Other then the fact that the Tigers had to use six pitchers in the Tigers 2-1, eleven inning win over the White Sox,the game was encouraging on a couple of different levels. Kenny Rogers made his second return and pitched five solid frames. He gave up just one run on two hits and he had a season high six strikeouts in five innings. The other encouraging thing was how well the pen pitched. Five relievers held the White Sox scoreless in the final innings with the highlight being Joel Zumaya’s two shutout innings. He was consistently hitting the high 90s on the gun and he struck out three and gave up just one hit.
Mike Hessman put the Tigers on the board in the fifth inning with a solo shot, his second of the year. Ironically, his other homerun also came off of starter Gavin Floyd earlier in the year. Then while the Tigers threatened, they couldn’t push a run across the plate until the eleventh. Curtis Granderson failed to bunt his way for the first out before and then Placido Polanco lined out. Brandon Inge kept the inning alive with a double and Carlos Guillen was intentionally walked. Then Timo Perez laced a single into right field to drive home Inge for the game winner.
The Tigers had six stolen bases in this game including two by Curtis Granderson and two by Placido Polanco. The two by Granderon gives him 19 on the year and he’s only been caught once. So he’s just one homerun and one stolen base away from the 20 mark.
The Yankees beat the Mariners so while the Tigers still sit three and a half back of New York, they’re just a half game back and could tie up the Mariners with a win this afternoon. The Yankees are also off today.
The Tigers play this afternoon in what should be there final Thursday game of the season. Chad Durbin gets the start and the Tigers hitters will face Mark Buehrle. It’s also supposed to be the return of Gary Sheffield.
Jon Garland held the Tigers’ hitters in check as a solid start by Jeremy Bonderman was wasted. And once again, the Tigers failed to get it done against the White Sox. Sigh. With the Indians win, the Tigers sit a distant seven games out with each team having 24 games left. So even if the Indians go 10-14 (which is unlikely), the Tigers would have to go 17-7 (which, based on how they’re playing, it also unlikely). At this point, I’m not even looking at what the Indians are doing, it’ll all be Yankees and Mariners.
The Tigers outhit the White Sox last night but they pushed just one baserunner across in a 3-1 loss. Carlos Guillen drove in the lone run with an RBI single in the sixth inning and he also had a team high two hits. Omar Infante, in his first game since getting called back up from Toledo, went one for three with a run. Magglio Ordonez went one for four and his lead in the batting race over Ichiro is now down to a single game.
Jeremy Bonderman fell to 11-8 in a pretty ineffecient start. He lasted just 5 1/3 innings yet threw 100 pitches and he gave up three runs on seven hits and two waks with three strikeouts. The two big mistakes were homeruns to Josh Fields and Alex Cintron which accounted for all three White Sox runs. Zach Miner did a nice job in relief. He finished up where Bonderman left off and he gave up just one hit in 3 2/3 innings of shutout relief.
The Yankees beat the Mariners last night so the Tigers deficit in the Wild Card is now 3 1/2 games. Kenny Rogers makes his second return of the season and he’ll face Gavin Floyd. This could be one of those important games not just on the scoreboard, but on the mound to see whether the Tigers will have one of their arms down their stretch.
The Tigers minor league affiliates have had some quality seasons this year and with a lot of the playoffs starting tomorrow, the Tigers have three affiliates in the post season. The Toledo Mud Hens and West Michigan White Caps will defend their titles while the Erie Seawolves also made the playoffs. And the Oneonta Tigers season isn’t over with yet, but they have a solid chance of winning their division.
For some outstanding coverage of the playoffs, be sure to check out Tigers Minors and Take I-75 North.
Wow. It’s funny because I turned the game off in the seventh because of family duties (i.e. playing with boy). I logged back in to check the box score to see how many runs the Tigers ended up winning by only to see the A’s came back in dramatic fashion. I’m glad I didn’t keep the game on because I’m sure, to put it lightly, I would have been annoyed. To blow a seven run lead is tough. To blow it when you could have picked up a game in both the division and the Wild Card makes it even tougher.
