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Missing Elvis

I miss Elvis Presley this time of year. The older I get — currently 53 — the younger Elvis was (42) when he died. So yes, Elvis Week grabs my heartstrings, from the tribute artists to the candlelight vigil, from the random t-shirts (Elvis with Bigfoot?) to the Elvis Presley 5K . . . a distance I’m rather certain the King never ran himself. There’s irony, of course, in “missing” Elvis Presley, as his presence — particularly in Memphis, Tennessee — couldn’t be greater, even if he were alive and well at age 87.

Elvis was a meteor. All of 23 years passed between the day he first walked into Sun Studio (in 1954) and the day he died at Graceland (in 1977). Compared with the performing and recording life span of the Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, or even my band of choice, KISS, “the Elvis Presley years” were the entertainment equivalent of a novella: just enough of a teaser to make you want more story, more adventure, more thrills.

I grew up with an Elvis story, as my dad met him (in the basement of Katz Drug Store) in September 1956, just a few days after Presley’s appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show, among the moments that made this particular meteor soar. Dad was but 14 when they shook hands, Elvis only 21. When I first listened to Elvis songs as a child, I was listening to a King my dad knew. That’s the way I saw things.

August 16, 1977, is among the earliest days of my life I can distinctly remember. I was eight years old and my family had recently returned to the States after a year in Italy. We were visiting my grandmother — Dad’s mom — at her Central Gardens home when news broke, first that Elvis had been rushed to Baptist Memorial Hospital, then that the most famous man on the planet (maybe second to Muhammad Ali) had died. This was my first experience with death, someone I “knew” . . . dying. Even at a still-tender age, I knew 42 years was not a long life.

Elvis, of course, has lived beyond the dates on his famous tombstone. This summer’s most talked-about movie makes that quite clear. My daughter Elena is not a moviegoer, but she made time from a busy work schedule to see director Baz Luhrmann’s Elvis with me. (“Elena, you and Elvis are both from Memphis, and you both have five-letter names that start with E-L.” Eye roll.) My older daughter, Sofia, took a picture of Elvis with her to New England for four years of college, a photo that can now be found at her apartment in Honolulu. She’s also been spotted in a dress adorned with Elvis imagery from the movie Jailhouse Rock. Aloha from Hawaii, indeed.

The point is that Elvis has found life among multiple generations since 1977, and there’s no indication his popularity has plateaued. (Remember, Elvis Presley has now been gone longer than he lived.) The only candlelight vigil I’ve experienced in full — with Sofia in 2016 — was under a Biblical rainstorm. But nobody went home. The line didn’t move . . . until the Graceland gates were finally opened. We had our ponchos to stay somewhat dry, and a kind couple from Sweden lit our candles as we walked up the driveway to the meditation garden, to pay our respects. Sure, it was somber strolling past a man’s grave. But it was also, somehow, energizing. This one man, in merely 42 years, left a mark we choose to honor every August . . . deluge or dry.

I grew up loving “Hound Dog,” “Jailhouse Rock,” and “Burning Love.” But my favorite Elvis song has become “If I Can Dream.” “As long as a man has the strength to dream, He can redeem his soul and fly.” Elvis famously sang this during his ’68 Comeback Special, and I’m not sure his voice sounds more alive in any other recording. So yes, I miss Elvis this time of year. But when I find myself dreaming, as we all do, I often think of him. And that helps me fly.

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Destination: Southwind

Nearing the end of his rookie season on the PGA Tour, Chad Ramey will be in the field at this week’s FedEx St. Jude Championship. Having earned his first win in March, Ramey has reached 80th in the FedExCup standings. (The top 125 players will compete at Southwind in the first of three playoff tournaments.) The Fulton, Mississippi, native — a graduate of Mississippi State —  shared some thoughts before making his playoff debut.

What have you learned about yourself as a rookie on the PGA Tour?

I’ve been able to go to a lot of new places, and play a lot of great golf courses. I can’t complain at all, picking up my first PGA Tour win. I wish I’d been a little more consistent, but I’ve learned a lot, and can build off that.

What stands out in your memories of that win at the Corales Puntacana Championship?

Those four rounds were really good, but they were far from perfect. You don’t have to be perfect to win. You’re gonna miss golf shots. It’s whoever moves on and gets over them the quickest. I can get in trouble with myself when I want everything to be perfect. Sometimes things can be good, and you create a problem in trying to make them better. I’m working on that.

Did nerves hit you on Sunday?

No doubt. They were there from the first tee to the last putt. I kept telling myself they’re just thoughts, feelings. Stay within myself and execute the game plan. Trust that hard work will pay off.

