The Best Post WWII Players for the Giants, Phillies, Pirates and the Cardinals
Say Hey! | In this week's edition of the best Post-WWI Major League Baseball players, we cover the last four of the eight legacy te...
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Say Hey! | |
In this week's edition of the best Post-WWI Major League Baseball players, we cover the last four of the eight legacy teams in the National League. Those teams included the NY/San Francisco Giants, Philadelphia Phillies, Pittsburgh Pirates, and St. Louis Cardinals.
🔟 Top 10 Giants Players Since 1946
1. Willie Mays (CF, 1951–1972)
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24× All-Star, 2× MVP (1954, 1965)
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660 HR, 3,283 hits, 338 SB, 12 Gold Gloves
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Played in both New York and San Francisco
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One of the greatest all-around players in baseball history
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Hall of Fame, 1979
2. Barry Bonds (LF, 1993–2007)
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5× NL MVP with Giants (7 overall)
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586 HR, .312 AVG, .482 OBP, .666 SLG with SF
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Most feared hitter in MLB history, holds HR and walk records
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Legacy clouded by PEDs, but performance unmatched
3. Willie McCovey (1B, 1959–1980, 1986)
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1969 NL MVP, 521 HR, 1,555 RBI
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.889 OPS, known for towering power
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Namesake of “McCovey Cove” at Oracle Park
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Hall of Fame, 1986
4. Juan Marichal (P, 1960–1973)
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243–142, 2.89 ERA, 2,303 strikeouts
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10× All-Star, known for high leg kick and pinpoint control
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One of the most dominant and stylish pitchers of the 1960s
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Hall of Fame, 1983
5. Buster Posey (C, 2009–2021)
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2012 NL MVP, 7× All-Star, 3× World Series champion (2010, 2012, 2014)
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2010 NL Rookie of the Year, .302 career AVG
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Defensive leader and heart of Giants’ dynasty
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One of the best catchers of the 21st century
6. Orlando Cepeda (1B, 1958–1966)
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1958 NL Rookie of the Year, 7× All-Star (6 with SF)
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.308 AVG, 226 HR with Giants
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Later won 1967 NL MVP (Cardinals), but elite in SF
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Hall of Fame, 1999
7. Matt Cain (P, 2005–2017)
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2× All-Star, 3× World Series champion
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Pitched perfect game in 2012
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Clutch postseason performer and workhorse
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Team leader and mentor in Giants’ golden era
8. Madison Bumgarner (P, 2009–2019)
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2014 World Series MVP, 3× World Series champion
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2.11 career postseason ERA, 0.25 in World Series (!), including historic Game 7 save
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4× All-Star, feared playoff pitcher
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Among best postseason performers in MLB history
9. Gaylord Perry (P, 1962–1971)
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2× Cy Young (1 with Giants), 134 wins with SF
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Known for alleged spitball, but effectiveness was real
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3.10 ERA, over 1,600 strikeouts with SF
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Hall of Fame, 1991
10. Jeff Kent (2B, 1997–2002)
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2000 NL MVP, 3× All-Star with Giants
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MLB’s all-time HR leader among second basemen (377 overall, 175 with SF)
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Paired with Bonds for elite 1–2 punch in early 2000s
🏅 Honorable Mentions
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Mel Ott – Much of his career pre-1946, but NY icon
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J.T. Snow – Solid 1B, defensive standout
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Hunter Pence – Clubhouse leader in 2010s
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Tim Lincecum – 2× Cy Young, 2 no-hitters, short but historic peak
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Brandon Crawford – 3× Gold Glove, 2× All-Star, key postseason SS
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Roberto Clemente (brief Giants connection only)
✅ Giants Mount Rushmore Since 1946
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Willie Mays
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Barry Bonds
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Willie McCovey
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Buster Posey
🔟 Top 10 Philadelphia Phillies Players Since 1946
1. Mike Schmidt (3B, 1972–1989)
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3× NL MVP (1980, 1981, 1986), 12× All-Star, 10 Gold Gloves
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548 HR, 1,595 RBI, elite defense and power
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1980 World Series champion & MVP
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Hall of Fame, 1995 — widely considered the best 3B in MLB history
2. Steve Carlton (P, 1972–1986)
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4× Cy Young (all with Phillies), 10× All-Star
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241 wins, 3,031 Ks with Philadelphia
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1980 World Series champion, legendary lefty with devastating slider
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Hall of Fame, 1994
3. Jimmy Rollins (SS, 2000–2014)
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2007 NL MVP, 3× All-Star, 4× Gold Glove
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Franchise leader in hits, runs, and doubles
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Key catalyst of the 2008 World Series champions
4. Chase Utley (2B, 2003–2015)
