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

Detroit?s famous double-play duo, Alan Trammell and Lou Whitaker, combined to accumulate 145.3 WAR. Neither is in the Hall of Fame. Joe Tinker and Johnny Evers, the Cubs? equally famous double-play duo, combined for 100.9 WAR. Both are in the Hall of Fame.
Regarding the more contemporary pairing, there?s a decent chance you don?t know that Whitaker (74.9) had a higher career WAR than Trammell (70.4).
Fangraphs
 
Eddie Yost hit .269 in his two years with the Detroit Tigers. He led the American League in OBP and Walks both seasons: .435 OBP and 135 Walks in 1959, and .414 OBP and 125 Walks in 1960.
#TheWalkingMan
 
https://www.detroitathletic.com/blog/2015/12/27/in-cameron-maybin-avila-gets-his-man-back/
In Cameron Maybin, Al Avila gets his man back.
Detroit Athletic

The Detroit Tigers? outfield will look a little different next year, with the acquisition of Cameron Maybin. He is expected to essentially take the place of Rajai Davis, platooning in center field with Anthony Gose. Maybin, a right-handed hitter, is seven years younger than Davis, who is clearly on the down side of his career.

Maybin is still a fleet runner, but is considered only an average or plus defender. He was once considered a five-tool prospect, but those days are long gone. Over the course of his nine-year career, Maybin?s weaknesses have been exposed, and he hasn?t been able to make adjustments, which has hurt his progress.

While he has raw power, he remains susceptible to breaking pitches away, resulting in his high whiff totals (He has averaged 132 strikeouts over a 162-game season). His inability to draw walks hurts his on-base percentage and his value as a leadoff hitter. With Atlanta in 2015, he hit just about anywhere in the lineup early in the season, before settling into the two-spot.

He is a good gap hitter, and he should be able to take advantage of Comerica Park?s vast expanse. Of course, Maybin played for several seasons at Petco Park in San Diego, which also has a big outfield, and he had mixed results. But the ball simply does not carry in San Diego, so things could be different here.

He has a lifetime batting average of .251. His career high in stolen bases was 40 in 2011. His 2015 WAR was 0.6. By comparison, Davis?s was 1.6.

Maybin doesn?t always get a good read on fly balls, but he has been able to more or less compensate for this with his speed. He?s got a good arm, but his throws are not always on the mark.

Maybin was the Tigers? first pick in 2005 (tenth overall). For a while, all we heard was Cameron Maybin this, and Cameron Maybin that. He was going to be the next Andre Dawson, the next Roberto Clemente. He was supposed to be the best Tiger prospect to come along in generations. Or so we were told.

When Detroit called him up from Double-A Erie in September of 2007, a big deal was made out of his first game in the big leagues. It was at Yankee Stadium. He went 0-for-4 that day. But the next afternoon, facing Roger Clemens before nearly 55,000 people and a national television audience, Maybin singled for his first major-league hit. A few innings later, facing Clemens again, he stroked a home run to dead center field. There was the feeling that it was the start of something special.

It was, but not the way we figured. That winter, the Tigers dealt Maybin to the Florida Marlins, along with five other players, including another blue-chip in Andrew Miller. Detroit, of course, landed Miguel Cabrera (and Dontrelle Willis), and the rest is history.

I find it intriguing that it didn?t take Al Avila long to bring Maybin back to Detroit. Avila, the current Tiger GM, was the assistant to Dave Dombrowski during the time that Maybin was drafted, as well as when he was traded away. During the press conference announcing the Cabrera deal, Dombrowski brought up the issue of losing Maybin and Miller. I?ll never forget one of his comments: ?Prospects are just that: Prospects.?

That philosophy pretty much sums up Dombrowski?s tenure in Detroit. And while the trade obviously was historically great for the Tigers, maybe Avila never wanted to relinquish Maybin. Maybe in the ensuing years, Avila always wanted to re-acquire the outfielder, and maybe Dombrowski didn?t.

Maybin, of course, is no longer a prospect, but he may not have reached his peak as a player, which should be good news to Tiger fans. If he can come anywhere close to the player the Tigers thought he was going to be when they drafted him years ago, this deal will turn out to be a good one. But that is a big ?If.?
 
December 28 in Tigers and mlb history:

1957: CBS states that it will not broadcast baseball into any area at the time a minor league game is scheduled.

1998: The Detroit Tigers sign free agent Gregg Jefferies to a two-year contract and trade outfielder Luis Gonzalez to the Arizona Diamondbacks for Karim Garcia.