Have you played Southwind? 

I Monday-qualified [for the FESJC] in 2015. And being so close to home, I’ve actually played it quite a bit. I really like the course. I’ve never played it as firm as it was during the tournament. The PGA Tour is going to set it up as firm and fast as they can. I think it’s very fair. If you can get the ball in position off the tee, you’ll have enough scoring clubs in your hand. 

This is the first time in Memphis for the FedExCup Playoffs. What’s your perspective as a player on the magnitude of the event?

Everyone’s going to be on high alert, hoping to make the top 70 and get to Delaware [for the second playoff tournament]. This will be my first playoff experience. Can’t wait to be there.

Have you visited St. Jude? Any thoughts on the charitable impact the FESJC makes?

It’s absolutely amazing, what St. Jude does. I haven’t had the chance to visit the hospital, but I’d love to. The caddy bibs, with the pictures the children draw . . . it’s a great foundation. I couldn’t be more proud of what St. Jude does.

The Saudi-backed LIV Golf tour has shaken the sport this year. Do you have thoughts on the changing landscape?

Golf’s in a weird spot right now. I haven’t put a lot of thought into it, to be honest. I’ve tried to be focused on the PGA Tour. My entire life, this is where I’ve wanted to play. And I’m staying true to that.

You attended the Masters as a fan when you were 10 years old. What would playing at Augusta mean to you at this stage of your growing career?

It would mean everything. I’ve never played there. It would be special to finally get there. A dream come true. The ultimate goal was to play on the PGA Tour, but for the Masters to come along with it . . . that would be special.

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Redbirds Report: Playoff Push and the Walker Watch

Just over two months of baseball remain in the Memphis Redbirds’ 2022 season. The team will alternate six-game series at home and on the road the next 10 weeks. Playing their first season in the International League, the Redbirds have a chance at their first playoff berth since winning the 2018 Triple-A national championship. Here are four story lines we’ll follow as the fabled “dog days” arrive.

• The Redbirds must beat Columbus . . . oh, wait. Memphis occupies third place in the IL’s West Division, behind Nashville and Columbus. So it stands to reason the Redbirds need to handle the Clippers if they’re to climb toward first place. Well, it’s problematic as the teams don’t play each other this season. For whatever reason, Memphis does not face four teams in its own division (also Louisville, St. Paul, and Toledo). We now live in a world where six-game series are the norm for cost-cutting minor-league operations. But please, let’s reconsider schedules so teams play those it must beat to reach the postseason. (Memphis does play first-place Nashville nine more times. Alas, all the games are in Middle Tennessee. Worth the drive, especially, perhaps, the last three games of the season: September 26-28.)

• The Jordan Walker watch continues . . . and grows. The slugging third-baseman has climbed to seventh in some rankings of minor-league prospects. Only 20 years old, Walker has hit .301 with an .873 OPS at Double-A Springfield. He could be a one-man infusion of offense for a Memphis team that already leads the International League in home runs.

But will Walker even be in the St. Louis Cardinals’ system by the time you read this? The Cards have been in the mix of the saltiest trade rumor this summer, one that would have Washington Nationals’ star Juan Soto — the 23-year-old All-Star turned down a 15-year, $440 million offer from his current team earlier this month — headed to Busch Stadium. It’s hard to envision such a deal taking place without Walker going to D.C. (His journey to the big leagues would be accelerated in the Nats’ system as the club occupies the cellar of the National League East.) Here’s hoping we get a glimpse of Walker at AutoZone Park, even if it’s brief.

• Memphis Mafia II? A friend asked me last week if the Cardinals would receive any promotions from Memphis for their postseason push. My answer: They already have. St. Louis has already been impacted by Brendan Donovan, Juan Yepez, and Nolan Gorman, all players who started their season with the Redbirds. It calls to mind the famed “Memphis Mafia” of David Freese, Allen Craig, Jon Jay, and Daniel Descalso, a quartet who made their big-league debuts in 2010, then helped the Cardinals win the World Series in 2011. Donovan is a Rookie of the Year candidate, having started games at six different positions for St. Louis. Gorman has added nine home runs with the Cardinals to the 15 he slammed for Memphis to start the season. And Yepez, frankly, was born to DH, an important component now of National League batting orders. Keep in mind, also, that one of these players could be in a trade package to acquire Soto from Washington. Impact, indeed.

