03.20.2009 1:54 pm
By: Derrick Goold
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
JUPITER, Fla. — For the second consecutive game, Joe Mather is not at third base for the St. Louis Cardinals today and it’s possible he could alternate the position with others for awhile here as manager Tony La Russa explores others options at the position.
Contrast that with second where it’s been Skip Schumaker then, now and later.
Several factors have contributed to a suddenly re-opened competition at third base for the Cardinals. Mather is “struggling at the plate,” according to La Russa. The strapping hybrid fielder is hitless in his past 19 at-bats with seven strikeouts. He has not had a hit since his home run on March 12. Mather started in the outfield Thursday against Tampa Bay and he was not in the starting lineup today against Philadelphia. He’ll likely play tomorrow — but in the outfield. This change comes after weeks of Mather making every start possible at the corner position the Cardinals need to fill until incumbent Troy Glaus is healthy.
The other factor that’s come up is the factor that was supposed to be there from the start: David Freese.
Freese essentially missed the first month of spring training because of an Achilles strain. That limited his ability to hit, his ability to play the field and his ability to run. In short, it halted his ability to compete for the job. The original plan was to have Freese and Mather split the time at third base and wait to see who emerged with the fill-in job. Mather got the early start. Freese was assigned to minor-league camp.
But because Freese isn’t on the 40-man roster, he can return to the major-league camp at any time. And that appears to be in the near future, depending on how he looks in a minor-league game today. If he shows he’s healthy, the Cardinals may give him a two-week makeup at the position.
For today, Joe Thurston started at third.
And those aren’t the only three candidates. Brian Barden is arguably the best defensive third baseman of the group, and not one of those four mentioned has as much experience in the majors at the position as Brendan Ryan. La Russa said Tyler Greene is also a viable alternative at third. For a position that featured one player almost exclusively for the first three weeks of games, the carousel at the hot corner now includes as many as six with two weeks to go. Six.
And then there’s Allen Craig, who is hitting .444 this spring … and playing first base.