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Detroit Tigers Team Notes Over 4 Million Views!!!! Thankyou!

AJ Hinch says Kevin McGonigle and Max Clark are already getting work in at the team's Spring Training facility. "That's a pretty good start".
 
World Series Champ % - AL:
8.1% - Mariners
6.8% - Tigers
5.8% - Yankees
4.7% - Blue Jays
3.7% - Red Sox
3.2% - Orioles
1.7% - Royals
1.6% - Astros
1.4% - Rangers
1.2% - Twins
0.7% - Athletics
0.6% - Rays
0.3% - Guardians
0.1% - Angles
0.0% - White Sox-
via Fangraphs
 
February 7 in Tigers and mlb history:

1899: Under a joint ownership arrangement, several Baltimore Orioles players are shifted to the Brooklyn Bridegrooms, and that club transfers several to the Orioles. Manager Ned Hanlon takes Willie Keeler, Joe Kelley, Hughie Jennings, and others with him to Brooklyn, while John McGraw and Wilbert Robinson remain in Baltimore to stay close to their businesses there. The powerful new Brooklyn team is now sometimes called the "Superbas", after a stage show in New York called "Superba" that is produced by the Hanlon brothers (unrelated to Ned Hanlon).

1905: In Lynn, Massachusetts, Rube Waddell prevents a fire by carrying a burning stove out of a store and throwing it into a snow bank. Three days later he flees nearby Peabody to escape charges of assaulting and injuring his wife's parents.

1908: The St. Louis Browns purchase future Hall of Fame pitcher Rube Waddell from the Philadelphia Athletics. The Browns pay $5,000 for Waddell, who won 19 games with a 2.15 ERA in 1907. Waddell will win 19 games this season, while lowering his ERA to 1.89.

1916: The Federal League's year-old suit charging antitrust violations by organized baseball is dismissed by mutual consent in U.S. District Court in Chicago by Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis. No appellate decision is written and it will not be until 1922 when the courts rule on antitrust, in another suit stemming from the Federal League.

1942: The Cincinnati Reds stir the hometown fans by selling popular catcher Ernie Lombardi to the Boston Braves, where he will win the National League batting title this season with a .330 average.

1949: New York Yankees superstar Joe DiMaggio signs a one-year contract worth $100,000, becoming the first player to earn a six-figure deal in major league history. In 1948, DiMaggio batted .320, while leading the American League in home runs and RBI.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FK_rg7BX...pg&name=medium

1958: The Dodgers officially become the "Los Angeles Dodgers, Inc." in anticipation of playing their first season on the West Coast.

1959: Nap Lajoie dies of pneumonia at the age of 84. Lajoie, who also managed the Cleveland Naps from 1905 to 1909, hit for a .338 batting average over a 21-year career and gained election to the Hall of Fame in 1937.

1959: Chicago White Sox president Mrs. Dorothy Rigney agrees to sell the team to Bill Veeck for a reported $2.7 million. Chicago insurance broker Charles O. Finley allows that he can match the price. Charles Comiskey, Dorothy's brother, will try to stop Veeck from buying the Sox, but will be unsuccessful.

1961: Boston Red Sox outfielder Jackie Jensen makes a return to the major leagues by signing a $40,000 contract. Jensen had retired in 1960 due to a fear of flying. The layoff will prove detrimental to Jensen, who will hit only .263 with 13 home runs this season.

1962: Lawyer Melvin Belli obtains a writ laying claim to Willie Mays, among other assets, unless the San Francisco Giants pay him the judgment awarded by a jury in January. Belli claims the club failed to file a motion for a new trial before the deadline.

1965: Satchel Paige is the special guest on a classic episode of "I've Got a Secret" with Steve Allen.


1986: The Detroit Tigers signed Jack Lazorko as a free agent.

1987: For only the second time in major league history, a player is forced to take a pay cut due to salary arbitration, when Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Orel Hershiser signs for $800,000, which is a twenty percent reduction from his 1986 salary. Hershiser was 14-14 with a 3.85 ERA in 1986.

