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

http://www.mlive.com/tigers/index.s...ers_gameday_anibal_42.html#incart_river_index
Detroit Tigers Gameday: Anibal Sanchez throwing as losing skid hits 2008 level.
Mlive

The Tigers' long-term losing skid has now hit 10 in 11 games after a 1-0 loss to the Baltimore Orioles on Friday.
The last such streak of this magnitude? Sept. 9-24, 2008, when the Tigers lost 12 of 13.

Justin Upton's strikeout problem continued on Friday, going 0-for-4 with three strikeouts. He's struck out 15 times in the last seven games and has eight games this season with three strikeouts.

Victor Martinez extended his hitting streak to four games on Friday with a 1-for-4 day at the plate. He's 11-for-17 during that stretch - all singles - with a strikeout and walk.

Miguel Cabrera isn't hitting for power in May. He's 13-for-43 this month with one extra-base hit and four RBIs, pulling in a slugging percentage of .326.
 
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I tweeted this to Miggy around 5 pm this afternoon;

KalineCountry ‏
@KalineCountry 7 hours ago
@MiguelCabrera https://www.instagram.com/p/BEz35a2RCL5/
Homeruns Si!!!!

He blasted a homerun but they still lost.

http://www.mlive.com/tigers/index.ssf/2016/05/detroit_tigers_83.html#incart_river_index
Tigers slammed into 11th loss in last 12 games by Orioles.
Mlive

The Tigers entered the game hitting .161 (5 for 31) with four singles, one home run and 11 strikeouts with the bases loaded this season.

Cabrera's 6th inning HR was calculated at 464 feet, the longest hit at Camden Yards since 2009.

Cabrera has 413 career home runs. The next home run he hits will tie him for 50th on the all-time list with Darrell Evans.
 
http://www.mlive.com/tigers/index.ssf/2016/05/detroit_tigers_83.html#incart_river_index
Tigers slammed into 11th loss in last 12 games by Orioles.
Mlive

http://www.freep.com/story/sports/mlb/tigers/2016/05/14/baltimore-orioles-detroit-tigers/84396612/
Baltimore 9 - Detroit 3: Tigers bombed in late innings.
Freep

http://www.detroitnews.com/story/sp...bbered-long-ball-11th-loss-12-games/84396204/
Tigers clobbered by long ball in 11th loss in 12 games.
Detnews

http://m.tigers.mlb.com/news/article/178186750/orioles-power-past-tigers-win-7th-straight
Tigers get on board, but can't overpower Orioles.
Tigers official site

http://m.tigers.mlb.com/news/article/178177946/miguel-cabrera-ends-tigers-scoreless-streak
Miggy's 462-foot homer ends Tigers' scoreless streak.
Tigers official site

http://detroit.cbslocal.com/2016/05/14/tigers-blow-late-lead-lose-to-orioles-9-3/
Tigers Blow Late Lead, Lose To Orioles 9-3.
CBSDetroit

http://espn.go.com/blog/detroit-tig...-rocked-in-the-sixth-as-the-tigers-lose-again
Anibal Sanchez gets rocked in the sixth as the Tigers lose again.
espn

http://espn.go.com/mlb/boxscore?gameId=360514101
Boxscore.
 
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May 15 in Tigers and mlb history:

1899 - Willie Keeler, one of the smallest players and best bunters, drives the ball past startled LF Ed Delahanty of the Phillies for an inside-the-parkgrand slam and an 8 - 5 victory for Brooklyn.

1901 - The first shutout in American League history (during its time as a major league) is recorded as Watty Lee of the Washington Senatorsblanks the Boston Americans, 4 - 0.

1903 - At Detroit, the Tigers pick on Boston outfielder Patsy Dougherty and collect five triples and two homers in winning, 8 - 6. Dougherty misjudges a number of fly balls.

1911: Ring Lardner writes, "They are using a new ball this year. It's livelier and that means more hitting, and more hitting means longer games, and that's the devil. It appears to be impossible to finish a game in less than two hours."

1911: With the score tied in the 10th inning, Boston's Smokey Joe Wood intentionally walks Ty Cobb, issuing one of two free passes the star will receive all season. Two batters later, Jim Delahanty drives in Cobb for Detroit's 5 - 4 win. With two safeties today, Cobb starts a 40-game hitting streak.

1912 - Ty Cobb charges into the stands at Hilltop Park in New York and attacks a crippled heckler named Claude Lueker. Other fans and Tigers mix it up before order is restored. Ban Johnson suspends Cobb indefinitely for the incident.

