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

December 15 in Tigers and mlb history:

1883 - In Louisville a "first-class colored team" is formed. The team, later known as the Falls Cities, becomes one of the nation's best black teams. It will join the National Colored Base Ball League (NCBBL) in 1887, but will apparently disband shortly after the collapse of the NCBBL in the first week of its season.

1886 - The American Association meets and ratifies the new rules. It also approves the new clause that allows a club to reserve a player for as long as it wants, not just for next year's contract.

1896 - The first pitching machine, created by Princeton professor Charles E. Hinton, is demonstrated in the university's gymnasium. The mathematics instructor's device resembles a rifle which shoots the ball toward the batter.

1920: The National League reveals a most telling statistic, pointing out the changes in the game: the use of 27,924 baseballs during the season, an increase of 10,248 over 1919.

1932: A joint meeting of American League and National League owners approves the concept of "chain store" baseball, developed as the St. Louis Cardinals farm system, despite strenuous objections by Judge Landis.

1933 - The major leagues agree on a uniform ball to be livelier than the National League ball of recent seasons, to match the American League balls.
Owners also agree to ban Sunday doubleheaders until after June 15th.

1938 - The Red Sox send Pinky Higgins and P Archie McKain to the Tigers for pitchers Elden Auker and Jake Wade, and OF Chet Morgan.

1945 The Tigers release Tommy Bridges, longtime ace pitcher. He has one of the greatest full names in baseball history: Thomas Jefferson Davis Bridges.

1964: Tigers owner John Fetzer announces a 2-year television pact between Major League Baseball and ABC-TV. The network pays $12.2 million to telecast games on 25 Saturdays, Independence Day, and Labor Day.

1965 - Detroit trades P Phil Regan to the Dodgers for IF Dick Tracewski. Regan will lead the National League in saves in 1966 while winning 14 of 15 decisions.

1969 - The National Labor Relations Board accepts the case of fired umpires Bill Valentine and Al Salerno, thereby issuing a challenge to baseball's antitrust status.

1994: The owners approve a salary cap plan by a vote of 25-3, but agree to delay implementing it so that another round of talks with the players can be held as the strike remains unresolved.

2000: The Tigers acquire P Matt Perisho from the Rangers for pitchers Kevin Mobley and Brandon Villafuerte.

2008 Detroit signs free agent and defensive specialist Adam Everett.

2009: Commissioner Bud Selig announces that he will chair a 14-person committee to analyze ways to improve baseball's on-field product. The group will look at issues such as the pace of the game, umpiring, instant replay and possible rule changes.

Tigers players and managers birthdays:

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/c/clarkni01.shtml
Jay Clarke 1905.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Eddie_Robinson
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/r/robined01.shtml?redir
Eddie Robinson 1957.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Ray_Herbert
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/h/herbera01.shtml?redir
Ray Herbert 1950-1951, 1953-1954.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Jim_Leyland
http://www.baseball-reference.com/managers/leylaji99.shtml
http://www.baseball-reference.com/register/player.cgi?id=leylan001jam
Jim Leyland manager 2006-2013, Tigers minor league player 1964-1970, Tigers minor league manager 1971-1981. 50th year in baseball in 2013.

Tigers players and managers who passed away:

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Ed_Barrow
http://www.baseball-reference.com/managers/barroed99.shtml
Ed Barrow manager 1903-1904.

from baseball reference
 
https://www.detroitathletic.com/blo...-can-make-their-improved-bullpen-even-deeper/
Here's how the Tigers can make their improved bullpen even deeper.
Detroit Athletic

The Detroit Tigers are fixing their leaky bullpen.

Just as with the rest of their off-season acquisitions so far, it hasn?t been by adding marquee names. But getting Francisco Rodriguez as the closer makes sense?and so does the acquisition of Mark Lowe as a set-up man.

At two years and $11 million, the thirty-two-year old Rodriguez is a solid short-term fix. When he?s been healthy, Lowe has been consistently solid. With 8.1 strikeouts per nine innings and 3.8 walks in his career, he gets the job done. His lifetime ERA is 3.80 and his career ERA-plus is 112 (league average is 100).

Lowe is coming off the best year of his career. In 2015, he split time with Seattle and Toronto, pitched fifty-five innings, and had an ERA of 1.91 and a WHIP of 1.05. His ERA-plus was 2.15, and he walked only twelve batters. In other words, he was dominant. The Tigers will gladly take a performance anywhere near that level.

