Paul DeJong Charles LeClaire-USA TODAY Sports

The Cardinals are aiming to activate infielder Paul DeJong from the 10-day injured list on Sunday, president of baseball operations John Mozeliak told reporters (including Derrick Goold of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch).  A corresponding move will be determined by the team prior to its game against the Mariners.

A bad back sidelined DeJong about a week before the start of the regular season and he began the campaign on the injured list.  The missed time in spring training meant that DeJong needed a fairly lengthy minor league rehab assignment. He played a combined 12 games at the A-ball and Triple-A levels, where he totaled a .302/.388/.512 slash line over 49 plate appearances.  On Friday, DeJong went 3-for-4 with a homer and six RBI with Triple-A Memphis.

Now recovered from his back problems, DeJong will enter the seventh and most pivotal season of his MLB tenure.  This is the final guaranteed season of DeJong’s six-year, $26M deal — he is owed $9M this season, and the Cardinals seem very likely to ultimately buy out DeJong (for $1M) rather than exercise their $12.5M club option on his services for 2024.  After an All-Star performance in 2019, DeJong has hit only .196/.280/.351 with 28 homers over 813 PA since the start of the 2020 season.

In that time, DeJong’s defense at shortstop has remained very good, but Tommy Edman has taken over the everyday shortstop job thanks to equal or better glovework and a more consistent performance at the plate.  With this in mind, it is hard to see exactly how much playing time DeJong might see at shortstop or second base once he joins the team, with Edman now entrenched at short and Nolan Gorman and utilityman Brendan Donovan splitting time at the keystone.  The DH spot doesn’t offer much relief, as the Cards are also trying to find at-bats for their outfield surplus.

It could be that St. Louis just uses DeJong as a bench player, perhaps supplanting Taylor Motter (who seems like the most obvious candidate to be optioned to Triple-A).  In theory, the Cards might try to give DeJong some playing time to showcase him for any sort of trade, yet that doesn’t seem likely unless the Cardinals were to eat basically all of the infielder’s remaining salary, which the club was hesitant to do last winter.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Mavericks advance to Western Conference Finals aided by controversial call late
Connor McDavid, Oilers hammer Canucks to force Game 7
Tyson Fury-Oleksandr Usyk epic increases excitement for potential rematch
Seize the Grey wins in muddy Preakness
Even Mike Budenholzer admits the Suns need a point guard
Watch: Juan Soto's first multi-homer game as a Yankee
Xander Schauffele, Collin Morikawa lead at PGA Championship
Knicks could get major boost for Game 7 showdown with Pacers
Giants All-Star pitcher suffers setback in recovery from injury
Panthers star named winner of 2024 Selke Trophy
WNBA to investigate $100,000 sponsorship deals for Aces players
Tiger Woods blames one big factor for missing the cut at PGA Championship
'Ain't good enough': Draymond Green claims Celtics must 'win it all' or it's a 'failure'
Blue Jays GM wants struggling club to feel 'massive sense of urgency'
Raptors expected to flip former NBA champion during the offseason
MLB insider reveals Mets' massive extension offer that Pete Alonso turned down
Celtics legend provides update after gruesome finger injury
Bulls hire former NBA head coach as top assistant
Chiefs move on from young running back
20-year MLB veteran working out, unsure about playing future

Want more sports news?

Join the hundreds of thousands of fans who start their day with Yardbarker's Morning Bark, the best newsletter in sports.