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

No excuses from starting pitcher Mike Pelfrey, who got roughed up for six runs against the New York Yankees in his Tigers debut on Saturday. Took full accountability for poor outing and made no excuses with regards to the weather. "Definitely not the way I wanted to start my Tigers career. I'll take the blame for today. Obviously, I let these guy down and put us in a big hole early."
espn

http://www.blessyouboys.com/2016/4/9/11397752/detroit-tigers-new-york-yankees-recap-mike-pelfrey
Yankees 8, Tigers 4: Mike Pelfrey bombs in his debut for Detroit.
bybtb

http://motorcitybengals.com/2016/04/09/detroit-tigers-bats-freeze-in-loss-to-yankees/
Detroit Tigers: Bats Freeze in loss to Yankees.
mcbtb

http://www.theoaklandpress.com/spor...around-in-tigers-debut-i-just-wasnt-very-good
Mike Pelfrey owns it after being knocked around in Tigers debut; ‘I just wasn’t very good’.
OaklandPress
 
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Anthony Fenech of the Detroit Free Press revisits the December 2007 blockbuster that saw the Tigers acquire Miguel Cabrera and Dontrelle Willis from the Marlins in exchange for a six-prospect package headlined by then-elite prospects Andrew Miller and Cameron Maybin.
Fenech spoke to former GM Dave Dombrowski (now the president of baseball ops in Boston), who explained that he received a rare call from owner Mike Ilitch to his home phone around Thanksgiving. Ilitch had gotten word that Cabrera could be available, and while much of the focus was on the Angels and Dodgers, Ilitch told Dombrowski to enter the mix and see what he could do, despite the Tigers? payroll already being stretched thin.
Fenech spoke to Dombrowski about discussions with Ilitch in which he outlined a Cabrera contract extension, and he also chatted with former and present members of that front office about the talks between the Marlins and Tigers at the ?07 Winter Meetings.
MLBTraderumors
 
Dave Dombrowski?s Tigers offered outfielder Rusney Castillo a $40MM deal when Castillo was a free agent, Jon Heyman tweets. That figure didn?t approach the $72.5MM offer Castillo eventually got from the Red Sox, but it suggests that Dombrowski liked Castillo even before taking over as the Red Sox? president of baseball operations. Castillo?s deal with the Red Sox, of course, hasn?t worked out well so far, and he has yet to receive a plate appearance this season.
MLBTraderumors
 
April 10 in Tigers and mlb history:

1913 - In a game which features U.S. President Woodrow Wilson throwing out the first pitch, the New York Highlanders become the New York Yankees. Playing their first game under their new nickname, the Yankees lose to the Washington Senators, 2 - 1,
as future Hall of Famer Walter Johnson picks up the win for Washington. After giving up an unearned run in the 1st inning, Johnson begins a string of shutout innings that will reach a major league record 56 before the St. Louis Browns score in the 4th inning on May 14th.

1947 - In one of the most significant moments in baseball history, Jackie Robinson becomes the first black player of the 20th century to sign a major league contract. Robinson agrees a one-year deal with the Brooklyn Dodgers, whose general manager, Branch Rickey, personally recruited Robinson from the Negro Leagues.

1959 - On Opening Day at Briggs Stadium, Chicago White Sox second baseman Nellie Fox goes 5 for 7 and hits an unlikely 14th-inning two-run home run off Don Mossi to beat the Detroit Tigers, 9 - 7. Fox did not homer in 623 at-bats last season.

1967 Detroit signs free agent Johnny Klippstein.

1989: Ken Griffey, Jr. hits his first major league home run at the Kingdome in Seattle's 6 - 5 win over the White Sox. Griffey's father, Ken Sr., is an outfielder with the Cincinnati Reds, making the two the first father-son duo to play in the major leagues at the same time.

2000 - On his father's 50th birthday, Ken Griffey, Jr. becomes the youngest player, at 30 years and 141 days, to hit 400 career home runs, beating the previous mark set by Jimmie Foxx, who was 30 years and 248 days old.

2006: Jim Thome and Joe Crede hit two-run home runs and Paul Konerko adds a solo shot, leading the Chicago White Sox to a 5 - 3 victory in the Detroit Tigers' home opener.