Lowe has battled a variety of health problems and injuries over his career, but he passed a rigorous physical. If you throw out the four years he wasn?t healthy and he struggled to pitch at all, with disastrous results? 2007, 2010, 2013, and 2014?Lowe?s career ERA declines to 3.49.

With Lowe and Alex Wilson, the Tigers now have two men in their pen whose 2015 seasons were equal to the very best among MLB relievers. You can?t expect Wilson to repeat his great rookie campaign?2.19 ERA, 1.03 WHIP?but again, anything close to it would be wonderful.

Detroit is improving its relief staff by subtraction as well as addition. Thankfully, Neftali Perez is gone. Also, no longer will Tigers fans have to suffer through the nibblings of Al Alburquerque. The Dominican can get strikeouts when he can find the plate, but watching him pitch is like watching a faucet drip, drip, drip. A walk here, a walk there, and then someone connects and boom! AlAl was going backward last year, with a 1.55 WHIP.

As for the rest of the bullpen, Detroit is hoping Blaine Hardy can continue on his path toward becoming a solid lefty?and Avila might yet find another southpaw. And who knows if the enigmatic Bruce Rondon will return to the reservation?

In any event, Detroit now has a decent back end of the bullpen?solid if not spectacular.

Here?s a thought on how to improve it even more: Alfredo Simon isn?t going to attract much interest as a free agent starter, so Detroit should consider signing him to a contract more appropriate for a reliever on the wrong side of thirty. Simon has been a decent reliever as recently as 2013 but can?t handle a full starter?s load.

In 2012 and 2013 with Cincinnati, Simon had ERA-pluses of 156 and 132 while pitching well under 100 innings a year. Then, out of desperation, the Reds made him a starter in 2014, and his ERA-plus declined to 107. Then the Tigers, even more desperate, had him pitch 187 innings in 2015, and his ERA-plus plummeted to 78.

Simon clearly wore down as both seasons wore on. In 2014, he managed to do well through 131 innings, and at the end of July his ERA was 2.84. However, in August it was 4.98 and in September 4.34 as he struggled through an additional sixty-three innings.

Last year Simon hit the wall in mid-June. His ERA was 2.58 for his first seventy-seven innings. Then, his last two starts in June were disasters, and his ERA in July and August was over 7.00, and it was 5.57 in September. Simon would often pitch well for the first couple innings, then fall apart.

So why not re-sign Simon for cheap and pit him back in the pen where he belongs? His track record shows he?d be fine in that role. He could be a multi-inning man when needed and help complete the repair job in the Tigers bullpen.
 
December 16 in Tigers and mlb history:

1922 - The Eastern Colored League (chartered as the "Mutual Association of Eastern Colored Baseball Clubs") is formally organized. The league will complete five seasons before folding in midsummer of 1928.

1926 - Judge Landis is given a new 7-year term as commissioner with a raise to $65,000.

1996: The Tigers trade 2B Mark Lewis to the Giants for 1B Jesse Ibarra.

Tigers players birthdays:

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Neil_Chrisley
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/c/chrisne01.shtml?redir
Neil Chrisley 1959-1960.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Billy_Ripken
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/r/ripkebi01.shtml?redir
Billy Ripken 1998.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/w/woodja02.shtml
Jason Wood 1998-1999.

from baseball reference
 
https://www.detroitathletic.com/blo...on-crawford-didnt-stick-around-for-3000-hits/
Money was the reason 'Wahoo' Sam Crawford didn't stick around for 3000 hits.
Detroit Athletic

Sam Crawford liked baseball well enough, he started playing it (and other bat-and-ball games) when he was barely tall enough to reach the table in Nebraska in the 1880s. But he was also no fool, and after he established himself as one of the best batsmen in the professional game, he expected to be paid well for it.

Money ? that?s why Sam joined the Detroit Tigers in 1902 and that?s why he left them 15 years later, and no personal glory or milestones would distract him from earning the salary he felt he deserved.

