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Cardinals agree with Carlos Beltran on two-year…

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Carlos Beltran and the World Series champion St. Louis Cardinals agreed to a two-year contract pending results of a physical, a move that would fortify the team’s lineup following the departure of Albert Pujols.

The team disclosed the agreement Thursday night and said it expects to make a formal announcement shortly after the holidays.

KMOX, the Cardinals’ flagship radio station, reported the deal is for $26 million over two years — the same figure cited by a person familiar with the negotiations who spoke to he Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because financial details of the agreement were not announced by the team.

The 34-year-old Beltran batted .300 with 22 home runs, 84 RBI and a .385 on-base percentage for the New York Mets and San Francisco Giants this year. He likely will be the opening-day right fielder for the Cardinals next season. Lance Berkman is expected to move to first base, taking Pujols’ spot.

Beltran and Berkman are switch-hitters, giving new manager Mike Matheny lineup flexibility.

Earlier this month, St. Louis re-signed shortstop Rafael Furcal to a two-year, $14 million contract and added left-handed reliever J.C. Romero with a one-year, $750,000 deal. The Cardinals appear to need only a few spare parts to finalize the roster.

After Pujols signed a $254 million, 10-year contract with the Los Angeles Angels, Cardinals chairman Bill DeWitt Jr. said he expected his team’s payroll to perhaps exceed this year’s total of $110 million.

Allen Craig, coming off an impressive postseason, gives the Cardinals another strong option in the outfield but will miss at least the first month of the season while recovering from knee surgery.

A six-time All-Star, Beltran began his career with the cross-state Royals in 1998, three years after Kansas City drafted him in the second round. The switch-hitter has a .283 career batting average with 302 home runs and 1,146 RBI.

“Beltran is a proven outfielder who obviously has been a tough opponent against the Cardinals for many years,” St. Louis general manager John Mozeliak said in a statement. “It is going to be nice to have his bat and competitive nature working for us instead of on the other side of the field for the next couple of years.”

Beltran faced the Cardinals in a pair of NL championship series, in 2004 with Houston and 2006 with the Mets. St. Louis won both series despite several big hits by Beltran.

With a chance to put the Mets in the World Series, however, he struck out looking to end Game 7 of the 2006 NLCS against Cardinals right-hander Adam Wainwright.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Beltran agrees to two-year deal with Cardinals

Saturday, Dec. 24, 2011

ST. LOUIS — Carlos Beltran and the World Series champion St. Louis Cardinals agreed to a two-year contract pending results of a physical, a move that would fortify the team’s lineup following the departure of Albert Pujols.

The team disclosed the agreement Thursday night and said it expects to make a formal announcement shortly after the holidays.

KMOX, the Cardinals’ flagship radio station, reported the deal is for $26 million over two years — the same figure cited by a person familiar with the negotiations who spoke to AP.

The person spoke on condition of anonymity because financial details of the agreement were not announced by the team.

The 34-year-old Beltran batted .300 with 22 home runs, 84 RBIs and a .385 on-base percentage for the New York Mets and San Francisco Giants this year. He likely will be the opening-day right fielder for the Cardinals next season. Lance Berkman is expected to move to first base, taking Pujols’ spot.

Beltran and Berkman are switch-hitters, giving new manager Mike Matheny lineup flexibility.

Earlier this month, St. Louis re-signed shortstop Rafael Furcal to a two-year, $14 million contract and added left-handed reliever J.C. Romero with a one-year, $750,000 deal. The Cardinals appear to need only a few spare parts to finalize the roster.

After Pujols signed a $254 million, 10-year contract with the Los Angeles Angels, Cardinals chairman Bill DeWitt Jr. said he expected his team’s payroll to perhaps exceed this year’s total of $110 million.

Allen Craig, coming off an impressive postseason, gives the Cardinals another strong option in the outfield but will miss at least the first month of the season while recovering from knee surgery.

A six-time All-Star, Beltran began his career with the cross-state Royals in 1998, three years after Kansas City drafted him in the second round.

The switch-hitter has a .283 career batting average with 302 home runs and 1,146 RBIs.

“Beltran is a proven outfielder who obviously has been a tough opponent against the Cardinals for many years,” St. Louis general manager John Mozeliak said in a statement. “It is going to be nice to have his bat and competitive nature working for us instead of on the other side of the field for the next couple of years.”

