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"Believe me, if I wanted to go out there and hit home runs, I would probably drop about 25 points over the last three weeks," Pujols said. "That wasn't my goal. My goal was to try to drive the ball into the gaps and try to finish strong."
La Russa has seen enough Pujols heroics over the years that he's not worried about the player who carried the franchise for the first half of the season and persuaded the front office to pull the trigger on deals for Matt Holliday, Mark DeRosa and Julio Lugo.
"I tell you guys straight out, it doesn't matter who's in front of me or behind me," Pujols said. "Obviously, I hit a little bit of a bump the last couple weeks but if you look at the whole year I was pretty consistent.
"Now it's time to be fresh and get ready for the postseason."
The matchup against the Dodgers features a potential superstar showdown of Pujols vs. Manny Ramirez. La Russa said his star doesn't need that type of artificial stimulus.
"You look for that vibe every game he plays," the manager said. "He's the same all the time. He's so tough-minded, consistent. All the time. Everywhere."
Pujols is making his sixth playoff appearance in nine seasons. The Cardinals have won the division series all five previous times and made it to the World Series twice, winning it all in 2006.
[Associated Press;
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