Tigers players birthdays:

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Tommy_Bridges
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/b/bridgto01.shtml?redir
Tommy Bridges 1930-1943, 1945-1946, scout 1958-1960.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Aurelio_Rodriguez
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/r/rodriau01.shtml?redir
Aurelio Rodriguez 1971-1979.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/k/knighra01.shtml
Ray Knight 1988.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/w/willica01.shtml
Carl Willis 1984.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/n/nieveme01.shtml
Melvin Nieves 1996-1997.

Tigers players and executives who passed away:

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Deacon_Jones_(jonesde01)
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/j/jonesde01.shtml?redir
Deacon Jones 1916-1918.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Bill_Lajoie
Bill Lajoie scout 1969-1973, scouting director 1974-1978, Assistant GM 1979-1983, General Manager 1984-1990.

from baseball reference
 
https://www.detroitathletic.com/blo...g-the-greatest-relievers-in-baseball-history/
John Hiller ranks among the greatest relievers in MLB history.
Detroit Athletic

I?ve written thousands of words about the Baseball Hall of Fame. In fact, I used to work there, and I wrote a lot of words for the Hall of Fame.

I?ve written over and over again about how Lou Whitaker was short-changed in his only year on the writers? ballot. I?ve written several articles touting Alan Trammell as a Hall of Famer, in fact I have pointed out that he compares favorably to Derek Jeter in peak value and is better than Barry Larkin and several others in career value.

You may have read a series of blog posts right here at Detroit Athletic Co. where I argued the Hall of Fame merits of Jack Morris, a candidate who doesn?t have the statistical r?sum? of other pitchers, but who possesses many of the traits of an ace who normally earns a plaque in Cooperstown.

Over at a website called Wahoo Sam, which I contribute to, I have made predictions for the last several years as to how the writers? balloting would come out. If I say so myself, I have been pretty accurate.

I?ve even examined the Hall of Fame cases of Bill Freehan and Mickey Lolich, two members of the 1968 World Championship Tigers who I must admit I admire very much. Although I?m biased, the two have a stronger Hall of Fame case than you may think, Freehan should be in, in my opinion. Mickey admitted to me once during an interview that he felt ?I?m a player who is in the group that?s just outside the Hall of Fame.?

So why would I write more about the Baseball Hall of Fame?

Because I?m willing to admit that I can learn new things and my mind can change. Recently I delved into some numbers while updating my list of all-time player rankings over at WahooSam.com. I?m not an expert on baseball statistics, but I do like to understand the numbers side of the game. I think new analytics have helped us understand how baseball games are won and lost, and how rosters can best be built. I enjoy that part of the game.

I can?t tell you how WAR (Wins Above Replacement) is figured exactly. It?s like the recent movie ?The Big Short?, which deals with the financial crisis of 2008. There?s a lot of technical Wall Street financial jargon in the film, I don?t understand all of it, but I understand quite a bit, and I have a good grasp of the general ideas. In the case of banking and financing I can tell bullshit when I see it. I feel the same way about baseball stats. WAR isn?t bullshit. It?s the best stat we have as a single measurement of how much a player has contributed to his team. The sabermetric crowd would agree.

As I plowed through a spreadsheet that had the top 500 relief pitchers in baseball history according to WAR, I noticed something very surprising, and embarrassingly so. John Hiller might be the best left-handed relief pitcher the game has ever seen. He also deserves to be ranked in the top 10 all-time as a relief pitcher.

Consider this: Hiller?s career WAR of 30.9 ranks seventh all-time according to Baseball-Reference. However, a closer examination of the list shows that three of the pitchers ahead of Hiller are credited with numbers they accrued as starters. The website?s statistical list doesn?t differentiate among the games pitched by those players in relief and as starters. Dennis Eckersley, Tom Gordon, and Bobby Shantz all rank ahead of Hiller, yet they each started a lot of games. The other three pitchers ahead of Hiller (Mariano Rivera, Goose Gossage, and Hoyt Wilhelm) started only a small percentage of games in their career (all three had more than 95 percent of their career games come in relief). But when you isolate the performance of Eckersley, Gordon, and Shantz to just their relief appearances (and other top relievers too), Hiller leapfrogs them easily. The new rankings are this:

MOST WAR, Relief Pitchers Career
1. Mariano Rivera ? 56.4
2. Hoyt Wilhelm ? 40.2
3. Goose Gossage ? 39.3
4. Lee Smith ? 29.6
5. John Hiller ? 28.7
6. Trevor Hoffman ? 28.4
7. Billy Wagner ? 28.1
8. Kent Tekulve ? 26.3
9. Rollie Fingers ? 26.0
10. Dan Quisenberry ? 25.4
11. Bruce Sutter ? 24.6

And here?s where the three I mention above fall to after removing their WAR as starters. Still good figures for a relief pitcher.