Nationals land Gonzalez

AP

OAKLAND — All-Star pitcher Gio Gonzalez said Thursday the Oakland Athletics have agreed to trade him to the Washington Nationals, and the deal is nearly finished.

“It’s 99 percent done,” Gonzalez said in a phone interview. “It’s pending a physical and I’m just waiting to hear from my agent.”

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Carlos Beltran and St. Louis Cardinals agree to…

KMOX, the Cardinals’ flagship radio station, reported the deal is for $26 million over two years — the same figure cited by a person familiar with the negotiations who spoke to The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because financial details of the agreement were not announced by the team.

The 34-year-old Beltran batted .300 with 22 home runs, 84 RBIs and a .385 on-base percentage for the New York Mets and San Francisco Giants this year. He likely will be the opening-day right fielder for the Cardinals next season. Lance Berkman is expected to move to first base, taking Pujols’ spot.

Beltran and Berkman are switch-hitters, giving new manager Mike Matheny lineup flexibility.

Earlier this month, St. Louis re-signed shortstop Rafael Furcal to a two-year, $14 million contract and added left-handed reliever J.C. Romero with a one-year, $750,000 deal. The Cardinals appear to need only a few spare parts to finalize the roster.

After Pujols signed a $254 million, 10-year contract with the Los Angeles Angels, Cardinals chairman Bill DeWitt Jr. said he expected his team’s payroll to perhaps exceed this year’s total of $110 million.

Allen Craig, coming off an impressive postseason, gives the Cardinals another strong option in the outfield but will miss at least the first month of the season while recovering from knee surgery.

A six-time All-Star, Beltran began his career with the cross-state Royals in 1998, three years after Kansas City drafted him in the second round. The switch-hitter has a .283 career batting average with 302 home runs and 1,146 RBIs.

“Beltran is a proven outfielder who obviously has been a tough opponent against the Cardinals for many years,” St. Louis general manager John Mozeliak said in a statement. “It is going to be nice to have his bat and competitive nature working for us instead of on the other side of the field for the next couple of years.”

Beltran faced the Cardinals in a pair of NL championship series, in 2004 with Houston and 2006 with the Mets. St. Louis won both series despite several big hits by Beltran.

With a chance to put the Mets in the World Series, however, he struck out looking to end Game 7 of the 2006 NLCS against Cardinals right-hander Adam Wainwright.

___

AP Sports Writer Ronald Blum contributed to this report.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Cardinals sign Carlos Beltran

ST. LOUIS (AP) – Carlos Beltran and the World Series champion St. Louis Cardinals have agreed to a two-year contract pending results of a physical, fortifying the team’s lineup following the departure of Albert Pujols.

The team disclosed the move Thursday night and said it expects to make a formal announcement shortly after the holidays. KMOX, the Cardinals’ flagship radio station, reported the deal is for $26 million over two years – the same figure cited by a person familiar with the negotiations who spoke to The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because financial details of the agreement were not announced by the team.

The 34-year-old Beltran batted .300 with 22 home runs, 84 RBIs and a .385 on-base percentage for the New York Mets and San Francisco Giants this year. He likely will be the opening-day right fielder for the Cardinals next season.

Lance Berkman is expected to move to first base, taking Pujols’ spot. Allen Craig, coming off an impressive postseason, gives the Cardinals another strong outfield option but will miss at least the first month while recovering from knee surgery.

A six-time All-Star, Beltran began his career with the cross-state Royals in 1998, three years after Kansas City drafted him in the second round. The switch-hitter has a .283 career batting average with 302 home runs and 1,146 RBIs.

“Beltran is a proven outfielder who obviously has been a tough opponent against the Cardinals for many years,” St. Louis general manager John Mozeliak said in a statement. “It is going to be nice to have his bat and competitive nature working for us instead of on the other side of the field for the next couple of years.”

Beltran faced the Cardinals in a pair of NL championship series, in 2004 with Houston and 2006 with the Mets. St. Louis won both series despite several big hits by Beltran. With a chance to put the Mets in the World Series, however, he struck out looking to end Game 7 of the 2006 NLCS against Cardinals right-hander Adam Wainwright.

(Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

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Carlos Beltran, Cardinals agree to 2-year contract

ST. LOUIS – Carlos Beltran and the World Series champion St. Louis Cardinals have agreed to a two-year contract pending results of a physical, fortifying the team’s lineup following the departure of Albert Pujols.

The team disclosed the move Thursday night and said it expects to make a formal announcement shortly after the holidays.

KMOX, the Cardinals’ flagship radio station, reported the deal is for $26 million over two years – the same figure cited by a person familiar with the negotiations who spoke to The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because financial details of the agreement were not announced by the team.

The 34-year-old Beltran batted .300 with 22 home runs, 84 RBIs and a .385 on-base percentage for the New York Mets and San Francisco Giants this year. He likely will be the opening-day right fielder for the Cardinals next season. Lance Berkman is expected to move to first base, taking Pujols’ spot.

Allen Craig, coming off an impressive postseason, gives the Cardinals another strong outfield option but will miss at least the first month while recovering from knee surgery.

A six-time All-Star, Beltran began his career with the cross-state Royals in 1998, three years after Kansas City drafted him in the second round. The switch-hitter has a .283 career batting average with 302 home runs and 1,146 RBIs.

“Beltran is a proven outfielder who obviously has been a tough opponent against the Cardinals for many years,” St. Louis general manager John Mozeliak said in a statement. “It is going to be nice to have his bat and competitive nature working for us instead of on the other side of the field for the next couple of years.”

Beltran faced the Cardinals in a pair of NL championship series, in 2004 with Houston and 2006 with the Mets. St. Louis won both series despite several big hits by Beltran.

With a chance to put the Mets in the World Series, however, he struck out looking to end Game 7 of the 2006 NLCS against Cardinals right-hander Adam Wainwright.

© Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Cardinals reach two year deal with Beltran

R.B. FALLSTROM

AP Sports Writer

ST. LOUIS (AP) – Carlos Beltran and the World Series champion St. Louis Cardinals agreed to a two-year contract pending results of a physical, a move that would fortify the team’s lineup following the departure of Albert Pujols.

The team disclosed the agreement Thursday night and said it expects to make a formal announcement shortly after the holidays.

KMOX, the Cardinals’ flagship radio station, reported the deal is for $26 million over two years – the same figure cited by a person familiar with the negotiations who spoke to The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because financial details of the agreement were not announced by the team.

The 34-year-old Beltran batted .300 with 22 home runs, 84 RBIs and a .385 on-base percentage for the New York Mets and San Francisco Giants this year. He likely will be the opening-day right fielder for the Cardinals next season. Lance Berkman is expected to move to first base, taking Pujols’ spot.

Beltran and Berkman are switch-hitters, giving new manager Mike Matheny lineup flexibility.

Earlier this month, St. Louis re-signed shortstop Rafael Furcal to a two-year, $14 million contract and added left-handed reliever J.C. Romero with a one-year, $750,000 deal. The Cardinals appear to need only a few spare parts to finalize the roster.

After Pujols signed a $254 million, 10-year contract with the Los Angeles Angels, Cardinals chairman Bill DeWitt Jr. said he expected his team’s payroll to perhaps exceed this year’s total of $110 million.

Allen Craig, coming off an impressive postseason, gives the Cardinals another strong option in the outfield but will miss at least the first month of the season while recovering from knee surgery.

A six-time All-Star, Beltran began his career with the cross-state Royals in 1998, three years after Kansas City drafted him in the second round. The switch-hitter has a .283 career batting average with 302 home runs and 1,146 RBIs.

“Beltran is a proven outfielder who obviously has been a tough opponent against the Cardinals for many years,” St. Louis general manager John Mozeliak said in a statement. “It is going to be nice to have his bat and competitive nature working for us instead of on the other side of the field for the next couple of years.”

Beltran faced the Cardinals in a pair of NL championship series, in 2004 with Houston and 2006 with the Mets. St. Louis won both series despite several big hits by Beltran.

With a chance to put the Mets in the World Series, however, he struck out looking to end Game 7 of the 2006 NLCS against Cardinals right-hander Adam Wainwright.

___

AP Sports Writer Ronald Blum contributed to this report.

(Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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Mabry named assistant hitting coach for Cardinals

Former St. Louis Cardinals outfielder/first baseman John Mabry has been named the team’s assistant hitting coach, General Manager John Mozeliak announced Friday.

Mabry, 41, fills the position left vacant by Mike Aldrete when he was named bench coach under new manager Mike Matheny last month.

“We are excited to have John rejoin the Cardinals,” Mozeliak said. “He brings a lot to the club when you consider both his baseball success and personality, and we look forward to having him around in a full-time role.”

Mabry who hit .263 for eight teams in 14 seasons in the majors, lives in St. Louis with his wife, Ann, and their four children. He is good friends with Matheny from their playing days together in St. Louis.

The team also announced former head trainer Barry Weinberg has been named the organization’s senior medical advisor.

He will work out of Jupiter, Fla., the team’s spring training headquarters, and “assist in all aspects of the medical department with focus on a developmental and mentoring program for the club’s minor league athletic trainers,” the team said.

Weinberg, most recently the Cardinals’ assistant athletic trainer under Greg Hauck, will be replaced on the major-league staff by Chris Conroy.

Conroy will be in his 14th year with the Cardinals organization, serving the last seven years as the medicaltrainer for Triple-A Memphis.

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Cardinals add John Mabry to coaching staff

St. Louis Cardinals Hot Stove: Team Offers…

Read More: Jake Westbrook (P – STL), Octavio Dotel (P – STL), Kyle Lohse (P – STL), Edwin Jackson (P – STL), Rafael Furcal (SS – STL), Albert Pujols (1B – STL), Adam Wainwright (P – STL), Arthur Rhodes (P – STL), Jaime Garcia (P – STL), St. Louis Cardinals

The St. Louis Cardinals have offered salary arbitration to franchise cornerstone Albert Pujols (Type A) and starting pitcher Edwin Jackson (Type B), but have declined to make offers to Rafael Furcal (Type B) and relief pitcher Arthur Rhodes (Type B), per a Twitter report from Derrick Goold of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. The only remaining player subject to arbitration is relief pitcher Octavio Dotel, but the team is not required to offer salary arbitration to Dotel because his compensation status was adjusted downward from Type A to Type B by the league on Tuesday.

The decision to approve or decline salary arbitration does not act as a proxy for the team’s interest in keeping each player in a Cardinals uniform, as MLB.com explains:

Of the four, the Cardinals retain some interest in return engagements with Dotel and Furcal, and possibly Rhodes, but Jackson isn’t expected to return. The Cardinals have five starting pitchers under contract for 2012 — Adam Wainwright, Chris Carpenter, Jaime Garcia, Kyle Lohse and Jake Westbrook — and traded for Jackson with the expectation that he would depart via free agency.    

As noted by Dan Moore of SB Nation St. Louis earlier in the week, Albert Pujols is not expected to accept salary arbitration, and the site will have timely updates on any decisions made the other players and all other off-season moves as well.

For more updates and analysis on the St. Louis Cardinals, check out Viva El Birdos. Stay tuned to SB Nation St. Louis for more breaking news on all matters St. Louis sports. For MLB Off-Season news make sure to visit MLB Daily Dish.

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St. Louis Cardinals Keep Most Coaching Staff…

If it isn’t broken, don’t fix it. Luckily the adage refers to the St. Louis Cardinals. After winning the 2011 World Series, many players and coaches will be back to try to repeat the performance. Even though Tony LaRussa retired just days after the championship, the Cardinals hired former catcher Mike Matheny to succeed him.

Less than a week after hiring Matheny, it was announced all but two coaches will remain with the team. That means Dave Duncan, a longtime friend and right-hand man of LaRussa, will be the pitching coach. Mark McGwire is still the hitting coach and Jose Oquendo will still be in the coach’s box at third base.

The only two coaches who will move on to other duties within the organization are first base coach Dave McKay and bench coach Joe Pettini. Chris Maloney, who was considered for the manager’s job, will be at first base after spending five years as the manager of AAA Memphis.

Matheny and general manager John Mozeliak are both wise to keep as many coaches on from last year as possible. With a new skipper in the dugout there needs to be as much familiarity on the team as possible. Matheny already knows many of the players from when he was with the Cardinals from 2000 to 2004. Having the coaches stay on the team can only help.

