Marly Rivera is a writer for ESPNdeportes.com and ESPN.com.
In 2001, a relatively unknown rookie named Albert Pujols was invited to major league spring training with the St. Louis Cardinals. He was there after spending most of the previous season in the Low-A Midwest League. Back then, the Cardinals and the Montreal Expos shared the same spring facilities at Roger Dean Stadium in Jupiter, Florida. That circumstance gave Pujols, then just 21 years old, a chance to be around Expos slugger Vladimir Guerrero.
Guerrero was coming off what would be the best overall offensive season in his 16-year major league career, belting 44 home runs with a remarkable slash line of .345/.410/.664, adding up to an OPS of 1.074. But for Pujols, what he remembers the most was how humble Guerrero was — and the amount of time he spent listening to Guerrero and Cardinals teammate Edgar Renteria talk baseball.
“When I was in spring training with the Cardinals, the Expos were there and we played a lot of dominoes [with Guerrero] and Edgar Renteria,” Pujols recalled in an interview with ESPN. “I was a young player too, and there were so many guys that embraced me and are close friends of mine now. And I grew close with [Guerrero]. The way he’s treated me since Day 1 when I got to the big leagues is the same way he treats me 19 years later.”