Wednesday 26 October 2011

Pujols Won’t Find Unconditional Love Elsewhere


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Sometime soon, Pujols is going to have to choose where he wants to play for the rest of his career.
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It's not hard to imagine a statue of Pujols with bat in hand outside Busch Stadium.
How much is enough?
This is something Albert Pujols is going to have to figure out before he decides whether he wants to remain a Cardinal or move on to a richer and, dare I say it, more demanding market.
Pujols was facing possibly the last game of his contract and of hisCardinals career as this grand old baseball city awaited Game 6 of the World Series on Wednesday.
Any way the Series ends, Pujols is sure to finish this week, this season, with the roaring adoration of the fans in the only town he has known. He will be ending his 11th season as a superstar who has hit three home runs in one World Series game (Saturday) and been walked intentionally three times and given the liberty to put on a doomed hit-and-run play (Monday).
Sometime in the next weeks and months, Pujols is going to have to choose where he wants to play for the rest of his career. He has turned down a contract said to be for nine years and about $200 million.
He is a logical man who has to know this one central fact: no town will ever love him more as a great player and, by all appearances, a steadfast charitable and religious family man.
It will never be easier for Pujols to be the person he is — which includes private, taciturn, perhaps even distant — than in this city, which adores its heroes. St. Louis never made demands that Stan Musial ever be anything more than the gracious hey-hey-whattaya-say superstar next door.
The legion of elders who saw Musial play from 1941 to 1963 maintain that he would have higher recognition today as a career .331 hitter if he had played in a coastal city like New York, Boston or Los Angeles. What is overlooked is that the East Coast media hectored Joe DiMaggio and Ted Williams in ways large and small — in a kinder and gentler time before the 24-hour gnawing of the carpenter ants of blog land and Twitter land.
Pujols may not be prepared to be the $300 million savior of a rich franchise. Who is? After a bad second game here, he vanished into the night, to the team bus or wherever, without dropping a few words to sate the news media. Later he said that he did not know anybody would want to talk to him, which just does not calibrate. Derek Jeter gives nothing away — nothing — but he shows up, says his controlled piece, and moves on.
The crumbling Alex Rodriguez, serving out the last six years of the worst contract in baseball history — as much as $300 million over 10 years — often makes things worse for himself in ways Pujols never would. After taxes, Pujols would still be able to do wonderful things for children with Down syndrome and all his admirable causes.
Pujols is a civic hero in St. Louis. Undoubtedly, Harry Weber, the sculptor who made the10 vital statues that bristle with life in the outdoor corner of Eighth and Clark, has made mental sketches of how he would portray Pujols. The poses vary — Cool Papa Bell, the St. Louisan who never got to the majors because of segregation, is rounding a base; good old Red Schoendienst is airborne, making the pivot at second base. Pujols surely would be depicted with bat in hand.
I visited the sculpture area on Tuesday, when the temperature was still 80 degrees. (It was expected to drop by half by Wednesday evening.) James Rooks from Myrtle Beach, S.C., who had a ticket for the sixth game, was asked where the eventual Pujols statue would be placed. “Maybe in the bathroom,” he said. “Depends on whether he signs with them.”
Rooks said he understood a great player would want to make as much as he could, “but he’ll make more in one year than most of us make in a lifetime.” Asked about the free agency that ballplayers gained after the Curt Flood suit (Flood is not included in the sculpture garden, oddly enough), Rooks said, “If I told my boss I was testing free agency, he’d say, ‘Fine, don’t come back.’ “
Should Pujols move on? “He should go to the Astros,” said a woman who was inspecting the statues. Turned out, she was from Texas, still smarting over the moon shot Pujols hit off Brad Lidge in 2005.
The Cardinals management is playing the game its own way. On Monday General Manager John Mozeliak said about Pujols: “There’s no doubt he’s been the identity of this organization for the past decade, and trying to push just one button or try to say you’re not going to feel that loss would be very difficult to say, especially in this environment.”
Cardinals fans have been imploring Pujols with standing ovations and chants and banners and probably even prayers. On Wednesday he was down to a game or two. It was on everybody’s mind.
Tony La Russa, explaining on Tuesday why Pujols had the freedom to call the backfired hit-and-run in Game 5, volunteered, “I think I’ve said over and over again that for the 11 years that we’ve been together, Albert has proven every year, virtually every day of the season and postseason, he is a great player, not just a great producer, he’s a very smart baseball player.”
Asked if it was on his mind that this could be the last game for Pujols as a Cardinal, La Russa, himself unsigned, said: “Well, yeah, you have a lot of time to think about your team. And over the course of the rush at the end of the season into the postseason, I have thought about Albert’s situation because he’s a teammate, and I care a lot about him personally and professionally.”
Pujols, true to his code, addressed his free agency when spring training opened, and has not revisited it since. Asked about his status the other day, Pujols said: “Let’s talk about something else. Let’s talk about baseball.”
Fair enough. But in weeks to come, Pujols needs to remind himself — if his agents and advisers do not — that money is not everything.

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