At the St. Louis Cardinals' annual Winter Warm-Up, the conversation around manager Oliver Marmol’s future took center stage - and not without reason. With Marmol set to enter his fifth season at the helm and his current contract running through 2026, the club is already entertaining the idea of keeping him around beyond that.
Marmol, when asked directly about a potential extension, didn’t bite. Instead, he passed the question along to Chaim Bloom, the Cardinals' new president of baseball operations.
“What time is Chaim on here?” Marmol joked, before acknowledging that talks had taken place.
“Yes, but I’ll let (Chaim) speak to anything that comes along with that. I’ll let him run with that one.”
It’s not the first time Marmol’s contract status has come up. Back in November, reports surfaced that the Cardinals were open to an extension, and while the rumors didn’t have a ton of weight at the time, they weren’t baseless either. According to multiple sources, initial conversations between the team and Marmol had already taken place.
Let’s be clear: this isn’t just about locking up a manager for the sake of continuity - though that’s certainly part of it. Marmol’s tenure in St.
Louis hasn’t been without its bumps, but it’s also come during a stretch where the team hasn’t always been built to win in the short term. His overall record sits at 325-323, a .502 winning percentage, with just one postseason appearance in four seasons.
Still, context matters. The last two years, in particular, haven’t exactly featured win-now rosters.
When Marmol received a two-year extension after the 2023 season, then-president of baseball operations John Mozeliak and team owner Bill DeWitt Jr. emphasized the value of stability. That theme seems to be carrying over into the Bloom era. The entire coaching staff is returning for 2026, a clear signal that the organization is prioritizing cohesion as it navigates a transitional phase.
The staff includes some familiar faces and a few new ones. Jon Jay will take on a “quality control coach” role in addition to his baserunning and outfield duties.
Daniel Descalso is back as bench coach, and Dusty Blake remains the pitching coach. The Cardinals also added Casey Chenoweth, previously the hitting coach at Double-A Springfield, as an assistant hitting coach, and Kyle Driscoll, who comes over from Arizona, as an assistant pitching coach.
As for Marmol himself, there’s been noticeable growth since he took over in 2022. His first year included some headline-grabbing moments - a confrontation with an umpire and a public spat with outfielder Tyler O’Neill - but since then, he’s developed a reputation as a strong communicator and a manager who knows how to handle personalities inside the clubhouse. His in-game decision-making still sparks debate among fans, but he’s shown the ability to stand by his choices and explain them with clarity in postgame settings.
When asked about where he’s grown the most as a manager, Marmol pointed to honesty as his guiding principle. “Honesty plays,” he said.
“I told myself the one thing I’m going to do is be honest. At the end of the day, some days it will play really well, some days it will be frustrating for people, but I’m not going to waver.
I’m going to be honest.”
That approach, according to Marmol, has helped him earn the respect and trust of his players. “If you do it the right way and you truly care about [the players], you do earn their respect and their trust. Sticking to that [honesty] is important to me.”
Chaim Bloom didn’t dive too deep into the extension topic during his availability, but he did offer a subtle nod to the idea of long-term planning. “I don’t want to go too deep into it in this setting,” Bloom said. “But generally speaking, it is something I think... there are positives about having a manager in that situation, especially with the fact that we are long-term oriented right now.”
That last part is key. The Cardinals are clearly in a phase of building for the future, and Marmol’s experience - particularly his time managing in the minors - could prove valuable as the organization leans into a younger roster.
The 26-man group he’ll lead in 2026 is expected to feature 24 players under the age of 30. That’s not just a youth movement - it’s a full-on generational shift.
And for a team trying to find its next identity, having a steady hand in the dugout might be exactly what they need. Whether an extension gets finalized soon or not, the Cardinals seem to be signaling that Oliver Marmol is a key part of their long-term vision.
