ST. LOUIS (AP) -Jeff Suppan viewed his first visit to Busch Stadium since the St. Louis Cardinals’ World Series parade as a business trip and nothing more.
The MVP of the NL championship series, who signed a free-agent deal with the Milwaukee Brewers after his old team showed little interest, insisted Friday he has no hard feelings.
“I realized they had to do what they had to do and I had to do what I felt I had to do,” Suppan said before the Brewers and Cardinals opened a three-game series. “I concentrated on being professional, seeing what was out there and being open to whatever offers there were.”
Suppan’s homecoming was his first chance to visit with ex-teammates since the Cardinals’ trip to the White House in February. He was presented his World Series ring at a pre-game ceremony, getting hugs hugs from several ex-teammates, but did not make a speech.
The Cardinals’ Scott Rolen had Suppan and his wife over for dinner on Thursday.
“He’s as good a teammate as you’d ever want, he’s a true professional, and he’s a good person,” Rolen said. “You add those up, and he’s a good friend.
“You don’t do any better than Jeff Suppan.”
Suppan, 0-2 with a 4.15 ERA after two starts with Milwaukee, is scheduled to pitch on Saturday.
Suppan’s four-year, $42 million deal is the largest in Brewers history after he made $4 million last year with St. Louis. He was 12-7 with a 4.12 ERA in 2006, then excelled in the NLCS against the Mets with eight scoreless innings and the victory in Game 3 and seven solid innings in the clinching Game 7.
“I think when you have memories of a World Series, to win it all with a group of guys you admired and enjoyed playing with is special,” Suppan said.
Suppan went 44-26 with a 3.95 ERA during his three-season stay in St. Louis. He was 62-75 in his career prior to that. St. Louis replaced Suppan, Jeff Weaver and Jason Marquis from last season’s rotation, converting relievers Adam Wainwright and Braden Looper to fill two holes and signing Kip Wells to a one-year, $4 million deal.
Suppan signed with the Brewers in late December after little contact from the Cardinals.
“Things happened, and he’s in a good spot,” Rolen said. “You wish him the best.”
Cardinals manager Tony La Russa said Suppan and the Cardinals were a good match, but re-signing him wasn’t possible.
“That’s the way it’s supposed to be,” La Russa said. “We knew how much money we had … we couldn’t get close.”
THIS IS NOT A GAMBLING SITE – If you think you have a gambling problem click here to find help.
Disclaimer: This site is for informational and entertainment purposes only. Individual users are responsible for the laws regarding accessing gambling information from their jurisdictions. Many countries around the world prohibit gambling, please check the laws in your location. Any use of this information that may violate any federal, state, local or international law is strictly prohibited.
Copyright: The information contained on TheSpread.com website is protected by international copyright and may not be reproduced, or redistributed in any way without expressed written consent.
About: TheSpread.com is the largest sports betting news site in the United States. We provide point spread news, odds, statistics and information to over 175 countries around the world each year. Our coverage includes all North American College and Professional Sports as well as entertainment, political and proposition wagering news.
©1999-2023 TheSpread.com