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

http://www.mlive.com/tigers/index.s..._ausmus_suspended_1_1.html#incart_river_index
Tigers' Brad Ausmus suspended 1 game by MLB, out tonight vs. Twins.
Mlive

http://www.freep.com/story/sports/m...troit-tigers-brad-ausmus-suspension/84511804/
Tigers manager Brad Ausmus suspended for tonight's game.
Freep

http://www.detroitnews.com/story/sp...eviewing-possible-punishment-ausmus/84507890/
Tigers' Ausmus suspended 1 game for outburst.
Detnews

http://m.tigers.mlb.com/news/article/178661180/tigers-manager-brad-ausmus-suspended-fined
Ausmus suspended 1 game, fined for tirade.
Lamont served as Tigers skipper for Tuesday night's game vs. Twins.
Tigers official site

http://detroit.cbslocal.com/2016/05/17/tigers-ausmus-suspended-one-game-due-to-home-plate-tirade/
Tigers? Ausmus Suspended One Game Due To Home Plate Tirade.
CBSDetroit

http://www.theoaklandpress.com/spor...ad-ausmus-fined-suspended-one-game-for-tirade
Tigers? Brad Ausmus fined, suspended one game for tirade.
OaklandPress

http://www.blessyouboys.com/2016/5/...nded-one-game-detroit-tigers-totally-worth-it
Tigers' Brad Ausmus suspended 1 game after hilarious on-field antics.
bybtb

http://espn.go.com/mlb/story/_/id/1...r-brad-ausmus-gets-one-game-suspension-tirade
Tigers manager Brad Ausmus gets 1-game suspension for tirade.
espn
 
http://www.mlive.com/tigers/index.ssf/2016/05/brad_ausmus-less_tigers_explod.html#incart_river_index
Brad Ausmus-less Tigers explode late to beat Twins, win third straight.
Mlive

http://www.freep.com/story/sports/mlb/tigers/2016/05/17/detroit-tigers-minnesota-twins/84518990/
Detroit 7 - Minnesota 2: Tigers use big seventh inning to beat Twins.
Freep

http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/gameday/index.jsp?gid=2016_05_17_minmlb_detmlb_1&mode=classic
Gameday Boxscore.

http://www.detroitnews.com/story/sp...rs-bats-erupt-twins-bullpen-victory/84522120/
Tigers bats erupt against Twins bullpen in victory.
Detnews

http://m.tigers.mlb.com/det/video/search?team_id=116&tagName=Detroit Tigers
Webvideo Highlights from the Tigers 7 - 2 win over the twins.

http://www.blessyouboys.com/2016/5/...cap-hits-and-runs-hits-and-runs-hits-and-runs
Detroit Tigers 7 - Minnesota Twins 2: Huge 7th sparks Motown victory.
Tigers official site

http://www.blessyouboys.com/2016/5/...cap-hits-and-runs-hits-and-runs-hits-and-runs
Detroit Tigers 7 - Minnesota Twins 2: Huge 7th sparks Motown victory.
bybtb

http://espn.go.com/mlb/recap?gameId=360517106
Tigers score 7 in 7th inning, beat Minnesota 7-2.
espn
 
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May 18 in Tigers and mlb history:

1912 - The Detroit Tigers use a team of replacement players against thePhiladelphia Athletics. With 19 players on strike in protest of the recent suspension of Ty Cobb, manager Hughie Jennings recruits college players and a number of local semipro players to avoid a forfeit and fine. Detroit loses to the Athletics 24 - 2, as pitcher Al Travers gives up all 24 runs on 26 hits.

1933 - The first All-Star Game is announced for July 6th at Comiskey Park. It will be played as part of the Chicago World's Fair celebration and is sponsored by the Chicago Tribune. Fans will pick the players.

1937 - Brooks Robinson is born in Little Rock, Arkansas. The perennial Gold Glove third baseman will make his debut with the Baltimore Oriolesin 1955. In 1964, Robinson will win the American League MVP Award. Six years later, his defensive brilliance will lead the Orioles to a World Series victory.

1946 - The Tigers acquire George Kell from the Philadelphia A?s for Barney McCosky. Kell wins the 1949 batting title and makes five All-Star teams in seven seasons with Detroit, becoming the greatest third baseman in franchise history.

1956 - Mickey Mantle of the New York Yankees hits home runs from both sides of the plate for the third time in his career, setting a major league record. Mantle includes a perfect 4 for 4 day, helping New York to an 8 - 7 victory over the Chicago White Sox.