The one thing that may seem a little weird is that Matheny will be younger than most of the coaches under his watchful eye. Duncan is 66 years old. Oquendo is 48. Matheny will already be one of the youngest managers in MLB next season at age 41 by the time Opening Day rolls around.

Now the only missing piece to next year’s puzzle is going to be whether or not the Cardinals can sign free agent Albert Pujols(notes) back to the team. The Miami Marlins have already made an offer to the slugging first baseman. Hopefully the coaches that remain in St. Louis can help convince Pujols to stay. Fans of the Cardinals will find out within a month whether he stays or goes.

St. Louis has done everything else right so far this offseason. They need to get the Pujols deal done next.

William Browning was born in St. Louis and is a lifelong St. Louis Cardinals fan. He currently resides in Branson, Mo.

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Five Reasons Why Mike Matheny is Best Choice for…

I must admit a bit of apprehension regarding Mike Matheny as the new manager of the St. Louis Cardinals. He succeeds legendary Tony LaRussa who retired just days after winning the 2011 World Series. ESPN reports Matheny was offered a two-year contract to prove himself as the former catcher has no previous managerial experience.

Here are five reasons why Matheny still might be the best choice for the Cardinals.

New Trend

Matheny is part of a trend in Major League Baseball. He is one of a handful of former players who took over teams without previous managerial experience. Kirk Gibson, Robin Ventura and Mike Scioscia are all retired ball players who have made waves in their clubs. Gibson was interim manager for the Diamondbacks in 2010 before being hired on full time in 2011. Ventura was just hired by the Chicago White Sox without any previous experience. Scioscia has been with the Los Angeles Angels since 2000.

Former Catcher

Matheny is a former catcher. As such, he knows how to do several important things on the field. First is that Matheny knows what pitches need to be thrown and when. Second is that the catcher is the field general who directs players where the throw the ball. Being a catcher harbors great experiences for future baseball managers. Look at legends such as Yogi Berra for an example.

Familiarity

Matheny’s familiarity with current players such as Yadier Molina will only help. Matheny also caught for ace Christ Carpenter and played with Albert Pujols (assuming Pujols comes back to St. Louis). He played five seasons in St. Louis and won three of his four Gold Gloves in the Gateway City. As a fixture in the Cardinals organization, Matheny will fit in with the franchise’s philosophy. He even played two years with current batting coach Mark McGwire.

Youth Versus Experience

Matheny is just like the team he inherited from LaRussa. He is young for a manager and can relate to players. Yet he has loads of leadership experience both as a player and within the organization. The current make up of the club is a mix of veterans and young players, many of whom won’t need much complicated managing skills. The starting rotation will be set once Adam Wainwright returns to join Carpenter and crew. The skills on the team are there, all they need is a good skipper.

Expectations

I think Matheny will know what is expected of him. He knows how much baseball means to St. Louis. He made it to the 2004 World Series and realizes what it takes to be part of a championship-caliber team. Matheny will have the energy and drive of a new job while he is still young enough to appreciate what it takes to put a winner on the field. As long as he doesn’t lose sight of those ideals, Matheny should do just fine.

William Browning was born in St. Louis and is a lifelong St. Louis Cardinals fan. He currently resides in Branson, Mo.

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Sandberg Interviews With St. Louis Cardinals

Spokane native Ryne Sandberg interviewed with the St. Louis Cardinals Wednesday for a chance at becoming the team’s new manager.

Sandberg, who graduated from North Central High School, has a track record as a successful Triple-A manager for both the Chicago Cubs and Philadelphia Phillies organizations.

He faces some stiff competition for the gig in St. Louis. Former Red Sox manager Terry Francona also interviewed for the job. Cardinals third base coach Jose Oquendo is also up for the job.

In all, the Cardinals have interviewed at least six candidates to replace Tony LaRussa, who retired after winning the World Series. The Associated Press said Thursday the team wouldn’t announce a new hire until next week at the earliest.

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St. Louis Cardinals talk to Ryne Sandberg, Jose…

ST. LOUIS — Hall of Famer Ryne Sandberg and longtime Cardinals third base coach Jose Oquendo interviewed for St. Louis’ managerial opening Wednesday.

Both interviews took place in St. Louis, Sandberg in the morning and Oquendo in the afternoon, a person familiar with the process told The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because no announcement was made.