1922 - In a 4 - 1 win at New York, Ty Cobb beats out a grounder to SS Everett Scott. Veteran writer Fred Lieb scores it ahit in the boxscore he files with the Associated Press. But official scorer John Kieran of the New York Tribune gives an error to Scott. At the season's end, the American League official records, based on AP box scores, list Cobb at .401. New York writers complain unsuccessfully, claiming it should be .399, based on the official scorer's stats. Lieb will reverse himself at the end of the year, but Ban Johnson goes with the hit call.

1933 - The major leagues advance the cut-down date a month, limiting rosters to 23 players today instead of June 15th.

1941: Joe DiMaggio gets a single in four at bats against Eddie Smith of the Chicago White Sox to start his 56-game hitting streak. Joe D's hit goes unnoticed as the Yankees lose, 13 - 1.

1951: In a fine trade for Chicago, the White Sox send lefty Bob Cain to the Tigers for hurler Saul Rogovin.

1952 - After pitching four no-hitters in the minors, 33-year-old Virgil "Fire" Trucks of Detroit pitches his first in the major leagues, a 1 - 0 blanking of the Senators. Vic Wertz's dramatic two-out home run in the 9th off Bob Porterfield wins the game at Briggs Stadium. Trucks will throw a second no-hitter later this year.

1957: With today's deadline to cut rosters to 25 players, a number of veterans are handed their walking papers. Among them are: pitchers Ellis Kinder and Jim McDonald, OF Bob Kennedy (White Sox), 1B Preston Ward (Indians), and 1B Eddie Robinson (Tigers).

1969: Willie Horton leaves the Detroit bench during a 2 - 1 win against Chicago and goes AWOL for four days.

1976: Mark Fidrych wins his first major league start, a complete-game 2-hit, 2 - 1 victory over the Indians. The Bird holds the Indians hitless for six innings, talks to the ball, and tamps down the mound before toeing the rubber each inning.

2009: Ryan Raburn and Brandon Inge hit grand slams as the Tigers defeat Oakland, 14 - 1. It is the first time that Detroit has hit two grand slams in one game since Jim Northrup did it all by himself on June 24, 1968.

2012: The White Sox are ahead, 6 - 0, in the top of the 6th inning when the Tigers' bats get to work. Miguel Cabrera, Ryan Raburn and Austin Jackson all homer in an 8-run frame, as Detroit wins, 10 - 8. The Tigers get a scare in the bottom of the 9th, however, when closer Jose Valverde retires the first two Sox hitters, then begins to feel tightness in his back; he gives up a pair of hits and has to leave the game. Veteran Octavio Dotel steps in, and while he gives up a two-run double to Alexei Ramirez, he retires Dayan Viciedo to end the game and pick up his first save as a Tiger. He has now recorded a save for 9 of the record 13 teams he has pitched for.

Tigers players birthdays:

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/h/hincha.01.shtml
A.J. Hinch 2003.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/k/karnuja01.shtml
Jason Karnuth 2005.

Tigers players who passed away:

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Goose_Goslin
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/g/gosligo01.shtml?redir
Leon 'Goose' Goslin 1934-1937.

from Baseball Reference
 
https://www.detroitathletic.com/blog/2016/05/15/carlos-guillen/
Carlos Guillen made a name for himself as one of the Tigers best shortstops.
Detroit Athletic

If you want to rank the greatest shortstops in the history of the Detroit Tigers, you start with Alan Trammell. There?s no real debate about him being number one.

Then the discussion has to include longtime Detroit mainstays Donie Bush and Billy Rogell, who played so long ago that hardly anyone remains who saw either dust their mitts with infield dirt.

It?s necessary and prudent to toss in Harvey Kuenn, a fella whose name is rarely mentioned without the accompanying phrase ?hard-hitting.? While Ol? Harv wasn?t a wizard with the glove, he nrarely met a fastball he couldn?t square up on.

Also included in that second tier of Detroit shortstops should be a ballplayer who came to the Tigers without much fanfare and fairly anonymously in one of the more lopsided deals to favor the club. I?m speaking of Carlos Guill?n, a likable team leader who came to Detroit and established himself as a dangerous hitter and capable infielder in eight seasons wearing the Old English D.

While others got much of the attention, Guill?n was quietly turning himself into an All-Star shortstop when Detroit became relevant again a decade ago as the Leyland Era began. It?s not hyperbole to say that without the clutch performance of Guill?n the Tigers could not have navigated their way to the pennant in 2006. That autumn, while the city of Detroit and the state of Michigan were falling in love with the team, Guill?n supplied several key hits under the hot lights of the postseason.