• DeJong’s example. Say what you will about Paul DeJong, for five years the Cardinals’ regular shortstop before a demotion in May when he struggled to begin the season. But acknowledge the veteran’s professionalism. He’s taken his work to Triple-A ballparks, searching for the consistency at the plate that eludes so many on their way to the big leagues, but escapes even major-league All-Stars at certain career crossroads. DeJong is making $9 million this season and is under contract for one more with the Cardinals, which makes him yet another trade candidate, particularly with Tommy Edman having taken over at short for St. Louis. He’s hit 15 home runs and has an eye-popping 49 RBIs in 49 games for Memphis. DeJong’s next call to the major leagues may feel even better than his first.

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Memphis Redbirds Alumni All-Star Team

When Albert Pujols and Ryan Helsley are introduced as members of the National League All-Star team Tuesday night in Los Angeles, it will extend a remarkable streak for, of all teams, the Memphis Redbirds. The local Triple-A franchise, you see, has been represented by a former player in every All-Star Game since 2003. (This year’s event will make it 19 in a row, as the pandemic forced the cancellation of the 2020 contest.)

It seems like a good time to name an All-Star team among the many Redbirds alumni to play in the Midsummer Classic. So here we go.

Catcher — Yadier Molina. The St. Louis Cardinals legend — a 9-time Gold Glove winner — has played in seven All-Star games (and was named to three others). Molina drove in a run in the 2009 event at Busch Stadium, making his All-Star debut in the stadium he’s called home since it opened in 2006. He made Cardinals history in 2017 in Miami, when he became the first St. Louis player in 43 years to homer in the All-Star Game.

First Base — Albert Pujols. The future Hall of Famer — he’s hit 685 home runs through Sunday’s games — will be appearing in his 11th All-Star Game (10th as a Cardinal), this time as a “legacy” selection during his 22nd and final season. Pujols had a memorable non-appearance at the 2007 event, when he was not brought off the bench in a game his National League squad lost, 5-4. What makes it especially memorable is the NL manager that night was Pujols’s skipper with the Cardinals, Tony LaRussa.

Second Base — Placido Polanco. A member of the inaugural Memphis Redbirds team in 1998, Polanco played in the All-Star Game as a Detroit Tiger (in 2007) and a Philadelphia Phillie (in 2011). He’s one of only three former Redbirds (along with Molina and Pujols) to accumulate more than 2,000 hits in the big leagues.

Third Base — Matt Carpenter. This three-time All-Star won a Silver Slugger at second base in 2013, but he made the All-Star team at the hot corner the next season. After a late-career decline in St. Louis, Carpenter has found his power stroke this season with the New York Yankees, having hit 13 home runs in just 31 games.

Shortstop — Paul DeJong. Runner-up in the 2017 National League Rookie of the Year vote, DeJong played in the 2019 All-Star Game on his way to slamming 30 home runs, a record for Cardinal shortstops. He has struggled the last three seasons, though, and finds himself currently playing short . . . for the Memphis Redbirds.

Leftfield — Allen Craig. Craig caught the final out (in leftfield) to clinch the 2011 World Series championship for St. Louis. He hit three home runs in that Fall Classic and made the 2013 All-Star team, helping the Cardinals return to the World Series by driving in 97 runs. He also helped Memphis win a Pacific Coast League championship in 2009 with a .322 batting average and 26 home runs. In 2010, he drove in a remarkable 81 runs in just 83 games for Memphis.

Centerfield — Adolis Garcia. One of only two Redbirds to hit a walk-off home run in the PCL championship series (the other was Pujols), Garcia made the 2021 American League All-Star team as a member of the Texas Rangers. He hit 31 home runs last season, stole 16 bases, and drove in 90 runs.

Rightfield — J.D. Drew. Not only did Drew make his first All-Star team in 2008 (as a member of the Boston Red Sox), he earned the game’s MVP award, drilling a two-run homer in the seventh inning to help the American League to a 4-3 win. Alas, it was also Drew’s final All-Star Game.

Pitcher — Adam Wainwright. Dan Haren started the 2007 All-Star Game, but if Molina is the catcher for this fantasy club, the pitcher must be Wainwright, who started the 2014 Midsummer Classic for the National League. Earlier this season, Wainwright and Molina established a new MLB record for team wins by a starting battery.

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Burly Batter

The Memphis Redbirds have won four championships since beginning play in 1998. But the franchise has never fielded a batting champion or league MVP. (Dakota Hudson won the 2018 Pitcher of the Year award for the Pacific Coast League.) Which means Alec Burleson could make some significant history here in 2022. Through Thursday’s games, the 23-year-old Redbirds outfielder is hitting .338, 27 points higher than the second-place batter in the International League. While recent teammates Brendan Donovan, Juan Yepez, and Nolan Gorman have made the leap to St. Louis and are now getting regular playing time with the Cardinals, Burleson continues to master the craft of hitting at the Triple-A level. And quite living up to his nickname: “Burly.”

