Red Schoendienst dies at 95, was oldest living Hall of Famer Jun 6, 2018 Jun 6, 2018 Facebook Twitter WhatsApp SMS Email Print Copy article link Save Tags St. Louis Cardinals Cardinals Red Schoendienst As featured on Red Schoendienst dies at 95, was oldest living Hall of Famer ST. LOUIS (AP) - Red Schoendienst, the Hall of Fame second baseman who managed the St. Louis Cardinals to two pennants and a World Series championship in the 1960s, died Wednesday. Facebook Twitter WhatsApp SMS Email Print Copy article link Save Forecast Radar Weather Wednesday Midmorning Forecast Poll Most Popular Articles Videos ArticlesIL House Democrats pass bill allowing undocumented immigrants to pay in-state tuition at public universitiesDecatur Public School District employee charged with sexually abusing 16-year-oldIllinois bill tackling digital grocery coupon concerns passes unanimously out of HouseCyrusOne data center project moves into next phase after land approvalSpringfield alderman speaks up for first time since heated city council meetingMan accused of setting his house on fire, damaging carForsyth-area set to get 5 new restaurants by the end of 20273 men arrested in connection with Paris shooting involving Danville aldermanIL bill requiring insurance coverage for preventative heart scans heads to SenateAnother round of storms is expected this evening Videos
Red Schoendienst dies at 95, was oldest living Hall of Famer ST. LOUIS (AP) - Red Schoendienst, the Hall of Fame second baseman who managed the St. Louis Cardinals to two pennants and a World Series championship in the 1960s, died Wednesday.Â