List of St. Louis Cardinals team records


The St. Louis Cardinals, a professional baseball franchise based in St. Louis, Missouri, compete in the National League of Major League Baseball. in 1892. Before joining the NL, they were also a charter member of the American Association from 1882 to 1891. Although St. Louis has been the Cardinals' home city for the franchise's entire existence, they were also known as the Brown Stockings, Browns, and Perfectos.
In 134 seasons, the franchise has won more than 10,000 regular season games and appeared in 27 postseasons while claiming 12 interleague championships, tying one other, and 23 league pennants. 11 of the interleague championships are World Series titles won under the modern format since 1903; the other championship and tie occurred in 1885–1886. 19 of the league pennants are NL pennants, and the other four are AA pennants. Their 11 World Series titles represent the most in the NL and are second in MLB only to the New York Yankees' 27.
Notable players have defined, in part, the Cardinals' success and history. Stan Musial owns the most career batting records with 22. Rogers Hornsby owns the most single-season records with 11. Bob Gibson owns the most career pitching records with 18. Silver King owns the most single-season pitching records with nine.

All-time record-holders

Table notes and keys

All statistics:
Batted or pitched left-handed
Switch hitter
Handedness unknown

Team records

Single-game

Italics– occurred in extra innings

Single-season

Attendance milestones:

All-time career individual records

Batting

Note: 1,500 plate appearances required for rate statistics.

Pitching

Notes: 500 innings pitched and 50 decisions qualify for career rate statistics.
left handed.

All-time single-season individual records

Batting

Pitching

Notes: 100 IP and 10 decisions qualify for rate statistics.
left handed.
;Other records:

Batting

Note: Minimum 250 plate appearances for rate statistics for seasons 1882–91. From 1892–present, the minimum number of PA is 300. Minimum 16 stolen base attempts qualifies for stolen base percentage. Since 1951 only.

Pitching

Single-game individual records

Includes both regular season and postseason games.

Batting

Pitchers with nine SO in a postseason game: Andy Benes, Paul Derringer, Gibson, Michael Wacha, Wainwright, Jeff Weaver, and Woody Williams.

Fielding records

Note: 2,000 innings minimum for position players' fielding percentage; 500 innings for pitchers.