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

May 23 in Tigers and mlb history:

1888: Hall of Famer Zack Wheat was born this day in Hamilton, MO.
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1901: Nap Lajoie of the Philadelphia Athletics receives the ultimate sign of respect from an opposing team when he is intentionally walked with the bases loaded by the Chicago White Sox.

1902: Cleveland financier Charles Somers, who is also the president of the Boston club, meets with Nap Lajoie in Philadelphia and guarantees him a 4-year contract at $7,000 per year no matter what the legal outcome of his case. Lajoie has played one game, then sat in the stands. In 1903, Cleveland fans will vote to rename the club the Naps in honor of Lajoie.

1907: Before a packed house of 23,000, John McGraw uses his entire pitching staff of six against the Cubs, but Chicago still wins 5 - 2, to move into first place over New York. Hooks Wiltse lasts just one inning giving up two Chicago runs. Jimmy Sheckard's three-run homer in the 5th off Christy Mathewson pitching on a day's rest seals the win for Chicago.

1911: Detroit beats Washington's Walter Johnson 9 - 8. Detroit loads the bases in the 8th inning for Ty Cobb already 3 for 4 with 3 stolen bases and Johnson in relief of Dolly Gray walks him to force in what will be the winning run.

1911: New York's Christy Mathewson continues his mastery of the Reds beating them
7 - 2 for the 18th straight time.

1917: Grover Alexander of the Phils allows the Reds only 2 hits; he collects 3 himself including a home run and a sacrifice and wins 5 - 1 over Fred Toney.

1919: It's Hank Gowdy Day in Boston the catcher's first game after returning from the Army. He hits the first pitch he sees from Dolf Luque for a single but the Reds prevail over the Braves 10 - 4.

1920: After a week in bed with illness Babe Ruth returns to belt a two-run homer in the 6th off Carl Weilman to give the Yankees a 3 - 2 win over the visiting Browns.

1922: George Sisler and Frank Baker match homers as the Browns and Yankees go into the 7th tied, 3 - 3. Ken Williams hits his 12th home run of the year with 2 on giving St. Louis a 6 - 3 lead and the Browns add 5 more off reliever Lefty O'Doul to win 11 - 3. Urban Shocker is the winner.

1924: Walter Johnson of the Washington Senators strikes out 14 in a 4 - 0, one-hit win over the Chicago White Sox for his 103rd major league career shutout.

1926: Hack Wilson smacks a 5th-inning home run a rare blast off the Wrigley Field scoreboard?situated at ground level to start a rout of the Braves. The Cubs score 7 runs in the 8th inning to win, 14 - 8. Sparky Adams contributes 4 hits for Chicago. Later that night Wilson and a few others are arrested at a friend's apartment for drinking beer in violation of the Prohibition Act. The scoreboard will be moved to the left field corner in 1937 before one will be built atop the newly-built bleachers.

1926: In Washington Al Simmons hits a solo homer off Walter Johnson into the CF stands. The A's beat the "Big Train" 5 - 3 behind the pitching of Slim Harriss.

1930: Despite a homer by Bill Terry in the 8th and a 3-run shot by Mel Ott in the 9th Carl Hubbell loses to the Phillies, 9 - 8. Philadelphia bangs out 17 hits including a home run by Pinky Whitney against "King Carl."

1934: Boston's Lefty Grove allows 5 early runs then settles down to beat the Indians 7 - 5. Down 5 - 4 in the 9th Grove hits for himself and singles. Grove will lose his next four.

1936: Tony Lazzeri hits 3 home runs 2 in the nitecap good for 4 RBI as the visiting Yankees pound the Athletics 12 - 6 and 15 - 1. The crowd of 24,240 one of the largest in several seasons pelts the field with cushions bottles and other articles making play difficult. Bill Dickey Ben Chapman Red Rolfe and Frank Crosetti also homer for New York.

1945: Mort Cooper is traded by the Cardinals to the Braves. The three-time 20-game winner has twice jumped the club in a salary hassle. Threatening to run out again unless his contract is increased from $12,000 to $15,000 Cooper is swapped by owner Sam Breadon to the newly-affluent Braves for Red Barrett and $60,000 cash. Cooper will develop arm trouble while Barrett 9-16 in 1944 will win 21 games for the Cards this season.

