St. Louis Cardinals Essays

  • Branch Rickey's Contribution To Baseball

    1258 Words  | 3 Pages

    Cincinnati Reds of the National League. His time with the team was brief. The Reds wanted to play on Sundays, but Rickey refused because his religion was more important to him. A few years later in 1906, Rickey was signed by the St. Louis Browns. Branch Rickey was the St. Louis Browns catcher for only a year before he was replaced behind the plate. (Biography.com) His next opportunity came with the New York Highlanders. Again this opportunity did not last long. In one game he se... ... middle of

  • Stan Musial: The Most Talented Baseball Player

    1358 Words  | 3 Pages

    the most valuable player three times, being in the 3,000 hit club and making it to the Hall of Fame. Stan played 21 years of Major League baseball. He played all 21 years with the St. Louis Cardinals. (Baseball Almanac) In “Historic Missourians,” “Musial wrote in his autobiography, ‘What made me sign with the Cardinals? Because they used salesmanship, the personal touch. Where others wrote, they talked. Where others waited, they acted. That early bird that got the worm must have been a Redbird.’”

  • Baseball's Perfect Warrior, Stan Musial

    809 Words  | 2 Pages

    The statue stands down the third base line outside of Busch Stadium in downtown St. Louis, Missouri. The statue has an inscription that reads, "Here stands baseball's perfect warrior. Here stands baseball's perfect knight." That was what commissioner Ford Frick’s opinion was about Stan Musial but his opinion was far from the rest of the countries opinion. Musial was not your “ideal” star. He didn’t marry Marilyn Monroe or hit in 56 straight games like Joe DiMaggio. Musial didn’t resemble youth like

  • My Collective Identity

    1388 Words  | 3 Pages

    an identity. I, like many, have multiple identities that create my special collective identity. Four of my favorite identities are being a passionate Christian, a proud American, a dedicated student at the University of Iowa, and a loyal St. Louis Cardinals baseball

  • ROGER MARIS

    1082 Words  | 3 Pages

    Roger Maris Essay Roger Maris was born in Hibbing, Minnesota on September 10, 1934. His father, who worked for the Great Northern Railroad, moved the family to North Dakota in 1942where Roger grew up. The Maris brothers played sports and attended Shanley High School in Fargo, North Dakota. It was in the 10th grade when Roger met Patricia, his future wife, at a high school basketball game. Roger played baseball in the American Legion program during the summers, since the North Dakota high schools

  • Sexual Orientation In Baseball

    1265 Words  | 3 Pages

    game that has many fans. It is played between two teams with nine players each, battling and fielding in turns. It is reported to be a sport that gay personnel could not come out to express their selves. The latest scenario being of the former Louis Cardinal baseball

  • Branch Lickie And Jackie Robinson

    1274 Words  | 3 Pages

    Jackie Robinson shook Major League Baseball forever by showing the league officials that African Americans could qualify to play in the MLB. He was a strong individual that was able to stand up to intense observation and confrontation. Not to mention he was a tremendous athlete. Did Branch Rickey (Jackie Robinson’s agent) make a good decision in choosing Jackie Robinson? Branch Rickey and Jackie Robinson were two very different people. Jackie Roosevelt Robinson was born on January 31, 1919, in a

  • Argumentative Essay On Performance Enhancing Drugs

    844 Words  | 2 Pages

    substances used to improve any form of activity performance in humans. For example, Bruce Irvin the defensive end with the seattle seahawks,and Daryl Washington the linebacker for the Arizona Cardinals. It is not just football players , baseball players also like, Cody Stanley from the St. Louis Cardinals. Many people use them, but the end up getting caught and suspended from playing.You are basically cheating your way to fame.People should not use drugs in a sport to become better because,These

  • Antitrust Laws In Sports

    1887 Words  | 4 Pages

    The MLB is exempted from antitrust laws and that started years and years ago. Baseball is exempt because the government and the court system view baseball as just a game, not a business. Baseball continues to enjoy being immune to antitrust laws because the government is unwilling to overturn legislation from decades ago that stated baseball was for fan enjoyment not a business. In 1903 it was ruled that players could not shop their service around to other teams to increase their salaries. The team

  • Jackie Robinson Research Paper

    1176 Words  | 3 Pages

    so good that people made a song called “Did You See Jackie Robinson Hit That Ball” (Breaking). Jackie stole home plate for a total of 19 times during his career (Breaking). When Jackie joined the army he got turned down but a Boxing Star named Joe Louis who was also in the army sent in a request for him so he got in (Weber 14). This request made Jackie a Lieutenant in the army (Weber 14). Jackie’s first season with the Kansas City Monarchs he hit a Batting Average of .340 (Weber 18). The Monarchs

