ST. LOUIS - The St. Louis Cardinals and 2011 World Series MVP David Freese have reached agreement on a one-year contract that avoids salary arbitration.
Terms of the deal announced Friday were not disclosed. The Cardinals have now come to terms with all arbitration-eligible players.
Freese is a St. Louis County native. The third baseman hit .283 with 20 home runs and 79 RBIs last season and earned his first All-Star appearance.
Freese, who was arbitration-eligible for the first time, had filed last month for a salary of $3.75 million. The Cardinals had countered with a $2.4 million offer. The final figure likely falls around the midpoint of the two.
Freese earned $508,000 last season.
The third baseman, who will turn 30 in April, enters 2013 on the heels of his most successful season in St. Louis. After years of injury issues, Freese stayed clear of the disabled list and played in a career-high 144 games, starting 132 at third base.
The Cardinals acquired Freese in December 2007 from the Padres in exchange for Jim Edmonds. Freese made his Major League debut two years later and opened the 2010 season as the club's everyday third baseman.
Though various injuries kept him off the field for parts of the 2010 and '11 seasons, Freese shined in the 2011 postseason playing on a club that snuck into the playoffs on the final day of the regular season,
Freese earned Most Valuable Player honors in both the National League Championship Series and World Series. He set postseason records with 21 RBIs and 50 total bases.
It was Freese's two-run triple with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning that sent Game 6 of the 2011 World Series against the Texas Rangers to extra innings. Freese later won the game with a home run leading off the bottom of the 11th.
Ballpark Village
After years of delays, ground was officially broken Friday on Ballpark Village in St. Louis, with plans to have attractions such as a Cardinals Hall of Fame and restaurant, a massive Anheuser-Busch-themed bar and a live entertainment plaza in place by Opening Day 2014.
The project will be developed on the site of the old Busch Stadium, adjacent to the new one that opened in 2006.
"We saw an opportunity to enhance the game day experience for our fans with a project unlike any other in baseball," said Bill DeWitt Jr., chairman and chief executive officer for the Cardinals.
Ballpark Village was first envisioned 12 years ago, six years before the new stadium was built, with the Cardinals promising it as part of a deal for more than $200 million in state and local subsidies to help construct the new stadium. Lavish plans initially projected shopping, entertainment, 400,000 square feet of office space, a 21-story condominium tower, even an aquarium.
But one snag after another ensued. Would-be tenants backed out; the project was redesigned several times; financing became difficult when the economy soured in 2008. In the meantime, the rock-and-weed-covered lot became something of an embarrassment. The Cardinals eventually put a small softball field on the spot to at least stop water from pooling.
Blake Cordish of the Cordish Cos., the developer working with the Cardinals, lauded the team for its persistence. He said the project will offer a great experience not only for fans on game days, but for residents and tourists year-round.
"It's a unique site in the heart of a great city in partnership with a world-class organization," Cordish said.
The Ballpark Village project received $17 million in state and federal incentives.
The project will include a large building north of the stadium that will house a venue called "Cardinals Nation" on 30,000 square feet over three levels. Cardinals Nation will have three parts: A two-story restaurant, a Cardinals Hall of Fame and Museum, and a roof deck featuring more than 300 seats that peer directly into the stadium. The roof deck will also have three patios and two bars.
A second building will house a two-story, 20,000-square-foot "Budweiser Brew House," showcasing Anheuser-Busch's history in St. Louis. It will include a deck overlooking the stadium and an outdoor beer garden.
Phase 1 will also include an entertainment area known as "Ballpark Village Live!"-- complete with a 40-foot LED screen above a stage. The team expects it to be a popular gathering place on game days, but Cordish said it will also host more than 100 events throughout the year, such as festivals, concerts and art fairs.
Mayor Francis Slay said he expects Ballpark Village to attract countless visitors to a downtown area that's also expecting to benefit from a multimillion-dollar planned upgrade of the Gateway Arch grounds and the area around the Arch.
"It's been a long time coming," Slay said of Ballpark Village. "It has been a very much anticipated event."
Offices, shopping and housing are expected to be part of future development that could reach $700 million and cover seven blocks, the Cardinals said.
"I have no doubt that Ballpark Village will be the envy of all of baseball and something we'll take pride in for generations," DeWitt said.


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