This wouldn't be the first time a former St. Louis Cardinals top prospect succeeded elsewhere. While not every phenom will turn into Randy Arozarena or Adolis G
This offseason was looking like it was going to be an eventful one for the St. Louis Cardinals in John Mozeliak's final season running the organization's baseball operations. Yes, Mozeliak made it clear that the team didn't intend to compete in 2025,
John Mozeliak says trading Nolan Arenado remains “Priority 1, 2 and 3” but acknowledges the team remains in a holding pattern due to the FA market. He would like to add to the bullpen/maybe a RH-bat, but won’t before they have clarity on Arenado’s future.
As Ken Rosenthal wrote toward the end of the 2024 season:
The St. Louis Cardinals entered this offseason with the intention of reducing payroll but doing so has been much easier said than done. Cardinals president of b
This is not the offseason the St. Louis Cardinals envisioned, president of baseball operations John Mozeliak acknowledged Saturday at Busch Stadium, speaking from the podium on the first day of the team’s annual Winter Warm-Up.
Cardinals president of baseball operations John Mozeliak met with reporters (including Jeff Jones of the Belleville News-Democrat) at the team's
With a change in leadership slated for after 2025, the Cardinals are reluctant to make long-term deals this winter. Read more at MLBTR.
John Mozeliak spoke to media members for nearly half an hour Saturday during the Cardinals' annual Winter Warm-Up event, addressing the team's offseason and future in depth.
St. Louis Cardinals president of baseball operations John Mozeliak talking about the team's plan to try to trade third baseman Nolan Arenado.
President of baseball operations turns 56 and fields questions from fans, media, conceding they've been inactive on roster as trade talks for Nolan Arenado stall.
There hasn't been much chatter since a deal fell apart with Houston, and that has kept the Cardinals from moving forward on other signings they want to make.