1948: Joe DiMaggio of the New York Yankees hits three consecutive home runs a 6 - 5 victory over the Cleveland Indians Two of his homers come off Bob Feller.

1951: Mel Parnell gives up 4 hits in shutting out the Browns while stroking 4 hits himself. Ted Williams walks 5 times in the 12 - 0 win. Vern Stephens sets an assist record for a third baseman with an assist from SS Johnny Pesky. On the last out of the game a grounder to Pesky he flips to Stephens who fires to 1B to set the record at 10 assists.
Frank Malzone will equal the record in 1957 and Ken McMullen will top it in 1966.

1953: The Detroit Tigers selected Earl Harrist off waivers from the Chicago White Sox.

1961: Norm Cash Steve Boros and Dick Brown hit consecutive homers and Al Kaline also goes deep for the Tigers in a 5 - 2 win over Minnesota.

1963: Baltimore veteran Robin Roberts two-hits the Senators to win, 6 - 0. Both hits are by weak-hitting Eddie Brinkman.

1969: Mickey Lolich sets a Detroit record with 16 strikeouts while defeating Andy Messersmith and the Angels, 6 - 3. Mickey Stanley's grand slam is the difference. Lolich's mark breaks the record of 15 set by Paul Foytack in 1956. Lolich's record was broken the 2013 season by Anibal Sanchez with 17 Strikeouts.

1971: With 53,337 on hand, Mickey Lolich and Les Cain with 3 innings from Joe Niekro notch shutouts as the Tigers sweep a doubleheader from the Senators, 5 - 0 and 11 - 0. The loser in the opener is Denny McLain making his first appearance in Detroit since being traded. Al Kaline and Norm Cash each hit two-run homers off Denny with Cash adding another pair one with the sacks full in the nitecap.

1980: Five hours after the midnight deadline, Major League players and owners avert a strike by announcing a new four-year basic agreement.
The new deal raises the minimum salary from $21,000 to $30,000 and increases the clubs' contributions to the players' pension fund, but the major issue of free agent compensation remains unresolved.

1981: The Detroit Tigers signed Paul Gibson as a free agent.

1984: At Anaheim 41,205 watch as Dan Petry and the Tigers clip the Angels 4 - 2 to run Detroit's record to 34-5. Detroit has now won 16 straight on the road to tie the American League record of the 1912 Senators. The win goes to Petry. The losing pitcher is reliever Frank LaCorte who takes his last major league loss when he gives up a two-run homer in the 7th to Lance Parrish.

1987: Lou Whitaker hits his 100th career home run in a loss to the twins.
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1989: The Cleveland Indians lose to the Detroit Tigers, 7 - 2, to drop their record to 21-22, but remain in first place in the AL East by percentage points. It marks the latest point in a season a sub-.500 team has been in first place.

1989: The Detroit Tigers signed Brad Havens as a free agent.

1991: Andre Dawson became the third member of the 300-300 club.

1996: In the Red Sox's 11 - 4 sinking of the Mariners Roger Clemens tosses a complete game win and bounces his first major league hit and the first by a Sox pitcher since 1972. Clemens gets to bat when DH Jose Canseco moves to LF in the 8th inning.

2002: At Miller Park, Shawn Green of the Los Angeles Dodgers becomes the 14th man in major league history to hit four home runs in a game and also sets a big league record with 19 total bases. Green goes 6 for 6, scores six runs (both franchise records), and has seven RBI in a 16 - 3 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers. Green is the second player this year to hit four home runs in a game. He also surpasses Joe Adcock's former mark of 18 total bases, set in 1954. Green also is the first major league player to collect six hits while hitting four homers, and his four homers plus a double tie the National League mark for extra-base hits. The Dodgers hit eight homers in the game, another franchise record. Before today's power display, Green had gone 0 for 15, and had been benched on May 18th.

2002: The Detroit Tigers released Bill Simas.

2012: Quintin Berry's first major league hit is a bunt double. The Tigers give up 2 runs in the bottom of the 8th to lose to Cleveland 4-2.

2016: The Detroit Tigers released Nate Schierholtz.

2016: Miguel Cabrera goes 3-for-3 with 2 home runs and a double in the Tigers' 5-4 win over the Phillies.

