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From My Seat Sports

2016 Memphis Redbirds: First Impressions

Sam Tuivailala

A few observations from the first weekend of Redbirds baseball:

• The current Redbirds roster is not packed with prospects, at least not according to the folks at Baseball America who compile such rankings. Among players in the St. Louis Cardinals system, reliever Sam Tuivailala is the highest-ranked Redbird (11th), followed by outfielders Charlie Tilson (13th) and Anthony Garcia (21st). All this means is there will be no entitlements for the players you see in white at AutoZone Park. None of them is expected to impact the big-league club in the near future, which gives every last one of them an edge with which to play. Tilson, Garcia, Memphis native Jacob Wilson, shortstop Alex Mejia, infielder Patrick Wisdom . . . these are all minor-league players in the purest form. Looking to catch the right eye (in the Cardinal system or elsewhere).

Catcher Mike Ohlman crushed a pinch-hit homer to help the Redbirds beat Colorado Springs Saturday night. You don’t know Ohlman unless you’re a card-carrying seamhead, but he belted 12 home runs and drove in 69 runs last season at Double-A Springfield. He’s one level shy of the major leagues and knows it. Motivated baseball players, it should be noted, are fun to watch.

• The Redbirds’ new principal owner, Peter Freund, would seem to have two distinct factors in his favor when it comes to the business of baseball at AutoZone Park. First, he comes to the table already an owner in the world of minor-league baseball (Class-A franchises in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, and Charleston, South Carolina). There will be no surprises for Freund in game-day presentation, revenue streams, sponsorship deals, etc. This being a Triple-A operation — and in a stadium the size of AZP — the volume will be new. And creative ideas are needed to bridge the gap between an acclaimed stadium and the Pacific Coast League’s smallest attendance figure (from 2015). But Freund is no rookie in rightfield.

And Freund is young (39). When I asked him about his favorite New York Yankees growing up, I assumed they’d be Thurman Munson and Reggie Jackson. Turns out his favorites were Don Mattingly and Dave Winfield, “the teams [of the Eighties] that didn’t win,” as he put it.

It’s unlikely Freund will make “old-school” mistakes in selling Redbirds baseball. Fans will no longer line up simply because baseball is the national pastime (it isn’t any more, at least so say millions of NFL fans). Entertainment at the ballpark today must be delivered in different packages than it was as recently as 2000, when AutoZone Park opened. Freund understands that, and he emphasized the local community — and local businesses — during his press conference last week. The Redbirds may be the Cardinals’ top affiliate but they are, in fact, a Memphis team. This must be sold better.

• Redbirds president Craig Unger has witnessed considerable transformation since taking his post two years ago this month. The ballpark he calls an office underwent significant renovation before the 2015 season and now his boss — for the first time in years — does not wear a St. Louis Cardinals hat (at least not outside Memphis). Unger has the confidence of both new owner Peter Freund and Cardinals general manager John Mozeliak; each made that clear during last week’s press conference. But what must Unger do to fill more seats at AutoZone Park?

During an informal conversation last week, Unger emphasized two things: group sales and “STEs” (season-ticket equivalents). There’s no better way to fill a section (or suite) at the ballpark than with a large group attending together. It’s a point of emphasis for the Redbirds’ sales team, and not just for weekend games. Games on Mondays through Wednesdays have been moved up a half-hour, to 6:35, while schools remain in session. Say what you will about the charms of the ballpark’s downtown location, but it means a drive of at least 20 minutes for most people attending. The aim is to get fans (especially young ones) to the stadium earlier and home by bedtime.

As for season-ticket sales, try convincing a die-hard baseball fan to attend 72 games in five months. The Redbirds are trying smaller, 18-game packages (with flexibility for which games a ticket-holder can attend), hoping to sell four of these (a “season-ticket equivalent”) for every full season ticket that goes unsold. Unger emphasizes the balance that must be found between accommodating those fans keeping score meticulously and those more interested in a cold one outside, the crack of the bat little more than a soundtrack for socializing. Find enough of each and you come much closer to filling a 10,000-seat stadium. (With the Grizzlies playing the mighty Golden State Warriors at the same time five blocks south, the Redbirds sold 6,415 tickets to last Saturday’s game, a figure more than 50 percent higher than the team averaged last season.)