  • Ted Williams

    1389 Words  | 3 Pages

    Ted Williams: A True All American "A man has to have goals-for a day, for a lifetime-and that was mine, to have people say, 'There goes Ted Williams, the greatest hitter who ever lived'" ("My Turn At Bat" 128). Theodore Samuel Williams was born on August 30th 1918 in San Diego, California. His father, a photographer, named him after the late outspoken president Teddy Roosevelt.His mother was a salvation worker of Mexican descent ("My Turn At Bat"15). His parents, who he later came to resent, were

  • Athletes Salaries

    746 Words  | 2 Pages

    performance. Yes, they are professionals, but in the grand schemes of things, what are they really accomplishing? These people are playing a game for entertainment purposes. Mark Simmons states that “… Ozzie Smith earned $2.34 million from the St. Louis Cardinals for pounding his frame into the dirt and fetching all those grounders” (Source A). Similarly, someone states that athletes make more than enough money for “throwing a ball or swinging a bat” (Source E). The capital that is spent on athletics

  • Influential People Research Paper

    795 Words  | 2 Pages

    Influential people inspire and lead us in incredible ways or terrible ways. First, Shawn Wight once quoted, “Pain won’t last forever, but the memories will.” As a result, this shows that if people take a risk and hurt themselves the pain will not last but the memory of them doing it will last forever. Another, quote is by Wayne Gretzky saying , “You’ll miss 100 percent of the shots you don’t take.” For example, in this quote Wayne Gretzky is trying to tell us that if people don’t take any shots at

  • Jackie Robinson : The First African American to Play in Major League Baseball

    1170 Words  | 3 Pages

    Jackie Robison was the first African American to play in the major leagues. He was a big thing for baseball, that he revolutionized the game forever. Jackie was an impact in the 1960s and generations to come. Jackie Robinson had a big influence on all sports. He got rid of racial rules in sports, gave hope to African Americans, but had hard times in the League, and was a good role model to all. He was an exciting player to watch as well. He won many awards in his baseball career. He played second

  • Essay On Lou Gehrig

    945 Words  | 2 Pages

    (MVP) that same year (Hickok). Gehrig got MVP honors again in 1936 when he hit .354 along with a league-leading forty-nine home runs and 152 RBI’s (Hickok). When it came to the World Series, Lou Gehrig always stepped up. In 1928 against the St. Louis Cardinals, Gehrig had four home runs and nine RBI’s with a .545 average (“Biography”; Hickok). Additionally, Gehrig racked up three home runs, nine runs scored, eight RBI’s, and a .529 average (Hickok). In thirty-four World Series games, Gehrig had thirty-five

  • Baseball Players: José Miguel Cabrera Torres

    760 Words  | 2 Pages

    One thing that kept his family going, was baseball. His father played baseball as a child on up to his twenties. His mother was on the Venezuelan national softball team for fourteen years. Miguel’s uncle, Davis Torres played Class-AA for the St. Louis Cardinals minor league team, before being released. Baseball ran through Miguel’s family, and it was something that they could all play together. When Miguel wasn’t playing baseball with his local team in Maracay. Miguel’s father, Miguel Sr., was a stud

  • How Baseball Survived the Great Depression

    760 Words  | 2 Pages

    baseball club owners claimed that putting games on the air was hurting attendance. However, evidence shows that the radio broadcasting caused more people to gain interest in the sport, causing more people to attend the sport. For example, the St. Louis Cardinals outlawed broadcasting during the 1934 season, and attendance levels decreased to 283,000 less than the 1931 championship season. The public clearly enjoyed the new radio broadcasting of games, and the media expressed their feelings. The Chicago

  • The Role Of Performance Enhancing Drugs In Sports

    1310 Words  | 3 Pages

    Journalists National Reporting Award and was twice a finalist for the Livingston Award, making him credible. When McGwire took steroids in 1996, he hit for fifty-eight home-runs,and he later signed a 40 million dollar contract with the St. Louis Cardinals (Pantuosco, 2011). Louis Pantuosco is a Professor of economics that received a Ph.D at Northwestern University, making him reliable. Since the athlete is playing much more proficiently than they did before, they get more attention from franchises, which

  • Baseball's Needed Change Essay

    988 Words  | 2 Pages

    in Ohio December 20th, 1881 and expired on December 9th, 1965. He was known to be very articulate and was politically and socially conservative. Rickey was a former baseball player who landed several different managing positions for the St. Louis Browns and Cardinals, Pittsburgh Pirates, and the legendary Brooklyn Dodgers of

  • Steroids in Major League Baseball

    780 Words  | 2 Pages

    as stimulants became very common and was a problem for the game which began raising suspicion. “By the 1990’s, steroids had become an epidemic.”(Joshua Z.) In a spend of three years, three players including San Francisco Giants Barry Bonds, St. Louis Cardinals Mark McGwire and Chicago Cubs Sammy Sosa hit sixty homeruns a joined seven times. Before that from 1927-1998, only Babe Ruth and Roger Maris had hit more than sixty homeruns in a season. It’s only a coincidence those three players have steroids