May 9 in Tigers and mlb history:
1871: The first Hispanic player in major league baseball is Esteban Enrique Bellan. The 21-year old Cuban infielder plays for the Troy Haymakers of the National Association.
1888: With a twelve-run lead, Louisville Colonels right-handed pitcher Icebox Chamberlain holds the Kansas City Cowboys scoreless pitching left-handed for the last two innings.
1896: Washington defeats Pittsburgh, 14 - 9, in a beanball battle. Senators pitcher Win Mercer hits three Pittsburgh batters while Pirate Pink Hawley plunks three Washington batters in a disastrous 11-run 7th inning, tying a mark he set on July 4, 1894. Hawley retires in 1900 after only nine seasons with a still-standing National League record of 195 hit batters. All told, eight batters are plunked in the contest, a National League-record five by Hawley. The five Washington batters hit by pitches ties the NL mark and won't be matched till July 2, 1969.
1906: The Cincinnati Reds purchased Jimmy Barrett from the Detroit Tigers.
1911: At Hilltop Park, Christy Mathewson and Three Finger Brown renew their rivalry, Matty emerges the winner, 5 - 2, over the Cubs' ace.
1911: Tigers pound the New York Highlanders 10-0 for a record start of 21-2. The 1911 Tigers actually had a better record through 23 games than the 1984 team, which was 19-4. But the '11 Tigers were 30-10 after 40 games, while the '84 champs tallied their immortal mark of 35-5.
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1914: Before 18,000, Christy Mathewson scatters 10 hits in shutting down the Braves, 2 - 0. A Chief Meyers double off Lefty Tyler accounts for both New York runs. Boston is now 3-11, 10 games behind the Pirates.
1915: It is Nap Lajoie Day as the long-time hero returns to Cleveland in a Philadelphia A's uniform. But Nap is hitless as Guy Morton tosses a 6 - 0 shutout against Philadelphia.
1916: Thirty walks are allowed at Philadelphia as Detroit overwhelms the A's, 16 - 2. Tiger rookie George Cunningham is lifted with one out in the 3rd inning after walking six batters. He is given the win, but leaves with a no-hitter and leading 9 - 0. Eighteen of the walks are issued by the A's - 12 by reliever Carl Ray - on their way to a season total of 715. Not until 1938 will a team (the St. Louis Browns with 737) top that. Detroit will add another 11 walks against the A's tomorrow for a two-game major-league record of 29.
1919: In New York, Cyclone Joe Williams, pitching for the Lincoln Giants, no-hits the Brooklyn Royal Giants, 1 - 0, defeating one of his fiercest rivals, Cannonball Dick Redding.
1926: In Ty Cobb's last year with Detroit Tigers, he crosses home plate after hitting one of this two home runs on the day as Tigers outlast the Yankees 14-10 in the Bronx. Cobb would go 4 for 4 to raise his season avg to .426 and also had 4 RBIs.
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1927: Pounding five Boston pitchers for 22 hits, the 2nd-place Tigers outlast the Red Sox, 17 - 11. Harry Heilmann hits 2 home runs, Marty McManus hits 2 triples.
1930: The Yankees' and the Tigers' outfielders make only two putouts for an American League record which has never been equaled. The National League record for outfield idleness is one chance (Pittsburgh versus Brooklyn on August 26,1910). Detroit's George Uhle strikes out 8 in winning, 5 - 4, and dropping the Yanks to 7th place. Hank Johnson (7 innings) and George Pipgras are the New York hurlers.
1933: The Chicago White Sox selected Earl Webb off waivers from the Detroit Tigers.
1937: Reds C Ernie Lombardi ties the modern major league record with six hits (5 singles and a double) in six consecutive times at bat, as Cincinnati routs Philadelphia, 21 - 10, on 24 hits. Alex Kampouris tallies 8 RBIs for the Reds on three homers, one a grand slam.
1937: At the Polo Grounds, Carl Hubbell wins his 4th straight and his 20th in a row, subduing the Cubs, 4 - 1. The game is scoreless for six innings. Hubbell matches the mark of Rube Marquard, who won one game in 1911 and 19 straight more in 1912.
1938: At Boston, Jimmie Foxx drives in five runs on a pair of homers to pace the Red Sox to a 15 - 3 drubbing of Cleveland.
1939: The St. Louis Browns purchased Les Fleming from the Detroit Tigers.