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6× All-Star, 4× Silver Slugger
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.282 AVG, 233 HR with Phillies
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One of the best all-around 2B of his era
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Elite postseason performer and heart of the 2008 team
5. Robin Roberts (P, 1948–1961)
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7× All-Star, 1950 Whiz Kids ace
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234 wins, led NL in wins 4×, innings 5×
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Hall of Fame, 1976
6. Ryan Howard (1B, 2004–2016)
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2006 NL MVP, 2005 NL Rookie of the Year
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382 HR, 1,194 RBI, 3× All-Star
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Key slugger on 2008 champs, 2009 NL champs
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Fastest player ever to reach 100 and 200 HR
7. Richie Ashburn (CF, 1948–1959)
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2× NL batting champion, 6× All-Star
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Elite OBP (.396 with Phillies), great speed and defense
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Hall of Fame, 1995
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Beloved Philly icon on and off the field
8. Cole Hamels (P, 2006–2015)
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2008 World Series MVP and NLCS MVP
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114 wins, 3.30 ERA, 1,844 Ks with Phillies
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4× All-Star, postseason ace of 2008 team
9. Dick Allen (1B/3B, 1963–1969, 1975–76)
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1964 NL Rookie of the Year, 3× All-Star with Phillies
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Hit .290 with 204 HR, .902 OPS in Philadelphia
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One of the most feared hitters of the 1960s
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Long-overlooked Hall of Fame candidate
10. Bryce Harper (RF/DH, 2019–present)
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2021 NL MVP, 2× All-Star (so far) with Phillies
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.284 AVG, 122 HR, .946 OPS in first 5 seasons
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Key piece of the 2022 NL champions
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On pace to become an all-time Phillies great
🏅 Honorable Mentions
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Curt Schilling – 3× All-Star, 1,554 Ks with Phillies
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Greg Luzinski – 223 HR, 4× All-Star
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Bobby Abreu – .303 AVG, .928 OPS over 9 seasons
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John Kruk – .309 AVG and a fan favorite
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Tug McGraw – Closer for 1980 champions
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Aaron Nola – Longtime ace of the 2010s and 2020s
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Pete Rose – Leader of 1980 title team, short tenure but huge impact
✅ Phillies Mount Rushmore Since 1946
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Mike Schmidt
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Steve Carlton
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Jimmy Rollins
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Chase Utley
1. Roberto Clemente (RF, 1955–1972)
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15× All-Star, 12 Gold Gloves, 1966 NL MVP
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3,000 hits, .317 AVG, cannon arm in right field
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1971 World Series MVP, led Pirates to two championships
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Died tragically in 1972 while on a humanitarian mission
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Hall of Fame, 1973 (inducted via special election)
2. Willie Stargell (1B/LF, 1962–1982)
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1979 NL MVP, 7× All-Star
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475 HR, 1,540 RBI, spiritual leader of the “We Are Family” Pirates
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Co-MVP of the 1979 NLCS and World Series MVP
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Hall of Fame, 1988
3. Barry Bonds (LF, 1986–1992)
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2× NL MVP with Pirates (1990, 1992)
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176 HR, 251 SB, .288/.408/.556 in Pittsburgh
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Best all-around player in baseball in the early '90s
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Left in free agency, legacy more tied to Giants but peak began in Pittsburgh
4. Andrew McCutchen (CF, 2009–2017, 2023–present)
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2013 NL MVP, 5× All-Star, 4× Silver Slugger, Gold Glove
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Face of the Pirates’ return to the postseason (2013–15)
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.291 AVG, 203 HR in first stint
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Among most beloved modern Pirates
5. Bill Mazeroski (2B, 1956–1972)
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10× All-Star, 8× Gold Glove
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Best known for hitting the walk-off HR in Game 7 of the 1960 World Series
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One of the greatest defensive second basemen in history
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Hall of Fame, 2001
6. Ralph Kiner (LF, 1946–1953)
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Led NL in HRs 7 straight seasons (1946–1952)
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.280 AVG, 301 HR in just 8 seasons with Pirates
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Hall of Fame, 1975
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Short career, but legendary power
7. Dave Parker (RF, 1973–1983)
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1978 NL MVP, 2× batting champ, 3× Gold Glove
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.305 AVG, 166 HR, 722 RBI with Pirates
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Key figure on 1979 World Series champions
8. Bob Friend (P, 1951–1965)
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191 wins with Pittsburgh, 3.55 ERA
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1955 NL ERA leader, 4× All-Star
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Longtime ace for the Pirates during their rise in the 1950s
9. Vernon Law (P, 1950–1967)