But blow a seven run lead they did. Nate Robertson was very good through six innings and his only blemish was the fifth when he gave up two runs. Then Fernando Rodney got tagged (he’ll probably be the talk on the sports radio show because everyone had been talking about how good he’d been), which set things up for Todd Jones to blow it in the ninth with two runs. He gave up only his third homerun of the season and it was his first blown save since July 21. Then Yorman Bazardo yielded the “losing” run in the tenth. Sigh.
Marcus Thames had three hits and three RBIs to lead the Tigers at the plate. Cameron Maybin hit leadoff and he went 0 for 4. Ramon Santiago was the other hitting star with two doubles, a triple and two RBIs.
So the Tigers are right back where they are to start the day because the Indians, Yankees and Mariners all lost. The Tigers get a day off to think about things before they head home to play three against the White Sox. Jeremy Bonderman will try to help right the ship on Tuesday and the hitters will see Gavin Floyd. I normally wouldn’t be worried about facing Floyd with his 6.92 ERA but his best start of the season was against the Tigers when he pitched six shutout innings on (his only win) on August 5.
The Tigers lost on Friday but then won this afternoon. The problem is at this point, .500 isn’t going to cut it especially against a team that’s pretty much out of it. With the Indians winning eight straight, the Tigers find themselves down by 5 1/2 games. Things are a little better for the Wild Card, but they still trail the Yankees by three games and the Mariner by one. Even if the Yankees go .500 the rest of the way, the Tigers would have to 16-10 the rest of the way just to force a tie. And this is a team that has gone 21-29 since the All Star Break. Anyway, sorry to sound so grim but things aren’t looking good. The Tigers need to put together an extended winning streak and they need to do it now.
Justin Verlander threw a career high 128 pitches and it’ll be interesting to see how he does the next couple of starts. He did strikeout ten in a solid start and he improved to 15-5. I was asked in an interview whether Verlander would win 15 this season and I said no thinking he’d run out of gas and finish with 13 or 14. As is sometimes the case, it can be good to be wrong.
Curtis Granderson belted his 19th step closer, and that puts him one long ball short of a historic season. He finished the day four for five with two RBIs and three runs while Timo Perez went three for four with two runs.
It’ll be Nate Robertson going up against Dallas Braden. Then it’s back home for three against the White Sox. In looking at the Tigers schedule, it’s odd that they have so many days off in September.   In fact this Thursday’s game against the White Sox is their last Thursday game of the year barring a postponement.
It took well over a month, but Jeremy Bonderman finally won his eleventh game of the season as the Tigers finally put together and pulled out a win in their series finale with the Royals. Bonderman improved to 11-7 and he gave up just one run on six hits with three strikeouts in seven innings. Just as important, he didn’t walk a single batter after walking nine in 11 2/3 innings in his last two starts. Fernando Rodney and Joel Zumaya each threw a scoreless frame to close out the 6-1 win.
It’ll be interesting to see how the talk radio scene reacts. After Sunday’s beatdown over the Yankees, people were calling it the most important win of the season. Then just one day later after the loss in the opener to the Royals, they were counting the Tigers out. There’s still quite a few games so to place one game over another is a little silly even as we go into September.
Curtis Granderson hit homerun number 18 and he both drove in and scored twice. The two runs put him over the 100 run for the first time in his career. Magglio Ordonez also went yard with his 26th and he finished the game three for four. With just a month to play, Ordonez leads Ichiro by nine points in the race for the batting title.
The Indians won their sixth straight game so the Tigers still sit 4 1/2 games back. The Yankees also won but the Mariners lost so the Tigers made a baby step forward in the Wild Card race.
Andrew Miller was sent down to the minors, sort of. He was optioned to Lakeland, who’s season ends on Monday so Miller won’t even report. Then when rosters expand tomorrow, he’ll be put back on the squad but he’ll be used as a reliever for the forseeable future.Â
The Tigers kick off a three game series in Oakland beginning tonight. Virgil Vasquez will get the start and he’ll face Joe Blanton.