A tall lad, Crawford was unusually muscular for his era, which helped him stand out among his contemporaries. He used that heft to swat the baseball all over ballparks as he advanced through the minor leagues in the late 19th century. Crawford played in Ontario, Canada and then Columbus, Ohio before turning heads with his play in Grand Rapids. With the team that was appropriately called the ?Furnituremakers,? Crawford reportedly once hit three homers in a game, most remarkably all three of them going over the fence. In an era when most homers were of the inside-the-park variety, it was notable. In 1899 he was snatched up by the Cincinnati Reds of the National League and he quickly gave notice that he was a man with great punch in his bat. He clubbed seven triples in only 31 games as a 19-year old and two years later he led the senior circuit with 16 home runs.

But while he was earning respect from his teammates and elsewhere in the league as a fine hitter, Sam was not getting respect from Cincinnati?s owner, a sourpuss named John T. Brush who was so miserly that he dreamed up the idea of a salary cap in the 19th century. In 1902, when the NL was feeling all sorts of pressure from the upstart new American League, Crawford pounced at the opportunity to jump to the AL for more money. Many stars did the same thing at that time, but it was a bold move because no one was sure what might happen in the ?junior circuit.?

The move proved wise of course, as Crawford became the Tigers best player immediately. In his first year with Detroit, ?Wahoo Sam? led the league in triples, something he would do four more times as he amassed a record 309 three-baggers in his career, many of them soaring over the heads of enemy outfielders at the corner of Michigan and Trumbull in Detroit?s Corktown.

With Ty Cobb often hitting in front of him, Crawford led the AL in runs batted in three times, including in 1915 when he was 35 years old, pretty old for a ballplayer in that era.

With Sam still poking the ball pretty well in his mid-thirties, it was puzzling when manager Hughie Jennings decided it was time to give more playing time to a young outfielder from San Francisco named Harry Heilmann. But that decision wasn?t being made solely by Jennings. Team owner Frank Navin was bristling a bit under the rising costs of fielding a big league baseball team. At that time Cobb was the biggest star in the game and the highest paid. In 1917 he was making $27,500, the equivalent of more than half a million today. That figure hampered Navin who was stingy in the contracts with his other players.

In the years when Ty Cobb was setting records for the Tigers, Crawford was the team?s next biggest star but he was not paid like it and that bothered him greatly. He took it for far longer than he cared to, and by 1917 when Heilmann was inserted into the starting lineup in his place when he had an off season, Wahoo Sam was fed up. That winter when Navin sent a contract that called for a big paycut to Sam at his home in Los Angeles, Crawford didn?t sign it. Instead he wrote the Detroit owner back and told him he was going to stay on the west coast.

In the long history of major league baseball only 29 players have reached 3,000 hits. Many batters have been unable to resist the magical 3,000-hit mark. Look no further than Ichiro Suzuki, signed to play another season in 2016 with the Marlins so he could he doggedly continue his pursuit of his 3,000th hit on this side of the Pacific Ocean.

But Sam Crawford never worried about 3,000 hits when he decided to leave the Tigers and stay home in California. He wanted respect and the way to spell R-E-S-P-E-C-T to Sam was in dollar bills. Instead of returning to the Tigers to get the 31 additional hits he needed to reach 3,000 (which most people hardly paid attention to anyway), he signed to play with the Los Angeles Angels. Major League Baseball was four decades away from expanding to California, but for Crawford the Pacific Coast League was big-time enough for him in 1918 when he signed a contract that called for him to make $3,500 more than Navin had paid him with the Tigers the previous season.

Sam showed that he wasn?t done as a player either. In 1918 he hit .292 but he was just warming up. In 1919 at age 39 he hit .360 with 239 hits, 41 doubles, 18 triples, and 14 home runs in the extended PCL schedule of 190 games. As a 40-year old he had 239 hits again and batted .332 with 21 of his patented triples. He was still clubbing triples and banging out hits at the age of 41 when he had 44 doubles and hit over .300 for LA in 1921. By that time he was making more than $20,000 playing in a ?minor league? but he sure didn?t care.

Reportedly, Sam never cared that he fell 31 hits shy of 3,000 hits. In 1957, thanks in part to a lobbying campaign led by Cobb, Crawford was elected to the Hall of Fame, an honor that was overdue and well deserved. He didn?t get paid to go to Cooperstown, but Sam did go to the Hall of Fame that year and nearly every year after that until his death in 1968, a proud baseball legend even though he never got to the 3,000-hit milestone.
 
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