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1960 NL Cy Young winner, 20–9 record that year
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162 career wins, 3.77 ERA
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Crucial in the 1960 championship run
10. Manny Sanguillén (C, 1967–1976, 1978–1980)
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3× All-Star, .296 career AVG
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Strong defense and excellent contact hitter
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Important piece of 1971 and 1979 World Series teams
🏅 Honorable Mentions
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Elroy Face – Dominant reliever in the 1950s, 18–1 record in 1959
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Doug Drabek – 1990 NL Cy Young, ace of early '90s playoff teams
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Jason Kendall – .306 AVG in first 7 seasons, 3× All-Star
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Kent Tekulve – Closer for 1979 champs
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Brian Giles – .308 AVG, .426 OBP with Pirates in late ’90s
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Matty Alou – 1966 NL batting champ
✅ Pirates Mount Rushmore Since 1946
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Roberto Clemente
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Willie Stargell
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Bill Mazeroski
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Andrew McCutch
🔟 Top 10 Cardinals Players Since 1946
1. Stan Musial (OF/1B, 1941–1963)
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Played all 22 seasons in St. Louis (except military service in 1945)
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3× NL MVP, 24× All-Star, 7 batting titles
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3,630 hits (1,815 home, 1,815 road), .331 AVG, 475 HR
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1950s cornerstone and all-time franchise icon
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Hall of Fame, 1969
2. Albert Pujols (1B, 2001–2011, 2022)
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3× NL MVP, 2× Gold Glove, 11× All-Star with STL
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469 HR, 1,400+ RBI with Cardinals
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.328/.420/.617 slash in first 11 years
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Key to 2006 and 2011 World Series championships
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Hall of Fame lock
3. Bob Gibson (P, 1959–1975)
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2× Cy Young, 1968 NL MVP, 9× Gold Glove
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251 wins, 3,117 Ks, 1.12 ERA in 1968
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2× World Series MVP (1964, 1967)
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Fierce competitor, dominant postseason force
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Hall of Fame, 1981
4. Yadier Molina (C, 2004–2022)
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10× All-Star, 9× Gold Glove, 2× World Series champion (2006, 2011)
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Franchise leader in games caught, postseason games played
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Elite defense, game-calling, leadership
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Future Hall of Famer
5. Ozzie Smith (SS, 1982–1996)
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13× Gold Glove, 15× All-Star, acrobatic defender
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.272 AVG with speed and flair
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Key to 1982 World Series win, 3 NL pennants
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Hall of Fame, 2002
6. Lou Brock (LF, 1964–1979)
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938 stolen bases (2nd all-time), 3,023 hits
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6× All-Star, clutch postseason hitter
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Led Cardinals to 2 World Series titles
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Hall of Fame, 1985
7. Ken Boyer (3B, 1955–1965)
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1964 NL MVP, 7× All-Star, 5× Gold Glove
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255 HR, 1,001 RBI with Cardinals
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Captain of 1964 World Series champions
8. Jim Edmonds (CF, 2000–2007)
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4× Gold Glove, 3× All-Star with STL
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241 HR, .903 OPS, highlight-reel defense
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Big part of early 2000s powerhouse teams and 2006 champs
9. Matt Holliday (LF, 2009–2016)
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.293 AVG, 156 HR, 4× All-Star with Cardinals
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Key slugger during playoff runs from 2009–15
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Helped win 2011 World Series
10. Chris Carpenter (P, 2004–2012)
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2005 NL Cy Young, 3× All-Star
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Postseason ace, 2006 and 2011 World Series champion
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95–44, 3.07 ERA with STL
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Huge Game 7 performance in 2011 NLDS
🏅 Honorable Mentions
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Adam Wainwright – 200 wins, 3× All-Star, clutch postseason pitcher
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Joe Medwick – Pre-1946 peak, but franchise legend
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Ted Simmons – 6× All-Star catcher
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Keith Hernandez – 1979 NL batting champ, 1982 champ
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Mark McGwire – 220 HR in 4½ seasons, but PEDs cloud legacy
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Curt Flood – 7× Gold Glove, civil rights pioneer
✅ Cardinals Mount Rushmore Since 1946
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Stan Musial
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Bob Gibson
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Albert Pujols
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Yadier Molina
#8647 #NoKings #ProDemocracy
1 comment
Here's a optional vote for Pittsburgh's Mt Rushmore, - Clemente, Stargell, Kiner and Parker. Mazeroski had one moment of greatness, not a career of greatness and McCutcheon was solid for a few years, but Kiner was a feared hitter who led the league in HRs 7 straight seasons. That's "Barry Bonds like" impressive.
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