GOLDEN: Masyn Winn’s ELITE Defense Earns The St. Louis Cardinals Their 100th Gold Glove Honor
Mason win strikes gold and makes history in the process. This is Locked on Cardinals. You are Locked On Cardinals, your daily St. Louis Cardinals podcast, part of the Locked On podcast network, your team every day. Hey there, Cardinal fans. I’m JD Haford, a former national radio sports anchor, born and raised in the St. Louis area, lifetime Cardinals fan and I’m your host for Locked on Cardinals, part of the Lock on Podcast Network covering your team every day. The Bridton area is where I grew up in St. Louis in case you are wondering Padville High School. Go Pirates. Uh thank you to our everydayers for being a part of uh this show and being with us throughout the season and now into the off season. For those of you who are new, welcome aboard. Hope you enjoy the content. This is a show serving Cardinal Nation and giving you all the info about the birds on the bat. Today’s episode brought to you by Game Time. Download the Game Time map, create an account. Use the code lock on MLB for $20 off your first purchase. Today’s episode, we are going to focus on gold. We like gold. Our Golden Boys in the organization. After last night’s announcement, that shortstop Mason win is now a Gold Glove winner. Congratulations, Mason. And uh I’ll be honest, I as much as I knew that Mason was deserving, I was definitely concerned that he was going to lose that because of the knee injury that cut things short and because of the adoration that everyone seems to have for Dodgers shortstop mukie bets, everybody loves him. Unless you don’t like the Dodgers, then you don’t love him so much. But you know, the the good guy, good family guy, he’s really good at everything. the fact that he changed positions. He’s been a goal glover in the outfield, comes into short stop, plays as good as he did. He was on the defending champion Dodgers, now back-to back champion Dodgers. I definitely thought they were going to side with Mookie Betts on this one. I just did. I thought I thought Mason was going to get screwed and I thought Muki was going to take it. So thrilled to hear last night that Mason Win got the credit that he deserved for what was a tremendous defensive season despite the knee injury that cut his year short and likely attributed to his numbers not being quite as good as maybe they were going to be. You know, uh not that his numbers were bad, but you know, he his trajectory was that they were going to be even better than what he finished at. So, uh could have been better than what he already was. And in doing so, he made a little bit of history, in case you’re unaware. uh as well as winning the gold glove uh becomes the youngest winner of the award in the history of the St. Louis Cardinals. Now, think about that for a second. Out of all the gold glove winners over the years for the Cardinals, they’ve won a bunch. The franchise boasts the most gold glove winners in the history of the sport by a long shot. Uh Mason Win has set the record for the youngest player to win it. That’s incredible. That’s incredible. Per John Denton at 23 years 19 91 days at seasons in win is the franchise’s youngest gold glove winner edging out third baseman Ken reitz who was 24 years and 96 days in 1975 when he won his also win is the fifth youngest shortstop staff to win the award behind Anthony Vulpi for the Yankees in 2023. Alan Traml of the Tigers in 1980. Francisco Lindor of Cleveland in 2016 and last year Ezekiel Tovar for the Rockies in 2024. He also pushes the Cardinals to the century mark in gold glove winners becoming the 100th gold glove winner in Cardinals history. He joins Edgar Renteria who won in 02 and 03. Hall of Famer Azie Smith from 82 to 92 and Dal Maxville in 1968 is the only Cardinal shortstops to win the award. It’s also the first gold glove winner for the Cardinals since 2022 when both Nolan Aronado and Brendan Donovan won. Now, in case you missed the episode where we covered all of the greatness that was Mason Win statswise here and why he was nominated in 2025. Let’s go through them quickly again. Plus 21 outs above average, plus two defensive runs saved. Only made three errors and 501 total chances which tied the totals of Cal Ripken Jr. in 1990 and Omar Viskeell in 2000 is the fewest by an MLB shortstop better than Aussie Smith. I know, wild, right? So, it’s not like we’re talking about a guy who just kind of had a better season than the other guys who were nominated this year and he wasn’t deserving. No, he was in rare air this year with what he was doing defensively. 