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

June 20th in Tigers and mlb history:

1905: A young woman sues the Giants for $500 for injury suffered when a foul ball hit her at a game at the Polo Grounds on September 3, 1904. Judge Chester B. McLaughlin dismisses the suit, ruling that patrons attend baseball games at their own risk.

1906: At Exposition Park, Honus Wagner clubs one of the longest hits in park history, but only makes it to third base. Rounding first, the Pirates player is clipped by 1B Kid Gleason, and Wagner limps his way to a triple. A courtesy runner, Harry Smith, scores for the Pirates on a fly and the Phils then generously allow Wagner to return to SS. But the injury will force him to miss three games.

1911: Ty Cobb breaks the American League hitting streak record with an infield single against Cleveland's Willie Mitchell. It is Cobb's 30th straight game with a hit. He adds two stolen bases to help Detroit win 8 - 3.

1914: The Tigers lose the services of Ty Cobb when he breaks his thumb in a fight with a butcher's clerk. Cobb will be out until August 13th.

1916: The Detroit Tigers selected Willie Mitchell off waivers from the Cleveland Indians.

1925: At Forbes Field, Max Carey becomes the first switch-hitter to hit for the cycle. The Pirate outfielder's performance helps Pittsburgh to bash Brooklyn, 21 - 5.

1932: Doc Cramer of the A's collects six hits in consecutive times at bat in a nine-inning game. Cramer will do this again in 1935, the only American League player to repeat the feat.

1934: The Tigers score three in the 11th to defeat the Senators 13 - 10.
Ex-Tiger Heinie Manush, leading the American League in hitting, has four hits and two homers as Washington collects 17 hits.
The Tigers get three-hit efforts each from Marv Owen, Mickey Cochrane, Charlie Gehringer and Hank Greenberg who also includes a homer. Elden Auker is the winner over Tommy Thomas.

1939: Tigers win the first night game ever played at Philadelphia' Shibe Park, 5-0. Tigers won't play a home night game for another 9 years.

1946: A Fortune magazine story gives some rare details of baseball finances, showing the Yankees had a revenue of $1.6 million and profit of $306,000, cut to $201,000 after minor league losses, the previous season. Of the gross income, $896,000 is from home ticket sales.

1948: Ralph Kiner hits home runs every Sunday for eight successive weeks in May and June. For the year he will hit 17 round trippers in 38 Sunday games.

1950: The New York Giants signed Willie Mays as an amateur free agent.

1953: The Detroit Tigers signed Bob Miller as an amateur free agent (bonus baby).

1956: At Detroit's Briggs Stadium, Mickey Mantle poles two Billy Hoeft pitches into the right CF bleachers, something no other player had done since the bleachers were built in the late 1930s. New York wins, 7 - 4.

1961: Al Kaline plays 3B for the first time in his illustrious career. His two hits and two RBIs lead the Tigers to a 5 - 4 win over the Senators.
Kaline will return to his customary spot in RF where he is already known as the pre-eminent Rightfielder in the history of the AL and play 3B just once more in his career in 1965.

1962: The Detroit Tigers signed Bill Faul as an amateur free agent.

1962: Hank Aaron of the Milwaukee Braves has the team's only two hits in a 3 - 2 win against Willard Hunter of the New York Mets in a six-inning rain-shortened game. Aaron homers in the 3rd and 6th innings and drives in all three of the Braves' runs, becoming the first player in MLB history to have two homers as his team's only two hits in a game.

1965: In the opener of two in Kansas City, the Tigers rally from an 8-run deficit in the 2nd inning to win 12 - 8.
Al Kaline collects his 1,000th RBI with a 2-run single. Detroit loses the 2nd game to snap their 8-game win streak.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/D9gvRy5WkAAKF9t.jpg

1968: Denny McLain pitches a 3-hit complete game in the Tigers' 5-1 win over Boston at Tiger Stadium. Mickey Stanley goes 3-for-4 with a home run and a double.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/D9gekpeXYAA147V.png

1970: Brooks Robinson's 2,000th major league hit is a big one - a 3-run homer off Washington's Joe Coleman in the 5th inning. The drive snaps a 2 - 2 tie, and the Orioles hang on for a 5 - 4 victory.

