June 29, 1950
Right back Harry Keough played for St. Louis McMahon. Unlike Simpkins-Ford, this team still exists, but only as a youth program called St. Louis Kutis Soccer Club, proudly calling itself "the oldest soccer club in the United States" and the "proud holder of 13 National Championships." Their home is at Rockwood Summit High School, also in Fenton, at 1780 Hawkins Road, 21 miles south of downtown St. Louis.
UPDATE: St. Louis has been granted a Major League Soccer expansion franchise that will begin play in the 2022 season, and will be the league's 1st team with female majority ownership (several women, not just one). The 22,500-seat stadium will be adjacent to the Union Station complex, at the southwest corner of 20th and Pine Streets. No name has yet been selected for either the team or the stadium, nor has a playing site in the event that the stadium is not ready. (It's a little over 2 years from now.)
Until this team begins play, the nearest MLS teams will be Sporting Kansas City, 263 miles to the west; and the Chicago Fire, 296 miles to the northeast. Chicago and Kansas City, along with Indianapolis, 242 miles to the northeast, are also home to the nearest NFL teams since the move of the Rams back to Los Angeles. Chicago, Indianapolis, and Memphis, 284 miles to the south, are home to the nearest NBA teams.
In spite of the St. Louis-Chicago rivalry, the Bulls' 1990s success makes them the most popular NBA team in St. Louis. In spite of the St. Louis-Kansas City rivalry, the Chiefs' success, including their new Super Bowl win (some Missourians are printing up "State of Champions" paraphernalia with the Chiefs' and Blues' logos), makes them the most popular NFL team in St. Louis.
Of the 155 current honorees, 30 are connected to sports, and 14 of them are Cardinals figures: Branch Rickey, Rogers Hornsby, Dizzy Dean, Stan Musial, Red Schoendienst, Bob Gibson, Tim McCarver, Curt Flood, Lou Brock, Whitey Herzog, Ozzie Smith, Haray Caray, Joe Garagiola and Jack Buck.
The inductees also include the Browns' George Sisler; the Negro Leagues' James "Cool Papa" Bell; St. Louis native and New York baseball legend Yogi Berra; football Cardinals Dan Dierdorf and Jackie Smith (as yet, no Rams); Hawks Bob Pettit and Ed Macauley (as yet, no Blues); boxers Henry Armstrong and Archie Moore; tennis stars Dwight Davis and Jimmy Connors; track legend Jackie Joyner-Kersee; bowler Dick Weber; multi-sport broadcaster Bob Costas; and, if you count golf, Hale Irwin and Judy Rankin.
Gerald Early, a Philadelphia native who has been inducted into the walk for his writing and his teaching at St. Louis' Washington University, has written about baseball, and was interviewed in Ken Burns' 1994 Baseball miniseries.
At 6504 Delmar is Blueberry Hill, the rock-and-roll-themed restaurant associated with -- but not, as I once believed, owned by -- the late St. Louis native Chuck Berry, who, of course, has a plaque on the Walk of Fame, as does his pianist Johnnie Johnson. They are 2 of the 26 musical personalities on the Walk, along with both Ike and Tina Turner, ragtime inventor Scott Joplin, jazz superstars Josephine Baker and Miles Davis, and opera singer Robert McFerrin, father of "Don't Worry Be Happy" singer Bobby McFerrin.
Chuck Berry's Walk of Fame star
Stan Musial is buried at Forever Bellerive Cemetery, 740 N. Mason Road. Light rail to Delmar Loop, then Bus 91 to Olive & Kram, then walk a mile south on Mason. George Sisler is buried at the Faith des Peres Presbyterian Church Cemetery, 11155 Clayton Road. Light rail to Clayton, then Bus 58 to Clayton & Geyer.
* Gateway Arch. Built on the traditional founding site of the city, on the Mississippi River, on February 14, 1764, the Arch, 630 feet high with its legs 630 feet apart at ground level, represents an old city. But it is, surprisingly, not an especially old landmark, opening to the public in 1967.
An underground visitors' center leads to a tram that takes you to the top, which is higher than any actual building in town, and serves as St. Louis' "observation deck." Like the Empire State Building, it has lights cast on it at night in honor of various occasions. Admission is $10. 200 Washington Avenue at Market Street, access via Walnut Street.