Tigers players birthdays:

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/l/loudear01.shtml
Art Loudell 1910.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/k/kneisru01.shtml
Rudy Kneisch 1926.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/b/boltocl01.shtml
Cliff Bolton 1937.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Frank_Lary
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/l/laryfr01.shtml?redir
http://sabr.org/bioproj/person/47fb9420
Frank Lary 1954-1964.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/k/kinger01.shtml
Eric King 1986-1988, 1992.

Tigers players who passed away:

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Dick_Kryhoski
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/k/kryhodi01.shtml?redir
Dick Kryhoski 1950-1951.

from Baseball Reference
 
Tonight?s ESPN Sunday Night Baseball game will be played in Detroit. The forecast calls for temperatures in the high 30s with a possibility of rain mixed with snow. Surprised? Neither am I.

Detroit is in Michigan. Of course the weather is inclement in early April. Allow me to be blunt. Scheduling an early-season game for 8 o?clock on a Sunday in an upper-midwest city is mind-numbingly stupid.

The Giants and Dodgers play each other tonight. In California. And not only is that an appealing match-up, both teams are off tomorrow, while the Tigers will be playing a day game.

If you?re planning to be at Comerica tonight, I suggest wearing a parka. And feel free to extend a middle finger in the direction of ESPN?s schedule makers. They already have one pointed at you.
Fangraphs
 
Hall of Fame outfielder George Sisler made 24 pitching appearances, including 12 starts. Fellow Cooperstown inductees Sam Crawford and Ty Cobb went a combined 1 for 10 against Sisler.

Rusty Staub is the only player with 500-plus hits for four different teams (Astros, Expos, Mets, Tigers).

Fangraphs
 
https://www.detroitathletic.com/blo...ayo-held-down-second-base-for-wartime-tigers/
Steady Eddie Mayo held down second base for Wartime Tigers.
Detroit Athletic

A journeyman infielder when he came to Detroit in 1944, Eddie Mayo?s glove helped solidify the Tigers? infield in the middle 1940s. Although his statistics were ordinary, the scrappy second baseman?s true value to the Tigers is best measured by results. During his first four seasons at Briggs Stadium, the Tigers won a World Series and finished second three times. In 1945, the Sporting News recognized Mayo?s contributions by naming him the American League?s Most Valuable Player and giving him a watch.

?We beat Chicago in the World Series that year,? Mayo once recalled. ?I was aggressive and I played every day and I think I contributed to the team winning the championship. I contributed, I wasn?t responsible.

?We had a lot great players on that team?Hal Newhouser, Hank Greenberg, Rudy York, Dizzy Trout, Roy Cullenbine, Doc Cramer, Paul Richards. But I fought every pitch. I was a fighter. I had to work hard for everything I got.?

The son of a Polish immigrant who changed the family name from Mayoski, Mayo was born in Massachusetts in 1910. He grew up just a block away from a double-decked ballpark in Clifton, New Jersey, a baseball hotbed.

?You know, in those days before television, semipro baseball was a way of life,? Mayo said. ?Every community had a team representing them, and they weren?t shy about importing players from wherever. In fact, I played for eight different teams in eight different cities. A different team each day and twice on Sunday. We?d play in Paterson, then hightail it up into New York state. It was quite common in north Jersey. You?d see the same fellas but on different teams.?

With exposure like that, it was only a matter of time before Mayo got noticed. One day in 1932, a scout named Ike McAuley came up to Mayo and said, ?How?d you like to play for the Detroit Tigers?? Mayo signed a $175-a-month contract to play for the Class C team in Huntington, West Virginia.

This being the depth of the Great Depression, Mayo soon saw his salary trimmed to $100 per month, plus $1.50 a day in meal money. Even in 1932, that didn?t stretch far.

Mayo remembered the Beckley Hotel in Beckley, West Virginia, where the second floor featured one bathroom and a communal tub for 20 rooms. ?They filled the tub up one time, that was it. At the end of the game, 15 muddy, clay-clogged kids jumped in and out of the tub and then went across the street to Greasy John?s, where you spent the balance of your dollar and a half a day on a hot dog and a coke.

