Welcome to Detroit Sports Forum!

By joining our community, you'll be able to connect with fellow fans that live and breathe Detroit sports just like you!

Get Started
  • If you are no longer able to access your account since our recent switch from vBulletin to XenForo, you may need to reset your password via email. If you no longer have access to the email attached to your account, please fill out our contact form and we will assist you ASAP. Thanks for your continued support of DSF.

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

December 11 in Tigers and mlb history:

1854: Hall of Famer Charles 'Old Hoss' Radbourne was born this day in Rochester, NY.

1884: The American Association votes to keep its ban on overhand pitching and to continue to allow fouls caught on one bounce to count as outs. It does abolish the tradition of team captains flipping for the honor of batting first. Now the home team will automatically bat first.

1900: A rumor that the Players Protective Association leaders have gone to Philadelphia to meet with Ban Johnson causes National League owners to "have something closely resembling a fit," says the New York Times. Players later admit the meeting took place.

1912: The Cincinnati Reds purchased Red Corriden from the Detroit Tigers for $7,500.

1917: The Phillies sell star pitcher Grover Alexander, twice a 30-game winner, and his personal catcher "Reindeer" Bill Killefer to the Cubs for righthander "Iron" Mike Prendergast, C Pickles Dillhoefer, and $55,000. Phillies owner William Baker later admits he made the trade because, "I needed the money." The 5th-place Cubs expect the addition of Alexander to greatly strengthen their staff, but Alex will be drafted in the Army.

1924: Eddie Collins signs as player-manager of the White Sox.

1927: The Browns sell George Sisler to Washington for $25,000.

1928: At the National League meeting, President John Heydler proposes the designated hitter for pitchers to improve and speed up the game. He contends fans are tired of seeing weak-hitting pitchers come to bat. Heydler refers to his idea as "the tenth regular."
The American League opposes the idea, and the NL withdraws the proposal.

1928: Toledo (American Association) purchased Johnny Neun from the Detroit Tigers.
1928: The Detroit Tigers traded Ken Holloway and Jackie Tavener to the Cleveland Indians for George Uhle.

1929: The Cards send Grover Alexander, 42, back to the Phillies with C Harry McCurdy for OF Homer Peel and P Bob McGraw.

1930: The BBWAA votes to continue the custom of selecting an MVP for each league. Beginning in 1931 the annual vote of the BBWAA will designate a player for this honor in each league. Previous MVP winners will be able to repeat under the new rules, something that was prohibited by the American League in the 1920s.

1934: The National League votes to permit night baseball, authorizing a maximum of seven games by any team installing lights. The American League will not grant permission for night games until 1937.

1934: The 1935 All-Star Game is assigned to Cleveland. Frank Frisch and Mickey Cochrane, rival managers in the St. Louis-Detroit World Series, will manage their respective league's teams.

1940: The Major Leagues extend commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis to another 4-year term. They also vote to limit night games to seven per team.

1941: The Giants acquire Johnny Mize from the Cardinals for three players - Bill Lohrman, Ken O'Dea and Johnny McCarthy - and $50,000. Because of injuries, Mize's home run production fell from 43 to 16 in 1941, but "The Big Cat" will bounce back to lead the National League in 1947 and 1948.

1947: Branch Rickey announces that the Dodgers have signed an agreement with Bud Holman and the city of Vero Beach to rent 104 acres of a former pre-war municipal airport. They will pay $1 a year and take over the maintenance. In 1952 the Dodgers will sign a new 20-year lease for $1 a year, and on March 11, 1953, a new field will be named Holman Stadium.

1950: At the winter meetings, held in St. Petersburg, FL, Major League owners vote 9-7 against renewing Commissioner Happy Chandler's contract for a new term, starting in 1951. The Cardinals' Fred Saigh led the opposition to Chandler, who had jeopardized the reserve clause and ordered investigations of the alleged gambling activities of several owners.

1951: Joe DiMaggio officially retires as a member of the New York Yankees with 361 home runs and an average of .325 after 13 seasons. His 56-game consecutive-game hitting streak in 1941 will stand as one of the all-time best diamond achievements.


1956: A major league player association is established with Bob Feller as president.

1956: The Major Leagues vote at a joint meeting to reduce player limits to 28 by Opening Day.

1957: The Phillies purchase veteran OF Dave Philley from Detroit.

