Cardinals–Royals rivalry

Cardinals–Royals rivalry
St. Louis Cardinals
Kansas City Royals
First meeting October 19, 1985
Royals Stadium, Kansas City, MO
Latest meeting

June 30, 2016
Busch Stadium, St Louis. MO

Royals 4, Cardinals 2
Statistics
Meetings total 90
Regular season series 5139, Cardinals
Largest victory 165, Royals (August 30, 1997)
Longest win streak
  • Cardinals: 7 (June 28, 2003May 21, 2005)
  • Royals: 4 (June 17, 2008June 27, 2008)
Current win streak 2, Royals
Post-season history

The CardinalsRoyals rivalry is a Major League Baseball (MLB) interleague rivalry between the St. Louis Cardinals of the National League (NL) Central division and the Kansas City Royals of the American League (AL) Central division. The rivalry between the two clubs is also known as the Show-Me Series or the I-70 Series, due to the fact that the two cities are both located in the U.S. state of Missouri (whose nickname is the "Show Me State") and are also connected by Interstate 70. Both teams played against each other for the first time in the 1985 World Series, which the Royals won 4-3 in seven games. Owing to their geographical proximity, these two teams face each other every regular season in interleague play.

Background

The Cardinals are one of Major League Baseball's oldest teams, having played in the National League in St. Louis since they were formed in 1882 as the Brown Stockings. The Royals joined the majors in 1969 as one of the American League's first expansion teams. Until major league baseball introduced interleague play in 1997, the only opportunity for the Cardinals and the Royals to meet was in the 1985 World Series. The two teams had gone through several periods of prolonged success (and several notable droughts) leading up to the World Series. The Cardinals fell on hard times in the 1970s after winning the 1964 and the 1967 World Series and appearing in the 1968 World Series. The Kansas City Royals had become one of the best teams in baseball by the late 1970s, reaching the American League playoffs six times from 1976 to 1984, including the 1980 World Series. After several down years, the Cardinals emerged as a pennant contender in the early 1980s, winning the 1982 World Series.

1985 World Series

Main article: 1985 World Series

The first official meeting between the Cardinals and Royals was in the 1985 World Series. This marked only the second time in baseball history that two teams from the state of Missouri met in the World Series. The first time was in 1944, when the Cardinals played against the St. Louis Browns. That series also marked the last time to date that a World Series was held entirely in one ballpark, as the Cardinals and Browns shared Sportsman's Park at the time.

The Cardinals won the National League East division by three games over the New York Mets and then defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers 4-2 in the National League Championship Series. The Royals won the American League West division by one game over the California Angels and then defeated the Toronto Blue Jays 4-3 in the American League Championship Series.

The Royals lost the first two games of the World Series at their home stadium and were on the verge of elimination, down 1-0 in the bottom of the ninth in game six, when umpire Don Denkinger made a controversial call, ruling runner Jorge Orta safe at first. Orta was later thrown out at third on a botched sacrifice attempt and did not score. The Royals would go on to win the game 2-1 in the bottom of the ninth following the put-out of Orta (the only out recorded in the inning). The Royals then went on to win game seven the following day 11-0 for their first World Series title. The Royals became the first team ever to win the World Series after dropping games 1 and 2 at home. The Royals did not return to the MLB postseason for 29 years, winning one of the American League wild cards in 2014 and advancing to the 2014 World Series. The following season, they claimed their first title since 1985 by winning the 2015 World Series.

Cardinals manager Whitey Herzog had been the Royals' manager from 1975 to 1979. He led Kansas City to the franchise's first three playoff appearances – in 1976, 1977, and 1978 – before getting fired just shortly after the Royals were eliminated from the playoffs in 1979.

Interleague play

The introduction of interleague play to major league baseball in 1997 allowed the I-70 Series to be revived in non-exhibition games. The teams have played every year since 1997, with several changes in format – variously playing 3-game, 4-game and 6-game season series. Through the 2015 season, the Cardinals lead the interleague series, 50–36.[1]

The first few seasons of the series were nearly even, with the Cardinals holding a slight advantage with a 14–13 record through the 2003 season. The Royals took two out of three from the Cardinals in 2010 behind victories from starting pitchers Zack Greinke and Bruce Chen. In 2011, the Cardinals won four of the six match-ups, three of them in the eighth inning or later. The last four games in the series were one-run games. In 2012, the Cardinals again won four of the six games, on the strength of a three-game sweep in Kansas City over June 22–24. The Royals won the season series in 2014 for the first time since 2010, taking 3 out of 4. They won the first two games in St. Louis 6-0 and 8-7 respectively, and after losing Game 3 5-2 in 11 in Kansas City, won the final game 3-2 after being down 2-0 late.

Year-by-year results

Year Cardinals W Royals W Note
1997 2
1 Cardinals win the first regular-season game played between the two teams, played at Kauffman Stadium
1998 1 2
Played at Busch Memorial Stadium
1999 1 2
2000 2
1
2001 0 3
Royals accomplish first series sweep by either team
2002 5
1 First year of 6-game home-and-away format
2003 3
3
In split series Cardinals outscore Royals 43–37 (4–10, 8–1, 2–5, 3–6, 13–9, 13-6)
2004 3
0 First series sweep for Cardinals; series reverts to 3-game format for next two years
2005 2
1 The 20th anniversary of the two clubs meeting in the 1985 World Series
2006 4
2 Series returns to 6-game home-and-away format, Busch Stadium (III) opens
Cardinals win the 2006 World Series
2007 3
3
In split series Royals outscore Cardinals 40–31 (8–1, 3–7, 17–8, 5–3, 1–5, 6–7)
2008 2 4
2009 5
1
2010 1 2
Series reverts to 3-game format for one season
2011 4
2 Cardinals win four of the six match-ups in the later innings
Cardinals win the 2011 World Series
2012 4
2
2013 3
1 Four consecutive games were played May 27–30; first two at Kauffman Stadium, last two at Busch Stadium
2014 1 3
Royals win series for the first time since the 2010 season
2015 4
2 30th anniversary of 1985 World Series; teams enter series (May 22, June 12 & July 23) with two best records in baseball
Royals win the 2015 World Series
2016 1 3
Return of 4 game format, 4 games between June 27–30; first two at Kauffman Stadium, last two at Busch Stadium
Totals 51 39

See also

References

External links

Bibliography

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