2016: The family of late Hall of Famer Tony Gwynn files a wrongful death lawsuit against the tobacco industry. Gwynn died in 2014 at age 44 of salivary gland cancer caused by using smokeless tobacco for over three decades.

2021: There are two very hot teams in the majors right now. In the American League, the Rays win their 10th straight, 6 - 4 over the Blue Jays, when they rally for 4 runs in the top of the 9th thanks to the generosity of Tyler Chatwood and Travis Bergen, who walks three consecutive batters with the bases loaded.
In the National League, the Padres win their 9th straight, completing a perfect homestand, with Fernando Tatis Jr. leading the charge with 2 homers, including a grand slam, and 6 RBIs, in a 9 - 2 win over the Mariners.

2024: The New York Mets selected Ty Adcock off waivers from the Detroit Tigers.

2024: By defeating the Rangers, 5 - 2, behind the pitching of Zack Wheeler, the Phillies complete a three-game sweep and have now gone 29-6 over their last 35 games. The last time in franchise history that the Phillies won that many games over a 35-game stretch was back in 1892.

2025: Ronald Acuña Jr. doesn't waste any time reminding fans how much the Braves have missed him in his return from a torn ACL suffered almost exactly a year ago. He blasts the first pitch thrown to him by Nick Pivetta of the Padres 467 feet into left-center field for a solo homer.

Tigers players birthdays:

Frosty Thomas 1905.

Charlie Sullivan 1928, 1930-1931.

Jordan Zimmermann 2016-2020.

Tigers players who passed away:

Danny Clark 1922.

Johnny Grabowski 1931.

Earl Webb 1932-1933.

Rip Radcliff 1941-1943.

Charlie Keller 1950-1951.

Jose Lima 1994-1996, 2001-2002.

Baseball Reference
 
SATURDAY SURVEY.
Totally Tigers

The month of May has been a particularly bad one for the Detroit Tigers. They have gone 4-15 (through Thursday’s games) with multiple losing streaks and were just swept in 4 games to the Cleveland Guardians. There was only 1 period this month in which they won 2 in a row.
Many of the games have been soul-crushing with 7 games lost just by 1 run and 3 games lost in the 9th by walk-offs.
Granted, the Tigers are dealing with a lot of injuries however there are real concerns about their rotation, relief pitching, offense and esp. defense.
Has this extended slump changed your viewing habits? Are you still watching them as much as you have in the past or have you decided to spend time in another way?

Have your viewing habits changed this year due to the Tigers' struggles?

1. No, I'm watching them the same amount.

2. Yes, not watching them as much.

3. Yes, I've stopped watching them.

VOTE
 
The expectation is that Troy Melton will come off the 60-day IL this Sunday and start.

Alleged Lefty masher Jahmai Jones is now hitting .204 against lefties this year.
17 strikeouts in 49 AB’s.

The Tigers today placed RHP Burch Smith on the 15-day injured list with right shoulder inflammation. RHP Brenan Hanifee has been recalled from Triple-A Toledo.
 
"They eliminated the tacky substance while they were emphasizing max effort on spin or velocity, and they put in a pitch clock so you can't recover the same amount of time in between pitches".
Dr. Neal ElAttrache on the perfect storm for pitchers' elbow injuries.
 
May 24 in Tigers and mlb history:

1880: Troy City rookie Roger Connor hits his first major league home run off Boston's Tommy Bond. He adds a triple and two singles as the Trojans beat the Red Caps 8 - 1. When Connor retires in 1897, he will have 136 homers a record that will stand until Babe Ruth breaks it in 1921.

1893: Catcher Connie Mack "misses" a short pop-up in front of home plate and starts a triple play in the 4th inning. He also drives in the winning run in the bottom of the 8th to lead Pittsburgh to an 8 - 7 win over St. Louis.

1901: At the Polo Grounds Christy Mathewson wins his 8th straight beating Cincinnati's Bill Phillips 1 - 0. Matty gives up just 3 hits.

1903: The Tigers avoid Detroit's Sunday ban on baseball by playing Washington at Grand Rapids in a game that draws 6000.
Detroit wins 5 - 4 behind George Mullin with John Deering in relief.

