Nolan Arenado reports to camp after
the Cardinals tried to trade him in the offseason
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[February 17, 2025]
JUPITER, Fla. (AP) — St. Louis Cardinals third baseman Nolan
Arenado reported to spring training on Sunday, showing up to play
for a team that spent much of the offseason trying to trade him.
The eight-time All-Star and 10-time Gold Glove winner is owed $74
million for the next three seasons.
Colorado will pay St. Louis $5 million this year, the final
installment of the $51 million the Rockies agreed to pay to offset
the $199 million remaining in a nine-year contract worth $275
million to finalize a trade four years ago.
The Cardinals could not move him and his contract, which gives
Arenado a full no-trade provision.
“I’m not going to talk about who the teams were because it doesn’t
really matter anymore, but so, yeah, there was about five teams,
five or so,” Arenado said. “I got a family now and to be willing to
pick up my family and move them, it has to be something that is
worth it.
“So, that’s kind of why the list was fairly small, and I don’t see
myself really changing that list ever.”
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Arenado is coming off a season that was not up to his standards,
hitting .272 with 16 home runs and 71 RBIs.
President of baseball operations John Mozeliak said Wednesday that
“the pink elephant” in the room was what the team was going to do
with Arenado, and he expected there to be a moment of awkwardness
when he arrived for spring training.
Four days later, Arenado showed up a day before position players
were due to report.
“We went into this offseason knowing that we were going to try to
explore trades, which we did," Mozeliak said. "We didn’t get to the
point where he was no longer a Cardinal, so he’s certainly welcome
back.
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St. Louis Cardinals infielder Nolan Arenado, right, is greeted by
manager Oliver Marmol on Sunday, Feb. 16, 2025, at the team's spring
training baseball facility in Jupiter, Fla. (Christian Gooden/St.
Louis Post-Dispatch via AP)
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"Simply put, with Nolan on our team, we feel we’re
a better team.”
The 33-year-old Arenado has hit .285 over his career with 341 home
runs and 1,132 RBIs with the Cardinals and Rockies. His most recent
season as an All-Star was 2023.
“I’m excited to get to work," he said. “I’m a ballplayer and I’m
really focusing on getting ready for the season.”
Arenado, though, did acknowledge that he wished the Cardinals were
committed to contending instead of rebuilding to set the franchise
up for success in 2026 and beyond.
St. Louis has not signed any free agents to major league contracts
after missing the playoffs for the second straight season following
a four-year run of postseason appearances. Four-time Gold Glove
first baseman Paul Goldschmidt left as a free agent to sign with the
New York Yankees.
“Do I wish the direction was all in? Of course,” he said. “But is
this what’s probably best for the Cardinals? Probably.”
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