August 25 in Tigers and mlb history:
1900: Criticism of administration in the National League continues. The Sporting News offers the new American League some editorial encouragement: "An organization opposed to the National League will be welcome because it will mean the elevation of the game if it is successful."
1902: Ban Johnson announces the American League's intention to have a New York team in 1903, with Clark Griffith as manager. The Baltimore franchise will be moved.
1909: Christy Mathewson stops the Pirates, 3 - 2, on five hits to notch his 20th victory of the season. It is the 7th season in a row in which Matty has hit 20 wins.
1913: Ty Cobb swipes home in the 5th inning to help the Tigers edge the Senators 6 - 5.
1915: The Red Sox win, 2 - 1 in 13 innings, to sweep the Tigers and solidify their hold on first place. Boston has now won seven straight and 19 of 21.
1921: With Cleveland waltzing to a 15 - 1 win over the Yankees, New York hurler Harry Harper, pitching in the 8th, plunks OF Charlie Jamieson in the ribs, Larry Gardner in the arm, and Steve O'Neill in the back. O'Neill throws the ball back at Harper, precipitating a bench-clearing brawl. New York OF Bob Meusel contributes four errors in the game. The Tribe takes over 1st place from the Yankees.
1924: Walter Johnson hurls a seven-inning rain-shortened no-hitter against the Browns, winning by a score of 2 - 0.
1930: Tommy Bridges walks 12 St. Louis Browns, but Detroit still beats them 7 - 5.
1934: Schoolboy Rowe, Detroit's sensational rookie P, defeats the Senators 4 - 2, for his 16th win in a row tying the American League record held by Walter Johnson, Joe Wood, and Lefty Grove. Hank Greenberg's 2-run double in the ninth gives the Tigers the win in Washington.
1937: Cleveland's Bob Feller strikes out 16 Red Sox, one less than his own American League record, in an 8 - 1 victory.
1945: The Tigers' Joe Hoover will swipe only 19 bases in his career, but the most valuable one comes today. On the front end of a 3rd-inning double steal, Hoover steals home against the Browns for the game's only run.
1952: Tiger Virgil Trucks (5-14) throws the second of his two no-hitters this season blanking the Yankees 1 - 0.
Phil Rizzuto's third inning at-bat is quickly scored as an error but is changed to a hit only to be reversed again in the sixth inning making the no-hitter a bit controversial. He also threw 4 no-hitters in the minors.
1957: Al Kaline is 4 for 4 with 2 home runs and 4 RBI in the Tigers 7 - 2 win over the yankees.
1961: Jim Bunning (15-9) allows just two hits while blanking the Senators 6 - 0, in a game called after eight innings because of rain. The win keeps the Tigers two games ahead of the Yankees.
1965: Moonlight Graham dies in Chisholm, MN. Graham played in one major league game, for the 1905 Giants, and did not get to bat. His character in W.P. Kinsella's Field of Dreams, later played by Burt Lancaster in the movie of the same name, will eventually make him a baseball household name.
1966: The owners approve a 55 percent raise in contributions to the players' pension fund. It will come from television, World Series, and All-Star Game money. Some money will also go to pay the salary of the Players' Association executive director.
1967: John Hiller throws his second straight complete game shutout in his second major league start, a 3 - 0 win over the royals.
1968: The Tigers ahead 5 - 0 fail to score with two on in the 4th inning when the Yanks bring in Rocky Colavito to pitch. The 35-year-old slugger retires Al Kaline and Willie Horton and tosses 2 2/3 innings of scoreless relief to earn the win. In Rocky's only other appearance in 1958, he also faced Kaline, and the victory by a non-pitcher will be the last this century. Bill Robinson and Bobby Cox crash successive homers to tie the score and, after a walk, Rocky comes around to score the winning run. In the 8th Yankees reliever Lindy McDaniel ties the American League record for consecutive batters retired by setting down the first Tiger he faces, giving him 32 straight batters retired over four appearances. New York sweeps, winning 6 - 5 and then topping Mickey Lolich 5 - 4. The four losses in New York leaves the Tigers just five games ahead of the Orioles.
1978: Major League umpires stage a one-day strike in defiance of their contract, in order to gain recognition for their union as their bargaining agent with Major League Baseball. Semipro and amateur umps are pressed into service until a restraining order forces the strikers to return. The umpires will walk out again at the beginning of the 1979 season.
1984: Jack Morris holds the Angels to one run for his 17th win. Ruppert Jones hits a 3-run home run in the Tigers 5 - 1 win.
1990: Cecil Fielder hits a home run over the left field roof of Tiger Stadium in the Tigers 14 - 4 pounding of the a's.
He would be the only Tiger ever to clear the left field roof.
https://twitter.com/i/status/1033445466455920642
1991: The Detroit Tigers released John Moses.
2002: Al Kaline honored at Comerica Park for 50 years with the #Tigers.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CqtrPorXEAAnm1U.jpg
2010: F?lix Hern?ndez of the Mariners beats the Red Sox in the second game of a doubleheader, fanning nine. That makes him the fourth-youngest hurler to 1,000 career strikeouts, following Bob Feller, Bert Blyleven and Dwight Gooden. David Ortiz is his 1,000th victim.
2013: Miguel Cabrera hits a moon shot to the left field upper deck at Citi Field for his 42nd home run of the year in the Tigers 11 - 3 win over the mets.
Tigers players birthdays:
https://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Justin_Upton
https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/u/uptonju01.shtml
Justin Upton 2016-2017.
Tigers players who passed away:
https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/d/dischge01.shtml
George Disch 1905.
https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/d/donahre01.shtml
Red Donahue 1906.
https://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Waite_Hoyt
https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/h/hoytwa01.shtml
Waite Hoyt 1930-1931.
https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/b/brideji01.shtml
Jim Brideweser 1956.
from Baseball Reference