Losing a Hero

The average working American makes about $31,111 in a calendar year. As a Los Angeles Angel, Albert Pujols will make five times that amount in a game.

A few months ago, if you went down to Busch Stadium around 7:00 p.m. there would be a sea of red Cardinals jerseys. Many would read “PUJOLS” on the back, showing our city’s support for their baseball legend. Now, $254 million later, those jerseys will be put in a basement cellar, where they will stay, collecting dust, until Pujols somehow makes amends to hurt and disappointed Cardinal fans.

Pujols played 11 seasons with the St. Louis Cardinals. He ripped 445 home runs, won three MVP awards, and brought his team two World Championships. This, Pujols said, was his ultimate goal. Well, if it truly was his goal, then wouldn’t he want good players around him? Wouldn’t he want the Cardinals to sign free agents like Matt Holliday and Lance Berkman, to make the dream of winning a championship possible? Apparently not.

Buster Olney, a well noted ESPN baseball analyst, has said that he thinks Pujols’ pride was hurt because the Cardinals didn’t make more of an effort to sign him and instead pursued free agent Matt Holliday two winters ago.

Pujols obviously wasn’t making his choice to win championships, he was doing it to make the most money as possible. Or maybe not. Maybe Albert’s ego just wanted the world to know, “I am the best. Look at my contract.”

Once someone gets $200 million, how much extra money really matters? It’s enough money to last him, his children, and his grandchildren for a lifetime. That is not even taking into account all the money he made as a Cardinal or through ad contracts.

As a lifelong Cardinal fan I am hurt by the situation. Baseball is one of the biggest parts of my life and always has been. Some of my first memories are of Pujols rounding the bases after a homer.

Now, those memories are tainted. All I can think about is Pujols leaving the city of St. Louis, leaving the Cardinals, and leaving me, over pride and a higher contract.

That said, I do not know how I would have reacted in the situation. It is a lot of money and its hard to blame a guy for taking it.

The truth is, we will never really know what was going through our once beloved first baseman’s head on that fateful Thursday morning he decided to leave. What we do know is that it hurts, it’s sad, and we lost one of our city’s legends.

(Photo by: Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times/MCT)