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

After a few days of speculation, some news about recent cuts Bobby Parnell and Casey McGehee: both players, who were released on Monday, have agreed to remain with organization, source confirms to ESPN.com. The players are expected to sign minor-league deals and open in Triple-A Toledo. So it appears the Tigers figured out a way to keep two veterans within the organization while bypassing the need to pay each a $100k retention bonus.

Tigers pitcher Matt Boyd has been optioned to Triple-A Toledo, which you can certainly take as a good indication that Shane Greene has won the 5th starter spot. In other pitching news, Bobby Parnell has indeed signed another minor-league contract and is even listed on today's travel list for squad traveling to Sarasota.

Reliever Bobby Parnell and infielder Casey McGehee are expected to sign minor league deals to stay with the Tigers' organization, after being released Monday.

Matt Boyd said he felt he was able to show this spring that he can start in the big leagues, and will try to continue to build on what he feels was a strong camp while down in Triple-A Toledo. "I'm going to make every day count until I'm up here again."

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At one point, the Tigers would have asked for catcher Brett Nicholas and more for Holaday, Evan Grant of the Dallas Morning News tweets.
However, the Rangers were able to acquire Holaday while hanging on to Nicholas. Instead, they parted only with right-hander Myles Jaye and catcher Bobby Wilson.
Meanwhile, Detroit plans on slotting the newly-acquired Jaye in their Double-A rotation, Jon Morosi of FOX Sports tweets. In the long term, he says, the club believes that Jaye can be a major league reliever.
MLBtraderumors
 
2016 MLB season preview: Detroit Tigers:
At No. 18: the Detroit Tigers.

2015 Record and Finish:
74?87 (.460), fifth place in American League Central (22nd overall)

2016 Projected Record and Finish:
80?82 (.494), third place in AL Central

The Case For:
The Tigers won the AL Central every year from 2011 to '14, and it?s not difficult to see how they could return to the playoffs this year after an off-season in which they filled the three biggest holes on their roster with star-quality players in ace Jordan Zimmermann, slugger Justin Upton and closer Francisco Rodriguez, all without sacrificing a player from their 40-man roster. If Justin Verlander can build off his strong finish to 2015 (2.27 ERA over his final 14 starts), he, Zimmermann and a healthy Anibal Sanchez could be a formidable trio backed up by the league-average ground-balling of winter addition Mike Pelfrey and the high ceiling of 23-year-old lefty Daniel Norris. Rodriguez and fellow new arrivals Mark Lowe and lefty Justin Wilson give the Tigers a quality top three in the bullpen, as well, with a slimmed-down and rededicated Bruce Rondon as another potentially dominant short reliever.

On the other side of the ball, healthy seasons from Miguel Cabrera and Victor Martinez along with prime-age seasons from Upton and J.D. Martinez, continued growth and maturity from third baseman Nick Castellanos, catcher James McCann, centerfielder Anthony Gose and shortstop Jose Iglesias, and continued good work from Ian Kinsler make for a promising attack. Opposing pitchers should have their work cut out for them facing a top five of Kinsler, Upton, Cabrera and the Martinezes.​

The Case Against:
The yawning gap between the quality of the name on the jersey and the performance of the player within swallows this team whole. Victor Martinez is a 37-year-old with bad knees who posted an 85 OPS+ last year. Kinsler turns 34 in June. Cabrera will be 33 in April and has proven increasingly fragile in recent seasons. Upton?s contact and strikeout rates have been trending in the wrong direction in recent seasons, and he represents a significant defensive downgrade from Yoenis Cespedes, who won a Gold Glove for four moths of work in Detroit last year. Worse, the young players in the lineup (Castellanos, et al.) all appear to have limited ceilings.

Pitching-wise, things are equally iffy. Sanchez hasn?t made 30 starts since 2012 and has never thrown 200 innings in a season. Verlander is 33, has lost at least two miles per hour off his peak fastball and can no longer dominate with his stuff the way he did in his late-twenties peak. Norris has great stuff and a bright future, but has yet to show he can translate either to a major league mound with consistency. Lowe threw all of 18 2/3 major league innings in the two seasons before 2015 and will turn 33 in June, and Rondon is completely unproven.​

X-Factor: Age:
Not just advanced age?though that?s certainly a concern with the team?s biggest stars?but also excessive youth. The Tigers have very few players in their natural peak seasons. A third of the lineup is 33 or older, and another third of their lineup is still adjusting to the majors, with McCann and Gose in just their second full major league seasons and Castellanos a mere 24 years old. Of the top three men in the rotation and bullpen, Verlander, Sanchez, Rodriguez and Lowe are 32 or older, and the two starters appear even older due to injury and decline. Rounding out the rotation, Pelfrey is also 32; Norris is the youngest player on the team at 23.