21 outs above average with the third highest total among all players. Only fellow shortstop Bobby Wit Jr. of the Royals at 24 and Red’s third baseman Key Brian Hayes in Boston Sidon Raphaela at 22 had better numbers. Uh now granted he did get smoked by Mookie Betts and defensive run saved who finished at a plus 17. Mason was at two. Uh Nick Allen of the Braves who was the other finalist was a plus 12. But the the plus two from Mason although it sounds low is actually the seventh highest total among all shorts stops. So, it’s not like he was some slouch in that category. Um, win gave a lot of the credit to his defensive prowess this year, although he was very good last year. Was a finalist last year, but uh gave a a lot of the credit to just routine really. He he was telling Derek Gul of the Post Dispatch, I’ll link his uh story in the description and in the show notes, saying it it was repeating fundamentals over and over and over and not veering from the path on that. Every once in a while, I would make a few jeter jump throws. For the most part, it was taking the fundamentals and making sure that I can make them 99 out of 100 times in warm-ups. It didn’t matter what day it was, what game of the year it was. We were out there every single day. I wanted to make sure it was locked down. And I was somebody who was always fascinated by the defensive side of the game. My favorite player growing up was Azie Smith. He’s on my wall over here. You can’t see it right now, but got an autographed picture of him uh from the 85 World Series turning a double play, jumping over a guy sliding into second base. But um he was my favorite player growing up. So, you know, defensive baseball was a big deal to me. You know, Ozie had a lot to do with that. I would I would watch his, you know, everydayers know this. I would watch his Azie the movie videotape over and over. Yes, it was VHS. That’s how long ago it was. And we’d always head down to the ballpark. My my father, my family, my mother, all of us, my little brother, we would head down early to watch the guys take infield. I always wanted to see it. Uh, and I remember just being astonished at how sharp and how fundamentally sound these guys were at the major league level. And and my dad used to, you know, we’d sit there and watch him take infield and he’d be like, you know, the good ones take hundreds of grounders a day. Repetition until it’s almost programmed into your mind exactly how to react to to each hop, to each bounce, to each situation. You just do it over and over and over where it becomes robotic to you and your body just reacts to everything. And that always stuck with me that, you know, if you really want to get really good at something, you just got to keep doing it over and over and over and keep trying. And as nice it as it is to to make the great plays, you know, the diving plays, the the jeter throws, as he mentions, going in the hole and making plays like that, making up them up the middle. Um, you know, where Mason can use that cannon arm of his to get guys that nobody else can. But if you don’t make the routine plays, like who who cares? Cool, you’re flashy, but you can’t feel the normal ground ball. It’s kind of like Ellie de la Cruz for the Reds where you see him make some pretty cool plays, right? But then he screws up all the simple ones and he’s a liability out there in the infield. Mason Win isn’t that way. He can make those great plays for you and that’s fantastic, but he’ll make the easy routine simple ones. We call them easy because they appear to be easy. Although they’re getting smoked at him at 105 miles an hour, but you have to be able to make this the the normal place. Like you can’t just take them for granted and just go through the motions. You got to work at it. So to hear that, you know, his thoughts on that at his age being as young as he is to know he’s this mature about and is uh, you know, that’s just a really great sign for things to come because this likely won’t be his last gold glove. All right? you know, finalist last year, as I mentioned, he wins it this year. So, in two full seasons, he’s been nominated twice, has won one. So, that kind of sets the tone for the future. And it’s one that Mason intends on adding to. He said this to Gold as well. I think I’ll have many gold gloves in my career. I’m not going to stop at one. I want to do this every year. Be the best defender I can be year in and year out. And, you know, being strong up the middle is a big deal. Uh John Denton from MLOB.com also believes that when has a solid case of winning the National League’s Platinum Glove award, which is uh you know goes to the best defensive player overall, an honor that’s been won by Yadier Molina four times. No one Aronado won it twice. Um so those are the guys in Cardinal history that have pulled it off, you know, and his defensiveness is, you know, he was leading the league and now it’s above average until the injury ended his season prematurely. Um although we had more good news in Gould’s article that you know Mason W’s been jogging and the pain is gone in that surgically repaired right knee and he says he can really feel the difference. U you know and and who knows how much that held him back in the second