Paul Goldschmidt, joining Yankees, 
		says of his 2024 season with Cardinals: 'I’m better than this' 
		 
		 
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			 [January 03, 2025]  
			By RONALD BLUM 
		
			NEW YORK (AP) — Paul Goldschmidt went through a miserable first four 
			months last year, including a career-worst 0-for-32 slide that ended 
			with a May 11 ninth-inning single to avoid his first five-strikeout 
			game. 
			 
			“The feeling was just like, man, I’m better than this,” the former 
			NL MVP said Thursday, three days after finalizing a $12.5 million, 
			one-year contract with the New York Yankees. “But you got to go out 
			and prove it. I mean, if you don’t perform, then you know you’re not 
			going to be playing. And I think that’s just the truth in this game 
			and in life.” 
			 
			A seven-time All-Star and four-time Gold Glove winner, the 
			37-year-old first baseman left St. Louis and became part of the 
			Yankees' Plan B after they lost Juan Soto to the rival New York 
			Mets. 
			 
			Coming off a World Series loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers, the 
			Yankees also have added left-hander Max Fried, closer Devin Williams 
			and outfielder/first baseman Cody Bellinger. 
		
			  
		
			Goldschmidt joins Aaron Judge, Giancarlo Stanton and Bellinger to 
			give the Yankees four MVPs. 
			 
			His beard and mustache shorn, Goldschmidt answered questions for 
			about a half-hour. He spoke of his excitement about his new team, 
			the third of his big league career, and recalled a series at Yankee 
			Stadium with St. Louis on Labor Day weekend last season. 
			 
			“Just to feel the energy walking out of the dugout, that was really 
			fun,” he said. “The energy’s high every game there.” 
			 
			He spent his first eight seasons with Arizona and his past six with 
			the Cardinals, slumping to a career-low .245 batting average last 
			season with 22 homers and 65 RBIs. He revived his numbers late in 
			the season, hitting .283 with seven homers and 25 RBIs from July 28 
			on. 
			 
			“Some things that I did wrong that got exposed and just wasn't 
			hitting pitches that for most of my career I’ve been able to connect 
			on, things that the opponents were doing, whether they were pitching 
			me different or stuff like that,” he said. 
			 
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            St. Louis Cardinals first baseman Paul Goldschmidt (46) in the fifth 
			inning of a baseball game Tuesday, Sept. 24, 2024, in Denver. (AP 
			Photo/David Zalubowski, File) 
              
 
			 Goldschmidt is a .289 career hitter with 362 homers 
			and 1,187 RBIs for Arizona (2011-18) and the Cardinals (2019-24). He 
			hit .317 with 35 homers, 115 RBIs and a .981 OPS in 2022, when he 
			was voted MVP. 
			 
			Goldschmidt spent a day with Judge working on hitting in January 
			2023 in Tampa, Florida, near the Yankee captain's home. 
			 
			“That's something I’ve always tried to do is find great hitters or 
			great players or coaches and just try to seek them out and try to 
			learn from them,” Goldschmidt said. “We just stayed in touch. He's 
			one of the best hitters in the world, maybe the best hitter, and as 
			a right-handed power hitter, a guy that I’m very, very excited to 
			play with and get to see him work every day.” 
			 
			Goldschmidt went to Driveline Baseball in Kent, Washington, ahead of 
			the 2024 season for two days of mechanical analysis. Still, he hit 6 
			for 47 (.128) in spring training and .224 with 22 RBIs in 52 games 
			through May. 
			 
			His upper and lower bodies were out of alignment on his swing. He 
			got out of whack mentally, too. 
			 
			“There’s times where maybe I was patient and pitchers were just 
			getting ahead very quickly and I was just sitting there and an 0-2, 
			1-2 count,” he said. “It's easy to look at somebody when they’re 
			struggling and say what’s wrong. It’s not always easy to say how to 
			fix it or for us to actually fix it or make those adjustments.” 
			
			
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