Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Giants, Cards proving geezers still have a place in baseball San Francisco: The second oldest team with an average age of 30.63 years old

- Tribune News Service New York Daily News

It’s long been said baseball is a young man’s game, and one of the primary tenets of analytics for general managers today is don’t fall in love with players 32 years or older.

But tell that to the St. Louis Cardinals and San Francisco Giants whose postseason fortunes are largely resting on the continuing superior performanc­e of their own little geezer brigades.

You start with the Giants, at an average age of 30.63 the second oldest team in baseball (behind the A’s at 31.17), who most certainly would not have been in first place in the National League West (but for one day) since

May 31 without the considerab­le contributi­ons of the old hands from their 2012 and 2014 world championsh­ip clubs, Brandon Crawford (34), Brandon Belt

Giants, Arizona (late) Oakland, Seattle (late)

(33) and Buster Posey (34). Crawford and Belt are having career seasons — in Crawford’s case, an MVP caliber season on both sides of the field — while Posey, with his most home runs since 2015 and typically stellar defense behind the plate, has reestablis­hed his Hall of Fame arc after being plagued by injuries in 2018 and ‘19 and sitting out all of last year for COVID-19 reasons.

As for the Cardinals, the third oldest team in the majors at

30.02 average age, it’s fair to say the 15-game winning streak that surged them from 3 1/2 games behind for the second wild card on Sept. 7 to close to clinching, does not happen without the late-in-baseball-life brilliance of 40-year-old Adam Wainwright and GM John Mozeliak’s enlightene­d trade deadline deals for 37-year-old Jon Lester and 38-year-old J.A. Happ. From

July 27-Sept. 13, Wainwright won nine of 10 starts while the Cardinals have won 12 of his last 13 starts, vaulting him into the National League Cy Young conversati­on.

Meanwhile, Lester and

Happ have each undergone a renaissanc­e since coming over to the Cardinals from the Nationals

and Twins respective­ly, combining for eight wins in August and September as much-needed plugs in their injury-riddled rotation.

(It is also worth noting that the catcher for the majority of these Cardinal wins was 39-year-old marvel Yadier Molina, in the midst of his 10th All-star season and 13th in which he has logged at least 110 games behind the plate. Happily for the Cardinals, Molina has said he will come back next year for one final season. After that, the next time we’ll see him will be in Cooperstow­n.

Lester, 3-5 with 5.02 ERA in 16 starts with Washington, has credited Wainwright for his turnaround in St. Louis in which he has essentiall­y been the Cardinals’ second-best starter and will likely start the wild-card game against either the Giants or Dodgers. “It’s the first time in a long while I haven’t been the oldest pitcher on the team,” he said last week, adding that Wainwright emphasized to him the importance of pacing himself, throwing fewer fastballs and working the corners for strikes. In his Sept. 20 start, Lester recorded his 200th career win, limiting the first place Brewers to three hits and two runs over six innings.

What Lester’s feat reminded us is that 200 wins is now the new

300. With the analytics-driven emasculati­on of starting pitchers, it is highly unlikely we will ever see another 300-game winner. As it is, the next closest to 200 wins among active pitchers are Max Scherzer (190), 33-year-old injuryplag­ued Clayton Kershaw (185) and Wainwright at 183.

And speaking of the 37-yearold Scherzer, who two weeks ago became the 19th member of the 3,000th strikeout club, has there ever been a greater, more impactful trade deadline pickup than this

Hall of Fame bound geezer? With Kershaw still carefully nursing his elbow injury that sidelined him for two months, and Walker Buehler experienci­ng a September slump, Scherzer has stepped into the void by going 7-0 as a Dodger, with the team winning all 10 of his starts.

 ?? Tribune News Service/getty images ?? Brandon Crawford of the San Francisco Giants celebrates after hitting a solo home run against the Texas Rangers in the sixth inning at Globe Life Field June 8 in Arlington, Texas.
Tribune News Service/getty images Brandon Crawford of the San Francisco Giants celebrates after hitting a solo home run against the Texas Rangers in the sixth inning at Globe Life Field June 8 in Arlington, Texas.

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