1959 - Jim Bunning pitches and bats the Tigers to a 14 - 2 beating of the red sox at Fenway Park. Bunning pitches the complete game and also homers and triples to knock in 5 runs. Al Kaline, Charlie Maxwell, and Frank Bolling also hit homeruns in the Tigers 16 hit attack.

1969 - Rod Carew of the Minnesota Twins steals second base, third, and home plate during the 3rd inning of an 8 - 2 loss to the Detroit Tigers. Carew pulls off the trifecta against the battery of Mickey Lolich and Bill Freehan. Carew becomes the first player in 28 years to steal three bases in sequence in the same inning.

1982: Larry Herndon of the Detroit Tigers hits three home runs in an 11 - 9 win over Oakland, and in the process becomes the 14th player in major league history to hit home runs in four consecutive plate appearances. On May 16th, he homered in his final at-bat to give the Tigers a 7 - 6 victory over Minnesota.

2004 - At the age of 40, Randy Johnson becomes the oldest pitcher in major league history to throw a perfect game, retiring all 27 hitters to lead the Arizona Diamondbacks over the Atlanta Braves, 2 - 0. It is the 17th perfect game in major league history and the first since David Cone of the Yankees did it against Montreal on July 18, 1999. Johnson also joins Cy Young, Jim Bunning, Hideo Nomo and Nolan Ryan as the only pitchers to throw no-hitters in both leagues, and creates the longest time span between no-no's, having first accomplished the feat against the Detroit Tigers in June of 1990.

2012: Justin Verlander makes a bid for the third no-hitter of his career, but falls two outs short, in beating Pittsburgh 6 - 0. Josh Harrison singles with one out in the 9th against the Tigers' ace for the Bucs' lone hit. Verlander, who strikes out 12, is now 16-2 for his career in interleague play.

Tigers players and coaches birthdays:

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/g/gentrru01.shtml
Rufe Gentry 1943-1944, 1946-1948.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Don_Lund
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/l/lunddo01.shtml?redir
Don Lund 1949, 1952-1954, coach 1957-1958, farm and scouting director 1963-1970.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Prince_Fielder
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/f/fieldpr01.shtml?redir
Prince Fielder 2012-2013.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Joakim_Soria
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/s/soriajo01.shtml?redir
Joakim Soria 2014-2015.

Tigers players who passed away:

http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Neil_Chrisley
http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/c/chrisne01.shtml?redir
Neil Chrisley 1959-1960.

from Baseball Reference
 
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https://www.detroitathletic.com/blog/2016/05/18/mcauliffe-heart-champion/
Dick McAuliffe had the heart of a champion.
Detroit Athletic

He was a hero to a generation of Detroit Tiger fans, a tough competitor who took no prisoners on the diamond.

He was the star second baseman on a championship baseball team, and his grit and determination to succeed was equaled only by that of the proud city for which he played for 14 years.

The Tigers announced that Dick McAuliffe passed away last week at the age of 76. No cause of death was given.

Though not a big man, he had the heart of a champion.

Born in Hartford, Connecticut on November 29, 1939, he grew up in Unionville, a nearby suburb. McAuliffe played football, basketball, and baseball in high school.

Pitching in a state championship game, he was yanked early due to wildness, was moved over to third base, and made a couple of swell defensive plays. Sitting in the stands that afternoon was Tiger scout Lew Cassell, who was so impressed with the kid that he signed him to a contract two weeks later. With the ink on his high school diploma barely dry, and a $500 bonus in his back pocket, Richard John McAuliffe was now a professional baseball player.

But it wasn?t an easy first summer for the 17-year-old. With the Class D Erie Sailors, McAuliffe hit only .206 in 60 games. It was a slow, steady progression up the organizational ladder for the stocky 5?11,? 160-pound shortstop. After hitting .301 in Knoxville in 1960, he was promoted to Detroit, seeing his first big league action on September 17 at Briggs Stadium. Pinch-hitting in the ninth inning for pitcher Paul Foytack in a blowout loss, McAuliffe drew a base on balls.

It was an appropriate start for a man with a good eye at the plate who was expert at drawing walks. He got into eight games in that season?s final month, with seven hits in 27 at-bats.

Following a sizzling start in the thin air at Triple-A Denver in 1961, he was called up to the Tigers for good in June. Seeing action at short and third base, he batted a solid .256 in his rookie year. By 1962, he was in the lineup every day, mostly at the hot corner, but his versatility allowed manager Bob Scheffing to pencil him in at second or short as well.

