St. Louis Cardinals: Cards vs. Cubs Bullpen

Oct 1, 2016; St. Louis, MO, USA; St. Louis Cardinals catcher Yadier Molina (4) and relief pitcher Seung Hwan Oh (26) celebrate their 4-3 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Scott Rovak-USA TODAY Sports
Oct 1, 2016; St. Louis, MO, USA; St. Louis Cardinals catcher Yadier Molina (4) and relief pitcher Seung Hwan Oh (26) celebrate their 4-3 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Scott Rovak-USA TODAY Sports /
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Jasen Vinlove-USA TODAY Sports /

Both teams have capable middle relievers and some questionable relievers.

As I mentioned before, both teams retooled their bullpen and added depth with the signings of Uehara and Cecil. When Spring Training opens, many of the same familiar faces will man both middle reliever cores for the Cubs and the St. Louis Cardinals.

The Cubs will deploy the names of Rondon, Strop, Edwards Jr., Grimm, Uehara, Duensing, and Smith to manage the middle innings. Of those names Rondon, Strop, and Uehara provide big league experience.

Rondon’s inconsistency was met with a trade for Aroldis Chapman and then a trade for Wade Davis. His 3.53 ERA last season is concerning for a guy tasked to hold the eighth inning. He will be anchored by veterans Strop and Uehara.

Between Strop and Uehara, Uehara had the worse year. Uehara’s ERA (3.45) to Strop’s ERA (2.85) shows how much the former closer has faded. His WHIP, although, was under one last season, it still begs the question if his stuff is still there? If Uehara fails to work out, Edwards Jr. will likely fill that role.

Outside of those three, Edwards Jr. and Grimm will be ask to get innings and provide some support to new guys like Smith and Duensing. Neither Grimm nor Edwards had a great season, but they look to bounce back.

The St. Louis Cardinals middle relievers are built on big league experience and preferred matchups. Behind Oh, the Cardinals will roll with Siegrist, Rosenthal, Broxton, Cecil, Bowman, Lyons, and Duke. While Lyons and Duke are injured, the Cardinals may look to bolster the bullpen just a little bit more.

Siegrist is the likely candidate to man the eighth inning for the Cardinals this season. Given Rosenthal’s shaky 2016, I don’t think the Cardinals will gamble on Rosenthal to man high-leverage situations any time soon.

If Siegrist can find his 2015 form and not be over-used by Matheny, he is a better option than Rondon in the eighth inning.

Outside of Siegrist, the Cardinals will use Rosenthal, Broxton, and Cecil to support the bullpen. There isn’t any need to mention Rosenthal’s shaky season. He lost confidence in his stuff and seemed to collapse too easily. If the Cardinals are to win games this year, his performance is key.

Cecil was brought to St. Louis to be a lefty specialist. If you don’t think this was a move to counter the likes of Anthony Rizzo or Kyle Schwarber or even Joey Votto late in games, think again. Cecil, like Rosenthal, will need to perform at his expected level to give the Cardinals a chance to win.

Jonathan Broxton continues to be the biggest question mark in the Cardinals bullpen. Frankly, I’m not a big fan of his and not too sure why he is on the roster, but he provides the depth right now given the injuries to Lyons and Duke. He has become too predictable at this point and needs to be truly impressive for the Cardinals to feel comfortable using him.

Matt Bowman rounds out the bullpen for the Cardinals. He is similar to the likes of Edwards and the other young guns on the Cubs. He needs more time to develop this Spring Training and hopefully comes out with a chip on his shoulder to be a go-to man.

Given the injuries to Lyons and Duke, save some room for either Alex Reyes or Michael Wacha. Both will be battling for a spot in the rotation this Spring, but there can only be one winner. Whether it is Reyes or Wacha in the bullpen, either one provides a solid choice to not only eat multiple innings for starters, but also provide late inning help as well.

The biggest question facing the Cubs bullpen is consistency. Should the bullpen collapse late in games before reaching Davis, the SP might have to provide more inning than expected over the season.  If it gets to that point, expect the Cubs to be active in the trade market for a middle reliever.

More from St Louis Cardinals News

The biggest question for the Cardinals is bullpen management. Matheny’s bullpen management is skeptical at best and, frankly, it needs to get better this season. If the manager cannot deploy the proper personnel in the right situations, the Cardinals will lose the easy games. Please do not over-use a single player…pleaseee.

The Cubs and Cardinals offer both capable and questionable middle relievers for the 2017 season. Both teams also have a good array of left and right handers heading into the season. While the Cubs have the best closer between the two teams, I think the Cardinals edge the Cubs out in middle relievers.

Remember that the Cubs starting pitching in 2016 was reminiscent of the Cardinals starting pitching in 2015. Both of the years the middle relievers didn’t have to do too much work. I don’t think the Cubs SP will be that great again and will force Maddon’s hand in middle relievers. I just don’t think they are as up-to-speed as the Cardinals.

Next: Cards vs. Pirates: Starting Rotation

Realistically, both teams have good bullpens. It really is a tie between the two teams. While Davis might prove to better than Oh, the middle relievers will decide more games than not for both teams. Hopefully when it comes to playing each other, though, the St. Louis Cardinals won’t have to see Davis too much.