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

from JasonBeck'sTimeline;
"Osuna provoked Magallanes players after hitting a HR days ago. Tonight, the first pitch was inside and wild. The second one hit Osuna. They exchanged words.
The first pitch to the next hitter was ball too. After the first strike, Rond?n threw to first like every pitchers does. Osuna told him " throw to home". Rond?n told him to mind his own business and Osuna asked hi to come for him. When Bruce approached him , Osuna tried to kick him. Due to TV censorship laws , the camera went to a far view while the brawl was developing. The next close image was Rond?n in the dugout while he was taken care with an injury in the face. Supposedly , above the eye.
With 10 games remaining and a 5 games suspension coming, probably Rond?n wont pitch again this season
Rond?n has 5 K and 4 BB, he is pitching after long break and his control in lost. The Osuna?s reaction was unjustified".
 
https://www.detroitathletic.com/blo...ons-another-world-series-title-seemed-likely/
When the Tigers got Al Simmons in 1936, another World Series Title seemed likely.
Detroit Athletic

Every baseball offseason, teams try to make a big splash with free agent signings or player trades. The ultimate goal is a world championship, and general managers get paid a lot of money to put the best club on the field.

Throughout baseball history, there are countless examples of wintertime deals, or player signings, that have helped put teams over the top. But what of the trades that didn?t work out so well? Or the free agents that turned out to be busts? Or the acquisitions that in the end were a waste of money? The human factor is the big unknown in any deal.

It can be difficult to predict how a player will respond to a new team, in a new city, with new expectations.

One transaction that didn?t work out so well for the Tigers was one that was hailed as a great move when it was made. The general opinion was that Detroit had just bought itself another World Series title.

It was December, 1935. The Tigers were barely two months removed from their first-ever world championship. But they knew they could use an upgrade in the outfield. At the December meetings in Chicago, owner Walter O. Briggs and his manager, Mickey Cochrane, opened up their wallets. They paid a then-princely price of $75,000 to the Chicago White Sox for a player who one day would have a plaque in Cooperstown.

His name was Aloys Szymanski, also known by his Americanized name, Aloysius Harry Simmons. But everyone just called him Al. Or ?Bucketfoot? Al.

For the Tigers, it looked like a wonderful acquisition. It?s true that Simmons was 33 years old, and coming off a sub-par year with the Sox in which he hit only .267 with 16 home runs and 79 RBIs. But he was one of the biggest superstars of his era, having gone to three World Series with the Philadelphia Athletics (winning two of them). Between 1924 and 1932, he?d averaged 23 home runs and 129 RBIs with Philly, while batting .358.

In September of ?32, the Sox purchased him for $100,000, along with two other players. Simmons? first two seasons in the Windy City were very productive, but while his batting average remained high, his power numbers dipped.
Cochrane had a simple explanation as to why Simmons had struggled in 1935: ?One trouble he had in Chicago was mental. Somehow, he got the notion in his head that he could not hit in the White Sox park. He won?t have any worry along that line here. He always liked to play at Navin Field.? Cochrane insisted Simmons was the best outfielder available, and that everyone he spoke to said the Tigers had greatly improved themselves.

When Simmons got word of the deal, he predicted he would hit .350 for Detroit. ?I?ll show those fellows I?m not through.?

Said Charlie Gehringer, the Tigers? future Hall of Fame second baseman: ?With Al Simmons in our lineup, I don?t see how we could miss repeating.? Schoolboy Rowe, Detroit?s young star pitcher, agreed: ?You can watch out for Al this summer. He?s going to have one of his best seasons.? Surrounded by Detroit?s other sluggers like Hank Greenberg and Goose Goslin, Simmons seemed poised to make a great comeback. And, most importantly, he was excited about playing for the Tigers.

But he got off to a slow start, and by the end of May he was hitting only .269 with four home runs. Making matters worse, the Tigers were sputtering along in fourth place, barely over .500. Simmons felt pressure to live up to the high expectations of others. He began hearing boos at Navin Field.

He eventually caught fire, hitting .394 in June, and .403 in August, turning the jeers to cheers. But it was a lost season for the Tigers, primarily because of injuries. Greenberg reinjured his wrist (he had originally hurt it sliding into home during the ?35 World Series) and played only twelve games all year. As for Cochrane, he suffered a nervous breakdown in early June and only played five games after that. The Tigers offense simply couldn?t make up such devastating losses. Detroit wound up in second place in 1936, a distant 19? games behind the Yankees and their dynamite rookie Joe DiMaggio.

Simmons showed he was still a force to be reckoned with, batting .327 with 13 home runs, 38 doubles, 96 runs scored, and 112 RBIs. But while never a gazelle in the outfield, he had slowed down considerably, and the Tigers were concerned that he had put on a lot of weight during the season. Simmons, always a testy sort, didn?t fit in well in the clubhouse, and could be a difficult player to manage. Word soon got out that the Tigers would listen to offers for him.
None came, at least to the liking of Briggs, and when spring training rolled around, Simmons was still in a Detroit uniform. He had lost a few pounds, but looked even slower in the outfield than he had in 1936. In Goose Goslin and Simmons, Detroit had two foot-weary fly chasers in their mid-30?s. Looking to get younger, the team couldn?t keep both of them. Finally, a few weeks before the season opener, the Tigers sold Simmons to the Washington Senators for $15,000. It wasn?t exactly the return on his investment that Briggs had been looking for.

