USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Nolan Arenado trade a steal for the Cardinals

- Bob Nightengal­e

It’s the St. Louis Cardinals’ greatest trade since the Lou Brock heist from the Chicago Cubs a half-century ago.

This is what the trade of Gold Glove third baseman Nolan Arenado means to the Cardinals and their return to greatness, sponsored by Cardinals owner Bill DeWitt, who was last heard telling the baseball world that owning a baseball team was lousy business and they couldn’t possibly increase payroll in the middle of a pandemic.

Incredible what a single move can do for a team’s image while changing the narrative of its owner.

The Cardinals, who were playing hard to get for past the year in their talks with the Colorado

Rockies, finally heard the proposal that was simply too good to ignore.

The six-player trade cleared its final hurdle Feb. 1 when MLB and the Players Associatio­n signed off on the deal, sending Arenado to St. Louis for lefthanded pitcher Austin Gomber, infielder Elehuris Montero, right-handed pitcher Tony Locey, infielder Mateo Gil and right-hander Jake Sommers.

You get Arenado, an eighttime Gold Glove winner, fivetime All-Star, five-time top-10 MVP finalist and four-time Silver Slugger, for nothing more than a back-end starter without a single prized prospect. The Rockies, believe it or not, are kicking in about $50 million.

No wonder folks in Colorado are calling this the worst trade by any sports franchise in the state’s history.

There are no guarantees in any sport, of course, but while everyone in the NL Central is stripping down or standing pat, the Cardinals’ stock is soaring.

This is a team that was badly in need of a power bat and defensive prowess. Arenado leads all third basemen with 120 defensive runs saved since 2013, while Cardinals third basemen have combined for minus-2 defensive runs saved.

The Cardinals hit the fewest home runs and were among the worst five teams in slugging percentage last year, while Arenado averaged 40 homers and 124 RBI from 2015 to 2019.

All it took was money and ingenuity. The Cardinals were able to get the Rockies to pay down the remaining $199 million in Arenado’s contract to about $150 million, with Arenado even willing to defer salary in exchange for another year and $15 million.

Oh, sure, there are two optout provisions in the contract, enabling him to walk away after 2021 and 2022. The odds of that happening is the same as Rockies GM Jeff Bridich being elected Denver mayor.

Arenado has long been enamored with the Cardinals, speaking glowingly about the franchise for years. This is a franchise that has had 13 consecutiv­e winning seasons, reaching the postseason eight times. The Rockies had a winning record only twice in the last decade.

Arenado desperatel­y wanted out of Colorado. Now he’s on a team that desperatel­y wants to win, year after year.

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