1907: Tigers beat the Senators 9-2 for their 8th win in 11 games, to pull within 2.5 games of league-leading Chicago. The Tigers will go on to win their first pennant.

1909: Under new manager Roger Bresnahan the Cardinals finally beat Christy Mathewson after losing to the Giants' ace 24 consecutive times.

1911: An abdominal ailment sidelines Nap Lajoie. He will get into only 90 games for the year and bat .365.

1916: Babe Ruth holds the Tigers to 4 singles in a shutout and goes 2-for-3 at the plate.

1918: Stan Coveleski of the Cleveland Indians pitches a 19-inning, complete game to defeat the New York Yankees 3 - 2. Former P 'Smokey' Joe Wood hits a home run in the 19th inning - his second of the game - to end the 3:45 marathon. For New York? Home Run Baker's 11 assists tie the American League record for a third baseman in an extra-inning game.

1919: The Boston Red Sox purchased Bill James from the Detroit Tigers.

1928: It's perhaps the game with the most prestigious dueling lineups when the Yankees and A's play today. The game includes 12 Hall of Famers, including Ty Cobb, Tris Speaker, Eddie Collins, Al Simmons, Jimmie Foxx, Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Mickey Cochrane, and Tony Lazzeri.
The players in the lineups have a combined 22,356 hits.
This number does not include non-playing Hall of Famers Herb Pennock and Stan Coveleski, managers Miller Huggins and Connie Mack, nor umpire Tom Connolly.

1929: Chicago's Ted Lyons and Detroit's George Uhle go 21 innings before the Tigers get a run to win, 6 - 5, in the longest game - 3 hours and 31 minutes - ever seen to date at Comiskey Park.
Uhle is the winner tossing 20 innings with Vic Sorrell pitching the bottom of the 21st. Lyons the loser goes the distance and gives up 24 hits.
Charlie Gehringer drives in Roy Johnson with a sacrifice fly for the final run. No pitcher has matched either Lyons' or Uhle's marathon effort since. Les Mueller in 1945 will come the closest.

1930: Babe Ruth hits home runs in both games of a doubleheader, giving him nine homers in one week. New York sweeps 10 - 6 and 11 - 1. Newly-acquired Red Ruffing is the easy winner in the nitecap.

1933: Detroit's Tommy Bridges tosses a one-hitter in topping the Senators 3 - 1. Joe Kuhel's homer is the only Washington safety. It is the first time in the American League that a pitcher has allowed a home run in a one-hitter.

1935: The Cincinnati Reds host the Philadelphia Phillies in the first major league night game, winning, 2 - 1, before 25,000 fans. On the initiative of Larry MacPhail, US President Franklin D. Roosevelt throws the switch at the White House to turn on the lights. The Reds will play seven night games, one each against the other National League teams.

1936: Tony Lazzeri, batting eighth for the New York Yankees, posts an American League record with 11 RBI while hitting three home runs - two of them grand slams - and a triple in a 25 - 2 rout of the Philadelphia Athletics. Another major league record is tied when Ben Chapman draws 5 walks as the Yanks are handed 16 bases on balls.

1942: At Korakuen Stadium in Tokyo one of the most memorable games in Japanese League history takes place a 28-inning marathon that ends in a 4 - 4 tie between Nagoya and Taiyo. It takes 3 hours and 47 minutes and both starters Michio Nishizawa of Nagoya and Jiro Noguchi of Taiyo go all the way: Nishizawa throws 311 pitches and Noguchi, 344. Games are not allowed to end in a tie because the teams have to show off their fighting spirit according to historian Yoichi Nagata. Because this is the last day of the spring schedule in the three-part season (spring summer and fall) closing ceremonies and awards are scheduled so officials order the umpire to end the game. Nagoya uses only 9 players and Taiyo 10. Despite the war the game is noted in The Sporting News.