Guill?n was born in Maracay, a city in the north of Venezuela and one of the most important cities in that country. Guill?n came from a middle class family and did not struggle as much as some other young ballplayers who came out of Latin America. In 1992, the 17-year old opened eyes with his play in his native country and a scout for the Houston Astros signed him to a contract as an undrafted amateur player. The Astros allowed him to continue his education and his amateur career in Venezuela for two more seasons, then Guill?n was assigned to Houston?s rookie league team in 1995. On that club he was a teammate of Freddy Garcia, a fellow Venezuelan who would become one of Carlos?s best friends in baseball.

As a young player learning to play the professional game in the Astros system, Guill?n was notable for two reasons. First, he arrived in the United States at the age of 19 with a lot of baby fat still on his frame. In his first few seasons, the infielder was listed at well over 215 pounds. His cheeks were chunky and he looked to many of his teammates as if he was more of a batboy than a ballplayer. But the second reason Guill?n stood out canceled any doubts of his belonging: he could hit the baseball very hard. His manager at one of his early stops was Jim Pankovits, who was impressed with young Carlos.

?I tell all my coaches to stay away from his swing, don?t mess with it,? Pankovits said. ?He?s got a nice easy swing from both sides [of the plate].?

Carlos was in his fourth year in the Houston organization when his life, and that of his best buddy, was jolted. The Astros were in the middle of a dogfight for a playoff spot and needed pitching for the stretch run, so they went all out and got a big name. Guill?n and his friend Garcia were packaged in a trade that brought Randy Johnson to the Astros from Seattle.

Having only known the Houston system, Guill?n found himself suddenly a member of the Mariners organization. He impressed his new team enough that he earned a September call up to the big leagues. It was what baseball men used to call ?a cup of coffee.? In his first major league game, Guill?n started at second base at the Kingdome in Seattle. His nerves might have been working in his first at-bat when he struck out against Mike Mussina, but two trips later his lined a ball deep to the right of the second baseman that was fielded on one hop. No throw could be made and Carlos crossed first base with his first MLB hit, also recording an RBI.

In his first few years with the Mariners, the club wasn?t sure where the young infielder fit in. Guill?n saw time at third base, second, and his natural position of shortstop while in the Seattle minor league system. Alex Rodriguez was entrenched at short however, so Guill?n?s path was blocked there.

The M?s may not have known where to plug in Carlos, but he had a strong preference. Venezuela has a long history of excellent shortstops, going back to Chico Carrasquel in the 1950s. Others followed: Hall of Famer Luis Aparicio, Davey Concepcion, Ozzie Guill?n, and Omar Vizquel, who was an All-Star in the American League when Carlos debuted.

In 2001 ARod bolted Seattle for a lucrative free agent deal and the Mariners handed Guill?n the shortstop job in what turned out to be an historic season for the club. Seattle won 116 games, tying the major league record. The season was pretty amazing considering the team had lost the services of Rodriguez and Ken Griffey Jr. in the previous two seasons. Guill?n drew praise for his steady play in the field, while his offensive game was coming along. At that point in his career, the 25-year old was a much better hitter from the right side than he was from the left.

The transformative moment in Guill?n?s career came a month before spring training in 2004. The Tigers acquired Guill?n for Ramon Santiago and a minor leaguer. It proved to be one of Detroit general manager Dave Dombrowski?s famous heists. In Detroit, Guill?n blossomed into an All-Star.

The Mariners had a new GM that year, Bill Bavasi, son of former baseball executive Buzzie Bavasi. In this case, the fruit did fall far from the tree. Bavasi signed free agent shortstop Rich Aurilia the same day he shipped Guill?n to the Tigers. Bavasi wanted a veteran shortstop and more power from that position. The 32-year old Aurilia seemed to fit the bill: he?d hit as many as 37 homers in a season for the Giants. But trading out Guill?n for Aurilia was one of the younger Bavasi?s biggest blunders.

Guill?n was arriving in Detroit just as the team was trying to rebound from the dreadful embarrassment of the ?03 season when they lost 119 games. After years of spending on his hockey team, Tigers? owner Mike Ilitch opened his wallet for baseball money and signed All-Star catcher Ivan Rodriguez. There was some buzz in Lakeland for training camp for a change after Pudge inked his deal. But few people paid much attention to Guill?n.

