10th
July
2008
Twins 7
Tigers 6
Recap:
- BOO
- YAY
- BOO
- BOO
- BOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
- OH GOD NO
- BOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!
- meh.
Actual recap:
- Tigers scored five runs in the third inning to take a commanding lead.
- Kenny Rogers itched a good game and left with a 6-3 lead.
- Fernando Rodney gave up one, then Todd Jones tried to blow up and destroy the game in regulation. Instead he just let the Twins tie it.
- The Tigers had a chance to win in regulation when the leadoff batter walked and stole second. His name would be Carlos Guillen. And he’s a good baseball player. He ended up on third after a wild pitch with one out. And two strikeouts later, the Tigers blew their best shot at winning the game.
- In Freddy Dolsi’s third inning on the mound, he gave up a home run to Justin Morneau that turned out to be the game winner.
Analysis:
- OK. show of hands. Who didn’t see the Tigers losing after they blew a four-run lead and didn’t score after the third? Anyone? anyone? Yeah. That ninth inning almost turned out OK after Todd Jones stunk again. But it didn’t.
- and after they didn’t score in the ninth, you — well I — knew there was no shot the Tigers could win.
- Jones is really doing his best to make sure the Tigers fail during a crucial stretch in their season. Not literally. It only feels like it. You had to figure he would have a tough stretch at some point. it’s just unfortunate it’s now. It really hurts the Tigers’ chances.
- And as far as that goes, they pretty much have to win the next three games. A split is hardly acceptable. It’s not like it’s MUST win. But it’s not exactly a good time to be splitting series with division rivals who own you in their own stadium.
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posted in 2008 season, Minnesota Twins |
8th
July
2008
Tigers 9
Indians 2
Recap:
- Justin Verlander got the first batters out, let the next two batters score, then shut down the Indians for pretty much innings 2 through 7.
- The Tigers brought their power shoes, especially Miguel Cabrera. He had two homers Marcus Thames one and Pudge one. Thames also chipped in an RBI double, and Curtis Granderson singled in a run.
- Did I mention Cabera went 4-for-4? Well, he did!
- This scoring outburst from the team came with Maggs on the DL and Carlos Guillen gone for the birth of his daughter.
- Not to be lost, Aquilino Lopez pitched two fantastic innings of relief for Detroit.
Analysis:
- The Twins thankfully lost. There might be 2 and a half months left in the season, but it is starting to get closer to make-or-break territory. Of course we’ve been on the other side of things, where the Tigers have been great at the all-star break only to have things go wrong in August. So, you know, if the baseball gods would like to bring the White Sox and Twins back to earth soon, that would be good, ya know?
- But if the Tigers keep getting good starts from pitchers and Cabrera is able to hit a little more consistently — a little more Thames-ian if you will– I have hopes September will still feature meaningful games. The next week is really a big one for Detroit, as they face the Twins four times. While normally you might like to face the pushover teams to collect some W’s, I think the only way the Tigers get back into a true division race is playing and beating the Twins and White Sox themselves. If they can’t do that, they don’t deserve the division title anyway.
Other stuff:
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posted in 2008 season, Cleveland Indians |
6th
July
2008
Carlos Guillen is the Tigers’ lone representative at the all star game, a far cry from last year’s five Tigers. Truth be told, it’s hard to make an argument for anyone else being on the team. Armando Gallaraga has pitched great but that was always going to be a long shot. Placido Polanco had to compete with some pretty decent second baseman, too. On the bright side, the players will get to rest and try to make up some of that distance in the A.L. Central.
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posted in 2008 predictions, All-Star Game |
6th
July
2008
Tigers 2
Mariners 1
(15 innings)
Recap:
- As they say, no one saw that one coming!
- The Tigers won in the 15th inning after the Mariners trotted out their backup catcher to the mound. He only allowed one run. But that’s all it took.
- Miguel Cabrera doubled off him, then pinch-runner Michael Hollimon went to third on an awful throw before scoring on a sac. And then, somehow, the backup catcher (or is that backup backup?) got out of the inning without allowing any more hits.
- But that’s not all that was weird.
- Nate Robertson pitched what would have been a complete game had it ended in nine innings. He did so in 100 pitches and allowed just the one run.