Burleson emphasizes that he’s “not an analytics guy,” so even an old-school stat like batting average isn’t a motivator. But he knows the challenge of hitting a baseball consistently, and has a measured approach — it starts with a simple, gentle stance from the left side of the plate — to making life difficult for Triple-A pitchers. “Every arm we face is a big-league arm,” says Burleson. “Locking in every day on preparation, having a set approach . . . that’s huge. And sticking to [the approach]. If you stick to what you do best in the box, it puts you in the best position for success. I have the same routine, the same cage work. Trusting that — and not trying to do something different — has allowed me to have continued success this year. If something goes wrong, there’s only so much in my swing that could be off. I want to enter the box only worried about the pitch I’m going to hit, and not worried about mechanics.”

Burleson has shown power at the plate (16 home runs), and the kind that translates to big-league success. Tuesday night at AutoZone Park, Burleson drilled a three-run shot over the right-centerfield wall that proved to be the game-winner against Jacksonville. Left-handed batters who can go yard to the opposite field tend to play well into their 30s. Then there’s the homer Burleson hit June 15th against the Nashville Sounds, the first and only inside-the-park job in Redbirds history. “I didn’t know if it was going to go over the fence or not,” he says. “I saw it kick [away], and I was thinking three . . . but [Redbirds manager Ben Johnson] was shouting, ‘You gotta go.’ I thought it was going to be a close play at the plate. I was very winded, catching my breath for a couple of innings.”

Burleson credits Johnson and hitting coach Brandon Allen among a group of influences this season, and he also appreciates some wisdom received recently from big-league veteran Corey Dickerson (with the Redbirds on a rehab assignment). “Talking to him about left-on-left situations helped me a lot,” says Burleson. “He’s been in the big leagues a long time, so it’s good to hear that knowledge.”

A native of Charlotte, Burleson adopted the New York Yankees as his favorite team despite his father pulling for the Atlanta Braves. His favorite players were Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez, men who earned their stripes primarily at the plate. Which makes the award Burleson won as a freshman at East Carolina in 2018 all the more surprising: American Athletic Conference Rookie Pitcher of the Year. (Burleson went 5-2 with four saves and a 3.33 ERA on the mound for the Pirates.) He smiles slightly when asked if he ever considered the Shohei Ohtani approach: pitch when you can, and hit when you’re not on the bump. “When I was drafted, it was as an outfielder,” he notes. “The bat was going to carry me to the next level. Everybody around me knew.”

The Redbirds are competing for their first postseason appearance since 2018 and their first International League championship. (Memphis competed in the Pacific Coast League through the 2019 campaign.) Through Thursday, they occupy third place in the IL’s West Division, just 2.5 games behind Nashville. Burleson describes a clubhouse that arrives at the ballpark ready to work, with Johnson’s professionalism in the manager’s office the team standard. “Ben expects a lot out of us,” he says, “to get our work done every day. That’s felt among all the guys. We want to have as much success as we can, and it’s not so much individuals. We pull for each other. It’s fun to come to the park with these guys.”

Burleson will have a hard time cracking the Cardinals’ outfield, so count on his name coming up in trade rumors this month. The 10th-ranked prospect in the St. Louis system is sure to draw attention from trade partners. But for the time being, Burly will take that gentle stance in a Redbirds uniform, and hammer baseballs toward a batting title.

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’Birds Helping ’Birds

Since the Memphis Redbirds’ arrival in 1998, we’ve grown accustomed to the Triple-A outfit sending reinforcements up I-55 when the parent club — the St. Louis Cardinals — discovers needs on its roster. Three players we saw at AutoZone Park in April are now seeing regular duty in the Cardinals’ batting order: multi-position maestro Brendan Donovan and a pair of sluggers, Juan Yepez from the right side and Nolan Gorman from the left.

But there’s a twist this season. The Redbirds have recently received reinforcements, not from Double-A Springfield as is customary, but from the big-league club itself. Outfielder Tyler O’Neill earned National League Player of the Month honors last September when he was the key cog in a 17-game winning streak for St. Louis (the National League’s longest since 1935). But the two-time Gold Glove leftfielder landed on the injured list last month with shoulder discomfort. He joined the Redbirds for a rehab stint on June 3rd, then delivered what proved to be a game-winning home run in the ninth inning the next day. A fourth consecutive win improved Memphis to 31-22 for the season and a high-water mark (nine games over .500).