1978: Tigers win 4 - 3 over the blue jays on a Jason Thompson RBI double in the 13th inning. Toronto is defeated for the third consecutive game by a Canadian-born pitcher. The Blue Jays lose to John Hiller of Detroit, after having previously tasted defeat at the hands of Ferguson Jenkins and Reggie Cleveland of the Texas Rangers.

1980: Al Cowens charges the mound and brawls with Ed Farmer at Comiskey Park.
White Sox reliever Ed Farmer swears he will take criminal action against Detroit's Al Cowens following an on-field brawl in Chicago. Cowens hits a grounder to SS, and then charges the mound instead of running to first base. The action stems from an incident a year earlier when a Farmer pitch shattered Cowens's jaw. American League President Lee MacPhail will suspend Cowens for seven games. The Tigers win, 5 - 3, in 11 innings.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DCdlKDKXkAAN72w.jpg

1981: The Detroit Tigers signed Bernie Carbo as a free agent.

1982: Former Tiger Ben Oglivie hits 3 home runs against the Tigers.

1984: At Detroit, Yankee reliever Jose Rijo falls to 1-7 when he serves up a 2-out three-run homer to Howard Johnson in the 13th inning. Detroit wins 9 - 6. Alan Trammell, Lance Parrish and Chet Lemon also hit homers for the Tigers, who draw their 3rd straight 40,000+ crowd.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Clbnsn2UgAAHYw-.jpg

1985: The Detroit Tigers signed Doug Flynn as a free agent.
1985: The Texas Rangers traded Frank Tanana to the Detroit Tigers for Duane James (minors).

1994: In a defeat to the Indians, the Tigers' string of 25 straight games of hitting a home run ends. The streak tied the major league record set by the 1941 New York Yankees.

1998: The Indians retire Bob Lemon's uniform number 21 prior to the team's 5 - 3 loss to the Yankees.

2000: Seven different Tigers hit homers in Detroit's 18-6 rout of the Blue Jays at Toronto's SkyDome. The homers come from Juan Encarnacion, Tony Clark (2), Juan Gonzalez, Bobby Higginson, Deivi Cruz, Robert Fick, and Rich Becker.
It's just the fourth time in MLB history that as many as seven players hit homers in a game for one team.

2003: In his MLB debut with the Marlins, Miguel Cabrera hits a walk-off home run in the 11th inning.

2004: The Detroit Tigers released Jimmy Haynes.

2004: On Father's Day with his dad present, Ken Griffey, Jr. nails a 6th-inning fastball off Cardinal hurler Matt Morris over the right field wall at Busch Stadium for his 500th career home run. The Reds center fielder becomes the 20th major leaguer and the sixth-youngest (34) to reach the milestone.

2007: The Detroit Tigers purchased Anastacio Martinez from the Washington Nationals.
2007: The Detroit Tigers traded Wil Ledezma to the Atlanta Braves for Macay McBride.

2007: Magglio Ordonez goes 3-for-4 in the Tigers victory over the Nationals to push his batting average to .383, his high point in an incredible season. Ordonez will finish at .363 to win the batting title, and his 54 doubles also leads the American League.

2012: The Detroit Tigers released Eric Patterson.

2013: Tigers beat the Red Sox on a 2-run walk-off home run by Jhonny Peralta.

2016: Miguel Cabrera hit a moonshot and Justin Upton hit two homers, including a walk-off smash in the 12th in the Tigers' 8-7 win over the mariners.

2017: An incompetent and full of himself umpire Joe West becomes the third umpire in major league history to work 5,000 regular season games when he is behind the plate in a game between the Diamondbacks and Rockies. Neither team existed when he began his career in the National League back in 1976. His 40 seasons as an umpire are a record, and he trails only Bill Klem and Bruce Froemming for the total number of games; he will eventually pass them both.

2019: Phil Regan, who pitched for the Tigers in the early 1960s, is named Mets pitching coach, at age 82. Phil Regan, the Mets new pitching coach, has a resume that includes: Faced Ted Williams in a major league game.
Had a teammate (Eddie Yost) who debuted in 1944. Once saved a game for Sandy Koufax.

2021: The Detroit Tigers released Wilson Ramos.

2022: The Los Angeles Dodgers purchased Trayce Thompson from the Detroit Tigers.

