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

http://espn.go.com/mlb/recap?gameId=360408106
Zimmermann, Tigers top Yanks to win 8th straight home opener.
espn

http://espn.go.com/blog/detroit-tig...igns-of-improvement-on-both-sides-of-the-ball
Nick Castellanos shows significant improvement with glove, bat.
espn

http://espn.go.com/blog/detroit-tig...shines-in-stellar-first-outing-on-opening-day
Jordan Zimmermann shines in stellar first outing on Opening Day.
espn

http://espn.go.com/blog/detroit-tig...an-thrives-in-important-9th-inning-appearance
Tigers' Kyle Ryan thrives in 'important' ninth-inning appearance.
espn
 
http://www.blessyouboys.com/2016/4/...s-podcast-victor-martinez-voice-of-the-turtle
Bless You Boys Tigers Blog The Voice of the Turtle Podcast Episode 27: Sorry, Buck Farmer. About 1 hour 50 minutes. From Friday morning 8A.M.

Topics in this week's episode include:
Baseball is back! But it might kill us.
The Tigers looked very good in Miami.
Victor Martinez is healthy and everyone should be terrified.
Anibal Sanchez: not dead.
CC Sabathia might be in trouble this weekend.
The Tigers' difficult April schedule.
Bad slides and baseball in dresses.
Listener questions!
Which baseball players do we hate most?
When Brad Ausmus goes right.

Contents:
2:41 - Rounding the Bases: this is how you win the division.
43:31 - Warming in the Pen: tough sledding ahead.
58:23 - High and Tight: baseball in dresses.
1:12:45 - Into the Mob Scene at Home: more Salty, please.
1:33:50 - The 7th Inning Kvetch: who kidnapped Brad Ausmus?
 
April 9 in Tigers and mlb history:

1947 - Commissioner Happy Chandler suspends Brooklyn Dodgers manager Leo Durocher for "conduct deemed detrimental to baseball." The one-year ban will force Leo to miss the major league debut of Jackie Robinson.

1959: At Griffith Stadium, the Baltimore Orioles become the first team in major league history to turn a triple play on Opening Day. The Orioles turn the feat in front of Vice-President Richard Nixon, who throws out the ceremonial first pitch as a substitute for President Dwight Eisenhower.

1959: In an effort to protect Little League batters, pitching mounds are moved back two feet to a distance of 46 feet.

1962 - U.S. President John F. Kennedy throws out the first ball to open the baseball season at new District of Columbia Stadium. Despite rain, a record Washington crowd of 42,143 shows up to see Senators pitcher Bennie Daniels stop Detroit.

1965 - U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson joins 47,878 fans for the opening of Harris County Domed Stadium (the Astrodome). The Houston Astros win an exhibition game against the New York Yankees, 2 - 1, in 12 innings. Yankees outfielder Mickey Mantle hits the first-ever indoor home run in the new park.

1974 - San Diego Padres owner Ray Kroc criticizes his club over the public address system during a game! "Ladies and gentlemen, I suffer with you," Kroc says. "I've never seen such stupid baseball playing in my life." The announcement occurs during San Diego's 9 - 5 loss to the Houston Astros. Coincidentally, the San Diego Chicken team mascot makes its debut that day. Hearing of the incident, Commissioner Bowie Kuhn will make Kroc apologize to the fans.

1981 Kirk Gibson has a horrible Opening Day, twice having balls hit him on the head in the outfield for Detroit.

1988 Jack Morris balks three times in one game. Umpires have been ordered to crack down on balks this year.

2009: The Blue Jays beat the Tigers as Ricky Romero outduels Rick Porcello. It is only the 19th time since 1901 that opposing starters both make their major league debuts together and it is the first time that two former first-round draft picks debut against one another.

2014:
Major League Baseball's Diversity Task Force, created exactly a year ago, issues three recommendations to increase the number of African-Americans players: expanding MLB support for existing programs aimed at developing baseball in inner cities; launching program to improve the quality of coaching available to young African-American players; and raising its profile in inner cities by engaging current and past stars in outreach programs directed at the African-American community. Former manager Jerry Manuel will head the task force on a day-to-day basis, to ensure the implementation of the three initiatives, while Detroit Tigers GM Dave Dombrowski will continue as its chairman.

2015: The Tigers set an American League record by extending their streak of innings without allowing since the start of the season to 24, before giving up an unearned run in the 7th inning of a 7 - 1 win over the Twins. The previous mark of 22 innings was set by the 1947 Chicago White Sox, while the major league mark of 32 innings belongs to the 1963 St. Louis Cardinals. Shane Greene is the winner against Kyle Gibson as Detroit improves to 3-0 and Minnesota falls to 0-3.

Tigers players birthdays:

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Vic_Sorrell
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/s/sorrevi01.shtml?redir
Vic Sorrell 1928-1937.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/c/cantrgu01.shtml
Guy Cantrell 1930.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Nate_Colbert
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/c/colbena01.shtml?redir
Nate Colbert 1975.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/b/brumlmi02.shtml
Mike Brumley 1989.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/m/morriha02.shtml
Hal Morris 2000.

Tigers players, coaches, and managers who passed away:

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Jimmy_Outlaw
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/o/outlaji01.shtml?redir
Jimmy Outlaw 1943-1949.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Billy_Hitchcock
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/h/hitchbi01.shtml?redir
http://www.baseball-reference.com/managers/hitchbi01.shtml
Billy Hitchcock 1942, 1946, 1953, coach 1955-1960, coach 1955-1961, manager 1960.

from Baseball Reference
 
https://www.detroitathletic.com/blog/2016/04/09/baseball-and-radio-go-together/
Baseball is meant to be listened to on the radio.
Detroit Athletic

There are two kinds of baseball fans: The kind that likes listening to games on the radio. And the kind that doesn?t.

