After Series, free agency for Pujols

— This time, it really was Albert Pujols’ final at-bat of the season, and perhaps as a St. Louis Cardinal.

The flashbulbs popped furiously in appreciation of the three-time NL MVP, who struck out in the seventh inning of Game 7.

One last send-off. Now, it’s time to start talking.

After 11 seasons with the team that drafted him, Pujols is a free agent for the first time.

St. Louis Manager Tony La Russa said he couldn’t imagine the Cardinals without Pujols and explained that the front office will do all it can to keep him in town.

“They’re going to try like heck to make it work, and we’ll see if it can work or not,” La Russa said. “The organization is going to try to keep him here and Albert wants to stay here. Best effort.”

Pujols played a quiet support role in the Cardinals’ World Series-clinching 6-2 victory over the Texas Rangers on Friday night with a walk, hit by pitch and two runs scored. That’s been the case most of the series except for his historic Game 3 explosion, when he joined Babe Ruth and Reggie Jackson as the only players to hit three home runs in a World Series game while matching records with five hits and six RBI.

He totaled one hit the rest of the Series, batting .240 overall with five intentional walks.

But just like 2006, when Pujols batted .200 with one RBI as the Cardinals polished off the Tigers in five games, the Cardinals needed his presence in the lineup, at first base and in the clubhouse, topull it off.

“You never know when it’s going to be your last one, so I’m going to enjoy this one,” Pujols said.

The 31-year-old Pujols has repeatedly expressed his desire to stay put in a city full of fans who believe he can do no wrong and with an organization whose chairman referred to him as irreplaceable.

After the game, Pujols was focused on celebrating, not contract talks, and thanked the fans for their support.

“I’m not thinking about that right now,” Pujols said. “Whenever that time comes, we’ll deal with it.”

The Cardinals exercised a $16 million option on Pujols’ contract after last season. The three-time NL MVP rejected a multiyear extension that included a small percentage of the franchise during the winter and cut off negotiations on the first day of springtraining.

And that’s where it stands.

Neither side has had much to say on the subject. Earlier in the postseason, General Manager John Mozeliak refused to handicap the odds on keeping him.

The Cardinals have addressed several offseason concerns already, picking up two-year options on pitchers Chris Carpenter and Adam Wainwright, plus signing Lance Berkman to a oneyear deal. That should make it easier to concentrate on the key questions: Can they afford Pujols?

If Pujols leaves, the Cardinals could move Berkman to first base and put Allen Craig, who has had a breakout October, in right field, and have millions left to spend on upgrades elsewhere.

After earning $111 million the last eight seasons, Pujols hits the market, along with Brewers first baseman Prince Fielder. Both could exit the NL Central.

The Cardinals’ payroll was about $110 million this season, and chairman Bill DeWitt anticipates it’ll be in that range next season. So far, the Cardinals have committed about $70 million to a half-dozen core players.

It remains to be see whether Pujols’ historic performance in Game 3 will raise the price tag. Or whether his complementary role the rest of the series will bring it down.

La Russa, who needs just 36 victories to become second on the career managing victories list, has said several times that Pujols is the best player he’s ever had. He batted .300 with 30 home runs and 100 RBI each of his first 10 seasons.

Pujols hit 37 home runs this year, running that streakto 11 years, and barely missed on the other two with a .299 average and 99 RBI.

Locally, Pujols is revered almost on a par with the legendary Stan Musial and sure to merit a statue or two outside Busch Stadium one day. In between innings of Game 6, a fan in the upper deck held up a homemade sign celebrating the Pujols era with No. 11 atop the team’s trademark birds on bat.

Any time Pujols comes to bat, the crowd comes to life. Even an infield pop-up initially gets fans screaming, if it’s hit high enough.

A cautionary note: Though there’s no question he’s among the elite players in the game if not the best, Pujols’ numbers in nearly every major offensive category are on a three-year decline including hits (186-183-173), doubles (45-39-29), home runs (47-42-37), RBI (135-118-99), walks (115-103-61), average (.327-.317-.299) and on-base percentage (.443-.414-.366).

Sports, Pages 23 on 10/29/2011

Upcoming Events