By that time, Simmons? best years were behind him. He never again played more than 125 games in a season, or drove in 100 runs. He had been a great player for many years, but he was in the wrong place at the wrong time in his lone summer with the Tigers.
 
It ?appears that? Cody Ross? career is over. The free agent outfielder suffered a bad hip injury with the D?Backs two years ago and he hasn?t been the same player since. The 34-year-old Ross was released by Arizona last season and later went 2-for-25 in nine games with the Athletics.
Ross has played parts of 12 MLB seasons, suiting up for the Tigers, Dodgers, Reds, Marlins, Giants and Red Sox in addition to the Diamondbacks and Athletics, and hitting .262/.322/.445
 
Didn't know where to ask this KC. It looks like Rod Allen has a new gig with MLB Network. Is it just an offseason thing?
 
Didn't know where to ask this KC. It looks like Rod Allen has a new gig with MLB Network. Is it just an offseason thing?

It's news to me Troy. I haven't seen anything about it with Tigers media sites or bloggers.
and Truthfully, I do not watch them on mlb network. I do not care for many there.

edit; I just checked his twitter timeline. It looks like he was on in the past few days to talk with people from each team in the AL Central and they had Rod talking Tigers.
 
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December 14 in Tigers and mlb history:

1882 - At its first annual convention, the American Association establishes the first permanent staff of umpires in major league history. Previously, the National League and AA umpires were local men hired on game day by the home club.

1900 - Suffering from a drop in attendance in 1900, National League owners vote to cut costs with a 16-player limit after May 1st. The Players Association claims the move is aimed at pressuring players into signing by shrinking the number of jobs.

1922: In a joint meeting of the two leagues, the ban on non-waiver trades after June 15 is approved. The National League favors a 50-player limit until June 15, the American League votes for 40. Judge Landis breaks the deadlock in favor of 40.
Compensation of World Series umpires is changed from a percentage of the players' pool to a flat $2,000.

1922: Still smarting over the rejection of the official scorer's decision in the Ty Cobb case, the national baseball writers' group meets and votes to back the New York group's protest. Fred Lieb, who had filled in the Associated Press box score giving Cobb the disputed hit, asks Ban Johnson to revise the records to .399 for Cobb. Johnson complains of not receiving box scores from some writers, who are appointed by the clubs as official scorers.

1932: The Washington Senators get Earl Whitehill from the Detroit Tigers for Firpo Marberry and Carl Fischer.

1933: Goose Goslin of the Washington Senators is sent to the Detroit Tigers in exchange for John Stone.

1938 - Major league teams adopt several resolutions. The National League allows the Cincinnati Reds to play their season opener one day before other teams, as a way of honoring the 100th anniversary of baseball and of the 1869 Red Stockings being the first professional team.
In other news, Will Harridge is re-elected as American League president and given a 10-year term. The AL permits the Cleveland Indians and Philadelphia Athletics to play night games. Finally, the major leagues agree on a standard ball but disagree on increasing rosters from 23 to 25 players. Judge Landis will eventually decide on 25.

1953 - Detroit Tigers shortstop Harvey Kuenn, who led the AL in hits with 209 and hit .308 for the season, is voted American League Rookie of the Year.

1994: Labor talks headed by federal mediator Bill Usery aimed at settling the ongoing strike break down.

1998 - Detroit signs free agent C Bill Haselman to a two-year contract.

2012: An?bal S?nchez agrees to a 5-year, $80 million deal to remain with the Detroit Tigers, helping keep their 2012 World Series rotation intact.

Tigers players birthdays:

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/k/kalliru01.shtml
Rudy Kallio 1918-1919.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/w/walkuji02.shtml
Jim Walkup 1939.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Carl_Linhart
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/l/linhaca01.shtml?redir
Carl Linhart 1952.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Sam_Jones_(jonessa02)
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/j/jonessa02.shtml?redir
Sam Jones 1962.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/r/robinje02.shtml
Jeff Robinson 1987-1990.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/j/jensema01.shtml
Marcus Jensen 1997.

from baseball reference
 
http://www.outsidepitchmlb.com/detroit-tigers-have-interest-in-sean-rodriguez/40151
Detroit Tigers have interest in Sean Rodriguez.
OutsidePitchMLB

http://www.freep.com/story/sports/mlb/tigers/2015/12/14/detroit-tigers-sean-rodriguez/77325402/
Tigers interested in utility man Sean Rodriguez.
Freep

Rodriguez, 30, hit .246 with four home runs and 17 RBIs this past season with the Pirates while playing six different positions. He played 102 games at first base, 16 in leftfield, 14 in rightfield, eight at third base, seven at second base and three at shortstop.
For his eight-year career, Rodriguez is a .228 hitter.

This guy blows dead goats.
 
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