I think this may be mostly a generational thing. Younger fans today can?t really grasp the concept of how we used to ?consume? sports way back in the dark ages.

Today, every game for every team is available to watch on TV, on your computer, or on your smartphone or tablet.

If we don?t want to sit through an entire game, we can just watch the highlights later on one of our many devices.

While baseball?s television ratings may be floundering, this is really a golden era for baseball viewing. The games can be consumed in so many different ways, and on so many platforms, that it boggles the mind.

When I started coming of age as a young baseball fan in the late 1970s and early ?80s, it was an entirely different world.

The Detroit Tigers didn?t televise every game back then. In fact, it was always a special treat to settle in for a game with George Kell and Al Kaline. Those two were a perfect pair on TV.

Kell, in his Arkansas twang, would say that a pitch was ?up high,? or ?down low.? Sometimes a hitter ?broke his bat half in two.? And sometimes a hitter would line one into the fans sitting behind the dugout, and Kell would shout ?Look out!? As if they could hear him.

Kaline, on the other hand, was good for the occasional insight, but he sometimes stumbled through player names. Al Bumbry became Al Blumbly, while Tom Seaver became Tom Seavers. Rusty Kuntz became, well, I?ll leave that one to your imagination.

Unlike the mere handful of TV games, when I was a kid the Tigers broadcast every single game on the radio.

My summer evenings were spent listening to Ernie Harwell and Paul Carey. Detroiters were spoiled with those guys for a long, long time.

I?m not going to tell any Harwell stories, because you?ve probably heard them all.

But here?s a couple of tales that reveal just how old-school Carey was.

In the early 1980s, the Royals Stadium P.A. system was kind of cutting-edge when it came to bells and whistles. While other ballparks were still employing the traditional organ players, the Royals featured pre-recorded rock music and electronic sounds that you didn?t hear yet anywhere else. I can still recall Carey doing the play-by-play one night from Kansas City. The sound system was loudly cranking out what resembled the huffing and puffing of an annoying choo-choo train. Finally a flustered Carey, who you could tell was trying to be heard over the incessant cacophony, blurted out: ?Well, I think we?ve had just about enough of that!?

Poor Carey. He would have cringed at the endless onslaught of noise in today?s baseball stadiums.

My other Paul Carey story, however, isn?t about anything he said during a game. One night just before the start of the 1988 season, he hosted a special round-table discussion on WJR in which listeners could call in (what a concept!) with questions about the Tigers? chances, or just about baseball in general.

One listener called in and started to make the case that Nolan Ryan should have won the National League Cy Young Award in 1987 (He?d actually finished a distant fifth behind winner Steve Bedrosian). The caller laid out some convincing facts in Ryan?s defense: He?d led the National League in ERA at 2.76, and strikeouts with 270. Ryan, the caller said, had been the victim of non-support all season.

Today, I can look up Ryan?s record and learn that in 16 of his 34 starts in 1987, the Astros scored two or fewer runs, and that his record in those 16 games was 1-13 with a 3.03 ERA.

The caller, of course, didn?t have all this information at his fingertips, but he was on the right track. That I even remember this radio moment decades after the fact is perhaps explained by saying it was an epiphany for me as I listened. It was one of the first times I?d ever heard someone trying to look beyond just wins and losses, of delving deeper in an effort to quantify a pitcher?s total effectiveness. It was my personal awakening into the world of sabermetrics.

Carey, the staunch traditionalist, was having none of it. He quickly interrupted the caller. ?And what was Ryan?s record last year?? he asked in that deep baritone voice.

?8-16,? the caller answered sheepishly.

?Well, that?s all you need to know,? Carey declared emphatically, and hung up.

Harwell and Carey were masters at their craft. Calling a baseball game on the radio takes skill and intelligence, along with perfect cadence and timing. A good radio announcer must have the ability to paint visual pictures on the fly, to inform, to entertain, and to convey the idea that they are describing something worth listening to, even in the midst a 10-0 blowout.

Baseball is the only sport that is actually better heard on radio than it is viewed on TV.

With cell phones and the internet, it?s a great time to be a fan of baseball on the radio. We can listen to any local or out-of-market games we want. We can sample every team?s announcers, comparing one to the other, like tasting different beers. And it is available everywhere, whenever we want it.

If Dan Dickerson starts to spend too many innings rambling on about some esoteric stat, or if Jim Price can?t decide if that last pitch was a two-seamer or a three-seamer, I?m only a few taps away from switching over to some other game.

Baseball and radio: It?s how Abner Doubleday would have wanted it.
 
Last edited:
http://www.mlive.com/tigers/index.s...d_ausmus_ejected_in_1.html#incart_river_index
Tigers' Brad Ausmus ejected in fifth inning vs. Yankees.
Mlive

http://www.mlive.com/tigers/index.s...y_hit_hard_tigers_o_1.html#incart_river_index
Mike Pelfrey hit hard, Tigers' offense freezes up in loss to Yankees.
Mlive

http://www.freep.com/story/sports/mlb/tigers/2016/04/09/detroit-tigers-new-york-yankees/82840924/
N.Y. Yankees 8 - Detroit 4: Ausmus canned in Tigers loss.
Freep

http://www.detroitnews.com/story/sp...-pounded-debut-tigers-drop-1st-game/82839902/
Pelfrey pounded in debut as Tigers drop 1st game.
Detnews
 
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