2023: The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit Court upholds an earlier decision by the US District Court for the Southern District of New York that three former minor league teams that were eliminated under the 2021 Minor League Reorganization cannot bring an antitrust suit against Major League Baseball. This is due to the exemption from the Sherman Antitrust Act from which MLB has benefited since the Supreme Court's decision in the case Federal Baseball Club v. National League, back in 1922. The plaintiffs are now expected to appeal to the Supreme Court, in order to attempt to have its century-old ruling reversed.

2025: Matt Raleigh continues his assault on the record books as he bangs two more homers in Seattle's 9 - 4 win over the Cubs at Wrigley Field, giving him a major league-leading 29 on the season. He passes the great Johnny Bench for most homers by a catcher before the All-Star Game, and ties the record for most by a switch-hitter. Bench needed 87 games to set the old mark in 1970, while Raleigh is just playing in his 73rd. His sixth multi-homer game as a catcher this year also ties the all-time mark for most by a catcher - in a full season.

Tigers players birthdays:
Win Mercer 1902.

Jim Delahanty 1909-1912.

Charlie Grover 1913.

Paul Bako 1998.

Bobby Seay 2006-2009.

Tigers players who passed away:

Joe Staton 1972-1973.

Baseball Reference
 
SATURDAY SURVEY.
Totally Tigers

The Washington Nationals are only 1 of the latest rebuilding teams in MLB. They are making the news now because, for the first time since 2019, they have just reached the .500 mark (just 3 games over).
After winning the World Series in 2019, they spent the next 5 years (we’re omitting 2020) in last place with 91 – 107 losses every year. Not a single player from their WS roster remains and fans are still hesitant to embrace their improvement.
Unlike the Tigers, the Nats did win that ring but it came as a huge cost. After 2019, Washington traded away every single star player including Juan Soto, Trea Turner and Max Scherzer. Eight top players alone were traded in 1 day.

The Tigers traded off many, but not all of their fan favorites, over a period of 3 years.
As a Tiger fan, how badly would you want that World Series ring?
Would you be willing to experience what happened to the Nationals fans for the last 6+ years?
To see every talented player traded off in one fell swoop?
To see an entirely unfamiliar roster substituted instead?
To see players like Soto and Turner become top 10 players in MLB – but for other teams?
How important is getting that World Series Championship flag to you?

How badly would you want the Tigers to win a World Series?

1. Willing to duplicate what the Nationals' fans experienced.

2. Not willing to sacrifice years of misery for just 1 year of greatness.

VOTE
 
The Tigers face a quiet issue in need of some nervous decisions: How to resolve a 40-man roster crunch ahead of 2027.
There will be some inevitable high-profile goodbyes -- and add-ons -- among players and prospects, with many of those decisions resting on how select Tigers perform the rest of an erratic 2026 season.
Tigers Intelligence Report w/Lynn Henning
 
Corbin Carroll is now 13 for 17 in his career with the bases loaded. To put that into perspective, he could go hitless in his next 119 AB’s with the bases loaded and still have a higher career average in that situation than Spencer Torkelson.
 
Kevin McGonigle is currently on pace for a 9.0 bWAR rookie season. The only rookie position player with a higher bWAR season in the last 50+ years is Mike Trout, who put up 10.5 bWAR in 2012.
 
To clarify, still a serious injury for Wenceel Pérez, who has a left orbital fracture. But his eyesight is not believed to be in danger.
Wenceel Pérez remains in Houston, getting further evaluation on his eye injury. He goes on 10-day IL to make room for Trei Cruz.“He’s in a good place. The swelling has started to go down,” A.J. Hinch said.
Jason Beck
 
Troy Melton this season:
1st inning: 5.0 IP / 5.40 ERA / 1.2 WHIP
Rest of the game: 26.2 IP / 2.02 ERA / 0.9 WHIP
 
Trei Cruz, third generation big-leaguer, soaks in an emotional debut.
Imagine being Trei Cruz Friday night.
He finally makes his big-league debut at age 27, after a methodical and at times fraught climb through the minor leagues. Comerica Park is packed. Tarik Skubal is pitching. Nelly is staging a post-game concert. The division-leading White Sox are in town.
In the stands are 20-some members of his family, who hastily flew in to be part of this moment, including his grandfather Jose Cruz and father Jose Cruz, Jr. – both long-time big-leaguers.
Detnews
 
Outman comes through off bench to help Tigers beat White Sox.
Tigers official site

Boxscore.