The circumstances that have Paul DeJong in a Redbirds uniform are more complicated than those for O’Neill. The 28-year-old DeJong — a National League All-Star in 2019 when he hit 30 home runs for St. Louis — has manned the shortstop position at Busch Stadium since 2017. But he struggled mightily to open the 2022 season, hitting only .130 over 24 games and striking out 25 times in 86 plate appearances. DeJong’s numbers weren’t much better in 2021, when he batted .197 and had far more strikeouts (103) than hits (70) in 113 games. With Tommy Edman — a Gold Glove second-baseman last season — moving to short for the Cardinals and Gorman stepping in at second, DeJong’s task is finding the swing that got him to that All-Star Game three years ago. Ask the Charlotte Knights and they might say he’s close to finding it. DeJong slammed four home runs in the Redbirds’ recent six-game series in Carolina. He’s driven in 19 runs in 21 games for Memphis, but continues to struggle making contact (21 strikeouts in 87 at-bats).

The fun part of this twist on talent sharing is that O’Neill and DeJong have merely supplemented the Redbirds’ regulars. Outfielder Alec Burleson — the Cardinals’ 10th-ranked prospect — earned the organization’s Player of the Month award for May, posting a .357 batting average with five home runs, 24 RBIs and 35 hits (a total that led all of Triple-A baseball). Burleson’s 42 RBIs in 46 games (through Sunday) rank fourth in the International League and have him on a pace that could threaten the Redbirds franchise record for a season (Nick Stavinoha drove in 109 in 2011).

Perhaps most significantly, the combined efforts of rising, rehabbing, and refining stars have the Redbirds sitting in third place in the International League’s West Division, four games back of the front-running Nashville Sounds . . . farm club of the very team St. Louis is chasing in the National League Central (the Milwaukee Brewers). All this with the Redbirds opening their longest home stand of the season (12 games) Tuesday night at AutoZone Park. The first guest will be the Durham Bulls (28-25), a club that lost five of six games to Memphis in its home park just over a month ago. Then the Sounds (34-18) come to town for what should be a bragging-rights series, at least for the state of Tennessee. Memphis hasn’t played a postseason game since winning the 2018 Triple-A National Championship. While the Redbirds have done their part to keep St. Louis in the playoff mix, they may secure a few critical wins — they count just as much in June as they do in September — with the help of veterans long familiar with the I-55 shuttle.

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The Grizzlies’ Memory Bar

I arrived in Memphis, Tennessee, in 1991, precisely a decade before the Vancouver Grizzlies became the Memphis Grizzlies. I enjoyed those first 10 years in the Bluff City, and as a man whose life has been wrapped in sports from the get-go, I found plenty of fun in this town. But nothing like the 2021-22 Memphis Grizzlies. Not even close. Not in the Nineties when I was a young man, and not since, as the years have carried me into middle age. I suppose all good things — even great things — must come to an end, as we’re taught early. But I’m not sure the 2021-22 Memphis Grizzlies will ever end, not for the bar they’ve set for professional basketball in the Mid-South, and not for what they achieved, even falling two rounds shy of the franchise’s first NBA Finals.

In a league celebrating its diamond anniversary, the 2021-22 Grizzlies put a sparkle on the sport by becoming the youngest team in NBA history to win 55 games (average age: 24.4 years). In so doing, the Grizzlies tied the franchise record for victories (56) and won their first Southwest Division title. (Banners are hung for such. The Grizzlies must raise one at FedExForum.) This young, effervescent squad pulled off a trifecta of sorts, leading the NBA in rebounds (49.2 per game), blocked shots (6.5), and steals (9.8). And look at those statistics: Each of them is an effort stat. The fact that Memphis topped all 30 NBA clubs in effort . . . well, that shouldn’t surprise anyone who watched as many as five or 10 games over the last seven months.

Alas, the NBA is a league of star power. Teams win championships with the celebrated, the marketed, the first-team All-NBA selections. For all the blue-collar strength the 2021-22 Grizzlies exhibited, they also featured Ja Morant, a young athlete — he’ll turn 23 in August — unlike any other this city has seen. (This city has seen Reggie White and Bo Jackson.) The NBA’s 2020 Rookie of the Year, Morant somehow claimed the league’s Most Improved Player Award two years later. His scoring average did leap from 19.7 per game to 27.4 (a figure that would have ranked sixth in the league had Morant not missed 25 games with injuries). But numbers won’t be what Morant leaves basketball fans at the end of what we hope is a long career. He’ll leave the “Did you see” conversations, stacked upon one another as hyperventilating children might do at a circus gone wild.

