St. Louis – As the St. Louis Cardinals enter the early stages of the 2026 season hoping to rebuild their pitching lineup, one truth is becoming increasingly clear: the void left by Kyle Leahy is far greater than anticipated.

Quiet and unassuming, Leahy was once the pitcher every playoff team needed – a multi-inning reliever who could absorb innings, control the tempo of the game, and keep the bullpen stable during the most tense moments. But now, with his role altered and the bullpen structure disrupted, the Cardinals are facing the direct consequences.

“We’re not just losing a name,” a Cardinals insider admitted. “We’re losing an entire operational structure.”

In the 2025 season, Kyle Leahy emerged as one of the Cardinals’ most consistent relievers, with an ERA of 3.07 on nearly 90 innings – an incredibly valuable stat for a player bridging the gap between starter and late-inning bullpen.

He wasn’t a closer. Not a highlight star. But he was the one who helped the Cardinals control games that seemed on the verge of collapse.

And that’s precisely why his absence (or role change) became a bigger problem than anticipated.

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The Cardinals are currently trying to replace Leahy with various alternatives, but none offer the same level of consistency:

Matt Svanson lacks consistency;
Gordon Graceffo is consistent but lacks swing-and-miss;
The younger options are still not reliable enough.

As a result, the bullpen is more vulnerable than ever.

The biggest concern isn’t individual performance, but the overall imbalance within the system.

Previously, the Cardinals operated their bullpen as a clear chain: starters extended the game, Leahy handled middle innings, and the late-inning trio finished it off.

Now, that structure has broken down.

Some innings are forced to be given to unprepared relievers. Some games are dragged out excessively for weaker bullpen players. And that leads to a chain reaction: fatigue, inconsistency, and increased errors.

In modern baseball, this can ruin an entire month of play.

The Cardinals are now turning their attention to Max Rajcic – a young reliever at Triple-A Memphis who is showing impressive form.

With his diverse pitching range and improved speed, Rajcic is seen as a potential successor to Leahy – at least in theory.

He possesses:

5+ pitching styles, an effective sweeper, consistent groundball ability, and steadily improving form at Triple-A.

However, the biggest problem remains: MLB is not Triple-A.

The Cardinals understand this, and therefore they cannot yet place their full trust in a name that has never experienced the real pressure at the highest level.

Under the new coaching staff, the Cardinals are pursuing a “bullpen flexibility” strategy – prioritizing constant change over fixed roles.

This means:

reliever can be optioned up and down constantly, the multi-inning role is fragmented, and prospects are tested earlier.

But this very flexibility means they lack a “steady pillar” like Leahy once provided.

What the Cardinals are facing is not a lack of talent.

It’s a lack of the right type of pitcher.

How Kyle Leahy turned dark times and sleepless nights in the minors into  major-league success with the Cardinals - News from Rob Rains,  STLSportsPage.com

Leahy is more than just a reliever – he’s the “bridge pitcher,” the one who connects the entire game:

maintaining the tempo,
reducing starter pressure,

and protecting the late-inning bullpen.

Not many pitchers in MLB can consistently do that throughout an entire season.

And the Cardinals are currently lacking that very piece.

While the Cardinals are still competitive, projection models only give them about a 30% chance of making the playoffs – a figure reflecting growing skepticism about roster depth.

If the bullpen isn’t stabilized soon, all efforts from rotation or offense could be wiped out in just a few games.

Kyle Leahy may not be the biggest headline name for the Cardinals.

But his influence – or rather, the void he leaves – is shaping the current bullpen structure.

The Cardinals aren’t just looking for a replacement now.

They’re looking to rediscover a system that once worked effectively.

And until that happens, Kyle Leahy’s name will quietly come up in every internal discussion in St. Louis – as a standard that no one has yet reached.

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