Well, it was another bizarre game, Andrew Miller couldn’t do much right as the left hander gave up five runs before getting a single out in the first inning as he fell to 5-5 on the season. Oddly, Buddy Bell probably had just as much to do with the Tigers escaping with just five runs because of an odd call. With runners on first and second and nobody out, he called for Joey Gathright to bunt with two strikes. He missed and that led to a strike em’ out, throw em’ out to give Miller his only two outs. Zach Miner then came in to get the final out.
From that point on, neither team scored the rest of the way and the Tigers ended up with a 5-0 final. Zach Miner threw four shutout frames and then Tim Byrday, Fernando Rodney and Bobby Seay pitched the final 3 1/3 while giving up just one hit. So the pen did their job, the Tigers’ hitters just couldn’t get on track to mount a come back for the second straight night.
Placido Polanco, Sean Casey and Timo Perez all had two hits a piece. Perez had the only extra base hits with each of his hit’s being doubles.
Even worse, the Indians won, so now the Tigers sit a distant 4 1/2 games back in the division race (five back in the loss column). And with the Mariners five straight losses, the Wild Card looks now to be the better option when everyone was saying it was out of reach just a week ago. The Tigers sit three games back for the Wild Card with Seattle and the Yankees tied atop the heap.
This afternoon, it’ll be Jeremy Bonderman going up against Leo Nunez. Bonderman hasn’t won since July 13, and this would be a great time for him to end that six game losing streak.
The Tigers are sending three pitchers and three hitters to the Arizona Fall League that begins in early October. Eddie Bonine, Jeff Gerbe, Jair Jurrjens and Dallas Trahern are the pitchers while Michael Hollimon, Jeff Larish and Cameron Maybin. So you have a couple of guys who spent some time on the big league club as well as a variety of players who should show up on the Tigers top ten prospects list going into the 2008 season.
The Tigers winning streak came to a quick end at two games after a loss to the Royals in their series opener. Robertson threw three decent innings before the wheels fell off the wagon and he he gave up three in the fourth and three in the fifth. Give some credit to Jason Grilli though. He came in to relieve Robertson in the fifth and didn’t allow a single base runner in 3 2/3 innings.
The Tigers outhit the Royals 16-6 but they still got doubled up in the run column. Magglio Ordonez had his third four hit game of the season although he didn’t drive in a run or score. Placido Polanco had three hits and while Ramon Santiago went three for four with a run.
Yesterday, everyone was on top of the world after the blowout win. Now, with an Indians win, the Tigers sit four back in the loss column in the AL Central and for the Wild Card. Andrew Miller gets the start tonight and the Tigers’ hitters will face Zach Greinke.Â
You know it’s a beatdown when Sean Casey gets a triple. The Tigers completely dismantled Mike Mussina and the Yankees bullpen last night as they won their second straight game to win the four game series three to four. Every Tiger regular had a hit and six had multi-hit games. The only Tiger starter who didn’t score was Marcus Thames and the only one who didn’t drive in a run was Sean Casey. Brandon Inge led the way with three hits and four RBIs while Ryan Raburn drove in three and scored three. The lone homerun came off the bat of Placido Polanco in the fourth inning.
The Tigers scored in the first five innings, took a break in the sixth and then put up six in the seventh to finish up the route. Lost in all of the offense was a nice start by Justin Verlander. He threw seven shutout innings to push his record to 14-5 and Zach Miner closed the game out with two shutout innings.
The Indians aren’t making it easy though as they’ve won their last three so the Tiger deficit in the Central is still 2 1/2 games. The Tigers get right back at it tonight with the first of three against Kansas City so now isn’t a time to let up. It’ll be Nate Robertson going up against Brian Bannister. Hopefully Nate can come close to matching his performance in his last start and the Tigers can give him a run or two.
The Tigers have a chance to do something tonight for the first time since July, and that’s win a series. They got to this point by putting together a nice performance yesterday that saw three homeruns, an injury to their starting pitcher, and some pretty good bullpen work.
Curtis Granderson led off the game with his inside the park homer and then Carlos Guillen belted a two run shot later in the inning. Marcus Thames completed the scoring for the Tigers when he went yard in the third inning.