half of the year. Defensively we know it we know it hurt him offensively but what what kind of damage was he doing defensively? You know what was his range like his ability to react? All of that altered by by this issue. So, um, it just it’s just great that he won it, you know, and and he was acknowledged for maybe not being the name that Mukie Betts is, but deserving. Certainly deserving, and he takes home the gold. So, congratulations to Mason Win. There was another Cardinal who was also nominated for a gold glove, but unfortunately did not take home the award. We’ll discuss him and the rest of the NL and AL winners next. Plus, we got a Cardinals minor leaguer who won him some gold as well. We’ll talk about it all coming up on Locked on Cardinals. The NBA is back and there is no better place to get in on the action than FanDuel, the official sports betting partner of the NBA. Even if you missed the start of the game or want to ride the hot hand, FanDuel has live bets on everything from who’s going to score next to fourth quarter comebacks. Uh, I got some names for you. Okay, so I’m a I’m a fantasy NBA guy, so I got some guys that you should have on your radar as far as people you want to look at for FanDuel. You know, Quinton Jackson from the Pacers is a guy to watch. Colin Gillespie from the Suns. Kelly Ubé Jr., a name that has been around for a little while now and is really starting to fill up that stat sheet for Philadelphia. Just some of the lesserk known names that you might want to take a look at if uh you know, FanDuel in the NBA is something you’re interested in, you can combine your live bets into a same game parlay for a shot at a bigger payout. And it just keeps all the games more exciting, especially when your team’s making that late push. So, right now, FanDuel is giving new customers $300 in bonus bets when your first $5 bet wins. Once again, new customers $300 in bonus bets when your first $5 bet wins. So, head to fanduel.com to sign up and play your game with FanDuel, the official sports betting partner of the NBA. Thanks for making Cardinals, your first listen every day. If you enjoy daily Cardinals content, you can follow the podcast on X at l_cardinals. We’re also on YouTube, Tik Tok, and Instagram at lockdown Cardinals. As for the Cardinals, other gold glove finalist, sadly, our buddy Victor Scott, friend of the show, did not take home the gold. We knew it was going to be an uphill battle for him. Like, this wasn’t all that shocking. Despite having an excellent first full season for the Cardinals, Victor Scott II walks away empty-handed. Lost out to the Cubs. Pete Crow Armstrong who finished uh tied with Mason in outs above average with 21. It was a plus 15 defensive run saved. Now Victor’s numbers obviously was a finalist. They weren’t bad. Nominated for a reason, but as far as center fielders go, he was a a plus 12 defensive run saved among all center fielders. Trailed only Raphaela PCA and the Nats. Jacob Young third among all center fielders in outs above average with a plus 16 behind Raphael and PCA. Uh the tough reality here is he’s going to have to battle PCA like for years to come. Like it isn’t going to be easy for him because Pico Armstrong isn’t going anywhere anytime soon. And he’s incredibly good. Not only does PCA have the range, he’s got speed. He’s got incredible athletic ability. On top of that, he’s also got a cannon for an arc, one of the best in the league. So, it’s it is really, really, really, really going to be tough for Victor Scott II to win a gold glove in center field while PCA is in the National League. Like, it’s just not going to be e easy. the Cubs faithful. They got quite a player roaming the Ivy there at Wrigley Field. It’s uh it’s going to be rough. So, uh but hey, you’re a finalist. You deserved it. Victor Scott was excellent and I hope he continues to uh progress not only on the defensive side of things, but I I hope you know the offense comes around where he can be talked about in the same sentences as PCA who had the incredible first half and then went radio silent in the second half, came on later on uh at the end of the year, but um you know that first half was just ridiculous by PCA. So um congratulations to Victor. It sucks that uh he didn’t win, but so be it. Uh the Cubs ended up winning three gold gloves this year. Ian Hap wins his fourth consecutive gold glove in left field, leading all NL players in left field with a plus 9 DRS. Uh Hap is the only player in Cubs history with three or more of them in the outfield. Nico her won at second base, his second Gold Glove award after leading all major league second baseman in outs above average with plus 14 and defensive runs saved at plus 17. He joins uh the late Hall of Famer Ryan Sandberg as a winner of the award of the position multiple times for the Cubs. Um other winners in the National League, you had Patrick Bailey for the Giants. He’s the