- In 15 inning the teams combined for 14 hits and left 23 on base.
- The Tigers bullpen only gave up two hits in six innings of work.
- Of the Tigers’ 8 hits, Pudge had four.
Analysis
- I’m sure I wasn’t the only one awaiting a devastating loss at some point! Thankfully the Tigers survived the runner getting to second a few times in extras.
- A wins’ a win, but it wasn’t what I’d call the kind of successful road trip the Tigers needed. They ended up losing ground on both teams above them.
- I think we’re seeing how much Detroit misses Magglio Ordonez and a healthy Miguel Cabrera. Three games in Seattle the Tigers scored 2 or less runs. That’s definitely not a good sign.
- Thankfully Detroit gets a day off and then faces a struggling Indians team that apparently just traded CC Sabathia.
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posted in 2008 season, Seattle Mariners |
5th
July
2008
Some Tigers thoughts as you enjoy the middle day of a three-day weekend:
- So the Tigers are 2-3 since returning to American League action. In my comments section, FJ wanted a time machine to go back, stop the Edgar Renteria trade and keep Jair Jurrjens a Tiger. I’m wondering if, long as he’s got that fancy Delorean, if FJ can’t get Bud Selig to move the Tigers to the NL rather than the Brewers…
- However, they have faced some pretty good pitching since returning to the A.L. And as the saying goes, good pitching beats good hitting. It’s not a real good excuse, of course, because, you know, good teams should get some wins even against good pitching.
- Here are the ERAs (and ERA+ comparisons to average) of the starters Detroit has lost to: Scott Baker, 3.65 ERA, 1.07 ERA+; Nick Blackburn, 3.78 ERA, 104 ERA+; Erik Bedard, 3.67 ERA, 107 ERA+. The average ERA of a starter in the A.L. is 4.24.
- Kenny Rogers must be wondering why his team hates him. In 18 starts by Rogers, the Tigers have scored 0 or 1 run five times. And twice they’ve only scored two runs.
- Of course, he’s not alone in his suffering. Justin Verlander’s run support is just a hair more than 4 runs per nine innings, ranking him near the bottom among starting pitchers in the A.L. (53rd of 65 starters with 60+ innings according to espn.com. I chose 60 innings to make sure it was among “regular” starters). Rogers gets 4.76 runs per nine while he’s on the mound.
- For the record, in 9 of 18 starts by Verlander, the Tigers scored two or fewer runs. Ouch! Makes it hard to win.
- What’s a more hair-raising experience? Driving the “pace car” near the crowds on those narrow winding roads in the Tour de France trying to stay ahead of the lead riders? Or being one of the riders?
- Thus far in his 25-plate-appearances major league career, Michael Hollimon’s slugging (.565) is more than twice his on-base percentage (.280). Interesting.
- The closest “regular” Tiger, depending on your definition of regular, to that total is Marcus Thames, with a .610 slugging and .333 OBP. Of eligible Tigers, the leaders for that are Miguel Cabrera at .115 difference and Magglio Ordonez at .114.
- The Tigers’ OBP is .340 this year. The 2-3-4 slots are .362, .333 and .373, respectively.
- Just for comparison, for the 2007 season, it was .345 with the 2-3-4 batters going .367, .365. and .421. That might explain a few things about why Mr. Rogers and Mr. Verlander don’t have as much run support!
- Returning to FJ’s point, knowing what we know NOW, I don’t think you make the Renteria trade. Still, I’m not sure. It’s not nearly as cut-and-dried as people seem to think it is, given the decision was not made in a vaccuum.
- At the time, the trade was a good idea. Remember, the Tigers knew Carlos Guillen was playing worse and worse at shortstop and wanted to protect him from injury for the length of his contract. They needed a quality SS. There was no dreams of getting Miguel Cabrera and Dontrelle Willis at the time, so it made sense to get a SS with some batting prowess and Jurrjens, while a nice young prospect, wasn’t a front-line starter either.
- Further food for thought: the National League is clearly the much weaker league. So Jurrjens likely wouldn’t be as successful in Detroit.
- And further: Who realistically is playing shortstop right now if that trade never occurs? And, while we can’t call this season a success, are the Tigers as successful as they were right now with that person as shortstop?
