Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
October 5 – 10: Television: ESPN (Game 1) Fox (Games 2–4) TV announcers: Jon Miller, Joe Morgan and Gary Miller (Game 1) Joe Buck, Tim McCarver and Chris Myers (Game 2) Thom Brennaman and Tim McCarver (Game 3-4) Kevin Kennedy (Game 3) and Chris Myers (Game 4) Radio: ESPN: Radio announcers: Gary Cohen, Luis Gonzalez: Umpires: Dale Scott Greg ...
The Cardinals went 105–57 during the season (the team's best record in the La Russa era), the most wins of any team in baseball that year, the most wins by any Cardinals team since 1944, and the first Cardinal team to win 100 or more games since 1985, and won the National League Central by 13 games over the NL Wild-Card Champion Houston Astros.
Next inning, Beltran's home run off Julián Tavárez put the Astros up 6−5. Brad Lidge pitched two shutout innings for the save as the Astros evened the series with the Cardinals at two games apiece. Beltrán tied records for the most home runs in a single postseason (8) and most consecutive postseason games with a home run (5).
Miami football hosts Louisville on Saturday, marking the 20th anniversary of 17-point comeback win over the Cardinals. Heres' what to know:
St. Louis Cardinals History 1875–1919 1920–1952 1953–1989 1990–present Seasons People Cardinal Nation Award winners Coaches Managers Owners and executives Broadcasters Overview Logos and jerseys Records Cubs rivalry • Royals rivalry World Series Championships: pre-MLB: 1886 · MLB: 1926 · 1931 · 1934 · 1942 · 1944 · 1946 · 1964 · 1967 · 1982 · 2006 · 2011 Grounds Robison ...
For the first time since Game 5 of the 1964 World Series, the Cardinals notched a road win ... the schedule until 2002. So the Cardinals' first road series against the Yankees was in 2003, and ...
The Dolphins had little trouble in dispatching the outclassed St. Louis Cardinals, one of nine games the Dolphins won that season against teams which won five or fewer games (the Cardinals finished 4–9–1 for the third time in four seasons, and did so again in 1973).
In 1987, the NFL began regularly scheduling games for Sunday nights to be aired on ESPN during the second half (Weeks 10–18) of the season. The league expanded these games to the entire season in 1990 , though the first half (Weeks 1–9) of the season was televised on TNT , while ESPN continued to carry the second half (Weeks 10–18).