1994: Former National Basketball Association star Michael Jordan signs a minor league contract with the Chicago White Sox. Jordan will report to spring training before being assigned to the Class-AA Birmingham Barons. After one season in the minors, Jordan will return to the NBA.

1994: The Detroit Tigers sign free agent pitcher Tim Belcher.

1996: Dave Winfield announces his retirement at the age of 44. Winfield compiled 3,110 hits, 465 home runs and 1,833 RBI during a 22-year career with six teams.

1999: Veteran pitcher Dennis Martinez announces his retirement. The Nicaraguan right-hander won 245 games with 3,999 2/3 innings pitched over a 23-year career with five teams. In 1991, he pitched a perfect game as a member of the Montreal Expos.

2005: The Detroit Tigers sign All-Star right fielder Magglio Ordóñez for five years for a reported $75 million. The contract for the free agent slugger, recovering from knee surgery, includes options which could extend his stay in Detroit for an additional two years making the deal worth nearly $100 million.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/C3rt2jRW...g&name=360x360

2005: The Detroit Tigers released Dewayne Wise.

2007: The Detroit Tigers traded Jeff Frazier to the Seattle Mariners for Yorman Bazardo.

2008: The fallout from the Mitchell Report continues when Brian McNamee gives a seven-hour deposition to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. Meanwhile, Roger Clemens lobbies congressmen and continues to claim McNamee lied about Clemens' use of steroids.

2012: Rusty Staub is voted into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame, alongside P Rheal Cormier and GM Doug Melvin, the latter two Canadian natives. Staub was the first star in the history of the Montreal Expos, representing the team at three All-Star Games and seeing his number 10 retired by the team. The Canadian senior national team that won gold at the 2011 Pan American Games and bronze at the 2011 Baseball World Cup is also honored collectively.

2013: The Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame announces its 2013 class. Two left fielders of the 1980s headline it: Montreal Expos all-around star Tim Raines, a seven-time All-Star, and Toronto Blue Jays slugger and 1987 American League MVP George Bell.

2013: Justin Verlander plays the Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

2014: In a major reversal, Alex Rodriguez decides to drop his lawsuit against Major League Baseball and the Players Association. He will serve his one-year suspension for his role in the Biogenesis scandal and will attempt to come back in 2015. He will also not attend the Yankees spring training opening shortly, where his presence would have been a major distraction.

2019: Hall of Famer Frank Robinson, a member of the 500 Home Run Club, a Triple Crown winner, the first player to win the MVP Award in both leagues, and the first African-American manager in major league history, passes away in hospice care in Los Angeles, CA at the age of 83. He was also a senior executive for Major League Baseball and was still serving as the honorary President of the American League.

2022: The Detroit Tigers signed Jack Lopez as a free agent.

2024: The Baltimore Orioles purchased Nick Maton from the Detroit Tigers.

Tigers players birthdays:

Earl Whitehill 1923-1932.

Dave Borkowski 1999-2001.

Tigers players who passed away:

Jim Walkup 1939.

Baseball Reference
 
THE NEWS BEHIND THE NEWS.
Totally Tigers
 
The Tigers signed Detroit native Jalen Evans this off-season. Here's how Jalen is looking in his last live AB at TreadHQ before heading to minor league spring training (spoiler alert: he looks really, really good).
 
February 8 in Tigers and mlb history:

1901: It is rumored that Nap Lajoie, the National League's leading hitter and Phillies top player, has jumped to the Philadelphia Athletics of the new American League.

1916: The National League turns down a request from Brooklyn Robins owner Charles Ebbets, who had wanted to impose a limit of 2,000 seats that clubs can sell for 25 cents. The Boston Braves have 10,000 such seats, the St. Louis Cardinals 9,000, the Philadelphia Phillies 6,500, and the Cincinnati Reds 4,000.

1927: Ty Cobb assigned by the Detroit Tigers to the Philadelphia Athletics.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/C3v4qrPWAAA3SNy.jpg

1932: Waite Hoyt is released by the Philadelphia Athletics and will sign with the Brooklyn Dodgers.