“Did you see Ja’s two-handed block?!?”

“Did you see Ja’s dunk?!?” We’ll have to be much more specific with this one.

“Did you see Ja’s wrap-around pass?!?”

“Did you see Ja’s buzzer-beating scoop?!?”

The Grizzlies have the superstar they’ll need to win two more rounds in the playoffs. It’s now just a measure of (1) keeping Morant healthy and (2) accelerating the team’s learning curve for postseason basketball. The Golden State Warriors — a few of them, at least — knew enough to earn a call here or an uncontested shot there, and that was enough in a best-of-seven series.

The great thing about young teams (if coached right, and thank you, Taylor Jenkins): They get better. The Grizzlies’ roster is in the hands of the NBA’s Executive of the Year (thank you, Zach Kleiman), and will surely receive a tweak or two before the 2022-23 season tips off. But you can count on Desmond Bane (future All-Star) returning. You can count on Jaren Jackson Jr. (future All-Star) further developing into the league’s best shot-blocking-three-point-shooter. And you can count on the memory bar climbing even higher for Memphis, Tennessee’s lone big-league operation. If you’re new to town, count your blessings for choosing this city and the basketball it delivers. If you’ve been around a while like me, adjust that memory bar one more time. But leave a higher slot or two.

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Redbirds Report: Armed (and Ready?)

Since the Redbirds arrived in Memphis in 1998, no position has proved more fruitful for the parent St. Louis Cardinals than starting pitching. It started with lefty phenom Rick Ankiel, the 1999 Minor League Player of the Year and runner-up the next season for National League Rookie of the Year with the Cardinals. (Not all young pitchers grow into old pitchers. We won’t rehash Ankiel’s struggles here.) Dan Haren, Adam Wainwright, Lance Lynn, Shelby Miller, Carlos Martinez, Michael Wacha, Jack Flaherty, and Dakota Hudson are eight more examples of Redbird hurlers who became rotation regulars in the big leagues. And it appears the next big arm on its way north is that of southpaw Matthew Liberatore.

Over a pair of starts in late April, the 22-year-old Liberatore showed fans in Memphis and Durham what the Cardinals hope to see in St. Louis in the near future. In a home start against Omaha on April 23rd, Liberatore tossed seven scoreless innings, struck out nine, allowed but two hits, and walked nary a batter. Six days later against the Bulls, he tossed another scoreless seven, struck out seven, walked three, and allowed only four hits. Particularly against the Storm Chasers, Liberatore commanded the strike zone with his low-to-mid nineties heat, going to a three-ball count on only one hitter. It was dominance, the kind St. Louis needs to see before Liberatore makes his major league debut. (Liberatore fell back to earth last Friday at AutoZone Park, allowing six runs and nine hits in five-and-two-thirds innings against Jacksonville.)

Liberatore is a significant piece of the Cardinals’ future, in part because of how he joined the franchise. On January 9, 2020, St. Louis traded Randy Arozarena to the Tampa Bay Rays for a package of players highlighted by Liberatore, the 16th pick in the 2018 draft. Arozarena helped Memphis win the 2018 Pacific Coast League championship (hitting a pair of home runs in the clincher at AutoZone Park), but gained national fame when he helped the Rays to the 2020 World Series (in which he hit three home runs) then won the American League’s Rookie of the Year award in 2021. All of that on one side of the trade, while Liberatore has yet to take the mound in a big-league stadium.

The Cardinals’ rotation will need Liberatore soon. Wainwright is now 40 years old, on the verge of setting a record for career starts as a battery with Cardinal catcher Yadier Molina. Flame-throwing Jordan Hicks is occupying another rotation slot, but has battled arm injuries for the better part of four years now. Veteran Miles Mikolas has pitched like he’s healthy for the first time since 2019, and newly acquired Steven Matz won three of his first four decisions as the only current lefty in the St. Louis rotation. Hudson is back after missing most of 2021 following Tommy John surgery. If any member of this quintet should fall out of the saddle, look for Matthew Liberatore to become the latest Memphis starter to cross the Mighty Miss.

• Redbirds second-baseman Nolan Gorman — he turns 22 Tuesday and is a childhood friend of Liberatore’s — had an April unlike any player in franchise history. He shattered the Redbirds record for home runs in the month with 11 and enjoyed a 16-game hitting streak, merely four shy of the club record (established in 1999 by Adam Kennedy). Gorman’s performance earned him International League Player of the Month honors. With the Cardinals struggling to score consistently in the early season, why isn’t Gorman in St. Louis? In two words: free agency. The longer St. Louis delays Gorman’s MLB debut, the later he becomes a free agent, capable of departing for the highest bidder in the market. As a left-handed slugger, Gorman could get a share of the designated-hitter workload with the Cardinals (the DH is a new, permanent addition to National League baseball). And if Cardinal shortstop Paul DeJong’s hitting woes continue, Gorman may fill the second-base void if former Redbird (and 2021 Gold Glove winner) Tommy Edman moves from second to short.