Video highlights of the Tigers win over the white sox.

Troy Melton deals, Dillon Dingler mashes as Tigers clinch series victory.
The Tigers outpitched the White Sox, and the offense came through after some early struggles.
BYBTB

Tigers overcome slow start by offense to beat White Sox, 4-1.
It all worked out in the end.
The Tigers, held hitless for 4.2 innings, rallied late to beat the Chicago White Sox, 4-1, Saturday at Comerica Park.
Kevin McGonigle produced the first hit, a single off lefty Joe Rock with two outs in the fifth. That advanced Zack McKinstry to third, setting up Dillon Dingler’s tying RBI single.
Dingler, who leads the major leagues with 32 two-out RBIs, added his 17th homer of the year in the seventh, a 430-foot blast to center.
Detnews

Detroit Tigers overcome slow start in another win vs Chicago White Sox.
The Detroit Tigers didn't get a hit until two outs in the fifth inning.
Then everything changed.
The Tigers overcame a slow start with one run in the fifth and two runs in the sixth en route to a 4-1 win over the Chicago White Sox on Saturday, June 20, in the second of three games in the series at Comerica Park.
Dillon Dingler – a catcher serving as the designated hitter – drove in two runs with a single and a solo home run, right-hander Troy Melton allowed one run (on one hit) across six innings, and two relievers slammed the door over the final three innings.
Freep

Troy Melton, timely hits lead Tigers to another win over White Sox.
The Detroit Tigers have taken down the first-place Chicago White Sox in two straight games — and now the Sox are no longer in first place.
The Tigers still have a long way to go to catch the Sox in the American League Central standings, but their 4-1 win on Saturday afternoon at Comerica Park doesn’t hurt.
The Tigers (32-44) have taken the first two games of the weekend series and will try to complete the sweep of the Sox (39-36) in Sunday’s finale.
Mlive
 
June 21 in Tigers and mlb history:

1901: Right-hander Harley 'Doc' Parker of the Reds gives up 21 runs and 26 hits to Brooklyn in his first start of the season - and major league farewell appearance. The 26 hits is a post-1900 record, tied by Al Travers in 1912, and by the A's Hod Lisenbee in 1936. The 21 runs allowed is a National League mark. Harley also faces a record 55 batters in the game. Led by Willie Keeler's five hits, including a home run and double, the Superbas win, 21 - 3.

1911: Grover Cleveland Alexander wins for the second day in a row, hooking up with Brooklyn's Doc Scanlan for a 15-inning operation, won by the Phils, 2 - 1.

1906: At the Polo Grounds, umpire Bob Emslie tosses John McGraw in the 4th inning, but his fellow ump Hank O'Day goes one better, banishing Joe McGinnity and first sacker Dan McGann in the 5th. Down 4 - 2, Christy Mathewson relieves for the Giants and shuts out the Pirates over the last four innings. The Giants load the bases in the 9th and Chappie McFarland relieves a tired Sam Leever. A single scores one and with two outs, Doc Marshall singles to score the winning run. Mathewson wins, 5 - 4.

1914: Against Detroit P George Boehler, Walter Johnson connects for a 5th-inning grand slam that is the difference as Washington wins, 7 - 3.

1916: Rube Foster of the Red Sox no-hits the Yankees 2 - 0, for the first no-hitter in Fenway Park, beating Bob Shawkey, 2 - 0. Harry Hooper leads the offense with three hits. Red Sox president Joseph Lannin hands Rube a $100 bonus and each of his Sox teammates receive a gold-handled pocket knife engraved with the date.

1936: Detroit Tigers player manager Mickey Cochrane checks out of the hospital and goes to a Wyoming ranch to recover his health.

1938: Red Sox 3B Pinky Higgins extends his consecutive hit string to 12 with eight hits in a doubleheader split with Detroit. He is 4 for 4 in each game, a Boston win in the opener. Detroit wins the nitecap 5 - 4, with Rudy York catching both games. Tomorrow, Pinky will strike out against Vern Kennedy in his first at-bat, ending the streak.

1939: The New York Yankees announce Lou Gehrig's retirement, based on the report that he has amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. The 36-year-old star will remain with the team as captain.

1941: The Detroit Tigers signed Dick Wakefield as an amateur free agent.