In the meantime, Jair Jurrjens left the game in the second because a shoulder injury. The good news is, no structural damage was found on the MRI. The bad news is, he hit the 15 day disabled list so the Tigers have suffered yet another injury to their starting rotation. Chad Durbin came in and he gave up a three run homer to Robinson Cano to make it close, but Bobby Seay, Joel Zumaya and Todd Jones held the Yankees scoreless the rest of the way for the win.
The Indians won so the Tigers still sit 2 1/2 games back of the division lead. The Mariners have lost two straight games so the Tigers have been able to make up some ground on them and they sit four games back for the Wild Card, with the Yankees between the Tigers and the Mariners. The Twins have won five straight though, and they’re now three games back of Detroit and they look like they could make some noise down the stretch.
The final game of the four game series is tonight. Mike Mussina takes the mound for the Yankees and it’ll be Justin Verlander throwing for Detroit. The Tigers roughed up Mussina a week ago Friday so hopefully they can do it again tonight.Â
…..by scoring on an inside the park homer. Man, Granderson has pretty much done it all this season. It’s the first inside the park homer since September of 2005 when Granderson himself did it.
Like their last couple of series, the Tigers took the first game last night as they kicked things off with the Yankees. This one must have been tough on the fans. There was a four hour rain delay before things finally kicked and then when they did, the game dragged on for close to four and a half hours. So if you got there right around 7 pm to see the game, it didn’t even start until around 11 pm and then didn’t end until around 3:30 am. I’d like to hear from anyone who toughed that game out.
Anyway, the bullpen, for as much they’ve been beat up, put together one of their best performances of the season. Andrew Miller was roughed up for six runs and he was gone before the end of the fifth inning. Tim Byrdak, Jason Grilli, Bobby Seay, Fernando Rodney and Chad Durbin then combined to throw 6 2/3 innings of shutout ball where they held the Yankees to just three hits and two walks. That allowed the Tigers to hang in the game despite not scoring for six straight innings to set up the big homer in the bottom of the eleventh.
So while the heroics went to Carlos Guillen for his three run walk off homer, the pen got it done and put the team in a position to win. While this is probably more of a blip then an emerging trend, it was nice to see the Tigers put it all together and pulled out a win under unusual circumstances.
Curtis Granderson had a huge day that included two more triples. He went four for six with the two triples, three RBIs and two runs and the two triples put him at 21 on the season.  That’s the most by a player in any league since Willie Wilson in 1985 and it’s the most by a Tiger since Ty Cobb’s 24 in 1917. It’s funny because 21 would be a team high for a lot of teams but with the Tigers, it puts him tied for seventh. He needs five more to tie the American League single season record of 26 set by Shoeless Joe Jackson in 1912 and tied by Sam Crawford in 1914.
Magglio Ordonez also had a big game. He went four for six with two RBIs, two runs and his 25th homer of the season. Cameron Maybin didn’t pick up a hit, but he walked, stole two bases and scored two runs.Â
Hopefully after some quality sleep, the Tigers can get right back to it tonight. It’ll be Chien-Ming Wang throwing for the Yankees while the Tigers throw the struggling Jeremy Bonderman. This would be a heck of a time for Bonderman to pick up his first win since July 13. Bonderman has put together some decent starts his last two times out but both times, he failed to pick up a win.
On July 19, the Tigers reached their peak of 21 games above .500 for the first time. They’d split their next four games and on July 23, they sat as 59-38 with a two game lead over the Indians.
Since that point, the entire division has been in a funk. There’s a three way tie for first with the White Sox, Twins and Royals going 13-15 since July 23, and the Indians are 12-15. The Tigers are at the bottom of that stack with a pretty poor 9-21 record. While the Tigers record is startling, the fact that none of the teams in the division are above .500 over the last month or so goes to show you why the Tigers have hung in there.
The last time the Tigers won a series, we were still talking about the All Star Break. This time it was Joel Zumaya who faltered on the mound. I was listening to the game on the radio, but from what Jim Price and Dan Dickerson were saying, Zumaya was mostly throwing around 94-95, which is a far cry from the dominating stuff we’re used to. The end result was three runs in the tenth (the only three runs for Cleveland) that cost the Tigers the game and the series.