1957: U.S. Congressman Emanuel Celler and Senator Kenneth Keating, both of New York, hint that there might be antitrust action against Major League Baseball if it televises games as planned, because it jeopardizes the minor leagues.

1959: The A's Arnold Johnson gives the New York Yankees an early Christmas present when he gift wraps OF'er Roger Maris in pinstripes. The Yankees acquire the slugger in a seven-player deal. Roger Maris is traded by the Kansas City Athletics (w/Joe DeMaestri & Kent Hadley), to the New York Yankees for Hank Bauer, Don Larsen, Norm Siebern & Marv Throneberry.

1969: A Federal Court in New York City rules against the suit of umpires Bill Valentine and Al Salerno because baseball is exempt from antitrust laws.

1974: Two baseball greats whose careers ended tragically, Roy Campanella and the late Roberto Clemente, each of whom already occupies baseball's Hall of Fame, are named today with twelve others to the Black Athlete's Hall of Fame. The formal induction ceremony will come on March 13th of next year.

1981: Veteran free agent infielders Joe Morgan and Mark Belanger sign one-year contracts with the Giants and Dodgers, respectively.

1984: OF Fred Lynn, a free agent, signs a four-year contract with the Orioles.

1985: The Detroit Tigers traded a player to be named later, Juan Berenguer and Bob Melvin to the San Francisco Giants for Eric King, Dave LaPoint and Matt Nokes. The Detroit Tigers sent Scott Medvin (December 11, 1985) to the San Francisco Giants to complete the trade.

1991: The Detroit Tigers signed William Brennan as a free agent.

1992: In free agent signings today, the Tigers sign P Bill Krueger to a 2-year contract.

1996: The Detroit Tigers traded Brent Stentz (minors) to the Minnesota Twins for Matt Walbeck.
1996: The Detroit Tigers traded Anton French (minors) to the Toronto Blue Jays for Roberto Duran.

1997: The Detroit Tigers signed Frank Castillo as a free agent.

1998: The Detroit Tigers released Trey Beamon.

2000: The Tigers obtain P Chris Holt, OF Roger Cedeno, and C Mitch Meluskey from the Astros for C Brad Ausmus and pitchers Doug Brocail and Nelson Cruz. Houston catchers threw out 22% of base stealers in 2000, while Ausmus gunned down 42%.

2000: The Detroit Tigers drafted Jermaine Clark from the Seattle Mariners in the 2000 rule 5 draft.

2001: Tigers trade Juan Encarnacion and Luis Pineda to the Reds for Dmitri Young.

2003: The Detroit Tigers signed David Cortes as a free agent.

2006: The Detroit Tigers signed Jose Mesa as a free agent.

2013: The Tigers ink OF Rajai Davis, also for two years.
2013: The Detroit Tigers signed Duane Below as a free agent.

2013: At the Winter Meetings, owners vote to ban home plate collisions over concerns about serious injuries recently suffered by catchers such as Buster Posey or Alex Avila. The exact wording of the rule still needs to be worked out, but baserunners will now be called out if they deliberately run into the opposing catcher, and will face a fine or suspension for particularly grievous offenses. catchers will also be banned from blocking access to the plate without the ball.

2014: Alfredo Simon heads to Detroit for Eugenio Suarez and Jonathon Crawford.
2014: The Tigers send P Rick Porcello to Boston for OF Yoenis Cespedes and Pitchers Alex Wilson and Gabe Speier.

2015: The Detroit Tigers signed Drake Britton as a free agent.
2015: The Detroit Tigers signed Lendy Castillo as a free agent.
2015: The Detroit Tigers signed Thad Weber as a free agent.

2019: Word leaks out that the Angels are on the verge of signing free agent 3B Anthony Rendon to a seven-year contract worth $245 million. When confirmed, it will already be the fourth contract worth over $100 million to be granted this off-season, following those to Ps Zack Wheeler, Stephen Strasburg and Gerrit Cole.

2020: The Phillies hire veteran executive Dave Dombrowski, who put together World Series-winning teams with the Florida Marlins and Boston Red Sox, and was the President and GM for the Tigers, as their President of Baseball Operations and General Manager.

Tigers players birthdays:

https://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Erwin_Renfer
Erwin Renfer Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More | Baseball-Reference.com
Erwin Renfer 1913.

https://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Slick_Coffman
George Coffman Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More | Baseball-Reference.com
Slick Coffman 1937-1939.