1945: The Tigers lose Al Benton who has 5 wins and 3 shutouts when he is hit on the ankle in the 4th frame by a line drive off the bat of Bobby Estalella. The A's score 4 in the 5th to win? 7 - 2. There is great confusion in the 2nd inning, when Irv Hall and George Kell bat out of turn for the A's: Kell, batting 6th in the lineup card handed to umpire Eddie Rommel, comes up in place of Hall, who is batting 5th. He strikes out, so Tigers manager Steve O'Neill does not point out the mistake, validating Kell's at-bat. But Hall then steps to the plate when the 7th hitter, 1B Dick Siebert, should have followed Kell. Hall singles, O'Neill appeals, and Rommel calls him out to end the inning. However, no one can then agree on who is to lead off the 3rd (if the rule had been properly applied, Siebert would have been the one called out to end the 2nd and number 8 hitter Frankie Hayes should have been next up). Rommel decides that Kell should be next. Both managers protest the decision, although no one seems to be sure who should have been the proper batter. When American League President Will Harridge rules on the protest filed by O'Neill (who claims, wrongly, that Siebert should have led off the 3rd), he dismisses the protest - but for the wrong reasons - indicating that he is just as confused as everyone else. The perplexing rule will be clarified in 1957.

1946: The New York Yankees announce the resignation of manager Joe McCarthy. He is replaced by Bill Dickey. McCarthy resigns because of reported gall bladder trouble. During his 15-year run with the Yankees, he guided them to eight American League pennants and seven World Series titles.

1951: Cleveland whips the Senators, 16 - 0 with Bob Feller pitching a two-hitter. Larry Doby has a homer and 4 RBIs to lead the Tribe.

1952: Jimmy Piersall and New York's Billy Martin first exchange insults before a game in Boston then exchange punches in the tunnel under the stands. It takes coaches Bill Dickey and Oscar Melillo along with starter Ellis Kinder to break up the fight. Piersall goes to the clubhouse to change his bloody shirt and gets into another brawl with teammate Mickey McDermott. He sits as Ellis Kinder stops the Yanks 5 - 2.

1955: Pittsburgh's highly touted Rule 5 acquisition, rookie outfielder Roberto Clemente, debuts his new uniform number, 21 (as reported by Pittsburgh Press beat writer Les Biederman). Originally number 13, he replaces the previous 21, outfielder Earl Smith, who was optioned to New Orleans of the Southern Association on May 3rd. Clemente is the 15th and final Pirate to wear number 21, which will be retired in 1973, following his fatal airplane crash on New Year's Eve, 1972.

1956: Mickey Mantle goes 5 for 5 with an intentional walk in an 11 - 4 win against the Tigers. Mantle is hitting .421.

1958: The Tigers buy Bob "Hurricane" Hazle from the Braves. Hazle, hitting .170, became expendable when Billy Bruton returned to action today.
Bruton, who last played on July 11 of last year, appears in the 9th inning of the Braves' 6 - 3 win over the Cardinals.

1958: The Detroit Tigers snap a nine-game losing streak and break the New York Yankees' 10-game win streak with a 3 - 2 win behind Frank Lary.
Al Kaline's RBI double in the 7th puts Detroit up for good. Frank "The Yankee Killer" Lary strikes out 6 in a complete game win. Lary is now 11-4 against the Bronx Bombers.

1962: The Tigers score their first 4 runs on homers then score the winner on a passed ball in the 11th to beat the Orioles 5 - 4. Charlie Lau misses a Hoyt Wilhelm knuckler to allow Dick McAuliffe to score.
Jim Bunning pitches the first 9 innings for Detroit and is accused by O's manager Billy Hitchcock of notching the ball with his belt buckle.

1964: Harmon Killebrew of the Minnesota Twins hits the longest home run in Baltimore's Memorial Stadium, a 471-foot shot to left-center off right-hander Milt Pappas.
Seven shutouts in both leagues tie the major league record for blankings in one day.

1965: Bill Freehan hits 2 home runs to drive in 5 in the Tigers' 8-3 win in Chicago.
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1984: Jack Morris leads the Detroit Tigers to their 17th straight road win, setting an American League record.
Morris allows four hits and Detroit beats the California Angels, 5 - 1. Morris allows 4 hits in 9 innings to win? and he is backed by homers from Lance Parrish and Alan Trammell. Almost unfathomably, the 1984 Tigers swept 12 of their first 16 series.

1992: The Detroit Tigers signed Jamie Moyer as a free agent.

2004: Tigers get 27 hits in a 17-7 drubbing of the Royals. Only one of the hits is a home run: a 3-run shot by Carlos Pena in the top of the 9th inning.