It’s a shame because Nate Robertson had one of his best starts of the season. 8 2/3 shutout innings in which he gave up just four hits and he struck out three. He did give up a two out double in the ninth and Joel Zumaya came in to get out of the jam but you can’t argue that Robertson was the one who kept the Tigers in this one.
The Tigers had a tough time at the plate and their lone run didn’t come until the bottom of the tenth inning. Marcus Thames drove in that lone run and he was one of two Tigers with two hits. He joined Magglio Ordonez, who scored the only run.
With the loss, the Tigers now sit 2 1/2 games back and the Wild Card leading Mariners are five games up. The Tigers start a four game series with the Yankees at home beginning tonight. It’ll be the rookie Andrew Miller making his return from the disabled list and he’ll face Roger Clemens.
I mentioned this briefly yesterday but the Tigers traded Craig Monroe to the Cubs for a player to be named later. Monroe’s season was pretty disappointing and unlike years past, he never got out of his slump. Of course he was designated for assignment last week when the Tigers brough up Cameron Maybin so they had to either trade him or lose him. His first full season was that horrible 2003 season where he finished second on the team in homers with 23 and he built a reputation as a clutch hitter with some high profile homeruns but when it came to picking the team’s most overrated player in the Hardball Times Preseason Annual, I had to go with Monroe because of his .303 OBP.   So while you always hate to see a guy go who spent five years with the team, he was definitely the odd man out.
The Tigers traded Craig Monroe to the Chicago Cubs for a player to be named later. No surprise that the Tigers didn’t get much for him after designating him for assignment. More on this when I recap the game.
A lot was made last year about how the White Sox starting pitchers wore down in the second half of 2005 because of their extended work load when they won the World Series in 2004. Three Tigers starters (Justin Verlander, Nate Robertson and Jeremy Bonderman) all set career high innings pitched totals last and that was just in the regular season. Tack on three more starts in the post season and you wonder if the rotations struggles are because the guys are beginning to wear out now. Anyway, Justin Verlander has been our best pitcher of late, but he’s hardly been lights out. It was his fifth straight start in which he gave up more hits then innings pitched (the radio likes to keep using this stat) and outside of an August 11 win in Oakland, you have to go all the way back to June 23 to find a start in which Verlander gave up just two runs or less.
Since that June 23rd start, Verlander’s ERA has gone up by over a run and it’s now close to touching 4.00. This was after a beatdown last night, although to his credit, the bullpen once again didn’t do him any favors. He left with two runners on and Zach Miner gave up a three run shot to allow those two guys to score. Still that just turned in a bad box score line into a worse one and Verlander now sits at 13-5.
The Tigers offense didn’t have much of a problem though. Carlos Guillen belted a three run homer and Magglio Ordonez went two for four with a homerun (his 24th), two RBIs and two runs. Ordonez still leads in the American League batting race with a .352 batting average with Ichiro right behind him at .349. Cameron Maybin also pitched in with two doubles and a run while Marcus Thames went yard with a two run shot for his fourteenth long ball of the season.
With the loss, the Tigers are back to a game and a half out. The rubber game is supposed to be this afternoon but it’s raining as I write this and it’s supposed to be worse in the afternoon so we’ll see if they get the game in. Nate Robertson will be on the mound and he’ll go up against Jake Westbrook.
Earlier yesterday, I was listening to the Big Show and they had ESPN’s Steve Phillips on.  Phillips talked about how he wouldn’t have thrown Jair Jurrjens because his stuff was only okay and with it being the second time around, the surprise factor wouldn’t be there. He said he would have skipped Jurrjens and with the day off on Monday, went with the rest of the rotation on regular rest. It made a lot of sense and I for a while, I bought it into it. That is, until the game actually started and Jurrjens proceeded to throw five plus innings of no-hit ball. He finally gave up a solo homerun to Jhonny Peralta with one out in the sixth, but his box score line was about as good as you could ask. He gave up the one run on one hit with four walks and a strikeout in 6 2/3 innings. Oh yeah, and he won his first major league game.
