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Detroit Tigers Team Notes Over 3 Million Views!!! Thankyou!

After 5 extra-base hits in Monday's game, the Tigers have now had one in 30 straight, the 2nd-longest active streak in MLB. (Pirates, 33).
 
Jose Valverde's average FB velocity: 2010 - 95.2; 2011 - 93.8; 2012 - 93.3; 2013 - 92.6.
 
Tigers, Royals set makeup game for August.
DETROIT -- The Tigers and Royals have officially scheduled their makeup game from last month's rainout, as the clubs will play a day-night doubleheader on Friday, Aug. 16, the next time Kansas City is in town.

The afternoon game, scheduled for a 1:08 p.m. ET first pitch, is the makeup game. Tickets from the April 23 rainout are good for that game, with no exchange necessary. The nightcap, starting at 7:08, is the regularly-scheduled game, requiring a different ticket.

Both games will be televised locally on Fox Sports Detroit and MLB.TV.

The teams opted for a day-night doubleheader to create a five-game, four-day weekend series, rather than play on a common off-day the following Monday, Aug. 19. Both sides have so few off-days in August that it would have left them in a long stretch of games.

For the Tigers, Aug. 19 is the only off-day from Aug. 2-Sept. 4. For the Royals, it's their lone day off between July 30 and Aug. 25. Any makeup game that leaves a team playing more than 20 days in a row requires a vote of the players.
from the Tigers official site
 
Ortega impressing Tigers with work out of bullpen.
DETROIT -- When the Tigers called up Jose Ortega a few weeks ago as an injury replacement for Octavio Dotel, the right-hander was a gifted young arm with some streaks of wildness. Now, he's looking like a Major League arm, and a potential middle-inning option for Detroit.

With two scoreless innings to finish out Monday's 7-2 win over the Astros, Ortega raised his total to 6 1/3 scoreless innings on two hits with a walk and six strikeouts in five appearances. He's thrown 61 percent of his pitches for strikes, and he's getting a better mix of fastballs and sliders than he had when he first came up last season.

Ortega has added some polish to the stuff that left an impression on manager Jim Leyland in Spring Training.
"He's doing well. He's always had that electric arm," Leyland said. "He's got electric stuff, and I like him a lot. He's really a good kid. He's throwing strikes. He's throwing the ball over the plate."

Leyland would like to stretch out Ortega's innings to make him an additional long-relief option alongside Drew Smyly. If Ortega can pull it off, Leyland could take advantage of Smyly's versatility and use him in some shorter lefty specialist situations without having to worry about a long-relief option.

That said, Leyland said he wouldn't mind using Ortega in the later innings to protect a lead. He did that Sunday with a 3-2 lead over Cleveland, but he pulled Ortega with two runners on, one out and a left-handed hitter coming up.
"I feel comfortable with him pitching in the seventh inning if I have to," Leyland said.
from the Tigers official site
 
Garcia to get fair share of action with Jackson out.
DETROIT -- Avisail Garcia is going to get his share of starts during his stretch filling in for the injured Austin Jackson, manager Jim Leyland said Tuesday. He just hasn't started yet.

"I'm not going to play him every day, if that's what somebody's getting at," Leyland said, "but I'll probably play him a lot."

Leyland opted for Don Kelly in center field for a second consecutive night on Tuesday, citing the matchup with Astros starter Lucas Harrell. Garcia will start Wednesday's series finale against lefty Dallas Keuchel and play center field, with Matt Tuiasosopo in left.

The Tigers will face three right-handed starters and a lefty during their four-game series in Texas this weekend. Leyland said Garcia could play two of those four, certainly against lefty Derek Holland on Sunday night, but also against one of the righties.

Given the emphasis the Tigers have placed on Garcia's development, playing time is something Leyland is going to have to watch with him. They want him to get regular at-bats, which was one big factor against him breaking camp with the big league club.

"You'd probably prefer to get him 500 at-bats in Triple-A," Leyland said, "but he's here and I'll play him. He played and performed in the postseason last year. I feel comfortable putting him out there."
from the Tigers official site
 
Brookens starting to settle in as third-base coach.
DETROIT -- While Tigers manager Jim Leyland is getting used to having Gene Lamont as his bench coach after seven years of Lamont as the third-base coach, Leyland feels Tom Brookens is starting to settle in coaching at third.

"He's getting acclimated to third pretty good. That's a tough job," Leyland said.

It's a challenge, Leyland said, because he and Lamont would so often be thinking the same thing on a play. It's also more complicated than going strictly by the scouting reports on opposing outfielders in deciding whether to send a runner home.

"Obviously, we pretty much know how everybody throws. We have scouting reports," Leyland said. "We talk about it. Some guys throw real good but aren't accurate. Other guys don't throw quite as good but are real accurate.

"I think you have to be careful with that kind of stuff, because you don't want to predetermine in your mind, 'Well, if it's hit to this guy, I better not go.' You have to actually see the play, and see it develop. That's why it's such an important job, because sometimes [a ball] is hit to that [tough] guy, but because of the way the ball was hit, he might be backing up to take it, instead of being able to charge it."

Leyland said he also doesn't believe in making decisions at third base according to the score of the game.

"I think you have to let your instincts take over, rather than something in the book," Leyland said. "That's just my personal opinion."
from the Tigers official site
 
http://mlb.mlb.com/video/play.jsp?c_id=det&content_id=27113185&partnerId=as_mlb_20130515_7982174
Webvideo Dirks' RBI double.
Andy Dirks hits a ground-rule double into the gap in right-center field to give the Tigers a 3-2 lead against the Astros.

http://mlb.mlb.com/video/play.jsp?c_id=det&content_id=27116743&partnerId=as_mlb_20130515_7982574
Webvideo Miggy's solo homer.
Miguel Cabrera launches a pitch from Hector Ambriz deep into the left-field stands to extend the Tigers' lead to 6-2 in the seventh.
 