2007: Carlos Guillen hits 2 home runs and Jeremy Bonderman allows only 4 hits over 8 innings as the Tigers shut out the Angels 12-0.

2008: Magglio Ordonez hits 2 home runs and a double in the Tigers' 19-3 rout of the Twins.

2011: The Detroit Tigers released Chris Oxspring.

2013: Anibal Sanchez throws no-hit ball until the 9th inning, when Joe Mauer breaks up his bid for a no-no with a one-out single to center. He strikes out the final two hitters but has to settle for a one-hit shutout as Detroit beats Minnesota, 6 - 0, the Twins' 10th straight loss. Miguel Cabrera's streak of four straight games with a homer ends, but he has two more RBI as he pursues his bid for another Triple Crown.

2020: Due to the coronavirus pandemic, the Nationals decide to hold a virtual ceremony to unveil their 2019 World Series rings. The date is selected as it marked the start of the team's remarkable turnaround in 2019, as they were 19-31 that day, but began to reverse course with a 12-10 win over the Marlins. The ceremony was to be broadcast on social media and cable television, but is postponed at the last minute as players object, preferring that the ceremony be held when the team can be physically reunited.

Tigers players birthdays:

Milt Jordan 1953.

Dave Machemer 1979.

Danny Bautista 1993-1996.

Brad Penny 2011.

Tigers players who passed away:

Charlie Grover 1913.

Bob Miller 1953-1956.
One of four major leaguers with the name, Bob Miller was noteworthy for breaking into the Major Leagues as a $60,000 "Bonus Baby" at age 17 in 1953. He remains the youngest pitcher to start a game in Detroit Tigers history, doing so after turning 18 on September 22nd that year. Although the Tigers were not a particularly young team overall, fellow rookies on the team included Al Kaline (a reported $35,000 bonus) and Reno Bertoia, both 18 at the time. Of the three, Miller received by far the most money for signing with Detroit.

Baseball Reference
 
DEEPER DISCUSSIONS.
Totally Tigers

This weekend, we’re doing something new. There’s no poll. No deciding which of 2 hard choices you have to make.
We’re asking that you answer one simple question. You can be as brief as you want or use a maximum of 6 sentences to make your point.
Here’s the question:
Given the Tigers’ dismal play so far this year, if you can make only 1 change (just one!), what would you do?
Everything is fair game and not solely roster-related. However, we ask that you keep the change realistic. No “sell the team” or “send down half the roster.”
Whether you choose to submit a comment or not, we ask that you hit the “like” button for the comment with which you most agree. Let’s see which reader has the most popular opinion.
 
Tigers' cursed season epitomized by freak season-ending injury to recent signing.
What did the Tigers do this winter to deserve such a tragic season?
MCBTB
 
Boxscore.

Orioles 5 - Tigers 3: Jansen gives up a walkoff shot in Game 1 of the doubleheader.
It just isn’t happening this year, folks.
BYBTB

Tigers walked off in ninth inning by Orioles; losing skid hits 8.
AJ Hinch doesn’t put much stock in the healing ability of rabble-rousing team meetings. But the conversation, the communication, the message-delivering is constant, maybe more so during a skid like the Tigers have been in.
“Probably should stay away from reading online and social media and the frustration that’s all around these types of stretches,” Hinch said. “It’s not healthy. You can’t feel sorry for yourself. You can’t dwell on it. The competition continues.”
Detnews

Kenley Jansen blows save on walk-off HR in Game 1; Tigers lose 8th straight.
The Tigers were one strike away vs Orioles, but instead have lost 16 of 18.
The losing streak continues.

Behind six strong innings from left-hander Framber Valdez, a costly defensive mistake by Baltimore Orioles first baseman Pete Alonso and just enough timely offense, the Detroit Tigers put themselves in a position to win.
Until right-handed reliever Kenley Jansen imploded.
The Tigers lost, 5-3, to the Orioles on Sunday, May 24, in Game 1 of a doubleheader at Oriole Park at Camden Yards.
Freep

