The Oklahoman

Cardinals soar into playoff position

- Mike Fitzpatric­k

NEW YORK – On the morning of the trade deadline in late July, the St. Louis Cardinals were a .500 team sitting 71⁄

2 games outside a playoff spot.

Even with new slugger Nolan Arenado at third base, a season that began with big expectatio­ns appeared to be slipping away.

Their next move? While other National League contenders added stars such as Max Scherzer, Kris Bryant and Javier Báez, the Redbirds went for a pair of struggling starting pitchers in their late 30s: Jon Lester and J.A. Happ.

That raised a lot of eyebrows, to put it mildly.

But seven weeks later, look how high these Cardinals have climbed.

Riding the ageless arm of Adam Wainwright atop a graybeard rotation, St. Louis has soared into postseason position with its recent surge. The confident Cardinals hold the second NL wild card by one game over San Diego heading into a pivotal threegame home series against the Padres this weekend.

“There’s still something to be said for wisdom,” manager Mike Shildt explained.

After scoring 25 runs in a threegame road sweep of the New York Mets, the Cardinals (76-69) have won five straight and seven of eight.

Muscular outfielder Tyler O’Neill (26 homers, .876 OPS) from Canada has emerged as a dangerous No. 3 hitter between fellow thumpers Paul Goldschmid­t and Arenado.

In the absence of injured ace Jack Flaherty, the 40-year-old Wainwright (16-7, 2.88 ERA) has pitched himself into the Cy Young Award conversati­on during a fountain-of-youth season. The veteran curveballe­r is 9-2 with a 2.02 ERA in his past 12 starts, going at least six innings every time.

Happ and Lester, a five-time All-Star and three-time World Series champion, have hardly been so dominant since arriving.

But they’ve pitched effectively for the most part and taken the ball on turn, providing reliabilit­y for an injury-ravaged staff.

That’s alleviated some of the pressure placed on a bullpen now hitting its stride following a wild start to the season.

St. Louis still has issues at closer – Alex Reyes was an All-Star in July but recently lost the job due to a string of rough outings.

In the lineup, the biggest change came at shortstop, where rookie Edmundo Sosa has replaced slumping Paul DeJong, an All-Star in 2019.

And with 39-year-old catcher Yadier Molina anchoring a sensationa­l defense that features five Gold Glove winners (including Wainwright), the rangy Cardinals lead the majors in defensive runs saved, according to The Fielding Bible.

“Great defense might not be the sexiest thing, but it helps you win a lot of games,” reliever Andrew Miller said. “In a lot of ways, we should be thankful it’s been a long season because it’s given us time.”

After falling a season-worst four games under .500 on June 27, the Cardinals are putting their pedigree on display when it counts in September. Their 11-inning victory Tuesday in New York vaulted them into postseason position for the first time since they clung to a slim lead in the NL Central on May 30.

“We’ve been waiting to really bust out all year. We came close a couple times, got on some good runs, but you know, this is crunch time and we’re the Cardinals,” O’Neill said. “September baseball, stuff’s important, and we’re here to win. So that’s what we do.”

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