Joel Zumaya made his return and while he pitched to just one batter, he touched 98 on the gun and he got Casey Blake to ground out weakly to second base with tying run on second. Fernando Rodney put all three batters he faced down in order as did Todd Jones to close the game out to hold the Indians to just that single hit.
The Tigers scored both of their runs on their first two hits of the game. Magglio Ordonez led off the with an opposite field homer and then Carlos Guillen followed that right up with a solo shot of his own. Curtis Granderson had the only other hit with his 31st double of the season.
So the Tigers now sit just a half game back of first place with two left to play in the series. Tonight, it’ll be Justin Verlander on the mound and he’ll go up against Paul Byrd.
Still out of town and the last leg of our trip took us to rainy Pittsburgh to see the Pirates play the Phillies at beautiful PNC Park. I found out too late that the hotel I stayed at was also the hotel where the Phillies stayed for the weekend but then again, I don’t get to see the Phillies play too often so I probably wouldn’t have been able to nail any of them down outside of maybe Ryan Howard. And in a crazy game, the Pirates beat the Phillies with a big late inning rally and the game had not one but two rain delays. I got lucky because my seats were actually underneath the upper deck and pretty well protected from the breeze and the poor weather.
I really liked PNC Park. Both the stadium and the skyline were very impressive and with it being on the river, it made it even more picturesque. And while I don’t want to bash on Comerica Park because it does have its positives, it strikes out when compared to PNC. There was a solid crowd but it was just as much Phillies fans as it was Pirates fans.
Cameron Maybin belted his first of hopefully many homeruns yesterday and he did it off of the Rocket, Roger Clemens. This came up on SABR-L (just one of the many reasons to join SABR) but it appears to be the only time a hitter has taken a pitcher yard when the pitcher has a Cy Young (Clemens won his first in 1986) that’s older then the hitter (Maybin was born in 1987).
After winning the opener Thursday, the Tigers laid an egg the rest of the weekend and dropped their final three games to the Yankees. Today’s game was particularly disconcerting with Jeremy Bonderman taking another loss but once again it was with an assist from some pretty poor bullpen pitching. The Tigers had the lead in this one as late as the fifth inning after coming back but the Yankees scored runs in their final four frames, including three in the eighth, to blow out the Tigers 9-3. Gary Sheffield stole his 20th base and if he starts stealing like a mad man, he has the chance to become, by far, the oldest player ever to go 30/30 (assuming he gets the 30 homers as well).Â
Now the Tigers find themselves in a bit of trouble. The Indians blew a tenth inning lead today so the Tigers are only two losses behind them but they now sit 3 1/2 games (five losses) back of the Mariners for the Wild Card with the Yankees right behind them. So unless the Tigers can take care of the Yankees at Comerica Park this coming weekend, it’s looking more and more like the only chance to get into the playoffs is going to be to outplay the Indians for the AL Central division crown. And there’s no better way to do that then with a series win against the Indians with things kicking off on Tuesday. It’s a rematch of Wednesday’s pitching matchup with Jair Jurrjens taking on Fausto Carmona on Tuesday.
I go out of town and all hell breaks loose (so I’ll be keeping this short). The Tigers took care of Mike Mussina and the Yankees last night, and with a sick Justin Verlander on the mound. Ideally he throws into the seveth but considering that he has the flu, you have to take what you can get.  Hopefully Nate Robertson can give us some quality innings so that pen isn’t a factor.
I have mixed feelings about the Cameron Maybin call up. On the one hand, it’s exciting to see yet another home grown prospect make it up to the bigs. On the other hand, the fact that we need him kind of tells me the Tigers have a pretty big hole out in right field. Still, Dave Dombrowski is no dumby so he must have seen something about the way Maybin was playing at Erie to warrant the call up. The Tigers designated Craig Monroe for assignment so they’ll have to try trade him unless he accepts going to down to the minors, which is doubtful.
Of course the game isn’t on where I’m at so I’ll have to listen in. Should be interesting if Maybin starts of mashing the ball.