first Giants catcher to win multiple gold gloves in his career. Uh following Buster Posey, former Cardinal player and manager Mike Matheni. And then Kurt Manwearing back in 1993. Can’t say I’m familiar with that guy. Uh but we know Matheni and Posie pretty well. Uh at first base it was the Braves Matt Olsen won his third Gold Glove award. Uh third base KBrian Hayes who played with both the Pirates and the Reds this year. That’s his second. Right field you had Fernando Tatis Jr. son of uh Fernando Tatis. He used to play for the Cardinals. That’s his second gold glove in right field. Giants pitcher Logan Webb gets his first. And then the utility winner was the Marlins rookie Javier Soya. Senoha. Soya. So can’t say I’m all that familiar with them either. first gold glove. Obviously, he’s a rookie. And the first for the Marlins. And try not to laugh at this, but first for the Marlins since Marcel Ozuna. That’s right. Marcel Ozuna, former Cardinal. Marcel Ozuna won in 2017. Senoha. Javier Senoha. I apologize for butchering that one. I was all over the place on that one. But anyway, 2017, Marcelo Zuna. Yes. The same guy that once climbed the left field wall at Bush Stadium on a fly ball that barely made it to the warning track and then when he realized he had done way too much face planted on that warning track, won a gold glove once the year before the Cardinal acquired him. actually one of the most unforgettable defensive bloopers I have ever seen. It will always stick with me. That and Jose Cona when he was with the Rangers and he went back on the fly ball and it bounced off his head over the wall for a home run. Those both are just seared into my brain is some of the worst bloopers or best bloopers depending on how you look at it uh by an outfielder that I’ve ever seen. Uh over in the American League, your winners were the Tigers. Dylan Dingler at catcher, his first. Ty France, who played with the Twins and the Blue Jays, won at first base, his first. Uh Rangers, Marcus Simeon wins at second base, his second. The Royals, Bobby Way Jr. at shortstop, his second consecutive. He’s the only other player in franchise history to win the award at short. Uh Alcitis Escobar won it in 2015. Uh, another Royal Mel Garcia won over at third base marking the first time in 12 years that both players on the left side of the infield for the same club won the Gold Glove award in the same year. Your previous instance was 2013. It was the Orioles. Do you remember who it was? Third baseman Manny Machado, who we always knew was a great third baseman. Still very, very good for the Padres’s. And shortstop JJ Hardy. Yeah, write that down. JJ Hardy and Manny Machado 2013. In the outfield, you had Steven Quan in left field for the Guardians. Sadan Raphaela in center field and William Abrau in right field, both for the Boston uh Boston Red Sox or the Bow Sox as I like to call them. Uh makes the Red Sox the first AL team with multiple outfielders winning a Gold Glove award in the same year since the 2022 Guardians. Uh Max Freed ends up winning for the Yankees at pitcher. his fourth gold glove, but his first with the Yankees. He won three with Atlanta. And then the AO utility award winner was Mauricio Dubois of the Houston Astros, who appeared at seven seven different positions, finished sixth in MLB with a plus 20 outs above average from all positions combined. That’s pretty darn impressive. So, uh, that’s nice to have guy like that for the Houston Astros. Uh when it comes to the Cardinals, despite only the two nominations and the one winner, the overall defense was very good this year. Uh Contrarus was a plus six DRS in his first year of first base. JC plus4 as a short stop, although we know he played other positions. Aronado plus three at third. Newar was a plus two in right field, although Walker played out there most of the time. Donnie was a plus two at second base. Um, the thing you think about now is like how are things going to change and shift around with the possible movement on the roster with trades involving Aronado and maybe a Brennan Donovan? How will N’s injury, double heel surgery, how’s that going to affect his his defense next season? Will Jordan Walker continue to be an issue in right field? I know eyeball test says he’s better, but the stats do not. The stats say he’s still terrible. How will JJ Weatherhol play when he gets to the major leagues at either second or third base? Will Nolan Gorman still be here to play at second and third base? Uh, lots of fluctuation is possible for the St. Louis roster, but you’ve got some pretty good pieces with, you know, Mason Win over at shortstop. Contras playing first. You would assume he’s going to get better. Uh, Victor Scott in center field. Those are some pretty reliable guys uh going into 2026. Um, wherever Brennan Donovan plays, if he is a member of the Cardinals, you know, you’re pretty solid there. But the catching position is