• In their first win of the season last Friday in Atlanta, the Cardinals set a major-league record by hitting three pinch-hit home runs. All three players who went deep — Jeremy Hazelbaker, Aledmys Diaz, and Greg Garcia — wore the uniform of the Memphis Redbirds in 2015. (Hazelbaker and Diaz would be with Memphis now were it not for injuries to the Cardinals’ Tommy Pham and Ruben Tejada.) The record-breaking night is the latest example of seeing Cardinal history at AutoZone Park, just before it actually happens.

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From My Seat Sports

Next Card Up: Redbirds Becoming Cardinals

@TPhamLV

Tommy Pham

The Memphis Redbirds have contributed mightily to an extraordinary 2015 season (thus far) for the St. Louis Cardinals. From a single plate appearance by Dean Anna to game-changing heroics by the likes of Tommy Pham and Greg Garcia, no fewer than 15 players have made the trip north on I-55 and impacted the team that calls Busch Stadium home. But the Cardinals’ season is extraordinary not so much for their current record — 63-35, the best in all of baseball — but for posting that record despite the accumulated casualties that have necessitated an open-flowing Memphis-St. Louis pipeline.

A quick review of the Cardinal infirmary:

• Ace Adam Wainwright tore an Achilles heel in his fourth start of the season, leaving behind a 1.44 ERA and a gaping void at the front of the St. Louis rotation.
• Two everyday players from 2014 — first baseman Matt Adams and centerfielder Jon Jay — have endured lengthy stays on the disabled list, Adams permanently (this season) with a torn quad muscle.
• The team’s most dependable power threat, All-Star Matt Holliday, came off the disabled list just over a week ago having missed more than 30 games with a quad injury of his own.
• A pair of new acquisitions to strengthen the bullpen — Jordan Walden and Matt Belisle — have been sidelined with arm ailments. Irony.
• Oft-injured starter Jaime Garcia surprised an entire fan base by making his way back to the starting rotation and posting a 1.69 ERA over seven starts in Wainwright’s spot. Garcia injured his hamstring on June 24th, though, and hasn’t pitched since. (He’s expected to return to the rotation this week.)

The minor leagues, it’s often emphasized, are about development, and that includes the Cardinals’ Triple-A affiliate here in Memphis. A player’s value at Third and Union is measured first by how he might impact the parent club. But this summer has been less about developing players for that final leap to The Show than playing musical chairs (in Memphis) when they become newly vacant (in St. Louis).

Lefties Tim Cooney and Tyler Lyons have combined to start 12 games in Wainwright’s stead (that is, when Garcia hasn’t). When not called to duty in St. Louis, Cooney has helped Memphis with a record of 6-4 and a 2.74 ERA, a season after setting a franchise record with 14 wins. He earned his first big-league win (over the Braves) last Friday, then was promptly demoted to Memphis when the Cardinals acquired reliever Steve Cishek in a trade with Miami.

Merely three years after being converted from shortstop to pitcher, Sam Tuivailala earned a Pacific Coast League All-Star nod with 12 saves and a 1.78 ERA. He missed the exhibition game, though, when the Cardinals promoted him in early July to relieve their ragged relief corps. He’s pitched in 10 games and helped bridge innings from the Cardinal starters to Trevor Rosenthal (or Kevin Siegrist) in the ninth.

The outfield injuries in St. Louis afforded the 27-year-old Pham his first extended stay with the Cardinals. Having hit .321 in Memphis after returning from, yes, a stay on the disabled list, Pham scored the only two Cardinal runs in a July 4th win over San Diego, then drove in all three St. Louis runs the next day in another victory over the Padres. He returned to the Redbirds last week when Stephen Piscotty (11 homers and 41 RBIs in Memphis) was promoted in the team’s latest attempt to fill the power void left by Adams.

What’s to come from all this roster shuffling? The Cardinals hope to find full strength — or a close approximation — by the time the postseason arrives, perhaps with reinforcements gained on or before this Friday’s non-waiver trade deadline. In Memphis, the Redbirds remain in contention for a playoff slot, four games behind Round Rock in their division of the PCL. As the Cardinals get healthier, so will the Redbirds’ playoff chances. Marco Gonzales, remember, hasn’t pitched for Memphis in more than two months. On his way back (he toes the rubber Monday night at AutoZone Park), Gonzales could end up helping a pair of pennant races on either side of the Mississippi River.