The Arch is treated as the tallest "building" in the State of Missouri, but the tallest real building in town is One Metropolitan Square, built at Broadway & Olive Street in 1989: 593 feet tall. Ordinary, by New York's standards.
* Brewery. The world's 2nd-largest brewery is the Anheuser-Busch plant on U.S. Routes 1 & 9, across from Newark Liberty International Airport. The largest is A-B's corporate headquarters, south of downtown. Public tours of the brewery are available. 1 Busch Place, Broadway and Arsenal Street. Number 30 or 73 bus.
* Museum of Transportation. A rail spur of the old Missouri Pacific Railroad (or "Mopac," later absorbed by the Union Pacific) enabled this museum to open in 1944. It houses trains, cars, boats, and even planes.
From a New York Tri-State Area perspective, it has one of the last 2 surviving New York Central steam locomotives, one of the last 2 surviving Delaware, Lackawanna & Western steam locomotives, an Erie Lackawanna diesel locomotive, and the 1960 DiDia 150, a.k.a. the "Dream Car" made famous by New York singing legend Bobby Darin.
3015 Barrett Station Road in Keyes Summit (though St. Louis is still the mailing address), west of downtown. Bus 58X to Big Bend & Barrett Station Roads, then a 15-minute walk north on Barrett Station.
* Hall of Fame Place. Yogi Berra, Joe Garagiola, Bobby Hofman and Jack Maguire, 4 future MLB players, all grew up on the 5400 block of Elizabeth Avenue on the north side, at the same time. Specifically, Yogi lived at 5447, and Joe lived across the street. For a time, broadcaster Jack Buck lived on this block as well. The neighborhood was Italian, and nicknamed Dago Hill -- later, after it became impermissible to use slurs like that, just "The Hill."
These are still private homes, so don't bother the people living there. On the west side, about 5 1/2 miles from downtown. Metrolink to Central West End, then Bus 14.
* Ulysses S. Grant National Historic Site. The closest the St. Louis area comes to having a Presidential Library, this park was built on land owned by the family of Julia Dent, the wife of the Union General and 18th President who is on the $50 bill.
7400 Grant Road, Grantwood Village, St. Louis County, southwest of downtown. It's tough to reach by public transportation: You'd have to take Metrolink to Shrewsbury station, transfer to Bus 21, ride it to Walton and Grant Roads, and walk a little over a mile down Grant Road.
The Democratic Party had its 1876 Convention at the Merchants Exchange Building, at 3rd Street between Chestnut and Pine Streets, nominating Governor Samuel J. Tilden of New York for President. The building stood there from 1875 to 1958.
The St. Louis Exposition and Music Hall stood from 1883 to 1907, and was the site of the Conventions for the Democrats in 1888 (renominating Grover Cleveland) and 1904 (nominating Alton Parker), and the Republicans in 1896 (nominating William McKinley). It stood at the southeast corner of 13th and Olive Streets.
The St. Louis Coliseum stood from 1908 and 1953, at the southwest corner of Washington Blvd. and Jefferson Avenue. The Democrats held their 1916 Convention there, renominating Woodrow Wilson. It also staged boxing.
The Washington University Field House has hosted Presidential Debates in 1992 (George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton and Ross Perot), 2000 (George W. Bush and Al Gore) and 2004 (George W. and John Kerry). 330 N. Big Bend Blvd. Metrolink to University City-Big Bend.
Not many TV shows have been set in St. Louis. The current NBC sitcom Superstore is set there. Also set in St. Louis have been Grace Under Fire, The John Larroquette Show, Making the Grade and On Our Own. Lucas Tanner was set in the suburb of Webster Groves.
Defiance, a postapocalyptic show that ran on Syfy from 2013 to 2015, used a damaged Arch was a landmark, but was filmed in Toronto. So if you're looking for locations in the city that have been on TV, guess what, the Arch itself and Busch Stadium are your best bets.
Since M*A*S*H commanding officer Colonel Sherman Potter, played by Harry Morgan, was from Mark Twain's hometown of Hannibal, 117 miles upriver from St. Louis, the failed spinoff AfterMASH was set at a veterans' hospital in St. Louis, but that was set in the mid-1950s, before the Arch went up.