1939: The New York Giants purchased Red Lynn from the Detroit Tigers.
1943: Due to the poor grade of rubber cement used to make baseballs because of wartime rubber shortages, a different type of baseball is put into play today with dramatic results. In eight games, six home runs are hit compared to a total of nine homers tallied in the season's first 72 games.
1946: At Fenway Park, Boston (20-3) runs its win streak to 14 by edging Chicago, 7 - 5. Bobby Doerr's two-run homer in the 4th inning is the big blow. Mickey Harris, in relief, wins his second game in two days.
1948: The Indians sweep a pair at Fenway Park, beating the Red Sox, 4 - 1, in 10 innings, and 9 - 5. A Ted Williams homer in the opener is the only Sox score, while Ken Keltner belts a pair of homers. They both add another in the nitecap, but Larry Doby clouts a monstrous two-run shot to dead center for the Tribe.
1949: At Detroit, the Tigers set back the first-place Yankees, 4 - 1, behind the five-hit pitching of Ted Gray. Vic Raschi also allows just five hits, including a homer by Dick Wakefield, in taking the loss.
1950: Ralph Kiner of the Pirates hits his second grand slam in three days - and the eighth of his career - and adds a three-run homer to drives in seven runs as the Pirates beat Brooklyn, 10 - 5.
1955: The Detroit Tigers purchased Charlie Maxwell from the Baltimore Orioles.
1958: The Detroit Tigers purchased Herm Wehmeier from the St. Louis Cardinals.
1960: Hall of Famer Tony Gwynn was born this day in Los Angeles, CA. One of baseball's best pure hitters of all time. He played 20 years in the majors, all with the San Diego Padres, with a lifetime .338 batting average and 3,141 hits. A perennial .300-plus batsman, he was especially difficult to strike out and once hit an incredible .394 in a season. With five 200 hit seasons, and an 8 time batting champ, Gwynn struck out only 434 times in over 10,000 plate appearances. Voted into the Hall of Fame in 2007.
1961: Game 1: Tigers 7 - Senators 2. Rookie Jake Wood has 2 hits and 2 stolen bases. Dick Brown finishes 2-for-4 with a triple. Don Mossi pitches a 4-hit complete game. 6th straight win: Tigers are 17-5.
1961: Game 2: Senators 5 - Tigers 4. Tigers are 17-6, up 3 in the AL .
1961: Jim Gentile of the Orioles becomes the third player to hit grand slams in consecutive innings (after Tony Lazzeri in 1936 and Jim Tabor in 1939; Rudy York also hit two grand slams in a game in 1946, but not in consecutive innings) when he belts one off Pedro Ramos in the 1st and adds another off Paul Giel in the 2nd. His 8 RBI in consecutive innings set a major league record. Gentile also tacks on a sacrifice fly to give him a club record 9 RBI in the 13 - 5 drubbing of the Twins.
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1962: Brooks Robinson becomes the 6th major leaguer this century to hit grand slams in back-to-back games, as he hits one against Kansas City's Ed Rakow. Baltimore wins, 6 - 3, at home. Brooks hit a grand slam on May 6th.
1963: Ernie Banks becomes the first National League first baseman to register 22 putouts (and 23 chances) in a game, as the Cubs beat Pittsburgh, 3 - 1, on Dick Ellsworth's two-hitter.
1964: The Washington Senators purchased Alan Koch from the Detroit Tigers.
1972: The Oakland Athletics traded Reggie Sanders to the Detroit Tigers for Mike Kilkenny.
1973: The Reds' Johnny Bench slugs three home runs and knocks in seven runs in a 9 - 7 defeat of Steve Carlton and the Phillies. Bench homers in the 1st, walks in the 3rd, and homers again in the 5th and 7th. It is the second time Bench has hit three home runs in a game against Carlton; the first came on July 26, 1970. Bench ties a major-league record with four consecutive homers, having hit one in his final at-bat the previous night in the Reds' 7 - 1 win. Despite the three homers, Dave Concepcion's two-run homer in the 9th, off Barry Lersch, is the game-winner.
1980: Jason Thompson hits a game-winning home run in the top of the 10th to beat the Angels. Would be his last homer as a Tiger before being traded to the Angels.
