After overseeing a "reset" of the Cardinals' player development pipeline through 2025, Chaim Bloom will take over as president of baseball operations ahead of the 2026 season.
Bloom signed a five-year contract with the Cardinals as he transitions from an advisor role to eventually take over for John Mozeliak, chairman Bill DeWitt Jr. announced in a press conference Monday at Busch Stadium.
Entering his third decade with the organization, Mozeliak will lead baseball operations through the 2025 season, and he will take on some additional responsibilities previously handled by the general manager. The coming season is the final year of his contract, and there is now a plan in place for who replaces him and how Bloom will be involved in guiding the Cardinals through the months until he takes over the lead.聽
His first focus will be acting upon suggestions and ideas he has had after a year spent auditing a minor-league and development system that has slipped behind while rivals have become cutting edge.
People are also reading…
"To catalyze that change, ownership has given us the green light to make investments (throughout the minor league system)," Bloom said. "There is a lot of work ahead of us. These days, the bar for excellence in this area keeps getting higher. The St. 不良研究所导航网址 Cardinals are the one that set the bar for everyone else, and we can again."
MLB payroll to drop聽
The planned investment in player development will have a trickle-up impact on the major-league roster. Mozeliak said the big-league payroll is likely to go down for 2025 after surpassing $200 million this season for the first time in club history.
The exact payroll number has not yet been set but in past years it has been tied to ticket revenue, and that too softened this year.
Ownership has increased the budget for operations costs to make investment in the minor-league system possible, and some of that will shift the payroll budget, Mozeliak said. The Cardinals have an instant hunk of salary they can clear if they wish by not bringing back Kyle Gibson ($12 million option for 2025), Lance Lynn ($12 million option for 2025), Keynan Middleton ($6 million option for 2025), and free agents Paul Goldschmidt and Andrew Kittredge.聽
The three options will cost a total of $3 million in buyouts.
GM Girsch reassigned to new role
The Cardinals also announced that general manager Michael Girsch will move into a "special projects" role at the senior vice president level.
The specific projects are not yet identified. Girsch has overseen the team's growing analytics department. The Cardinals also have a multi-million renovation on their player development and spring training complex in Jupiter, Florida, set to start with groundbreaking in April. That is more than two years later than initially planned.
'Not a Band-Aid solution'
The construction delays in Jupiter were just a few of the hiccups that have stalled or cost the Cardinals' player development in recent years.
Mozeliak, in his opening comments, acknowledged how the farm system has slipped and how significant strides need to be made to keep up with their peers in the industry.
"It is not a Band-Aid solution, and it is not an excuse," "We need to make changes to reach our stated goal. We are committed to seeing this through."
He added: "When you think about your legacy, I do hope (the organization) is a better place when I step down next year."
-- Derrick Goold
Cardinals call this a 'reset'
Bloom's current title as advisor to the president of baseball operations remains the same for now. Cardinals chairman and CEO Bill DeWitt Jr. said Bloom's five-year contract begins after this coming season, and it does not include his time as an advisor.
Mozeliak said he'll assume the general manager duties vacated by Girsch's move to a "special projects role."
Mozeliak pushed back against the suggestion that the Cardinals are entering a rebuild.
"I don't see this as just a pure rebuild," Mozeliak said. "I see it as a reset. There are some fundamental things we want to do differently in the organization. Then, ultimately, as we continue to have success at the minor league level, at the player procurement level, then we can time it right to then try and reinvest at the major-league level."
Mozeliak said he did not have a set number of additions slated on the player development staff. The first priority will be to add to the leadership positions in player development and then have those individuals play a part in what the player development staff will look like.
Despite the announced emphasis on bringing the player development system up to speed, DeWitt Jr. quibbled with the characterization of the Cardinals player development system having been a concern for years.
"I'm not sure that I would agree with the assessment there's been a concern for years," DeWitt Jr. said. "We've done pretty well in drafting and developing players, historically. I think the bar has risen, as Chaim would say. There's much more analytics now attached to it."
--听Lynn Worthy
***
Follow updates from the St. 不良研究所导航网址 Cardinals press conference about the "shift in direction" that will restructure the team's operations. The press conference begins at 2 p.m.
St. 不良研究所导航网址 Cardinals beat reporter Derrick Goold previously wrote that the President of baseball operations John Mozeliak and manager Oliver Marmol will return for 2025 in their roles.
Adjustments are planned within the front office and organization to include investment in player development and technology, expanding staff and increased influence for executive Chaim Bloom among other moves. As Mozeliak said in a phone interview Sunday with the Post-Dispatch: 鈥淐hanges are coming.鈥
鈥淲e鈥檙e shifting to a heavy emphasis that puts it back on scouting and player development,鈥 Mozeliak said. 鈥淚 would say that over the past 10 years or so we鈥檝e run a lean operation, and part of that was to allow us to maximize success at the major league level. But over time, you learn that machine can wear down. It鈥檚 just not producing at the level it once did. That鈥檚 not to say our minor leagues are in disarray. But an emphasis on infrastructure is something we have been taking a very serious look at.
鈥淚t鈥檚 obviously going to be a shift in philosophy,鈥 he added. 鈥淚nstead of looking for short-term answers, we鈥檙e going to try to take more of a long view.鈥
Refresh this page to get updates to the article; the tweets below will update automatically.
鈥淚t鈥檚 obviously going to be a shift in philosophy ... a heavy emphasis that puts it back on scouting and player development,鈥 Mozeliak told the Post-Dispatch.