The Cardinals have interviewed six candidates as possible replacements for Tony La Russa, who retired after winning the World Series last month. A decision is not anticipated until next week at the earliest.

“Obviously, it’s a gem of a job,” said former Red Sox manager Terry Francona, among the candidates.

Sandberg and Francona, interviewed Wednesday in Cincinnati, are the only candidates without St. Louis ties in the mix to succeed the 67-year-old La Russa, who managed two World Series champions and guided nine teams to the postseason in 16 seasons.

Francona, who parted ways with the Red Sox after eight seasons following a September collapse, said the Cardinals gave him no timetable.

The Cardinals got permission from the Phillies to talk to the 52-year-old Sandberg, well-known by St. Louis fans from his playing career on their team’s biggest rival. Sandberg managed Philadelphia’s Triple-A team after four seasons managing in the Cubs’ organization.

The 48-year-old Oquendo has been the third base coach the last dozen years. He played his final 10 major league seasons with the Cardinals from 1986-95 when he was nicknamed the “Secret Weapon” in a nod to his versatility.

Chris Maloney has managed the Cardinals’ Triple-A franchise in Memphis the last five years, Mike Matheny won three of his four Gold Gloves as a catcher for St. Louis from 2000-04 and now is an instructor in the organization, and White Sox coach Joe McEwing earned the nickname “Super Joe” as a versatile substitute with the Cardinals.

Nationals catcher Ramos kidnapped in Venezuela: Washington catcher Wilson Ramos was abducted by gunmen from his home in his native Venezuela.

Ramos, 24, was taken away in an SUV by four armed men in central Carabobo state, Kathe Vilera, spokeswoman for the catcher’s Venezuelan League team, said through her official twitter account.

“This is sad, worrisome and true that Wilson Ramos has been kidnapped,” she said.

Judicial police in Venezuela said the gunmen entered Ramos’ home in Santa Ines, located about 150 kilometers (95 miles) west of Venezuela’s capital, Caracas.

There were no immediate reports of ransom demands.

Cubs interview Maddux:Mike Maddux, the pitching coach of the two-time defending AL champion Texas Rangers, is the third person to officially interview for the position created when Theo Epstein fired Mike Quade as the Chicago Cubs manager last week.

The Cubs have also interviewed Phillies bench coach Pete Mackanin and Brewers hitting coach Dale Sveum. Cleveland Indians bench coach Sandy Alomar Jr., will have his turn Friday.

Alomar interviews for Red Sox job: Sandy Alomar Jr. is interviewing for the Boston Red Sox manager’s job. He’s the third to interview for the job, after Pete Mackanin and Dale Sveum. Mike Maddux withdrew his name from consideration.

The job opened when the team parted ways with Terry Francona after eight years and two World Series championships. Also scheduled to interview are Torey Lovullo and Gene Lamont.

Reyes meets with Marlins: The Marlins courted All-Star shortstop Jose Reyes with the tour and lunch on South Beach, team president David Samson said on his weekly radio show on WAXY-AM. The Marlins are also pursuing left-hander Mark Buehrle, who took the ballpark tour Tuesday, Samson said.

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St. Louis Cardinals Manager Search: Ryne Sandberg,…

Read More: Jose Oquendo (PH – STL), Philadelphia Phillies, St. Louis Cardinals

The St. Louis Cardinals are continuing their search for a new manager this week, and on Wednesday they completed interviews with two key candidates. According to Derrick Goold of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Ryne Sandberg and Jose Oquendo both interviewed for the Cardinals’ managerial gig on Wednesday. They’re the fifth and sixth candidates to be interviewed for the position.

Sandberg, a Triple-A manager for the Phillies, and Oquendo, the Cardinals’ third base coach, join four other known candidates that have already interviewed for the position. Terry Francona, Joe McEwing, Mike Matheny and Chris Malone all completed interviews previously with Cardinals management.

It’s unclear if the team is going to schedule interviews for any other candidates, but the team may already be settled on hiring one of the six interviewed candidates.

Stay tuned to SB Nation St. Louis for more information, and for in-depth analysis on the St. Louis Cardinals be sure to visit Viva El Birdos. Visit Baseball Nation for more news and notes around the league.

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