• Triple-A baseball will host the first “Triple Championship Weekend” this fall in Las Vegas. Division winners in the International League will compete for a title on Friday, September 30th. (Memphis competes in the West Division of the IL.) Then division winners in the Pacific Coast League will play on Saturday, October 1st. The two league champs will square off on October 2nd for the Triple-A national championship. Memphis has not played a postseason game since winning the Triple-A crown in 2018.

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Q&A: FESJC Director Joe Tomek

Amen Corner. Azaleas in bloom. Jim Nantz and gentle atmospheric music. Golf is in the air as the Masters takes the sports world’s center stage this weekend. Seems like the right time for a visit with Joe Tomek, the new executive director of the FedEx St. Jude Championship. TPC Southwind will deliver its own charms August 11-14.

Memphis Flyer: Welcome to Memphis. What are your impressions of the city, now that you call it home?

Joe Tomek: My predecessor, Darrell Smith, told me, “If you love Memphis, Memphis will love you back.” My wife and I arrived [in December] with open minds, ready to learn about the city. We had certainly heard what national media and outsiders had to say, but it’s been fun to explore the different areas, the food scene, go on hikes. There have been so many people willing to reach out, with no objective. I’m learning different opinions about our golf tournament, the history. We feel very welcome. There’s a connection [to the tournament] everywhere.

And what about TPC Southwind, your new home course?

It doesn’t get the national recognition some of the big-name courses do, but it’s by far one of the most underrated courses on the PGA Tour. Our players will say that. I bet the vast majority would put Southwind in their top-five courses. It’s not because it’s easy; it’s challenging. But it’s a fair challenge. It rewards good shots and punishes the bad ones. When a player is on his game, he can score really low.

After three years as part of the World Golf Championships, the FedEx St. Jude Championship now opens the FedExCup Playoffs. What’s the significance of the transition, and what can Memphis fans expect from the tournament’s new format?

There’s a lot of change, and it can be confusing, misunderstood. But since the FedExCup system was established in 2007, this has been the goal: to host the playoffs in Memphis. We’re at the pinnacle. Our players spend the entire season — from October 2021 to August 2022 — competing to make it to Memphis. That has such a cool storyline. Everyone should be excited about it. We kick off the biggest three-week stretch in golf. You’ll see the magnitude of what this event is. Our field size has doubled: we’ll have the top 125 players [in the FedExCup standings].

NOTE: 70 players will advance to the next week’s BMW Championship.

The tournament’s relationship with St. Jude is profound, and goes back generations. Have you been able to visit the hospital, and what kind of impact does St. Jude make on the PGA, beyond the tournament here?

Rick Shadyac graciously hosted my wife and me for a brief tour recently. Across the PGA Tour, every tournament is set up to benefit charities in their local community. But there is nowhere — not in golf, maybe not in all of sports — a better visual representation or tangible feeling of the impact our sport can have outside the ropes. The fund-raising is amazing. But the personal impact you can make on an individual basis: seeing a child’s face when a top-ranked player bends down to say hi or shows them how to putt. Those are moments that can change a kid’s life.  Everyone has a “St. Jude moment.” I haven’t had mine yet, but I’m excited for it. I know it will bring me to tears.

Do you play golf yourself? What first drew you to the sport professionally?

I play when I can get out, but probably not as much as people would believe. In college [at the University of Dayton], I was an engineering major. But halfway through college, I thought that if I can’t get through a class without being bored, how am I supposed to spend a career pursuing that? Going into my senior year of college, I got an internship running junior golf tournaments. You’d do everything, from setting up the course to awards. Twelve- or fifteen-hour days. And I had a blast. I felt I could make a career out of it.

The Memphis tournament has long been known for two things: St. Jude and the intense heat. What else might distinguish the FESJC from any other event on the PGA Tour?

There’s big pride in Memphis for the tournament. It’s easy for me to feel that pride, being new here. With this new platform, being a playoff event, we’re starting to look regionally, if not nationally, to draw partners and fans to this event. There’s no other opportunity in the Mid-South to see these stars. Everyone we talk to — be it St. Louis or Nashville or Little Rock — it’s about the golf and the charity. But it’s also about the city. Using this platform to show off for a national audience how great Memphis is. All eyes will be on us [in August].

