Welcome to Detroit Sports Forum!

By joining our community, you'll be able to connect with fellow fans that live and breathe Detroit sports just like you!

Get Started
  • If you are no longer able to access your account since our recent switch from vBulletin to XenForo, you may need to reset your password via email. If you no longer have access to the email attached to your account, please fill out our contact form and we will assist you ASAP. Thanks for your continued support of DSF.

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

Matt Tuiasosopo has gone 28 games played without an extra base hit, hitting .182/.262/.182.

2E has gone from having a .275 ISO on July 27th to a .178 ISO today. That's drop of almost 100 points.

According to Brooks, in the 2nd half 2E is hitting .321 against the 4-seam FB and .068 against everything else. http://bit.ly/15naG1z

Scouting report on 2E, don't throw him a fastball.
 
Tigers Miguel Cabrera has 90 first-pitch hits, six more than second-best Braves Freddie Freeman (86), despite seventeen fewer swings.
 
http://www.mlive.com/tigers/index.ssf/2013/09/prince_fielder_set_to_play_in.html
Prince Fielder set to play in 500th consecutive game: 'Unless it's bleeding or broken, I'm going to play'.
from Mlive

http://www.detroitnews.com/article/...500th-consecutive-game-takes-pride-work-ethic
Tigers' Prince Fielder plays 500th consecutive game, takes pride in work ethic.
from the detnews

http://www.foxsportsdetroit.com/mlb...om-father?blockID=943263#.UkDa2tkM56U.twitter
Prince Fielder: Work ethic comes from father.
from DetroitFox
 
Last edited:
Miggy returns to Tigers' lineup.
The lineup card said Miguel Cabrera was ready to play again on Monday. There wasn't much elaboration from manager Jim Leyland.
"He's playing," Leyland said.
Realistically, Leyland could have just pointed to his quote from Sunday, when Cabrera was out of the lineup.
"If he's OK to play, I'm going to play him," Leyland said. "Not to say that I won't rest him."

In other words, with the Tigers needing some sort of combination of two wins/two Indians losses to clinch a division title, Cabrera was going to be in the lineup if he felt up to it.

Cabrera said after Sunday's game that he felt improved from Saturday, when he left with soreness in his groin after a ninth-inning walk. He estimated that he's at 80 percent to 90 percent strength.

But he looked as though he was moving at much less than that on his first-inning groundout to third. It was a routine ground ball he had no hope of beating even at full health, but he was noticeably slower than he was even last week.
from the Tigers official site
 
Fielder plays in 500th consecutive game.
The reaction from Prince Fielder when asked about playing in his 500th consecutive game said plenty about his approach.
He didn't realize he had reached a milestone.
"Oh, I didn't even know," Fielder said. "Yeah, that's good. That's pretty cool. It's another day. Kinda tired, but when the game starts, I'll be all right."
He's just played. He always plays.
"I'm stubborn," he said. "I've always said: Unless it's bleeding or broken, I'm playing, just because I'm hard-headed."

Fielder has started every regular-season and playoff game the Tigers have played since he signed with Detroit in January 2012. He hasn't missed a game his team has played since Sept. 13, 2010, when a flu bug left him unable to take the field for the Brewers for a series opener in Houston. Before that game he had played in 327 consecutive games.

But he's been there for every one since -- 483 at first base, 17 at designated hitter. Fourteen of those starts at DH have come with Detroit, where the closest manager Jim Leyland can come to getting him to accept a day off is to get him off the field for a game here and there, swapping places with Victor Martinez.

"When you've got stars and they go out there every day, that's a big plus," Leyland said. "And Prince is a very proud guy. ? He likes to play. He likes to be in the lineup. He knows that he gets paid to be in the lineup, and that's what he does. And I give him the utmost credit."

Fielder's streak became the longest when Matt Kemp missed a game in May 2012. Fielder was at 217 games then, and it wasn't even the longest stretch of his career.
"You want to be there all the time," Fielder said. "That's your job."

For Fielder, actually, it's the preparation that's the work, from Spring Training to batting practice to extra hitting to scouting reports. He's a creature of habit, but that doesn't necessarily make him a fan of it. He wouldn't be playing every day without it.

"Once the game starts, then it's fun," he said. "All the stuff before, that's what makes it a job, I guess. That's the only Groundhog Day part of it. Spring Training's probably the toughest part of the season.

"Once the game starts, everything's easy after that."

And the longer the season goes, the easier he's making it look. His health has remained strong, and he's batting .380 with a 1.039 OPS for September, a pace that would give him his best month of the season if he keeps it up this week.

But it's not just a physical grind he's conquering. It's a mental grind.

"It's a mental grind when you work in Detroit," Leyland said. "You've got to get up at 5:30 and go to the automotive plant and get on the assembly line, and you've got the bad weather and the traffic. That's a mental grind, too. We're no different than anybody else. People work hard in this country, and there's a lot of days when people would like to stay home."
from the Tigers official site
 
Back
Top