That changed pretty quickly. In his first month as a Tiger, Guill?n hit .309 with 14 runs batted in in 22 games. In May he stepped it up, hitting .343 with a new power stroke: he belted 14 extra-base hits that month, including four triples and four homers. Thanks to his quick start (he was hitting .324 with 13 homers, 65 RBIS, and 107 hits at the All-Star break), Guill?n became an instant fan favorite. Pudge got all the headlines, but Carlos was showing on the field that he was going to be a force on the team.

The switch-hitter was an All-Star in his first season in a Tigers? uniform when he slugged 20 homers and batted .318 for the season, the highest mark by a Detroit shortstop since Alan Trammell was manning the position. The following year he was hitting over .350 in May when he got hurt and missed nearly a month. He suffered another setback in the late summer and as a result only appeared in 87 games in 2005. But Guill?n hit .320 with good power again.

He followed up his injury-marred 2005 season with his best professional year in 2006. That season the Tigers got off to a hot start under new manager Jim Leyland, who quickly learned to love his shortstop. Guill?n hit 19 home runs and was red-hot down the stretch, hitting close to .350 in the second half. But his best and most important performances in ?06 were yet to come.

The Tigers entered the playoffs as a wild card team, making their first postseason appearance in almost twenty years. They lost Game One of the AL Division Series to the Yankees, a team favored to beat them. In Game Two, the Tigers were facing Mike Mussina at Yankee Stadium and fell behind 3-1. Here was the same pitcher Guill?n had faced in his very first major league game back in 1998. Both were in different uniforms, but the stakes were much higher. In the sixth, Mussina tried to sneak a fastball past Carlos but Guill?n swung and sent a home run into the right field stands at Yankee Stadium to tie the game. Detroit held on for a 4-3 win to tie the series. In the Motor City over the next two games, Guill?n had five hits and the Tigers defeated the Yanks to advance to the ALCS. In all, Carlos produced eight hits, four for extra bases, in the series win over New York. Detroit would not lose another game on their way to capturing the pennant. When Magglio Ordonez blasted a home run to win Game Four of the ALCS and the pennant at Comerica Park, Guill?n was one of the first teammates to put a bear hug on him as the crowd went crazy.

In the World Series, a similar script played out as the team lost Game One to St. Louis. In the second game in the first inning, Guill?n stroked a run-scoring double for a critical run in the 3-1 Detroit victory. Unfortunately it was their only win in the Fall Classic. But Guill?n had three hits in that game and six in the World Series. Overall he batted .353 in the World Series and .362 in the postseason in 2006 for the Tigers. He knew how to rise to the occasion.

Guill?n finished tenth in AL Most Valuable Player voting in 2006 and was an All-Star in 2007 and again in 2008 for the Tigers. In ?07 he topped 100 runs batted in, becoming the second Detroit shortstop to do that, the other being Trammell.

As part of a core group that included Rodriguez, Magglio Ordonez, and Placido Polanco, Guill?n was one of the team leaders on the Tigers as they established themselves as a legitimate contender every year and laid the groundwork for the 2011-2014 run of four straight division titles. With many Latin stars during this era, the Tigers became a popular destination for players born south of the border.

?This is a team everybody?s watching in Venezuela because we?ve got a lot of Venezuelan players on this team,? Guill?n said.

One of the final and most memorable moments of Guill?n?s career as a Tiger came during the 2011 season against the Angels at Comerica Park. In a game that matched aces Justin Verlander and Jered Weaver, the Detroit righthander was no-hitting the Angels in a tight contest. Ordonez broke up the scoreless game by hitting a long home run, but as he watched while going down the first base line, Weaver screamed at him to ?run hard.? The two players exchanged words and gestures as Ordonez circled the bases. The two benches nearly cleared too. Later in the game, Guill?n hit a home run off Weaver and flipped his bat emphatically while staring at Weaver. It was an uncharacteristic display of showmanship by Guill?n. but one he felt was necessary.

?That was for Magglio, for what [Weaver] did to my teammate,? Guill?n said.

In his mid-30s, Guill?n?s body broke down pretty quickly, torn up by back problems and leg and knee injuries. He played his last game in 2011 before succumbing to a season-ending injury. He came back to Lakeland the next spring but officially announced his retirement in March. He was only 36 years old.

Evidence of his high regard by the team was shown in August of 2012 when the Tigers honored Carlos Guill?n with a special day at Comerica Park. Ironically, the man the Tigers had traded to Seattle for Guill?n (Ramon Santiago) was back in a Detroit uniform and gave his former teammate a big hug. Other former teammates showed up to salute Guill?n and the emotional Leyland was seen wiping away some tears.