I’ve got to put you on the spot: Who will win the Masters this year?

You know, I really like Rory McIlroy. He hasn’t done it there yet. To complete a career Grand Slam. He’s such a good person. Team Rory.

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From My Seat Sports

Memphis Redbirds Reload for 2022

Tuesday night at AutoZone Park, the Memphis Redbirds will host their first conventional Opening Night in three years. After losing the entire 2020 season to pandemic restrictions and opening a shortened 2021 campaign in May, the ballpark’s lights will shine for the “lid-lifter,” with a full, 150-game season on the calendar. Thus will begin the franchise’s 24th season (and 22nd at AutoZone Park).

Some news and notes for the season ahead:

• Ben Johnson is back for his third season as manager of the Redbirds. The pride of Germantown High School will be the first manager to lead Memphis for three seasons since Pop Warner held the job from 2012 to 2014. After a 69-71 record in 2019, Johnson’s club posted a 61-67 mark last year. The ’21 Redbirds established a franchise record with a 15-game winning streak.

• The Redbirds will compete for the first time in the International League, part of the Southeast Division along with Charlotte (Triple-A affiliate of the Chicago White Sox), Durham (Tampa Bay Rays), Gwinnett (Atlanta Braves), Jacksonville (Miami Marlins), Nashville (Milwaukee Brewers), and Norfolk (Baltimore Orioles). Memphis was a member of the Pacific Coast League from 1998 through the 2019 season, before minor-league baseball was restructured with regional travel a priority. They will play a pair of familiar foes from the IL’s Midwest Division: the Iowa Cubs (Chicago Cubs) and Omaha Storm Chasers (Kansas City Royals).

• Memphis should be stocked with premium prospects, at least until the parent St. Louis Cardinals have needs to fill. Infielder Nolan Gorman will open the season with the Redbirds, with hopes of taking his left-handed power to the Cardinals in the near future. Gorman hit .274 with 14 home runs and 48 RBIs in 76 games for Memphis last season. He made a rather seamless transition from his natural position of third base (occupied by Nolan Arenado in St. Louis) to second base. 

Ranked third among Cardinal prospects, just below Gorman, is left-handed pitcher Matthew Liberatore. (19-year-old slugger Jordan Walker tops the rankings and will get time at Double-A Springfield before he appears at AutoZone Park.) Liberatore skipped Double A (with the lost 2020 season) and grew on the mound as a Triple-A pitcher last summer. He split 18 decisions and posted a 4.04 ERA while leading the Redbirds with 124 innings pitched. Still only 22, the lanky (6’4”) lefty is targeted for the Cardinals’ starting rotation, one that took a hit last month when Jack Flaherty was shut down with shoulder tenderness. Liberatore will start the season in Memphis, but expect him to make his major-league debut in 2022.

The Cardinals’ fourth-ranked prospect, Ivan Herrera, should take over catching duties for Memphis. Herrera displayed some power last season at Springfield (17 home runs). As Yadier Molina plays his 19th and final season for the Cardinals, Herrera aims to compete for a 2023 job-opening in St. Louis, one that hasn’t existed in almost two decades. 

Another pair of top-10 Cardinal prospects likely to suit up for Memphis are pitcher Zack Thompson and outfielder Alec Burleson. A left-handed hitter with pop (like Gorman), Burleson slammed 14 homers and put up a .488 slugging percentage for Springfield in 2021 before a late-season promotion to Memphis. Infielder Brendan Donovan contended for a roster spot with the Cardinals until the final week of spring training. He’ll likely be the first Memphis promotion (among position players) when/if the Cardinals are hit with an injury.

• Juan Yepez hit 22 homers and posted a .289/.382/.589 slash line for Memphis last season on his way to recognition as the Cardinals’ Minor League Player of the Year. Yepez entered spring training as a prime candidate for designated hitter with St. Louis. (The National League has adopted the DH as part of the new collective bargaining agreement with the players.) Trouble for Yepez, though, is the return of Cardinals icon Albert Pujols, signed last week to a one-year deal, one that allows Pujols to finish his career where he played his first 11 seasons (and won three MVP awards). Pujols and Yepez are both right-handed hitters with limited value in the field. (Yepez appeared rocky at first base during spring training.) The 24-year-old Venezuelan could be the centerpiece of the Redbirds’ offense, and a prime trade candidate if Pujols finds his groove (again) with the Cardinals. Should Pujols struggle with the big club and Yepez slug for Memphis, youth may end up being served in St. Louis.