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http://www.mlive.com/tigers/index.ssf/2013/10/jim_leyland_struggles_at_plate.html
Jim Leyland: Struggles at plate for Andy Dirks one reason why Don Kelly is starting in left field.
from Mlive

Leyland goes with Kelly over slumping Dirks.
Don Kelly made just 11 starts in left field during the regular season. Between Andy Dirks as a left-handed bat and Matt Tuiasosopo from the right side, there weren't many other starts to go around.
With Sunday night's start in Game 2 of the American League Championship Series against the Red Sox, however, Kelly has started three of Detroit's seven games this postseason in left. That's two more than Dirks, who hasn't started since the AL Division Series opener against Bartolo Colon.
Tigers manager Jim Leyland made clear Sunday's what's behind the shift.
"Donnie Kelly probably wouldn't be playing in left field tonight if Andy Dirks was swinging good," Leyland said Sunday.
Those struggles go back before this postseason. Dirks ended the regular season in a 2-for-18 slump after hitting a three-run homer Sept. 21, then went 0-for-3 in the ALDS opener against Colon, a pitcher he had previously hit well in his career.
Dirks entered Game 4 of the ALDS as a defensive replacement, walking and scoring twice.
The current stretch doesn't necessarily banish Dirks to the bench for the rest of the postseason. Leyland hinted he could try to get him a start at some point and give him a chance to jump-start his offense.
"There's no secrets," Leyland said. "You just decide if you want to give Dirks his shot at some point."
from the Tigers official site
 
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Peralta gets nod at short over Iglesias.
Tigers manager Jim Leyland does not believe in personal catchers for pitchers, preferring that his pitchers grow comfortable working with everybody behind the plate. To some degree, though, he has two shortstops he can tailor to his starting pitcher, if he wants.

For the second time in three games, the Tigers started a pitcher who finished with one of the five-highest fly-ball ratios in the American League in ALCS Game 2 on Sunday against the Red Sox. For the second such game, Detroit started Jhonny Peralta at shortstop, his old position, and sat Jose Iglesias, his replacement.

Game 2 starter Max Scherzer doesn't have as strong of a fly-ball tendency as Justin Verlander, who went three games without a ground-ball out at first base. However, Scherzer had the higher fly-ball ratio in the regular season, second only to Oakland's A.J. Griffin among AL starters.

That said, Leyland fiercely defends Peralta's ability to play at short. His decision, he said, has to do with the hitters he can use to generate offense.

"Jhonny Peralta is no donkey," Lelyand said. "He's made the All-Star team twice for me as a shortstop in the last few years. He's a very good shortstop. We're trying to get another bat in there, and we felt it would be the best way to do it.

"This guy is a bona fide Major League shortstop. This is not a utility guy you're playing there. This is a top-notch shortstop. He doesn't have the range Iglesias has, but this is a very, very good shortstop."

Peralta's strength is in his reliability to convert the ground balls he reaches into outs. Iglesias' biggest strength is his range. Offensively, the comparison isn't between Peralta and Iglesias, but Iglesias and the left fielder Leyland can play with Peralta at shortstop. Starting Peralta at short on Sunday, Leyland said, allowed him to get another left-handed bat (left fielder Don Kelly ) into the lineup against Boston starter Clay Buchholz.
from the Tigers official site
 
Alburquerque utilizing fastball as counter to slider.
Considering how badly Red Sox hitters looked swinging against Anibal Sanchez in Game 1 of the American League Championship Series on Saturday night, it made sense that Al Alburquerque and his swing-and-miss slider followed Sanchez with a perfect seventh inning. For a change, however, he didn't fire a barrage of sliders.

In fact, Alburquerque threw half sliders and half fastballs. The latter is a pitch that had all but disappeared from his arsenal the last few weeks as he continued to get good results from his sliders, but a pitch Tigers coaches had been encouraging him to throw more often for a while.

Alburquerque wasn't pitching to his strength so much as he was pitching against the scouting report.
"Everybody in the league knows he is a slider guy," manager Jim Leyland said. "It's probably a bit of a surprise last night that he used that [fastball] a little bit more than a slider."

The bigger surprise was that Alburquerque threw it for strikes, five of them out of the six fastballs he threw. The Red Sox, playing to the scouting report, didn't swing at any.

That's a stark contrast to the regular season, when he threw just 51 percent of his fastballs in the strike zone, according to STATS.
from the Tigers official site
 
http://www.mlive.com/tigers/index.ssf/2013/10/detroit_tigers_play_game_2_of_1.html
Bullpen melts down as Detroit Tigers blow late four-run lead, suffer 6-5 loss in Game 2 of ALCS.
from Mlive

http://www.freep.com/article/201310...lpen-blows-four-run-lead-8th-loses-Game-2-9th
Boston 6, Detroit 5: Tigers' bullpen blows four-run lead in 8th, loses Game 2 on walk-off in 9th.
from the freep

http://www.detroitnews.com/article/...s-Game-2-loss?odyssey=tab|topnews|text|Sports
Eighth-inning collapse dooms Tigers in Game 2 loss.
from the detnews

http://detroit.tigers.mlb.com/mlb/g...013_10_13_detmlb_bosmlb_1&mode=recap&c_id=det
Bullpen writes different ending after Scherzer fans 13.
http://detroit.tigers.mlb.com/mlb/g...d=det#gid=2013_10_13_detmlb_bosmlb_1&mode=box
Boxscore.
from the Tigers official site
 
October 14 in Tigers history:

1908: Before the smallest crowd in World Series history (6,210), the host Detroit Tigers are tamed on three hits by Orval Overall, who strikes out 10 in a 2 - 0 triumph. The Chicago Cubs win the World Series in five games. Upset over seating arrangements at the World Series, sports reporters form a professional group that will become the Baseball Writers Association of America.

1909 - George Mullin of the Detroit Tigers outlasts three Pittsburgh Pirates pitchers for a 5 - 4 victory sends the World Series to a seventh game in Detroit. This is the first World Series to go the limit.

1984 - Kirk Gibson hits two home runs to lead the Detroit Tigers to an 8 - 4 victory and the World Series in five games over the San Diego Padres.

Tigers players birthdays:

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/m/meanepa01.shtml
Vincent Maney 1912.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/s/sabeler01.shtml
Erik Sabel 2002.

Tigers players who passed away:

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Tom_Tresh
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/t/treshto01.shtml
Tom Tresh 1969.

from Baseball Reference
 
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