Detroit Tigers blow late lead to lose 8th straight game.
The Detroit Tigers keep finding new, painful ways to extend their losing streak.
Colton Cowser hit a two-strike, two-out, three-run home run in the bottom of the ninth off Tigers closer Kenley Jansen to lift the Baltimore Orioles to a 5-3 victory in Game 1 of Sunday afternoon’s doubleheader at Camden Yards.
The Tigers (20-33) have now lost eight in a row and are 2-16 since May 4. They’ll try to avoid a sweep against the Orioles (23-29) in the nightcap.
Mlive
 
From Game 53,
With this game 1 loss, the Tigers have 7 hits or fewer in 10 straight games and that is an ignominious franchise record.
4 hits in game two, they could add to that record.
Added to this game 54:
Now that is 11 straight games with 7 hits or fewer and adds to this record of futility for the team in 125 plus years.

Troy Melton's solid season debut helps Tigers snap skid.
Tigers official site

Boxscore.

Video highlights of the Tigers win over the orioles.

Tigers 4 - Orioles 1: Troy Melton returns and the Tigers win a game.
Troy Melton led the way, and the bullpen responded to break an eight-game skid.
BYBTB

Troy Melton helps Tigers bounce back to win nightcap vs. Orioles.
Not much on Troy Melton’s shoulders as he made his season debut Sunday night.
The Orioles punched the Tigers in the face in the first game of the doubleheader, walking off Kenley Jansen with a two-out, two-strike, three-run home run in the bottom of the ninth.
That meant Melton was carrying the weight of an eight-game losing streak, not to mention the accompanying 2-19 skid and the MLB-worst 7-21 road record and everything else the Tigers have been grinding through this month.
Detnews

Dillon Dingler, Troy Melton carry Tigers in Game 2 win to end skid.
The Detroit Tigers' losing streak is over.
Right-hander Troy Melton shoved into the sixth inning in his first start of the season after returning from the injured list, catcher Dillon Dingler golfed a two-run home run in the first, and third baseman Kevin McGonigle delivered a two-run single with the bases loaded and two outs in a full count in the fifth.
Freep

Finally! Tigers stop losing skid as Troy Melton shines in 2026 debut.
Mlive
 
May 25 in Tigers and mlb history:

1906 - Martin Dihigo is born in Matanzas, Cuba. Over the course of his career, Dihigo will make seamless transitions between all nine positions and play in several countries. As a hitter he will lead the Negro Leagues in home runs in 1926 and 1935; as a pitcher he will win more than 300 games and defeat Satchel Paige while touring Cuba. He will be elected to the American Hall of Fame in 1977, becoming the only player in history to be inducted to the American, Cuban, Dominican, Mexican and Venezuelan Halls of Fame.
He will later add yet another honor as one of the inaugural inductees in the Latin American Baseball Hall of Fame in 2010.

1922: After being thrown out at second base trying to stretch a single, New York's Babe Ruth throws dirt in the face of umpire George Hildebrand and then goes after a fan. Ruth is ejected, and eventually fined $500 and suspended one game by American League president Ban Johnson.

1935: Babe Ruth shows flashes of his past glory by hitting the final three home runs of his career in the Boston Braves' 11 - 7 loss to the Pittsburgh Pirates. In addition to a 5th-inning single, Ruth hits homers in the 1st inning against Red Lucas, 3rd inning against Guy Bush and 7th inning off Bush again. In addition, his final homer is the first in Forbes Field's history to clear its right field roof.

1937: Tiger catcher/manager Mickey Cochrane is beaned in the head by a pitch from New York's Bump Hadley. Cochrane is unconscious for seven days and nearly dies as a result.
The future Hall of Famer never plays another game in the big leagues, though he returns to manage Detroit the next season.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/C9842nHXYAAAdwK.jpg
While his professional playing career was over, Mickey Cochrane remained active in baseball and coached the US Navy Great Lakes Bluejackets Team during WWII.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DdLjCcEVMAUfnnr.jpg

1951: Willie Mays debuts for the New York Giants, striking out in the 1st inning against Bubba Church. Mays goes 0 for 5, but makes three good plays in the field.

1953: Ralph Kiner hits the 300th home run of his career, off Al Corwin of the New York Giants at Forbes Field. Kiner is the 12th player to reach the mark.