1941: Lefty Grove's Fenway Park consecutive win streak, which started on May 3, 1938, ends at 20 games with a 13 - 9 loss to the St. Louis Browns.

1942: The white sox Ted Lyons wins his 250th career game, 6 - 5, over the Red Sox. A week later, he will beat New York's Red Ruffing to match the Yankee hurler's 251 career wins. The White Sox veteran will finish the season with 20 complete games in 20 starts, lead the AL with a 2.10 ERA, then enter the Marine Corps at age 42.

1945: The Tigers and A?s battle to a 1-1 24-inning tie.

1946: Hall of Famer Hal Newhouser wins his 100th game. His record: 100-72. He will post more wins before his 30th birthday than any pitcher in the lively ball era.

1950: Joe DiMaggio gets his 2,000th hit, a 7th-inning single off the Indians' Marino Pieretti, as the Yanks win, 8 - 2. DiMaggio joins Luke Appling and Wally Moses as the only active players with 2,000 or more hits.

1958: Frank Lary pitches his third straight shutout, beating the Yankees' Duke Maas
1 - 0. Al Kaline throws out Maas trying to score at the plate and hits his 7th home run to extend his hitting streak to 18 games.

1958: White Sox lefty Billy Pierce hurls a two-hitter against the Orioles, winning 1 - 0 over Billy Loes. It's the Sox's 5th shutout in their last six games.

1959: Milwaukee's Hank Aaron hits three two-run home runs at Seals Stadium to power the Braves to a 13 - 3 win over the Giants. It's the only 3-homer game of Aaron's career.

1960: The Detroit Tigers signed Jim Rooker as an amateur free agent.
1960: The Detroit Tigers traded Ray Semproch and cash to the Los Angeles Dodgers for Clem Labine.

1960: It wasn't that often but Whitey Ford out duels Yankee Killer Frank Lary to give New York a 6 - 0 win in Detroit. Mickey Mantle is 3 for 5 with two homers off Lary.

1964: On Father's Day at Shea Stadium, Ex-Tigers pitcher Jim Bunning fans 10, drives in two runs, and pitches the first perfect game (excluding Don Larsen's 1956 World Series effort and Harvey Haddix's 1959 extra-inning loss) since Charlie Robertson's on April 30, 1922. Philadelphia beats the Mets, 6 - 0.
Bunning also becomes the first pitcher to win no-hitters in both leagues, and Gus Triandos becomes the first catcher to catch a no-hitter in each league. Bunning throws just 90 pitches in winning his second no-hitter. The next time Bunning faces the Mets he will shut them out.

1966: The Detroit Tigers traded a player to be named later and Don Demeter to the Boston Red Sox for Joe Christopher and Earl Wilson. The Detroit Tigers sent Julio Navarro (June 21, 1966) to the Boston Red Sox to complete the trade.

1966: Satchel Paige makes his final professional pitching appearance, going the first two innings for the Peninsula Grays (Carolina League) against the Greensboro Yankees. Satch gives up two runs. Peninsula's regular catcher, Johnny Bench, takes the night off.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FzKNJ0gXsAEw1DQ?format=jpg&name=medium

1969: Willie Horton powers two homers, one a grand slam, and drives in six runs to lead the Tigers to a 9 - 5 win over the visiting Senators. Mickey Lolich (8-1) is the winner, allowing just four hits.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/D9WFZcGW4AArxJY.jpg

1970: Cleveland wins the first game against Detroit, but Detroit's Cesar Gutierrez then goes 7 for 7 with six singles and a double to tie a record set in 1892, in a 12-inning 9 - 8 nitecap win. Mickey Stanley's home run wins it for the Tigers. Gutierrez, wearing #7, starts the game hitting .218, and was 0 for 18 before today. Gutierrez will collect just seven hits in all of 1971, and 128 hits for his career.

1972: Bob Gibson wins his 211th game, passing Jesse Haines as the Cards' biggest winner, in St. Louis's 14 - 3 win over the Padres. Gibson cracks a 3-run homer in the 7th before exiting.

1972: Rico Petrocelli and Carl Yastrzemski lead the Red Sox to an 11-inning, 10 - 9 win over Texas. Yaz collects five hits and scores four times, while Rico drives in six runs, four with a grand slam. Frank Howard is 4 for 4 for Texas. Luis Tiant wins with an inning of shutout relief.

