
1964 St. Louis Cardinals Statistics | Baseball-Reference.com
Record: 93-69-0, Finished 1st in National League (Schedule and Results) Postseason: Won World Series (4-3) over New York Yankees. Manager: Johnny Keane (93-69) General Manager: Bob Howsam (Hired 8/17/1964) Scouting Director: George Silvey. Ballpark: Busch Stadium I. Attendance: 1,143,294 (5th of 10)
1964 St. Louis Cardinals season - Wikipedia
The 1964 St. Louis Cardinals season was the team's 83rd season in St. Louis, Missouri and its 73rd season in the National League. The Cardinals went 93–69 during the season and finished first in the National League, edging the co-runners-up Cincinnati Reds and Philadelphia Phillies by one game each on the last day of the regular-season to ...
1964 St. Louis Cardinals Roster | Baseball Almanac
The 1964 St. Louis Cardinals team roster seen on this page includes every player who appeared in a game during the 1964 season. It is a comprehensive team roster and player names are sorted by the fielding position where the most number of …
1964 St. Louis Cardinals Schedule - Baseball Almanac
A 1964 St. Louis Cardinals schedule with dates for every regular season game played, opponents faced, a final score, and a cumulative record for the 1964 season. Data from the 1964 St. Louis Cardinals schedule includes home and road winning percentages, monthly win-loss data, team versus team totals, and score related splits.
St. Louis Cardinals 1964 Scores, Stats, Schedule, Standings ...
The St. Louis Cardinals were 93-69 in 1964. They finished 1st in the NL. They won in the 1964 World Series against the New York Yankees, 4 games to 3, to win their seventh championship.
1964 Major League Baseball season - Wikipedia
The 1964 major league baseball season began on April 13, 1964. The regular season ended on October 4, with the St. Louis Cardinals and New York Yankees as the regular season champions of the National League and American League, respectively.
1964 St. Louis Cardinals – Missouri Sports Hall of Fame
The 1964 St. Louis Cardinals went 93–69 during the season and finished first in the National League, edging the co-runners-up Cincinnati and Philadelphia by one game each on the last day of the regular season to claim their first pennant since 1946 and went on to beat the New York Yankees in seven games of the World Series.