1968: One day short of the six year anniversary (5-26-1962) of Al Kaline's worst injury breaking his collarbone on 9th inning game saving catch,
Oakland A's scumbag pos pitcher Lew Krause hits Al in his right arm fracturing it. Kaline will be lost to the Tigers until July 1.
Denny McLain strikes out 8 with 1 walk in a complete game win, his 7th of the season. Tigers win 2-1.
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1975: Mickey Lolich wins his 200th game for the Tigers, becoming just the third pitcher to win that many for Detroit. In a rain-shortened game in Chicago, Lolich beats the White Sox, 4-1 with seven innings of work. The lefty will win 207 games for the Tigers, third all-time behind Hooks Dauss and George Mullin.

1979: The Cincinnati Reds traded Champ Summers to the Detroit Tigers for a player to be named later. The Detroit Tigers sent Sheldon Burnside (October 25, 1979) to the Cincinnati Reds to complete the trade.

1983: Kirk Gibson scores on a memorable inside-the-park home run and the Tigers beat the blue jays 6 - 2.

1984: Mariners beat the Tigers 7-3 in Seattle. The Tigers' AL-record road winning streak is snapped at 17. Tigers are 35-6.

2001: The Detroit Tigers signed Lyle Mouton as a free agent.

2006: The Detroit Tigers released Matt Mantei.

2006: Tigers trail 6-0 after the 1st inning but rally to win 13-8 and hand the Royals their 13th straight loss.

2013: The Tigers welcome members of the 1968 team to Comerica Park to celebrate the 45th anniversary of their world championship.
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Detroit Tigers honor 1968 World Series championship team; Al Kaline: 'It seems like only yesterday'.

2014: The Tigers posthumously honor Bill Bruton with the African American Legacy Award. The outfielder played for the Tigers from 1961-64 and died in 1995. Bruton was one of the first African American players to be a regular starter for the Tigers.
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2018: Tigers honor usher Bill Fundaro for 50 years at Tiger Stadium and Comerica Park.

2021: By working home plate in a game between the Cardinals and White Sox, one of the worst umpires in baseball history Joe West, sets a new career record with 5,376 games as an umpire, passing Bill Klem, whose last game was in 1941. He already held the record for most seasons worked, as this year is his 44th (Klem and Bruce Froemming had 37), but Klem's record of having been the home plate umpire for 3,548 games is untouchable.

2022: Anaheim City Council votes unanimously to cancel the sale of Angel Stadium and surrounding land to Los Angeles Angels owner Arte Moreno, following the resignation of Mayor Bill Sidhu on corruption charges a few days earlier. The $350 million sale had been agreed in December 2019 but not yet finalized, and was at the center of an FBI investigation that led to accusations that Sidhu had provided insider information to the team and in return demanded kickbacks in the form of campaign contributions. The city councillors are now no longer convinced that the proposed deal reflects the city's best interests, and are willing to risk a breach of contract lawsuit from Moreno in order to examine a potential deal again, starting from scratch.

2025: Before starting today's game, Tarik Skubal had already won a Cy Young Award, but had never thrown a complete game. The Tigers' ace gets this milestone out of the way with a 5 - 0 shutout of the Guardians, and makes it a Maddux too as he needs just 94 pitches to accomplish the feat.

Tigers players birthdays:

Joey Eischen 1996.

Bill Haselman 1999.

Randall Simon 2001-2002.

Tigers players who passed away:

Bill James 1915-1919.

Al Lakeman 1954.

Baseball Reference
 
OPEN MIKE.
Totally Tigers

Today, as we honor those who gave their lives for our country, we welcome readers to share their thoughts about the Tigers or baseball in general. Your observations, comments and questions. Extra credit to those who create topics or questions that generate thoughtful dialog threads.
For this day only, a maximum of 6 sentences please.
 
Kenley Jansen has allowed a Walk-Off Home run every 132 IP in his career.
This season Jansen has allowed a Walk-off Home run every 4.7 IP.

Colton Cowser was hitting .193 w/ a .530 OPS and just walked the Tigers off by taking Kenley Jansen deep on a 0-2 pitch with 2 outs.
 
Aiden Ruiz feels like a Tigers draft pick — which is why Detroit’s decision is so interesting.
Aiden Ruiz fits everything Detroit has prioritized recently, but could this draft could be the moment the Tigers pivot toward pitching upside?
MCBTB
 
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