- So, I don’t know. I wish the Tigers have Jurrjens, certainly, but the issue is deeper than the first glance of Jurrjens > Renteria.
- Finally today, I think Detroit takes the next two games from the Mariners.
- Go A’s!! And please, Cleveland, would you win a game or two this weekend before breaking up the band?
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posted in 2008 season, bunt singles |
1st
July
2008
Some news and notes:
- The Tigers’ short-season-A team, the Oneonta Tigers, seem to be up for sale. The team has a contract with Detroit through 2010. Interestingly, with a population of 13,000, Oneonta is one of the smallest towns affiliated with a major league club. I think someone in Marquette needs to buy it. Although that might be a bit of a commute for the New York-Penn league.
- Miguel Cabrera may end up on the disabled list, Lynn Henning reports. We’ll learn more today.
- La Velle E. Neal III, who appears to have the most complicated name in the A.L. Central beat writers’ circle, wrote in the Star Tribune that Jason Kubel will sit tonight while Craig Monroe gets the start. Kubel can’t hit Nate Robertson.
- Neal also reports Glen Perkins apologized for throwing the bal near Guillen’s head.
- There was lot to second-guess, a StarTrib blog reports.
- The Indians are alone in LAST?!! That’s kinda weird.
- Marcus Thames has the highest OPS for a Tiger with 100 at-bats or more. (He was 148) and a .961 OPS. He is just ahead of Magglio Ordonez (.866) and Curtis Granderson (.849).
- Robertson has allowed hte most hits and most ER in the Tigers’ rotation. That fact remained so even when you only look at the month of June though his ERA of 3.77 was much improved.
- The Tigers reportedly are one of the teams most interested in Freddy Garcia. I’m not sure I’m as interested as some. I know he won a decent number of games for several years. But even before injuring his shoulder, his ERA+ for his previous three seasons, from 2006 to 2004, was 105, 116 and 122. That’s kind of going in the wrong direction.
- Jeremy Bonderman had a successful surgery to remove a rib. He’s now officially done for the season. But the surgery went well, fortunately.
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posted in 2008 season, bunt singles |
1st
July
2008
Tigers 5
Twins 4
Recap:
- After falling behind 4-1, the Tigers scored the game’s final four runs in the seventh and eighth innings for the win.
- Matt Joyce’s triple tied the game in the eighth, and Curtis Granderson’s single knocked him in for the winning run.
- Joel Zumaya got a save, pitching the game’s final 5 outs. It was a rollercoaster ninth that saw two runners get on base with back-to-back one-out hits, but he got the job done.
- Casey Fossum got the win.
- Armando Galarraga didn’t pitch fantastic, but he did pretty well. Two of the runs he gave up were aided by the fact the Tigers made all three errors in the first three innings of the game.
- Miguel Cabrera left with a sore oblique I mean hip flexor. Just seems like it’s oblique city. Not good. He’s day-to-day but probably won’t play again in the series I’m guessing.
- The game was a wee bit chippy. Twins pitcher Glen Perkins threw the ball near Guillen’s head. Galarraga threw behind Minnesota’s Joe Mauer. Then near him again. And the ump warned both teams at that point, prompting the Twins manager to get himself thrown out. Later Guillen slid hard into second. It was important to break up the double play, but Tigers analyst Rod Allen thought it was sending a message. So that’s something to watch maybe.
- add: I almost forgot, Pudge looked pretty sore. So that’s something to watch, too.
Analysis:
- HO geez, that was a scary one eh?
- The Tigers are getting back to the ol’ Cardiac Cats we got used to in years past. They come from behind late. They threaten to give it all back. You reach for the milk and Mylanta. And they win. Not a formula you want to rely on but it’s worked recently.
- I don’t think this series is as big as some might suggest. It’s still June/early July. But is it at least a little big? Heck yes. The Tigers did their part, they picked up the first game to take a bit of pressure off, they didn’t get swept, so the standings can’t change too negatively as they play in the HHHorrordome. Winning 2 of 3 would be awesome. So they’ve got two chances at that.
- Zumaya’s save attempt was frightening, to say the least, but I think a nice confidence builder. He took another step forward. He looked pretty good. Definitely that was one of the day’s best signs.
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posted in 2008 season, Minnesota Twins |