Tom Gordon ? 22.2
Bobby Shantz ? 20.7
Dennis Eckersley ? 19.3

Which led me to think about our old friend John Hiller, who spent his entire 15 seasons with the Detroit Tigers. He ranks fifth all-time in WAR among relief pitchers, and he?s the first southpaw on the list. Sure, he?s not in the same league as the top three (Mo, Wilhelm, Goose), but who is? Yet there he is, a solid fifth on the list, ranking ahead of Hall of Famers Rollie Fingers and Bruce Sutter. Hiller also ranks ahead of Trevor Hoffman, who will become eligible for the HOF very soon and who everyone thinks will get in eventually.

Why doesn?t John Hiller get more respect? His name was on the BBWAA ballot only once, in 1986 when he got 11 votes (2.6%). Also on the ballot that year was a reliever named Roy Face, who toiled mostly for the Pirates in the 1950s and 1960s. He was a good pitcher, but his career WAR was 20.9, well below that of Hiller. In subsequent years Hiller has been eligible to be considered by the Hall of Fame?s veterans committees, but his name has never made the final ballot. Given his credentials, one has to wonder why.

Cooperstown is still trying to figure out how to honor relief pitchers. The role has changed dramatically over the years. At one point, relievers were leftover starters who came in when the starting pitcher had blown the game. Then relievers became more specialized, and by the 1970s we saw the advent of the ?fireman? epitomized by Fingers, Gossage, Sparky Lyle, and yes, Hiller.

It?s probably Hillers? career saves total that works against him. Most voters and HOF veterans committee members are not sophisticated enough to look at peripheral stats, especially when it comes to a difficult position like relief pitcher. The voters find it much easier to assess relief pitchers based a simple stat like saves. Hiller had 125 saves, a total that ranks 103rd in baseball history. When he retired it was in the top 25, and at one point he held the single-season record with an (at the time) eye-popping 38. Hiller rebounded mid-career from a heart attack that he suffered in his 20s. His story is an inspirational one. But still, he?s garnered little attention at all since hanging up his spikes in 1980 and retreating to Michigan?s upper peninsula, which is harder to get to than upstate New York and Cooperstown.

If you?re not comfortable with the ?fancy pants? WAR stat, there are many other stats that support Hiller as one of the best lefties and best relievers period in baseball history. His ERA+ (adjusted ERA to the era he pitched) is 136, which is one of the five best for the ?firemen? era of relievers. The leaders in ERA+ are mostly guys who pitched in relief the last 10-20 years, when closers are facing 3-4 batters per outing. Hiller averaged nearly six batters faced per relief appearance, and nearly 40% of his appearances in relief were multi-inning. That means Hiller was facing more batters and getting more outs, yet his ERA was still stellar. Current relievers have a much better chance to keep their ERA low when they only face a few batters per outing.

John Hiller will probably never get on the Hall of Fame ballot again, let alone earn election. But based on the numbers, he was one of the best relief pitchers in history and he should be remembered for that.
 
The Tigers have been getting calls about Nick Castellanos, Tony Paul of the Detroit News reports. Castellanos was a 2010 first-rounder and a former top prospect, though he?s underwhelmed both offensively and defensively in two full Major League seasons, posting negative fWAR totals in both 2014 and 2015. These struggles notwithstanding, it?s probably unlikely that Detroit would move Castellanos since he?s only 23 and under team control through the 2019 season.

Once J.D. Martinez and the Tigers get talking about an extension, the negotiations will be in the neighborhood of a four-year, $60MM deal. This contract could be backloaded, which would allow the team to pursue more upgrades now and pay Martinez his biggest salaries later once other large contracts have come off the books. Martinez is entering his age-28 season now and has two remaining years of arbitration eligibility before hitting free agency, so under Paul?s projected extension, Martinez would reach the open market as a 32-year-old having given up two free agent years. The $60MM number may be a little conservative, in my view, given how first-rate hitting is at a premium.

While the Tigers aren?t shy about spending, the team will stray too far (if at all) over the luxury tax limit, so landing a top outfield name like Yoenis Cespedes or Alex Gordon is probably unrealistic. Detroit could move another big contract like Ian Kinsler to make payroll space, though Paul points out that the team would just be creating a new hole at second base to solve a hole in left field. The Tigers could instead save any payroll room for a trade deadline addition.

MLBtraderumors
 
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