McAuliffe?s unusual batting stance was suggested to him by Wayne Blackburn, one of his minor league hitting coaches. A left-handed hitter, he stood spread-eagled at the plate with his left knee pointed at the catcher and his right knee at the pitcher?s mound. His at-bats began with his right foot poised on his toes, and his bat held ridiculously high above his head, before McAuliffe unleashed his trademark vicious stroke. He was a classic ?foot-in-the-bucket? hitter whose high leg kick hearkened back to Hall of Famer Mel Ott.

The swing generated occasional power (he hit 197 lifetime home runs), but also more than his share of strikeouts. And while not a high average hitter (he never reached .275 in any one season), his consistently high on-base percentage made him a tough out in an offensively-challenged era. And he was a slasher at the dish, a line-drive hitter whose swing didn?t result in many ground balls.

His breakout year was 1964, despite his 32 errors at shortstop. He blasted 24 home runs with an OPS of .762 and 4.2 Wins Above Replacement. Not bad for a kid who hadn?t yet turned 25.

By the following summer, he began a string of three-straight all-star appearances (including a home run in the 1965 game). His WAR from 1966-68 was 6.0, 5.1, and 5.6, respectively.

The 1967 season was a disappointing one for the Tigers. McAuliffe had by that time been switched to second base. The fate of the team went down to the final game of the year, which the Tigers needed to win or face elimination. With Detroit trailing 8-5 against the Angels at Tiger Stadium with two on and one out in the bottom of the ninth, McAuliffe hit into a 4-6-3 double-play to end his team?s season.

It was only the second double-play he hit into in 1967.

But in 1968, the Tigers won the American League pennant. McAuliffe led the team with 95 runs scored (and didn?t hit into a double-play all summer). He batted only .222 in the World Series victory over St. Louis, but did hit a home run Game Three at Tiger Stadium.

But McAuliffe?s signature moment in a Tiger uniform came on August 22 of that year. On the hill for the visiting White Sox was Tommy John. According to McAuliffe, John was ?a lowball, sinker-slider (pitcher) with great control and not a great deal of velocity.? But in McAuliffe?s second at-bat, with the Tigers up, 1-0, John nearly beaned him on three straight blazing fastballs, with each pitch hurling toward the backstop.

In McAuliffe?s eyes, the Sox, who still had a theoretical chance in the race, wanted nothing better than to knock him out of commission for a week or two. McAuliffe glared back at John on the pitcher?s mound. The two exchanged verbal pleasantries, (John reportedly saying ?What are you going to do about it?!?) McAuliffe rushed the mound, and the benches cleared right speedily.

In the words of Tommy John: ?McAuliffe drove his knee into my left shoulder and separated it.? As a result, the pitcher missed the rest of the season. As for McAuliffe, he was suspended five games and fined the princely sum of $250.

Injuries and age began to take a toll, and within a few years McAuliffe was reduced to platoon status. He homered in the 1972 American League Championship Series, which Detroit lost to Oakland in five games. But after the 1973 season he was dealt to the Boston Red Sox for a young, relatively-unknown outfielder named Ben Oglivie.

McAuliffe hit only .210 in Beantown in 1974, and was released after the season.

He took a managerial gig with the Bristol Red Sox for 1975. But in August, with Boston?s third baseman Rico Petrocelli forced to go on the disabled list with vertigo, McAuliffe was surprisingly brought back to play. He appeared in seven games, all at third base, and collected two hits, as Boston won the American League East. McAuliffe, however, was left off the post-season roster, effectively ending his major league career.

?The game was very important to me,? McAuliffe once said. ?I played as hard as I could. I always thought I gave 100 percent.?

Tiger fans couldn?t agree more.
 
http://www.mlive.com/tigers/index.s...ers_gameday_justin_81.html#incart_river_index
Detroit Tigers Gameday: Justin Verlander still hunting for first May win.
Mlive

http://www.mlive.com/tigers/index.ssf/2016/05/tigers_lineup_slumping_james_m.html#incart_river_index
Tigers lineup: Victor Martinez, slumping James McCann given day off.
Mlive

http://www.freep.com/story/sports/m...wins-ricky-nolasco-justin-verlander/84529572/
Detroit Tigers' lineup: Victor Martinez a late scratch for 'rest'.
Freep
 
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