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1984: Umpire Joe West ejects two television cameramen from Shea Stadium when they allow the Mets to view replays of a controversial play at the plate in which Hubie Brooks is called out. The Mets beat Atlanta, 3 - 1.
1984: The longest - and slowest - game in American League history ends in the 25th inning when Harold Baines homers off Chuck Porter to give the White Sox a 7 - 6 victory over the Brewers. It is the latest homer in history.
The game falls one inning shy of the major league record, but takes by far the most time to play: 8 hours and 6 minutes.
The contest was suspended the previous day after 17 innings with the score tied 3 - 3, and each team scores three more runs in the 21st. The Sox lose a chance to win in the 21st as runner Dave Stegman is touched by 3B coach Jim Leyland, which leads to a Sox protest. Tom Seaver pitches the final inning to earn the win, then wins the regularly-scheduled game as well, 5 - 4. Tom Paciorek of the Sox sets a major-league record as he enters the game in the 4th inning and registers nine at bats as a substitute.
1984: Tigers beat the Royals 3 - 1 to tie the 1955 Dodgers' record of 25 wins in their first 29 games.
Tigers are 13-0 on the road, chasing the 1912 Senators' 16-0 mark. Sparky's response: "I wish you hadn't told me that".
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1988: Oakland beats Detroit, 3 - 1, to extend its club-record winning streak to 14 consecutive games, the longest in the majors since 1977. The A's will finally lose tomorrow, 8 - 2 to the Tigers, after starting the skein on April 23rd.
1989: For the first time since April 10th, no major league games are shutouts, ending a streak of 29 consecutive days with at least one shutout.
1991: The Detroit Tigers released Mark Ettles.
1992: The Tigers beat the Mariners 13-0, outhitting them 19-5. Bill Gullickson pitched the complete game shutout, improving to 5-2 with a 2.92 ERA. Rob Deer homered & drove in 3. Tony Phillips had 3 RBI & 3 runs scored.
1997: The Minnesota Twins selected Kevin Jarvis off waivers from the Detroit Tigers.
2006: Ivan Rodriguez makes his first career start at first base, after 1,914 games at catcher in a loss to baltimore.
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2016: The Detroit Tigers released Michael Crotta.
2017: James McCann hits his 7th home run of the year to lead AL catchers, though he has only 4 other hits and his batting average is .157 and the Tigers beat the diamondbacks 7 - 3.
2019: With a solo homer in the 3rd inning in a 13 - 0 win against the Tigers, Albert Pujols of the Angels becomes the fifth player in major league history to collect 2,000 RBIs. Many articles say he is just the third player to reach the milestone, but that is discounting the 224 RBIs collected by Babe Ruth before the statistic became official in 1920, placing him above the threshold, and the entire career of 19th century great Cap Anson.
Tigers players birthdays:
Check out the latest Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More of Lew Drill. Get info about his position, age, height, weight, draft status, bats, throws, school and more on Baseball-reference.com
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Lew Drill 1904-1905.
Check out the latest Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More of Tom Yewcic. Get info about his position, age, height, weight, draft status, bats, throws, school and more on Baseball-reference.com
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Tom Yewcic 1957.
Check out the latest Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More of Ron Jackson. Get info about his position, age, height, weight, draft status, bats, throws, school and more on Baseball-reference.com
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Ron Jackson 1981.
Check out the latest Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More of Daniel Schlereth. Get info about his position, age, height, weight, draft status, bats, throws, school and more on Baseball-reference.com
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Dan Schlereth 2010-2012.
Check out the latest Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More of Prince Fielder. Get info about his position, age, height, weight, draft status, bats, throws, school and more on Baseball-reference.com
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Prince Fielder 2012-2013.
Check out the latest Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More of Ian Krol. Get info about his position, age, height, weight, draft status, bats, throws, school and more on Baseball-reference.com
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Ian Krol 2014-2015, 2021.
Tigers players who passed away:
Check out the latest Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More of Herm Malloy. Get info about his position, age, height, weight, draft status, bats, throws, school and more on Baseball-reference.com
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Herm Malloy 1907-1908.
Check out the latest Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More of Wayne McLeland. Get info about his position, age, height, weight, draft status, bats, throws, school and more on Baseball-reference.com
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Wayne McLeland 1951-1952.
Check out the latest Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More of Tom Fletcher. Get info about his position, age, height, weight, draft status, bats, throws, school and more on Baseball-reference.com
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Tom Fletcher 1962.
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