1941: The Detroit Tigers release future Hall of Famer Earl Averill.

1941: The Tigers sign outfielder Hoot Evers, a star at the University of Illinois.

1942: At California's Folsom prison, the annual game between major leaguers and the prison team is stopped when it is discovered that two prisoners have escaped. With the pros leading 24 - 5 at the end of seven innings, the game ends and guards go after the two lifers, who are found three hours later. The major leaguers include Ernie Lombardi, Tiny Bonham, Gus Suhr, Joe Marty, and Johnny Babich.

1956: The legendary Connie Mack dies at age 93. After managing Pittsburgh's National League club from 1894 to 1896, the former catcher became a prominent figure in Ban Johnson's Western League.
A founder of the American League in 1901, Mack managed and owned the Philadelphia Athletics from 1901 to 1950, leading the team to five World Series titles and nine American League pennants. He won election to the Hall of Fame in 1937.

1961: The Sporting News announces the Tigers are reinstating the Old English "D" on their home uniforms, after one season with the word "Tigers" scripted across the front. Kaline here.

1962: The Federal Trade Commission accuses Topps Chewing Gum of illegally monopolizing the baseball card industry. In 1980, a court decision will open the door to competition.

1972: Josh Gibson and Buck Leonard are elected to the Hall of Fame through the Special Committee on the Negro Leagues.
The two former stars, who led the Homestead Grays to nine straight league championships from 1937 to 1945, become the second and third players to be selected by the Committee, joining Satchel Paige, who was elected in 1971.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GF0YfVXWEAAwxfA?format=jpg&name=medium

1973: MLB owners announce that "early bird" spring training camps are canceled until all bargaining with the Players' Association is concluded.

1983: One day after taking a job as director of sports promotions for the Claridge Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City, Mickey Mantle is ordered to sever his ties with Major League Baseball by Commissioner Bowie Kuhn.
Mantle joins fellow Hall of Famer Willie Mays as players banned from baseball by Kuhn for involvement with legalized gambling.

1984: The Detroit Tigers traded Colin Ward to the San Francisco Giants for Pat Larkin.

1993: The Detroit Tigers signed John Cangelosi as a free agent.

2017: The Detroit Tigers signed David Lough as a free agent.
2017: The Detroit Tigers signed Mike Zagurski as a free agent.

2021: MLB and the Players Association agree on a new set of health and safety protocols for spring training and the upcoming season, given the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Among the features retained from 2020 are seven-inning doubleheaders and the use of the extra-innings tie-breaker - but not the universal designated hitter. The deal also confirms the opening of spring training on February 17th and the date of Opening Day on April 1st.

2021: The Detroit Tigers signed Pedro Payano as a free agent.

Tigers players and coaches birthdays:

Don Heffner 1944, coach 1961.

Hoot Evers 1941, 1946-1952, 1954, executive and scout 1970's.

Steve Dillard 1978.

Tigers players who passed away:

Rufe Clarke 1923-1924.

Jim Hannan 1971.

Baseball Reference
 
SUNDAY SURVEY.
Totally Tigers

It’s now been several days since the arbitration committee ruled in favor of Tarik Skubal and awarded him $32 mill for the 2026 season.
Yesterday, we outlined the dynamics of what happened at the arbitration hearing. We learned about the intentions of Scott Boras and Tarik Skubal, the Tigers and MLB’s Labor Relations Board.
In case you missed it:

We know the immediate results but what did this meeting do to the future of the game? To the future of the Tigers and other teams?
To what may happen at the end of the year with a lockout becoming more likely?
What part of this arbitration drama concerned you the most?

What part of this arbitration drama concerned you the most?

1. Boras and Skubal's plan to not negotiate.

2. Setting a precedent to dismantle the arbitration system.

3. What this record-breaking deal will mean for top young talent going forward.

4. MLB's significant influence over how teams offer contracts.

VOTE
 
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