Jordan Walker’s scary moment adds new concern as Cardinals offense hits rough stretch

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Jordan Walker’s scary moment adds new concern as Cardinals offense hits rough stretch

Was not the result the Cardinals wanted Saturday.

Jordan Walker’s scary moment adds new concern as Cardinals offense hits rough stretch

Was not the result the Cardinals wanted Saturday.

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Jordan Walker’s scary moment adds new concern as Cardinals offense hits rough stretch originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

For a team still trying to figure out exactly what it is in 2026, the St. Louis Cardinals have leaned heavily on flashes of promise. Few have been more important than Jordan Walker, whose early-season power surge gave fans a reason to believe something bigger might be building. But over the past week, the tone has shifted.

Not only has Walker cooled off at the plate, but a scary in-game moment on Saturday added another issue of concern. During the Cardinals’ game with the Seattle Mariners, Walker was hit by a pitch and later appeared shaken up after being caught stealing second base. It was the kind of sequence that forces everyone to pause, especially given how central he’s become to St. Louis’ offense.

Jordan Walker stung in the hand by an up-and-in fastball that left the pitcher's hand at 97.8 mph.He'll remain in the game.

Even before the hit-by-pitch, there were signs that Walker’s red-hot start was beginning to level out. After opening the season as one of the most productive bats in the lineup, Walker has hit just .172 over his last seven games. The power that defined his early stretch has disappeared during that span, and strikeouts have started to climb. For a young hitter still working to establish consistency at the major league level, that kind of swing isn’t unusual, but it is noticeable.

Pitchers appear to be adjusting, attacking him differently and forcing him to make quicker in-game changes. That’s part of the growth curve, but it’s also where early-season momentum can stall.

Walker’s struggles wouldn’t feel as significant if the Cardinals were getting steady production elsewhere. Right now, that hasn’t consistently been the case. St. Louis has leaned on him as a primary source of power, and when that disappears, the offense can feel stuck. That showed up again in a quiet performance against Seattle, continuing a trend that began in the previous series.

The Cardinals are still hovering around .500, which aligns with preseason expectations for a team in transition. But the path forward becomes much more difficult if their most dynamic young hitter isn’t producing.

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Slumps come and go. Development is still a work in progress. That’s understood. What made Saturday different was the visual of Walker being shaken up after taking a pitch and then going hard on the bases. Even if there’s no lasting issue, it adds immediate uncertainty around a player the Cardinals can’t afford to lose for any stretch.

For a young player already navigating adjustments at the plate, physical discomfort or hesitation can complicate things further.

There’s no reason for panic yet. Walker’s overall numbers remain strong, and his early performance showed exactly why the organization believes in his long-term upside. But this is the phase that often defines young hitters. How quickly he adjusts back, how he responds to pitchers countering him, and whether he can maintain confidence through a rough patch will say a lot about what comes next.

For now, the Cardinals are watching closely. Because when Walker is right, their lineup feels different. And when he isn’t, the margin for error gets a lot smaller.

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