Bob Sykes Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More | Baseball-Reference.com
Bob Sykes 1977-1978.

https://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Mike_Henneman
Mike Henneman Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More | Baseball-Reference.com
Mike Henneman 1987-1995.

Tigers players who passed away:

Ted Lepcio Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More | Baseball-Reference.com
Ted Lepcio 1959.

Baseball Reference


bump.
 
December 12 in Tigers and mlb history:

1887: A baseball reporters association is organized. It pledges to work to standardize scoring practices, especially in the gray area of stolen bases.

1900: The National League considers going back to 12 teams to counter American League moves into some cities. Club owners invite Ban Johnson to come to the NL meeting, but change their mind about compromise and leave the AL head outside the meeting room. The NL awards the AL's Minnesota and Kansas City territories to the new Western League, even before the AL officially abandons them. The NL agrees to hear the players in a public meeting, but rejects all their demands.

1906: The American League gives Ban Johnson a raise to $15,000 for the remaining four years of his contract.

1907: The Detroit Tigers purchased Ira Thomas from the New York Highlanders.

1911: A rift between the leagues develops over widespread charges of ticket speculation during the World Series, and accusations that officials of the Giants and A's were involved. The American League passes a resolution refusing to participate in another World Series until it has control of ticket sales in its own parks. The National Commission investigates the charge that speculators were given large blocks of tickets, but takes no action and releases no findings. The following spring, the Commission finds that much scalping occurred, but there is no evidence either team was involved, and peace is declared.

1922: Jake Ruppert agrees to buy out his partner Colonel Huston and gains full control of the Yankees.

1927: The National League reports more than five million attendance for the league in 1927, a new high.

1930: The Rules Committee of baseball issues a greatly revised code, reducing the number of rules by combining many. Not only is the sacrifice rule abolished but also the rule awarding a home runs when the ball bounces into the stands. "Bounce homers" will now be doubles. This had already been in effect in the American League but not the National League.

1933: At the major leagues' annual meeting, the owners vote Judge Landis another seven-year contract as commissioner. Will Harridge gets a new five-year pact as American League president.

1933: Connie Mack is still selling. First he sells Lefty Grove, the A's top winner in each of the past five seasons, along with Max Bishop and George Walberg, to the Boston Red Sox for $125,000 and two players, pitcher Bob Kline and infielder Rabbit Warstler.

Next, catcher Mickey Cochrane goes to Detroit, then George Earnshaw and backstop Johnny Pasek, just acquired from the Tigers, go to the White Sox for $20,000 and catcher Charlie Berry.
Berry once led the NFL in scoring and will become a major league umpire in the 1940s.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CzLG_ZbWQAEDrVK.jpg
The day will be known as "Black Tuesday" in Philadelphia.

1933: The Detroit Tigers traded Johnny Pasek and $100,000 to the Philadelphia Athletics for Mickey Cochrane. As player-manager, Cochrane will lead the Tigers to two straight pennants and their first world championship.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FGXTJj1X...pg&name=medium

1938: The Detroit Tigers traded Ed Selway (minors), George Archie, Tony Piet, Jo-Jo White and cash to Seattle (PCL) for Fred Hutchinson. He will pitch 10 seasons and manage 3 seasons for the Tigers.

1940: The Boston Red Sox purchased Pete Fox from the Detroit Tigers.

1941: The Washington Senators traded Jimmy Bloodworth and Doc Cramer to the Detroit Tigers for Bruce Campbell and Frank Croucher.

1944: The Tigers swap infielder Joe Orengo to the Red Sox for Skeeter Webb, son-in-law of Detroit manager Steve O'Neill. O'Neill denies any knowledge of trade talks, saying "I read about it in the morning paper."

1946: The Pittsburgh Pirates purchased Jimmy Bloodworth from the Detroit Tigers.
1946: The Detroit Tigers released George Caster.

1949: By a 7-1 vote, the American League rejects a proposal to bring back the legal spitball. The rules committee also alters the strike zone to the space between the armpits and the top of the knees. The new rule eliminates the batter's shoulders being within the strike zone.

1950: The owners vote to drop the bonus and high school rule which was designed to prevent the wealthier clubs from buying up all of the available talent. The rule required that all "bonus players" had to stay on the major league roster after one season in the minors.