another position. You know, you always want to be strong up the middle, right? Uh, catcher, short stop, second, center field. That’s a goal for every team to be strong defensively up the middle. The catching position is also what appears to be an area of strength. You know, you’ve got Pedro Pah, who was very good defensively, not amazing, but very good. Uh, Jimmy Krooks is somebody who’s been very good in the minors defensively. But another Cardinals catching prospect just took home some gold this year as well. We’re going to talk about him coming up next on Locked on Cardinals. The NFL season is back and honestly there’s nothing better than being in the stadium surrounded by fans cheering on your team. But getting your tickets honestly it can be a pain in the butt, can be a hassle between cues and login screens and prices jumping at checkout. very very frustrating for the customers and that’s why I use Game Time because I don’t want to deal with that stuff anymore. It’s the app that gives the advantage back to fans. Game time is fast, easy, it’s backed by the game time guarantee where you’re always going to get 100% authentic tickets delivered on time and at the best price. Plus, all your fees, they’re included. So, that price you see is the price you pay. They’re not going to sneak any fees in on you at the very end and you’re going to be like, “Why is everything so expensive?” It’s not. they they’re going to tell you exactly what it’s going to be. The app makes it super simple. You can see the exact view from your seat. You got zone deals, which is awesome. It’s faster. It’s cheaper. It’s less stressful than any other way I’ve ever bought tickets. It’s why I use it every single time. Download the Game Time app, create an account, use code lock MLB for $20 off your first purchase. Terms apply. Again, that’s promo code Loc MLB for $20 off. Swipe, tap, ticket, go. Download Game Time today. Thanks again for making lock on Cardinals your first listen every day. The uh Cardinals have what we consider a pretty strong group of catchers right now. Like not only at the major league level, but just in the system. Um Ivon Herrera is still a catcher. Defensively, work in progress. Offensively though, you love him. Pedro Pahz defensively very good. Offensively, you’ve had better. You’ve had better, but he doesn’t like kill you offensively. It’s not like he’s hitting 160 or something like that. Uh Jimmy Krooks we think is kind of a mixture of both. He’s going to give you some pop. Left-handed hitter, pretty good defensively throughout his minor league career. Somebody that’s supposed to be able to be pretty good at both sides. Um, we could throw in Joel Poso if you want to. Uh, didn’t kill you behind the plate. Obviously, we we saw him shine as a pinch hitter off the bench, but uh, we liked him. Um, and it’s that kind of depth that has prompted teams to wonder if the Cardinals might be willing to trade away a catcher at some point this off season because beyond those four guys who already have Major League experience, the Cardinals also have two more catchers who are flying up the rankings in Major League Baseball. and 18-year-old Rainal Rodriguez and 21-year-old Leonardo Bernal. Now, Rodriguez is ranked third among Cardinals prospects according to MLB pipeline. And right behind him is Bernal, who is ranked fourth. Both are on the top 100 best prospects in baseball right now. Rodriguez at 55, Ball at 92, joining JJ Weatherhold, who’s our top prospect, ranked number five overall. And then pitcher Liam Doyle, who they just drafted this year at number five overall, is ranked 36th among the top 100. Rodriguez is also ranked sixth overall at the catching position. And although Bernal does not crack that particular list, I’m sure he’s right there on the on the fringe, he is on the list of minor league gold glove award winners for 2025, which is awesome because that’s not an easy thing to do. A reminder that only one award is given per position among all the levels of minor league baseball. So Bernal didn’t just win the award for the double A level, which is where he played at this year for Springfield, but he beat out all of the catchers in minor league baseball. So Aball, hi A, double A, AAA, he beat all of those guys to win the Gold Glove Award as the best defensive catcher in minor league baseball. And that, my friends, is pretty awesome considering he’s also an offensive threat. 