I asked an AI model why is the tigers offense so bad this year. It's pretty damn accurate albeit slightly not up to date with the numbers.
It has been an incredibly frustrating stretch to watch. After a late-season collapse in 2025 that carried over into this spring, the Tigers are sitting near the bottom of the AL Central with a 20-28 record
While the team's massive pitching injuries (like Tarik Skubal’s elbow surgery) are taking up most of the headlines, the offense has routinely left the team stranded. Aside from a few bright spots, the lineup is fundamentally broken right now.
1. The Core Veterans Are Crashing and Striking Out
For this offense to work, the middle-of-the-order core needs to produce. Instead, they are striking out at alarming rates and failing to make competitive contact.
- Spencer Torkelson has been a major liability, batting just around .194 with a staggering 63 strikeouts in 160 at-bats.
- Kerry Carpenter has cratered to a .216 average and has already racked up 40 strikeouts in limited action
2. "Running it Back" with a Flawed Lineup
President of Baseball Operations Scott Harris faced a lot of criticism for his lack of offseason additions. During the final months of 2025, Detroit's offense completely collapsed (ranking near the bottom of the league in OPS down the stretch). Instead of aggressively upgrading the bats in free agency, the front office largely chose to "run it back" with the same group. The lack of dynamic new bats has made the lineup incredibly predictable for opposing pitchers
3. Relying Far Too Heavily on Rookies
Because the veterans aren’t hitting, the offense has been completely forced to rely on young prospects. While 21-year-old rookie sensation Kevin McGonigle has been fantastic (hitting around .293 with an impressive .400 OBP), it is an incredibly tall order to ask a rookie to carry an entire MLB offense. Colt Keith has also carried his weight (hovering around .304), but the younger guys aren't getting any protection from the veteran bats around them
4. Riley Greene is Fighting Alone
Riley Greene is having a spectacular season, batting .317 / .418 / .490, but baseball is a team sport. Because Torkelson, Carpenter, and the bottom of the order are providing zero protection, opposing pitchers can choose to pitch around Greene or attack the heavily flawed hitters right behind him. The team simply lacks the depth to capitalize on the few times Greene does get on base.
The Verdict: The Tigers' front office bet on internal progression and "patience" from a lineup that proved it was broken at the end of last year. Right now, a lack of plate discipline, alarming strikeout rates from their power hitters, and a total lack of depth are spoiling any chance of capitalizing on their young talent.