1954: Willie Mays and Roberto Clemente lead the North to victory in the Puerto Rican Winter League's annual all-star fund-raiser. The Sporting News correspondent Pita Alvarez De La Vega gives the exuberant young duo's exploits some national exposure: "The league took a break from its pennant battle to stage the annual 'Three Kings' all-star game at Mayaguez. All proceeds went into a YMCA fund to buy gifts for the island's poor children in keeping with the old Latin tradition of the Three Kings bringing gifts on January 6... The All-Star North team, made up of players from the Santurce and Mayaguez clubs, won the game, 7 to 5. Willie Mays and Roberto Clemente hit home runs for the winners."

1957: The Detroit Tigers purchased Jim Delsing from the Chicago White Sox.
1957: The Detroit Tigers purchased George Spencer from the Chicago White Sox.

1968: Cleveland trades pitchers Luis Tiant and Stan Williams to the Twins for 3B Graig Nettles, OF Ted Uhlaender, and pitchers Dean Chance and Bob Miller. Tiant led the American League in ERA in 1968.

1975: The Tigers trade pitcher Mickey Lolich and outfielder Billy Baldwin to the Mets in exchange for outfielder Rusty Staub and pitcher Bill Laxton.
Lolich initially vetoed the trade, but Lolich's attorney induced him to change his mind.
Lolich remains the Tigers Franchise Leader in Strikeouts 2679, Shutouts 39, and Starts 459.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DuOg6htWkAEmn6N.jpg

1976: The Detroit Tigers released Bill Freehan.

1980: The Detroit Tigers traded Dave Stegman to the San Diego Padres for Dennis Kinney.

1985: The Detroit Tigers traded Rich Monteleone to the Seattle Mariners for Darnell Coles.

1997: The Detroit Tigers signed Bip Roberts as a free agent.
1997: The Detroit Tigers released Kevin Jarvis.

1998: After being given his last rites, Joe DiMaggio makes a miraculous recovery defying the doctors' dire predictions. He will live another four months.

1999: The Detroit Tigers sent Kimera Bartee to the Cincinnati Reds as part of a conditional deal.

2006: The Detroit Tigers signed Brandon Watson as a free agent.
2006: Alexis Gomez of the Detroit Tigers granted free agency.

2007: Chad Durbin of the Detroit Tigers granted free agency.

2008: Aquilino Lopez of the Detroit Tigers granted free agency.

2010: The Detroit Tigers signed Chris Oxspring as a free agent.

2011: Will Rhymes of the Detroit Tigers granted free agency.

2013: The Tigers sign P Joba Chamberlain to a one-year deal.

2017: National broadcaster Bob Costas is the winner of the Ford Frick Award while long-time writer for the Akron Beacon Journal Sheldon Ocker wins the J.G. Taylor Spink Award. They will both be honored at the Hall of Fame induction ceremony next July.

2019: Major League Baseball and the Players Association agree to amend the Joint Drug Prevention and Treatment Program to include testing for opioids. The purpose is not to punish players caught, but to offer them treatment in order to prevent another tragedy like that which cost the life of P Tyler Skaggs last summer. In addition, cannabis will no longer be tested for, reflecting the fact the substance is now legal in Canada and in a growing number of jurisdictions in the United States, and does not have performance-enhancing effects.

2019: The Detroit Tigers drafted Rony Garcia from the New York Yankees in the 2019 rule 5 draft.

2020: The Detroit Tigers signed Ian Krol as a free agent.

2022: The Detroit Tigers signed Kervin Castro as a free agent.

2023: The Detroit Tigers signed Andrew Chafin as a free agent.
2023: The Detroit Tigers signed Trey Wingenter as a free agent.

Tigers players birthdays:

Les Hennessy Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More | Baseball-Reference.com
Les Hennessy 1913.

https://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Flea_Clifton
Flea Clifton Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More | Baseball-Reference.com
Flea Clifton 1934-1937.

Sawyer Gipson-Long 2023-present.

Tigers players and announcers who passed away:

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DO15ptGX0AAhgx4?format=jpg&name=360x360
Ty Tyson announcer 1927-1953.

Baseball Reference
 
Last edited:
Miguel Cabrera, retired from Tigers in MLB, plans to play one final season in Venezuela.
 
https://www.blessyouboys.com/2023/1...me-run-derby-ronald-acuna-jr-tigres-de-aragua
Miguel Cabrera wants to play a final pro season in Venezuela next year.
The big man has retired from MLB?s ranks, but he wants to give it one more go for his countrymen.
BYBTB

https://motorcitybengals.com/posts/detroit-tigers-legend-miguel-cabrera-playing-venezuelan-league
Detroit Tigers legend Miguel Cabrera not done playing quite yet.
Miguel Cabrera is suiting up for games once again, just not for the Detroit Tigers.
MCBTB

https://www.freep.com/story/sports/...aseball-venezuela-detroit-tigers/71886765007/
Miguel Cabrera, retired from Detroit Tigers, plans to play one final season in Venezuela.
Freep
 
Last edited:
December 13 in Tigers and mlb history:

1906: The Detroit Tigers purchased Claude Rossman from the Cleveland Naps.