6 feet, 245, switch hitter, 50 hit, 50 power tools to go with the 60 grade arm that threw out 27 of 69 attempted steels. He also hit 247 with 13 home runs, 70 RBI’s. He added 13 stolen bases. That’s impressive stuff. And by winning the award, he joins only Victor Scott as a minor league gold glove award winner for Springfield. Scott won that award back in 2023. And now you’re seeing, you know, him flourish at the major league level as defensive player. Uh once again, we’re hoping the offense will come around to make him more of a complete player and uh you know, be a more dominant member of uh the the outfield core for the Cardinals uh in 2026 and beyond. But it’s another reason why I continue to bring up moving Ivon Herrera to a different position. Switching positions for Ivon Herrera continues to make a lot of sense to me. Whether it’s left field, whether it’s first base, something other than catcher seems to eventually be the move in my opinion. You know, we know the dude can hit at the major league level. He’s one of your middle-ofthe- bat orders. Why not save his legs? Save the injury risk. Let him be a slugger for years to come without the wear and tear of catching. Seems to make a whole lot of sense to me. And he hasn’t even shown that he’s been all that good as a catcher to begin with. So I It’s not like we’re Well, but he’s so good back there. Do we want him? That’s not the case. He hasn’t been that good back there. So, um I know they’re going to give it another try this year. We’ll see how it goes. But I am the guy that is ready to go ahead and move him already. Move him over to someplace else and see what else he can do at a different position. I just there’s too much talent behind the plate already defensively that um I would rather see. So, uh as far as Leo Leonardo Bernal, I’ve said this before, I I believe he’ll start the year at Memphis. There’s no need to rush him up to the major leagues. We’ll get a look at him in spring training. He’s got to be added to the 40man this year. So, uh, if something does happen, if a trade goes down, if injuries happen, uh, he’s going to be somebody that they can call upon very early if they need to, um, being that he’ll be on the 40man. So, I don’t know. Looking forward to it. I’m I’m excited for his future and, um, we’ll just see what High and Bloom and company have in store as far as making any moves from that depth uh, at some point here in the off season. All right, that’s going to wrap things up. Thanks for making lock on Carlos, your first listen every day. If you haven’t already, please give us a follow on access at l_cardinals at the JD Sports Radio, Tik Tok, and Instagram at lockdown Cardinals. Like, subscribe on YouTube and help our channel and love for the Cardinals grow. We are almost to 13,000 subscribers. We are down to single digits to get us there. So, if you have not subscribed yet, please I I would appreciate I implore you to please go ahead and uh like and subscribe and uh be a part of Locked on Cardinals each and every day. You’re the best fans of baseball for a reason. and we’ll see you next time. Locked on cartons.
Masyn Winn makes St. Louis Cardinals history, becoming the youngest Gold Glove winner in franchise history at just 23 years old. The Cardinals shortstop posted elite defensive numbers—plus 21 outs above average and only three errors in 501 chances—matching legendary totals from Cal Ripken Jr. and Omar Vizquel while surpassing even Ozzie Smith’s records.
JD Hafron breaks down Winn’s defensive philosophy centered on fundamentals and relentless repetition, revealing why the young star believes this is just the first of many Gold Gloves. The discussion covers Victor Scott II’s center field nomination, Pete Crow Armstrong’s dominant win for the Cubs, and a complete review of all 2025 Gold Glove winners across both leagues. Plus, Cardinals catching prospect Leonardo Bernal captures a minor league Gold Glove, highlighting the organization’s defensive depth at the position.
Discover why Winn’s approach to defense could reshape the Cardinals’ infield for years to come and what this historic achievement means for St. Louis’s defensive future.
0:00 Intro
0:32 Masyn Winn Wins Gold Glove Award
3:04 Youngest Cardinals Gold Glove Winner Ever
5:37 Winn’s Defensive Philosophy and Fundamentals
9:10 Winn’s Future Gold Glove Aspirations
14:22 National League Gold Glove Winners
17:26 American League Gold Glove Winners
19:28 Cardinals’ Defensive Outlook for 2026
22:30 Leonardo Bernal Wins Minor League Gold Glove
26:03 Moving Ivan Herrera to Different Position
https://www.stltoday.com/sports/professional/mlb/cardinals/article_fc67ecd3-c327-4b23-9c96-013e3f1e4b78.html
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5 comments
Who's the next young player that will win a Gold Glove for the Cardinals?
Congratulations to Mason Winn on his first Gold Glove! And Congratulations to back to back World Series Champion Tommy Edman! Both well earned and representative of the old "Cardinal Way." 🇺🇸
Didn't Victor Scott accumulate his stellar defensive stats in far fewer innings than PCA played?
The 100th Gold Glove for the St. Louis Cardinals – the most of any MLB team. Congrats Masyn Winn!!!
Pedro started showing signs of some power at the plate toward the end of the year, too, after Saggese suggested he go back to the batting stance he had in the minors. I really hope he's working on that in the off season!