When the history of the Tigers is written, the name of Carlos Guill?n deserves a place in the narrative. He arrived in Detroit an unknown, but he ended his career as one of the best shortstops the team ever had.
https://youtu.be/oIWHfUoEyG4
 
Tigers starter Anibal Sanchez did not speak to reporters after the game, but manager Brad Ausmus said he seemed to hit a "wall" in the sixth inning. This trend becoming problematic for the Tigers. When to pull him? When to stick with him? "He can't be a five-innings pitcher," Ausmus said. "The bigger problem is that even if you see he's struggling there after five -- which I don't think there were signs of it, quite frankly -- our bullpen is so taxed that I don't know how we get through the next four innings."
espn
That is being put between a rock and a hard place.

As one player told ESPN earlier this series, it's been tough to see others take the blame for the team's shortcomings this stretch. And not just manager Brad Ausmus, but the entire coaching staff, and the front office, too. Said closer Francisco Rodriguez: "They're not gonna fire 25 players. [There's] always gonna have to be someone else to take the blame, and all the heat, for our actions. We're the ones that have to hit, that have to pitch, that has to run the bases, catch. We're not doing it. It's not only him, we're letting down a lot of people. Coaches, front office, they busted their tails off to provide us good care, scouting reports, travel, all that. It's not only him, it's other people that we have put in a situation where they shouldn't be."
espn
 
Cabrera went 1-for-3 with a two-run homer and a walk in the loss to the Orioles on Saturday.
It's been a tough stretch for "Miggy" and the Tigers lately. He is hitting .304 this month, but that was his first homer in the last 14 games. Since hitting 44 homers in 2013, Cabrera has seen his home run totals drop to 25 in 2014 and 18 in his injury abbreviated 2015 season. He has just five in 135 at-bats this year.
CBSsports
 
http://www.mlive.com/tigers/index.ssf/2016/05/detroit_tigers_bases_loaded.html#incart_river_index
Failure with bases loaded a season-long trend for Detroit Tigers.
Mlive

Failing with the bases loaded has been a season-long trend for the Tigers, who are hitting .156 (5 for 32) in those situations this season. They have one extra-base hit (a grand slam by Jarrod Saltalamacchia) and 11 strikeouts (two each by four different players) in 32 at-bats with the bases loaded.

Here are individual numbers:

J.D. Martinez: 1 for 5, 2 SOs, RBI
Jarrod Saltalamacchia: 1 for 3, HR, SO, 4 RBIs
Nick Castellanos: 1 for 2, SO, 2 RBIs
Jose Iglesias: 1 for 2, RBI
James McCann: 1 for 1, 2 RBIs
Miguel Cabrera: 0 for 5, 2 SOs
Anthony Gose: 0 for 4, 2 SOs, RBI
Ian Kinsler: 0 for 3, 2 SOs, RBI
Andrew Romine: 0 for 2, SO
Mike Aviles: 0 for 2
Anibal Sanchez: 0 for 1
Victor Martinez: 0 for 1, RBI
Justin Upton: 0 for 1, SO, BB, RBI

The Tigers did just fine as a team with the bases loaded in 2015. They were first in the American League in batting average (.336) and third in OPS (.872) with the bases loaded last season.

Here are the Tigers players who had the most at-bats with the bases loaded last season 2015 and how they fared:

Nick Castellanos: .500 (9 for 18), 3B, 2 HRs, 23 RBIs, 1.394 OPS
Yoenis Cespedes: .462 (6 for 13), 2B, HR, 12 RBIs, 1.198 OPS
Victor Martinez: .500 (6 for 12), 2 2Bs, 12 RBIs, 1.167 OPS
J.D. Martinez: .545 (6 for 11), 2 2Bs, 2 BBs, 14 RBIs, 1.299 OPS
Ian Kinsler: .222 (2 for 17), 2 2Bs, 9 RBIs, .583 OPS
James McCann: .000 (0 for 9), 2 RBIs, .182 OPS
Andrew Romine: .625 (5 for 8), 5 1Bs, 7 RBIs, 1.250 OPS
Miguel Cabrera: .143 (1 for 13), 2B, 2 BBs, 7 RBIs, .649 OPS
Jose Iglesias: .000 (0 for 7), 2 BBs, 3 SOs, 2 RBIs, .000 OPS

Those numbers for Cabrera in 2015 look as bad as they do in 2016, but they don't represent a lengthy trend. Cabrera entered the game Saturday night hitting .388 with a .986 OPS with the bases loaded for his career.
 
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