Victor Scott II (photo by Wes Hale)

Something is rotten in the state of St. Louis Cardinals baseball. The Memphis Redbirdsโ€™ parent club finished in last place in 2023, the first time in 33 years the proud franchise took on the scent of a cellar. Following some significant changes to the clubโ€™s starting pitching rotation, hopes were elevated for a better 2024, only to see the team open the season as though its collective wings had been clipped. There were injuries (three outfielders opened the season on the injured list), scoring droughts (the Cards endured a 12-game stretch in which they scored more than three runs exactly once), and generally dreadful play from both veterans (Paul Goldschmidt) and rising โ€œstarsโ€ (Nolan Gorman). As Memorial Day nears, is there hope for fun summer days at the ballpark?

Memphis is playing a role, as it has since 1998 when the Redbirds arrived, in efforts to cure the Cardinalsโ€™ ills. Last yearโ€™s star rookie โ€” right fielder Jordan Walker โ€” opened the season with St. Louis but returned for some Triple-A development when his batting average plummeted to .155 after 20 games. Likewise, the franchiseโ€™s third-ranked prospect โ€” center fielder Victor Scott II โ€” started the season in the Cardinalsโ€™ batting order, but only because of those injuries to outfielders Tommy Edman, Dylan Carlson, and Lars Nootbaar. Scott batted .085 in 20 games before getting his ticket to Memphis for a first taste of Triple-A pitching.

Scott stole an eye-popping 94 bases last year, a season he split between Class-A Peoria and Double-A Springfield. He knows speed will be his meal ticket, as evidenced by the frequent bunts youโ€™ll see from the 23-year-old Georgia native. Through 23 games with Memphis, Scott has stolen eight bases (and only been caught once). But his on-base percentage of .271 is about 80 points shy of what heโ€™ll need to crack the Cardinalsโ€™ everyday lineup. While Scott will likely spend the summer with Memphis, look for Walker โ€” batting .318 in 17 games for the Redbirds โ€” to soon reclaim his place in right field for the Cardinals.

โ€ข The Cardinals acquired infielder Cesar Prieto at last yearโ€™s trade deadline in a deal that sent pitcher Jack Flaherty to Baltimore. Through Sunday, Prieto was batting .340 for the Redbirds with 27 RBIs and 27 runs scored. With five (!) St. Louis regulars batting under .240 and the club near the bottom of the National League in scoring, you gotta figure Prieto might have a place with the big club in the near future. (Veteran infielder Brandon Crawford is hitting .097 in a reserve role for St. Louis.)

โ€ข The hottest pitching prospect in the Cardinalsโ€™ system is 21-year-old righty Tink Hence, currently occupying a spot in the rotation at Double-A Springfield. In his latest start last Saturday, Hence struck out nine in six innings in a win over Midland. Should Hence show signs of growth in the coming weeks, he could make his Triple-A debut with Memphis shortly after his 22nd birthday (August 6th). With four of their starters in their mid-30s, St. Louis desperately needs a young arm (or three) to emerge, ready to retire big-league batters.

โ€ข Keep an eye on Luken Bakerโ€™s home run total. The Redbirdsโ€™ first-baseman has slammed 11 dingers through Sunday, giving him 65 for his career with Memphis. Baker needs 10 more to surpass Nick Stavinohaโ€™s record of 74 (a standard established in 2011). 

โ€ข How quickly can a former Redbird impact the big club? If you like the modern WAR metric (a measure of a playerโ€™s overall impact, relative to an average player), the answer is less than two months. Rookie shortstop Masyn Winn โ€” last yearโ€™s everyday shortstop with Memphis โ€” is leading the Cardinals with 1.8 WAR. He also leads the club in stolen bases (7) and is near the top of the National League in defensive metrics for his position.

Frank Murtaugh is the managing editor of Memphis magazine. He's covered sports for the Flyer for two decades. "From My Seat" debuted on the Flyer site in 2002 and "Tiger Blue" in 2009.