Let's back up this "so-called" losing. Okay, are you listenin to me, dawg. St. Louis Cardinals were never LOSERS! This was a message from Albert Peejols. Yankees are going to whoop them aside their head. WHAT!
Article date: July 25, 1992 ... "Atlanta Braves stretched their winning streak to 12 games with a 4-3 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates."
Joe DiMaggio
El Hombre, Albert Pujols!
the st.louis cardinals won the world series 11 times
The New EnglandPatriots (as of 9/15/09) have won 12 straight against the Buffalo Bills. That is the longest losing streak currently The Buffalo Bills have beaten the Cincinnati Bengals 9 games straight. The Bengals have not beaten the Bills since 1989. That is the fourth longest streak as far as losses and the longest as far as time.
St. Louis Cardinals vs. the New York Mets, 1974
St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Michael Wacha was the winning pitcher of Game 2 of the 2013 World Series.
The longest game in Cardinals history was played on September 11, 1974 against the New York Mets. The game went 25 innings and lasted 7 hours and 4 minutes. The Cardinals won 4-3.
Both the St. Louis Cardinals and the Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers have beaten the New York Yankees three times in the World Series. The Cardinals defeated the Yankees in 1926, 1942 and 1964. The Dodgers won in 1955, 1963 and 1981.
First baseman Kevin Youkilis of the Boston Red Sox went error free for 2,002 fielding atempts stretching 238 games. The streak began on July 4th, 2006 and came to an end on June 7th, 2008 against the Seattle Mariners. Previously, the record was 193 games and was held by Steve Garvey of the San Diego Padres.
The St. Louis Cardinals went to the World Series three times in the 80s - 1982, 1985 & 1987, winning once in 1982.
In the Spring of 1988, the St. Louis Cardinals, moved to Arizona. The Cardinals are the longest standing NFL franchise. Ref: http://www.azcardinals.com/history/index.php
Yes. In 11 innings, the St. Louis Cardinals defeated the Texas Rangers, 10-9. The winning hit was a solo home run in the bottom of the 11th by the Cardinals' David Freese.