1922: Alarmed at the increase in home run hitting (1,054 in the major leagues, up from 936), some American League owners back a zoning system setting a minimum of 300 feet for a ball to be called a home run. The motion dies.

1922: The league requires each club to furnish two home uniforms per player, plus extra caps and stockings on the road, to improve the players' appearance. In National League meetings, Charles Ebbets proposes putting numbers on players' sleeves or caps. It's left to each club to do as it wishes.

1927: Senators president Clark Griffith gains approval to have Washington open the American League season one day before the rest of the league, to celebrate a "National Day" with the U.S. president throwing out the first ball. The AL also installs Ernest S. Barnard as its president.

1927: The St. Louis Browns traded Harry Rice, Elam Vangilder and a player to be named to the Detroit Tigers for
Lu Blue and Heinie Manush. The St. Louis Browns sent Chick Galloway (December 24, 1927) to the Detroit Tigers to complete the trade.

1930: The 15-year career of George Sisler ends as the Boston Braves release him. A lifetime .340 hitter who twice led the American League with averages above .400, Sisler will be among the first to be elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame, enshrined in 1939.

1940: Veteran umpire and ex-Tiger George Moriarty is removed from the active staff and transferred to the American League promotional department.

1942: Happy Birthday to Hall of Famer Ferguson Jenkins, born this day in Chatham-Kent, Canada.

1956: The Dodgers trade Jackie Robinson to the cross-town rivals, the Giants, for pitcher Dick Littlefield and $35,000. Jackie, according to some accounts had already decided privately to leave the game to work for Chock Full of Nuts, publicly retires from baseball rather than accept the trade.

1961: Mickey Mantle signs a 1962 contract for $82,000. Only Joe DiMaggio has been paid more by the Yankees.

1969: The Tigers trade Tom Matchick to the Red Sox for Dalton Jones.

1978: The Detroit Tigers released Mickey Stanley. Stanley played 15 seasons, all with the Tigers, and won a world championship in 1968, and 4 Gold Gloves for his superior defense in Centerfield.

1993: The Detroit Tigers signed David Wells as a free agent.

1995: The Detroit Tigers signed Mark Parent as a free agent.

1999: The Detroit Tigers drafted Mark Johnson from the New York Yankees in the 1999 rule 5 draft.
1999: The Tampa Bay Devil Rays drafted Chad Ogea from the Detroit Tigers in the 1999 rule 5 draft.

2001: The Tigers sign IF-OF Craig Paquette to a 2-year contract.
2001: The Detroit Tigers purchased Joe Valentine from the Montreal Expos.
2001: The Detroit Tigers drafted Jeff Farnsworth from the Seattle Mariners in the 2001 rule 5 draft.
2001: The New York Mets traded a player to be named later to the Detroit Tigers for C.J. Nitkowski and cash. The New York Mets sent Kyle Kessel (minors) (December 13, 2001) to the Detroit Tigers to complete the trade.

2001: Writing a 24-page pun-filled opinion, U.S. District Judge Harvey Bartle III upholds most of an arbitrator's decision declaring nine of 22 umpires who lost their jobs following a 1999 mass resignation must be reinstated. To make his point, the judge said it was his job to make sure the arbitrator hadn't "missed the ball" and both parties "make(s) a pitch that all or part of the arbitrator's ruling should be scored as an error and set aside".

2007: The Mitchell Report is released, naming 89 players as having used or been in possession of steroids. Roger Clemens, Andy Pettitte, Miguel Tejada, David Ortiz, and Jason Giambi are among those named. The report calls for tighter regulation of performance-enhancing drugs.

2010: Canada Post announces that it will feature Hall of Famer Ferguson Jenkins on a postage stamp that commemorates black history month next February.

2011: The Associated Press reports a few more features of the new Collective Bargaining Agreement signed earlier this month. The All-Star break will go from three days to four beginning in 2013*, with the Mid-Summer Classic being played on a Wednesday; teams will no longer be allowed to have players on the 40-man roster share a room during spring training; and players are forbidden from displaying tattoos with corporate logos.