Zimmermann, J.D. Martinez, Upton, Iglesias and Wilson are in their respective primes, but the rest of the team is outside of that sweet spot. Correspondingly, they're less likely to deliver peak-quality performance in 2016.​

Number To Know: 19:
That?s how many blown quality starts?a start in which a pitcher finishes the sixth inning or beyond with a quality start but remains in the game to give up a fourth run?the Tigers have had in Brad Ausmus?s two seasons as manager, according to Baseball Prospectus, and they led the league both years, with nine in 2014 and ten last season. A blown quality start is a measure of a manager?s failure to capitalize on a winning situation?either his failing to (or perhaps in Ausmus?s case, reluctance to) call in fresh arms out of the bullpen when his pitcher is tiring, or his inability to detect a decline in his starter?s performance.

Ausmus?s slow hook has resulted in another dubious distinction. In his first two years with Detroit, he has allowed one of his pitchers to throw 50 or more pitches in an inning on four occasions, including letting the 22-year-old Norris throw 54 in the first inning of a game against the Rangers on Sept. 30 last year. The rest of the league has combined for just one 50-pitch inning in those two seasons (by the Royals? James Shields in 2014); Ausmus has overseen 22% of the 50-pitch innings in the last seven years despite managing in only two of those seasons. Given the fragility of the arms in his charge, including the overworked Verlander, the fragile Sanchez, the surgically repaired Zimmermann and the still-developing Norris, the hope is that Ausmus will have increased confidence in his relief corps this year.​

Scout?s Takes:
Most Overrated: Justin Upton, LF

?I think this guy is in a slight decline right now. The body?s getting big. He?s just slowing down a little bit. He?s been terrible in spring training. He?s been chasing high fastballs. He?s been chasing sliders out of the strikezone. I know it?s spring training and it?s early, but you get frustrated because the guy is unbelievably talented.?​

Most Underrated: James McCann, C

?This guy is a good player. He can hit. He can catch. For me, he?s going to be one of the better catchers in the American League. I?m excited about this one. I expect big things from this guy.... In the minor leagues, they weren?t sure about his defense, but he has gradually gotten better with his receiving, his throwing and everything. His bat is surprising. You stick him down in the bottom of this lineup, and he?s going to do some damage. You can?t forget about this guy.?​

GFY SI
 
The Tigers decision to award the 5th starter spot to pitcher Shane Greene appears to be a good one. Greene has a stellar outing against the Orioles, racking up nine strikeouts in total over 5 2/3 scoreless innings. Exits in the sixth inning to well-deserved applause from crowd.
espn

Tigers pitcher Shane Greene was understandably very pleased with tonight's outing, despite feeling like his timing was off in the first few innings. Felt he re-established his slider and was happy with the effectiveness of his off-speed stuff. Greene said he was excited about earning 5th starter spot and never doubted he could get back to this point, even with a trying year on the injury front: "No, I have all the confidence in the world in myself. I've been riding this roller coaster for a long time. I've gotten pretty good at riding it".
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March 31 in Tigers and mlb history:

1909 - The National Commission rules that players who jump contracts will be suspended for five years. Players joining outlaw organizations will be suspended for three years as punishment for going outside organized baseball.

1962: The Pacific Coast League proposal to use a designated hitter is voted down 8-1 by the Professional Baseball Rules Committee. Prompted by the Cubs' college of coaches, the committee also rules each team must name a manager 30 minutes prior to the game. The DH will not come into major league use until 1973, when it is adopted by the American League.

1995 - The longest strike action in sports history ends - in a courtroom. A U.S. District court order forbids owners from implementing new financial working conditions in the wake of the impasse in negotiations. The court decides that conditions will revert to the old rules from the previous season. Because of the timing of the court order, 18 games will have to be trimmed from the major league schedule.

1999 - Commissioner Bud Selig confirms that discussions are underway which could lead to advertising space being sold on the sleeves of players uniforms. Nothing will come of these, fortunately.

2009 - The Detroit Tigers surprisingly cut slugger Gary Sheffield, who is one home run shy of 500 for his career. Sheffield, a 9-time All-Star, is 25th on the all-time home run list and 27th in RBI (1,633). He only hit .178 in spring training, but went deep in 5 of 45 at-bats. He says he is not shocked, but is surprised. Marcus Thames will replace Sheffield as Detroit's starting DH.

2011: The Yankees are successful on opening day, beating Detroit, 6 - 3, at home. Curtis Granderson, whose health was a concern before the start of the game because of a strained right oblique muscle, makes a diving catch of a line drive hit by Will Rhymes in the 1st, then breaks a 3 - 3 tie with a solo homer off Phil Coke in the 7th. Mark Teixeira had earlier hit a three-run blast to tie the score in the 3rd.

Tigers players birthdays:

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/c/couchjo01.shtml
Johnny Couch 1917.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/g/grissma01.shtml
Marv Grissom 1949.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/d/denehbi01.shtml
Bill Denehy 1971.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/j/jonestr01.shtml
Tracy Jones 1989-1990.

Tigers players who passed away:

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Grover_Lowdermilk
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/l/lowdegr01.shtml?redir
Grover Lowdermilk 1915-1916.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Bob_Schultz
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/s/schulbo01.shtml?redir
Bob Schultz 1955.

from Baseball Reference
 
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