The best-known movie set in the city is Meet Me In St. Louis, based around the 1904 Exposition, starring Judy Garland and directed by Vincente Minnelli, who later married each other. Tennessee Williams was from St. Louis, so he set his play The Glass Menagerie there, and it's been filmed twice, in 1950 and 1966.
The baseball-themed 1949 film It Happens Every Spring takes place in St. Louis, but was filmed at Wrigley Field in Los Angeles, and uses footage from the 1945 World Series, which was played at Wrigley Field in Chicago (the Los Angeles Angels were then a Cubs farm team) and Briggs Stadium in Detroit (later renamed Tiger Stadium).
The year 1952 saw 2 films about Cardinal pitchers: The Pride of St. Louis, with Dan Dailey as a then-still-living-and-broadcasting Dizzy Dean; and The Winning Team, with Ronald Reagan as the recently-deceased Grover Cleveland Alexander. Both were shot in Los Angeles, and the Alexander film ends with him striking Tony Lazzeri out to win the 1926 World Series over the Yankees, when there were actually 2 more innings to go.
And, just as, in the days before The Natural, sports-themed movies rarely got actors who looked like they could play their sports, athletes have always been turned into actors, even when they shouldn't have been. In 1997, Shaquille O'Neal starred in Steel, another one set in St. Louis but filmed in L.A. He plays a scientific genius who makes his own armor and weapons and becomes a superhero. It was based on a DC Comics hero created in the wake of the temporary "Death of Superman," but his adventures were set in fictional Metropolis. As with the Halle Berry version of Catwoman, when you take a comic book character away from the source material, it doesn't work. It was still better than Shaq's turn as a genie in Kazaam.
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Not many TV shows have been set in St. Louis. The current NBC sitcom Superstore is set there. Also set in St. Louis have been Grace Under Fire, The John Larroquette Show, Making the Grade and On Our Own. Lucas Tanner was set in the suburb of Webster Groves.
Defiance, a postapocalyptic show that ran on Syfy from 2013 to 2015, used a damaged Arch was a landmark, but was filmed in Toronto. So if you're looking for locations in the city that have been on TV, guess what, the Arch itself and Busch Stadium are your best bets.
Since M*A*S*H commanding officer Colonel Sherman Potter, played by Harry Morgan, was from Mark Twain's hometown of Hannibal, 117 miles upriver from St. Louis, the failed spinoff AfterMASH was set at a veterans' hospital in St. Louis, but that was set in the mid-1950s, before the Arch went up.
The best-known movie set in the city is Meet Me In St. Louis, based around the 1904 Exposition, starring Judy Garland and directed by Vincente Minnelli, who later married each other. Tennessee Williams was from St. Louis, so he set his play The Glass Menagerie there, and it's been filmed twice, in 1950 and 1966.
The baseball-themed 1949 film It Happens Every Spring takes place in St. Louis, but was filmed at Wrigley Field in Los Angeles, and uses footage from the 1945 World Series, which was played at Wrigley Field in Chicago (the Los Angeles Angels were then a Cubs farm team) and Briggs Stadium in Detroit (later renamed Tiger Stadium).
The year 1952 saw 2 films about Cardinal pitchers: The Pride of St. Louis, with Dan Dailey as a then-still-living-and-broadcasting Dizzy Dean; and The Winning Team, with Ronald Reagan as the recently-deceased Grover Cleveland Alexander. Both were shot in Los Angeles, and the Alexander film ends with him striking Tony Lazzeri out to win the 1926 World Series over the Yankees, when there were actually 2 more innings to go.
And, just as, in the days before The Natural, sports-themed movies rarely got actors who looked like they could play their sports, athletes have always been turned into actors, even when they shouldn't have been. In 1997, Shaquille O'Neal starred in Steel, another one set in St. Louis but filmed in L.A. He plays a scientific genius who makes his own armor and weapons and becomes a superhero. It was based on a DC Comics hero created in the wake of the temporary "Death of Superman," but his adventures were set in fictional Metropolis. As with the Halle Berry version of Catwoman, when you take a comic book character away from the source material, it doesn't work. It was still better than Shaq's turn as a genie in Kazaam.
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St. Louis has a history out of proportion to its size, and Cardinal fans like to think of their town as the best baseball town in America. You are under no obligation to agree, but it is one of the best baseball cities, and every fan who can get out there should.
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