Few players have risen through the St. Louis Cardinalsโ minor-league system with the star power of Jordan Walker. Twice the franchiseโs Minor League Player of the Year, Walker entered the 2023 season as the fourth-ranked prospect throughout the minor leagues according to Baseball America. And Walker had yet to turn 21. He made the Cardinalsโ Opening Day roster having never played a game at the Triple A level and proceeded to start his big-league career with a 12-game hitting streak. Not the stuff of typical rookies.
Cut to the present and Walker finds himself midway through a 2024 season that hasnโt gone precisely to plan. He again started in right field for St. Louis on Opening Day, but struggled in April with a .155 batting average and no home runs through 20 games. (In 117 games as a rookie with the Cardinals, Walker batted .276 with a .445 slugging percentage and 16 home runs.) On April 24th, the Cardinals sent Walker to Memphis to fine-tune his swing and recharge for his sophomore campaign. Over 43 games with the Redbirds, Jordan has batted .264, slugged .402, and hit three home runs.
โIโm trying to relax,โ says Walker. โIโve shortened my stance a bit. So Iโm not as rigid when I start my swing. I feel like Iโm seeing the ball better.โ How relaxed? Last Thursday, Walker took a nap during an optional team batting practice and proceeded to pick up three hits, including a homer, in a win over the Jacksonville Jumbo Shrimp. He also threw out a runner at the plate from right field.
Walker says he hasnโt had a conversation with Cardinalsโ brass specifically about their expectations for his next promotion to the big club. But he knows itโs about the magic word for hitters at all levels: consistency. โIf my swing is where it needs to be,โ notes Walker, โif Iโm driving the ball the way Iโve been recently, I should be fine. As long as I hit the ball hard, everything should work out.โ
Had Walker played four years of college baseball, heโd just now be starting his pro career. Instead, he has a season in the big leagues on his resume, and the weight of expectations for the kind of career that takes a franchise closer to the World Series. Does that weight get heavy? โMaybe a little bit,โ he says. โBut I donโt think Iโve changed anything, approach-wise or mindset-wise. I just wasnโt as consistent with what got me success in the minor leagues, and what got me success last year. Thatโs the key. These pitchers are tough. Your swing can feel good, but if you get tough pitches, itโs always tough to hit. But Iโm comfortable with my swing, Iโm making good swing decisions, and I feel like I can drive the ball. With a simple approach, Iโll catch fire again. Itโs an up-and-down game.โ
Ben Johnson recently became only the third manager in Redbirds history to win 300 games, but heโs still getting to know Walker, who has now played a half-season, total, at the Triple A level. โWith Jordan, itโs a matter of getting comfortable playing every day,โ says Johnson. โHeโs about to catch fire, any day now. And weโll get him [back to St. Louis] soon.โ
After a slow start, the Cardinals have played themselves into contention for a wild-card playoff spot. In addition to Walkerโs absence, the team has suffered lengthy stays on the injured list for Tommy Edman, Lars Nootbaar, and Willson Contreras. Thatโs virtually half a batting order the club can infuse for the second half of the 2024 season. And it can be safely said, among the four, no one has a higher ceiling of potential than Jordan Walker. Greatness awaits.

