Sports

Statue to Depict Pujols as Humanitarian; Unveiling Wednesday At His Restaurant

"The Pujols Family Foundation wanted to get this up while Albert is still a Cardinal," the sculptor said.

A bronze statue of St. Louis Cardinals' first baseman Albert Pujols will be unveiled Wednesday 11 a.m. at Westport Plaza. Sculptor Harry Weber said the statue shows Pujols as a humanitarian, not necessarily as an intimidating baseball player.

Weber said his bronze sculpture of Pujols is a bit unusual, in that the buyer picked the pose—not the sculptor or subject of the artwork.

“I didn’t pick it, Albert didn’t pick the pose, his foundation didn’t pick it, the Cardinals didn’t pick it,” Weber said. “The donor. . .wanted to honor Albert not as a great baseball player, but as a great humanitarian."

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The at 11 a.m. Wednesday outside at in Maryland Heights.

about the 10-foot tall 1,100-pound statue.)

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Weber said probably five people in the world know who the anonymous is. He did reveal that the donor does not live in St. Louis.

commissioned Weber to do the sculpture.

A moving sculpture

Weber didn't want to give too much away about the sculpture’s pose, but Thursday, just two hours after putting on some finishing touches, he did share this:

“It moves,” he said. “I like sculptures that move.”

The Pujols sculpture moves in the sense that Weber's sculpture of Bob Gibson moves. It captures Gibson’s follow through on a pitch, as he practically falls off the mound.

Most of Weber’s sculptures embody action, such as Red Schoendienst turning a double playEnos Slaughter sliding into third and other works at the Plaza of Champions outside Busch Stadium.

“We can do a lot with stainless steel, like suspending 1,200 pounds of Bobby Orr off the toe of his skate after he was tripped by (St. Louis Blues defenseman) Noel Picard,” Weber said.

The picture of Orr soaring through the air after scoring an overtime goal to clinch the 1970 Stanley Cup still haunts Blues fans.

Stay or go?

Weber said he enjoyed his experience with the Cardinals first baseman.

“I really enjoyed capturing Albert’s personality,” Weber said. “I enjoyed his company. He’s a really nice guy and is absolutely sincere in everything he says and does.”

Pujols is strong physically and emotionally, he said.

“But he’s definitely a gentleman,” Weber said. “Maybe there’s a little shyness there or somewhat of a language barrier, but there’s definitely not a single ounce of stand-offishness.”

A question of timing

The unveiling comes just as Pujols’ career with the Cardinals is up in the air. As a free agent, the three-time National League MVP will be deciding what next season means for him.

“The timing of the unveiling is serendipitous,” Weber said. Longtime Cardinals Manager Tony La Russa announced Monday he was quitting.

“But this whole project started well before the contract was in the works. It started two years ago. The Pujols Family Foundation wanted to get this up while Albert is still a Cardinal,” the sculptor said.

The issue of whether Pujols will play baseball elsewhere did come up during one meeting, Weber said.

“He said, ‘Whatever happens, I trust that God has a plan for me,’ and I think he truly believes that.”

“I think he wants to stay in St. Louis, but for him there have got to be other considerations that come into play,” Weber ventured as opinion.


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