1974: The Braves fire manager Eddie Mathews, the only man to play for the Braves in Boston, Milwaukee, and Atlanta. Clyde King is hired to replace him.

1977: Behind Luis Tiant's 2-hitter, the Boston Red Sox pummel the Baltimore Orioles, 7 - 0. Jim Rice and George Scott bang homers. The Sox also sign Tommy Helms, released by the Pittsburgh Pirates, and waive Doug Griffin.

1986: Bo Jackson, college football's Heisman Trophy winner in 1985 and the first pick (by Tampa Bay) in the NFL draft, stuns observers nationwide by signing with the Kansas City Royals instead.

1988: Trailing 6-1 entering the bottom of the 9th, the Tigers scored 7 runs to stun the Yankees. Alan Trammell hit a walk-off grand slam off Cecilio Guante. This came a day after Guante allowed a walk-off HR in the 10th to Tom Brookens.

1994: Lou Whitaker smashes a walk-off grand slam, the sixth of eight career walk-off homers for him. Eight is a lot for someone with fewer than 250 homers.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DCdlxldWAAA08FV.jpg

1997: The host Detroit Tigers blast the Boston Red Sox, 15 - 4. The Sox, trailing by 12 runs, try OF Darren Bragg at 3B, and put IF Mike Benjamin on the mound for the 9th. Benjamin retires all three batters he faces, the only one of five Sox hurlers to do so.

2012: The Detroit Tigers signed John Lindsey as a free agent.

2013: The Detroit Tigers signed Jon Link as a free agent.

2015: J.D. Martinez hits three homers and drives in 6 runs in Detroit's 12 - 4 win over the yankees. Martinez victimizes Masahiro Tanaka twice and adds the third off Danny Burawa, making his big league debut for New York.

2021: Jacob deGrom's other-worldly season continues as he pitches 5 scoreless innings to lead the Mets to a 4 - 2 win over the Braves in the first game of a doubleheader. This extends his scoreless streak to 30 innings, and lowers his season's ERA to 0.50, as he becomes the first pitcher in history to go 12 straight starts of giving up one or no earned runs, besting the record set by Bob Gibson in 1968.

Tigers players birthdays:

Tom Jones 1909-1910.

Gene Pentz 1975.

Sean Runyan 1998-2000.

Jeff Baker 2012.

Jefry Marte 2015.

Baseball Reference
 
DEEPER DISCUSSIONS.
Totally Tigers

Last week, when asked about all of the players on the IL, Manager A. J. Hinch said “… we can’t dwell on it because it’s not changing. The lineup we have is the group we’re going with now.”
How do you interpret his statement?
Is it about a lack of available talent, prospect readiness or preparing for a lockout?
Today’s blog addresses this question and allows readers to share their thoughts in more detail. And hopefully, to actively engage with others by responding to their posts and creating back-and-forth discussion threads. The more the merrier!
For this one blog only, you’ve got 6 sentences max to share your thoughts. Of course, you can also respond to other readers.
TT will supply the ammunition. One thought-provoking question. Several options provided. One hard choice to be selected. One vote.
Ready?

How do you interpret A. J. Hinch's comment?

1. We don't have any other players who would be better.

2. We're not going to risk bringing up prospects we don't feel are ready yet.

3. We want our prospects to stay in the farm system so they can play next year as we are already planning for a lockout.

VOTE
 
Depending on whose metrics you use, the 2026 Tigers have 8-9 guys who have seen regular AB and have a negative WAR. Cannot imagine better evidence of a flawed MLB roster with zero help at AAA. Considering most of the bad bats also have bad gloves and the root problem is obvious.
 
Tigers runs scored: 309
Tigers runs allowed: 315
Guardians runs scored: 309
Guardians runs allowed: 315
The difference is, Cleveland has much better defense especially in the outfield and they do the “little things” like have productive at bats, move runners along, lay down bunts once in a while. I’m sure the don’t substitute players in game nearly as much as Detroit.
 
The Tigers are 8-14 in one-run games and 1-12 (!!!) in two-run games.
Collectively that is a 9-26 (.257) mark in games decided by two runs or less is dead last in the majors.
 
Tigers starting pitchers have allowed no more than four runs in 24-straight starts, which is MLB's longest active streak. We also have the lowest team ERA (3.15) in the majors this month. The Yankees (3.81) are next-closest among AL clubs.
 
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