The St. Louis Cardinals have opened up a few more paths in Memphis, and that matters because the organization is clearly trying to keep its upper-minors pipeline moving.
First baseman Bligh Madris has been released and is headed overseas to the Korean Baseball Organization, while infielder Jeremy Rivas and outfielder Matt Koperniak were also let go from the Memphis roster. Those three departures create room at Triple-A, and the Cardinals will fill those spots with more transactions as they continue making space for the wave of new talent coming into the system.
Madris was the most productive of the trio this season, and he was in the middle of his age-30 campaign when the move came. He also stands out as the only one with major league experience.
A left-handed hitter, he was putting together his strongest Triple-A season since his days with the Pirates, who selected him in the ninth round of the 2017 draft. In his first season with St.
Louis, Madris posted his best offensive output by wRC+ and sits five homers shy of his career high, even though he has played 30 fewer games than the year he set that mark.
For Rivas and Koperniak, the release creates a chance to find a new landing spot with a clearer route to future promotions. Both had been blocked in the organization, and now they’ll have to chase their next opportunity elsewhere.
The timing lines up with a bigger organizational reset. The Cardinals have one of the stronger farm systems in the game, and that group is only expected to look better after the MLB Draft. New draftees have until July 27 to sign their first pro contracts, and the class is expected to be a mix of players who get shut down for the year and others who could jump right into pro ball.
Madris had been Memphis’ main option at first base, logging 49 games there. Blaze Jordan handled another 18 games at the position, and catcher prospect Leonardo Bernal has also seen time at first in 13 games. Bernal, though, is still viewed as a catcher of the future after winning a Minor League Gold Glove behind the plate.
That corner-infield picture is part of why Madris had no obvious path to St. Louis.
Alec Burleson is locked in at first after another strong season, and Jordan has held his own at the corners. Even with some possible promotions coming from Double-A Springfield, the Cardinals don’t have a clean answer waiting if Burleson or Jordan misses extended time.
First base isn’t a spot you can just hand to anybody, and the organization will need to keep building depth there.
Elsewhere in Memphis, the playing time picture remains steady. Joshua Baez, Victor Scott II, and Colton Ledbetter will keep getting everyday run in the outfield as they push toward the majors.
Rivas had been spending more time at shortstop than second base, so Thomas Saggese and Cesar Prieto should continue to see regular work in the middle infield. Behind them, Jesus Baez has been on fire.
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