?We had three Model A Fords at the time, with running boards on the side. They had an expansion luggage rack on the running board on the left side. You put your suit roll in there. After you?d played a night game you?d travel from Huntington, West Virginia, to Johnstown, Pennsylvania. That was about 350 or 400 miles. You?d drive all night long and get in Johnstown just in time to play another game. But that was baseball then. And you loved it. That was great.?

Mayo was a third baseman then. In 1936, he was sold to the Baltimore Orioles of the International League, who in turn traded him to the New York Giants. Mayo made a token appearance in that fall?s World Series between the Giants and the Yankees. The Giants traded Mayo to the Boston Braves, where he played parts of two seasons before being sold to Los Angeles, the Chicago Cubs? farm team in the Pacific Coast League. He stayed there five years, waiting for a shot to break into the parent club?s lineup. Mayo had some great years in the PCL. ?But there was no future with the Cubs because of Stan Hack at third and Billy Herman on second. They were fairly young, so I could?ve been with Los Angeles until I died of old age.?

Instead he was drafted by the Philadelphia A?s. It was 1943, and Mayo was 33 years old. The Sunday before the start of the regular season, Mayo was struck in the left eye by a thrown ball. The resulting retinal hemorrhage caused a small blind spot that never completely went away. Nonetheless, World War II was in full swing, and baseball was desperate for players. Mayo was a fine defender at third base for the A?s, but Philadelphia dropped him because of his .219 batting average, which was poor even by wartime standards.

That?s when he was picked up by the Tigers. Manager Steve O?Neill shifted the newcomer to second base. ?In my opinion, he was the greatest humanist and manager of ballplayers that I?ve ever known,? Mayo said of O?Neill. ?A great strategist and a very understanding man. He was the kind of manager who said, ?You?re a major leaguer, you know how to play ball,? and left you alone.?

O?Neill steered the club into two pennant races that weren?t settled until the final day of the season. In 1944, the Tigers were edged out by the St. Louis Browns. The following season, the Tigers outlasted three other teams. Mayo had his finest overall season in the bigs, batting .285 and hitting 10 home runs?both career highs?while flashing great defense at second base. In the seventh game of the World Series, he had two hits, scored twice, and drove in a pair of runs as the Tigers won, 7-2, behind Hal Newhouser?s complete-game performance.

?Hal was a great pitcher,? Mayo said. ?He wasn?t a thrower?he was a pitcher. He had all the ammunition that goes with a great arm.?

Mayo played regular through 1948, after which he accepted an offer to manager the Tigers? AAA club in Toledo. He went on to coach briefly with the Red Sox and Phillies before moving into private industry. He retired with a lifetime .252 average over nine major-league seasons.

Mayo had a couple of well-deserved nicknames: ?Steady Eddie? and ?Hotshot.? He was suspended for a year in the PCL for spitting on an umpire during a heated argument, a suspension that later was overruled. On another occasion, this time while with Detroit, he received a $25 fine from American League president Will Harridge ?for knocking Skeeter Newsome on his ass.?

?He was a shortstop with Boston,? Mayo explained. ?What happened? Well, were playing in Detroit and he hit one to left center. A three-base hit. One of the tricks of the trade when you?re a second baseman is to stand on the inside of the bag as the runner comes around. That way he has to make that wide turn. He can?t cut it short.

?So I?m just standing there, watching the outfield, and Newsome?s got to make that wide turn, which made his three-base hit a two-and-a-half-base hit. He sees he can?t make it to third. So, as he turned around and came back to second, he tossed out a couple expletives and popped me in the chest. I don?t know why he didn?t throw a haymaker, ?cause he had me there, I wasn?t even looking for it. I threw off my glove and?I remember it like it was yesterday?three jabs and a hook and he was on his ass. He was one guy I really wanted to demolish.?

A successful business career enabled Mayo to enjoy a very comfortable lifestyle. He had homes in Berlin, Maryland, and Palm Springs, California, both on the golf course. He was 96 and the oldest living Tiger when he died in 2006. Long before then, however, he had quit watching the game he had once played with such passion, bemoaning the lack of fundamentals and discipline in the modern player. He grew irritated whenever someone pointed out to him some player who was hustling on the field.

?Well, Christ, 400 guys played like that back when there was 16 teams,? Mayo would respond. ?Everybody dove into bases, everybody came in spikes high, everybody ran out a ground ball. If you didn?t play ball like that, you didn?t stick around.?
 
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