May 15 in Tigers and mlb history:

1899 - Willie Keeler, one of the smallest players and best bunters, drives the ball past startled LF Ed Delahanty of the Phillies for an inside-the-parkgrand slam and an 8 - 5 victory for Brooklyn.

1901 - The first shutout in American League history (during its time as a major league) is recorded as Watty Lee of the Washington Senatorsblanks the Boston Americans, 4 - 0.

1903 - At Detroit, the Tigers pick on Boston outfielder Patsy Dougherty and collect five triples and two homers in winning, 8 - 6. Dougherty misjudges a number of fly balls.

1911: Ring Lardner writes, "They are using a new ball this year. It's livelier and that means more hitting, and more hitting means longer games, and that's the devil. It appears to be impossible to finish a game in less than two hours."

1911: With the score tied in the 10th inning, Boston's Smokey Joe Wood intentionally walks Ty Cobb, issuing one of two free passes the star will receive all season. Two batters later, Jim Delahanty drives in Cobb for Detroit's 5 - 4 win. With two safeties today, Cobb starts a 40-game hitting streak.

1912 - Ty Cobb charges into the stands at Hilltop Park in New York and attacks a crippled heckler named Claude Lueker. Other fans and Tigers mix it up before order is restored. Ban Johnson suspends Cobb indefinitely for the incident.

1922 - In a 4 - 1 win at New York, Ty Cobb beats out a grounder to SS Everett Scott. Veteran writer Fred Lieb scores it ahit in the boxscore he files with the Associated Press. But official scorer John Kieran of the New York Tribune gives an errorto Scott. At the season's end, the American League official records, based on AP box scores, list Cobb at .401. New York writers complain unsuccessfully, claiming it should be .399, based on the official scorer's stats. Lieb will reverse himself at the end of the year, but Ban Johnson goes with the hit call.

1933 - The major leagues advance the cut-down date a month, limiting rosters to 23 players today instead of June 15th.

1941: Joe DiMaggio gets a single in four at bats against Eddie Smith of the Chicago White Sox to start his 56-game hitting streak. Joe D's hit goes unnoticed as the Yankees lose, 13 - 1.

1951: In a fine trade for Chicago, the White Sox send lefty Bob Cain to the Tigers for hurler Saul Rogovin.

1952 - After pitching four no-hitters in the minors, 33-year-old Virgil "Fire" Trucks of Detroit pitches his first in the major leagues, a 1 - 0 blanking of the Senators. Vic Wertz's dramatic two-out home run in the 9th off Bob Porterfield wins the game at Briggs Stadium. Trucks will throw a second no-hitter later this year.

1957: With today's deadline to cut rosters to 25 players, a number of veterans are handed their walking papers. Among them are: pitchers Ellis Kinder and Jim McDonald, OF Bob Kennedy (White Sox), 1B Preston Ward (Indians), and 1B Eddie Robinson (Tigers).

1969: Willie Horton leaves the Detroit bench during a 2 - 1 win against Chicago and goes AWOL for four days.

1976: Mark Fidrych wins his first major league start, a complete-game 2-hit, 2 - 1 victory over the Indians. The Bird holds the Indians hitless for six innings, talks to the ball, and tamps down the mound before toeing the rubber each inning.

2009: Ryan Raburn and Brandon Inge hit grand slams as the Tigers defeat Oakland, 14 - 1. It is the first time that Detroit has hit two grand slams in one game since Jim Northrup did it all by himself on June 24, 1968.

2012: The White Sox are ahead, 6 - 0, in the top of the 6th inning when the Tigers' bats get to work. Miguel Cabrera, Ryan Raburn and Austin Jackson all homer in an 8-run frame, as Detroit wins, 10 - 8. The Tigers get a scare in the bottom of the 9th, however, when closer Jose Valverde retires the first two Sox hitters, then begins to feel tightness in his back; he gives up a pair of hits and has to leave the game. Veteran Octavio Dotel steps in, and while he gives up a two-run double to Alexei Ramirez, he retires Dayan Viciedo to end the game and pick up his first save as a Tiger. He has now recorded a save for 9 of the record 13 teams he has pitched for.
Tigers players birthdays:

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/h/hincha.01.shtml
A.J. Hinch 2003.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/k/karnuja01.shtml
Jason Karnuth 2005.

Tigers players who passed away:

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Goose_Goslin
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/g/gosligo01.shtml
Leon 'Goose' Goslin 1934-1937.

from Baseball Reference
 
Detroit Tigers center fielder Austin Jackson had been struggling at the plate for a few weeks, probably because of the sore left hamstring that eventually landed him on the 15-day disabled list Monday afternoon. Of course, that was a few hours too late for most weekly league owners to make a move by the time their rosters locked, but we?re all at the mercy of the teams making decisions. Jackson scored a few runs Friday night, played the entire game Saturday, sat Sunday and figured to remain active because manager Jim Leyland called his day off precautionary, but now he?ll miss a few more Mondays getting healthy.
Jackson got off to a fine start to the season but had regressed to his occasional old ways of late, striking out at a high rate, eschewing the plate discipline that had helped him hit .300 last season, and he has not stolen a base since April 21. His normally elevated BABIP was a more normal .336, far below his career mark of .367. The Tigers deserve credit for making the safe choice to sit him down, which good teams can afford to do in mid-May. Fantasy owners should be embracing this if it helps Jackson play better the final four months, because he hadn?t been contributing much the past couple weeks anyway.
espn insider
 
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