2013: Reds 1B Joey Votto is named recipient of the Tip O'Neill Award, given to the best player in Canada, for a record fourth straight year.

2013: The Detroit Tigers signed Joba Chamberlain as a free agent.

2016: The Detroit Tigers signed Waldis Joaquin as a free agent.

2017: The Tigers trade All-Star 2B Ian Kinsler to the Angels for two prospects, P Wilkel Hernandez and OF Troy Montgomery, as they continue a rebuilding trend begun late last season when they traded J.D. Martinez, Justin Upton and Justin Verlander.

2018: The Detroit Tigers drafted Reed Garrett from the Texas Rangers in the 2018 rule 5 draft.

2019: The Detroit Tigers signed Austin Romine as a free agent.

2020: The New York Times reports that the Cleveland Indians have decided to bite the bullet and drop their controversial nickname, after years of pressure from Native American activists and others. They had already dropped their caricatural "Chief Wahoo" mascot last year, and pressure only increased after the Washington Redskins of the NFL became the "Washington Football Team" earlier this year. It is not yet clear when the change will take effect, and what the new team name will be. They will eventually be called the "Guardians".

2022: The beneficiary of the latest free agent mega-deal is SS Carlos Correa, who decided to opt out of the final two years of the three-year deal he had signed with the Twins following last year's lockout. His bet pays off handsomely as the Giants offer him a 13-year deal worth $350 million - the biggest in team history. However, the story comes with the usual caveat that a formal announcement will be made after a physical exam, but it will fall apart on December 20th, when the said exam reveals a problem that makes the Giants back out only hours before a scheduled press conference meant to introduce Correa to the media.

Tigers players birthdays:

Rube Kisinger Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More | Baseball-Reference.com
Rube Kisinger 1902-1903.

https://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Scat_Metha
Frank Metha Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More | Baseball-Reference.com
Frank 'Scat' Metha 1940.

https://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Larry_Doby
Larry Doby Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More | Baseball-Reference.com
Larry Doby – Society for American Baseball Research
Larry Doby 1959.

https://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Bubba_Morton
Bubba Morton Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More | Baseball-Reference.com
Bubba Morton 1961-1963.

Carson Fulmer Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More | Baseball-Reference.com
Carson Fulmer 2020.

Baseball Reference
 
Last edited:
https://totallytigers.wordpress.com/2023/12/12/watercooler-wednesday-114/
WATERCOOLER WEDNESDAY.
Totally Tigers

Andrew Chafin is returning to the Detroit Tigers.

He signed a 2-year contract with Al Avila for $13 mill, earning $6.5 mill each year. But he had a player opt-out after his first year.

Chafin did very well in his first season and opted out of his contract, believing he could earn $9 mill/year. When he could not get that amount from another team, he asked the Tigers if he could come back. After a brief salary discussion, Scott Harris said the 2 sides could not agree on a new salary.

Andrew went on to have a poor year in 2023 with 2 other teams. He was no longer locating the strike zone as he did in Detroit. Now a free agent, he just re-signed with Detroit. It is believed that Chris Fetter and his team can again work magic and return him to his previous form.

Chafin?s salary has gone from $6.5 mill/year to $4.25 mill. His contract is loaded with performance incentives and the Tigers, not Chafin, hold a team opt out clause for 2025.

Ironically, the D?backs DFA?d Tyler Holton when they signed Chafin. The Tigers picked up Holton who garnered attention for Rookie of the Year votes. Now Detroit has both of them in the bullpen. Both of them lefties which gives the team a distinct advantage against their competition.

What do you think about this signing?

What do you think about the Chafin signing?

1. Great! Good strategy and savvy signing.

2. Let's see what Fetter can do first.

3. Shouldn't have been given a 2nd chance.

VOTE
 
How Tigers plan to help reliever Andrew Chafin, whose walk rate went from 7.8% in 2022 to 12.5% in 2023, locate pitches again.

Scott Harris: "We trust Andrew to be able to command the baseball a little bit better when he's back in a Tigers uniform."

Chafin's walk rate has spiked before..2016, 2018, 2020 so its not unusual..its gone from 11+% back to 8% or less every time..it was 7.8% last time he threw for Fetter/Nieves..a regression is almost a guarantee..when the command is good..Chafin's is very very good.
 
Back
Top