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

Boxscore.

Phillies 8 - Tigers 1: A career-high, a triple play and a butt-kicking.
Casey Mize bounced back with his best stuff after being shelled and the offense turned back into a pumpkin.
BYBTB

Tigers suffer another lopsided loss in 'full-circle moment' for Castellanos.
Detnews

It was somewhat of a manic outing for Mize. He posted a career-high 10 strikeouts in 4.1 innings. According to research done by MLB.com, he’s the first Tiger ever to strike out at least 10 with no walks in less than five innings.
He got a season-high 19 swings and misses on 53 swings, getting six each with the four-seam fastball and slider. He got five with his splitter.
But he was tagged with the four runs and nine hits was at 101 pitches when he left with two on and two out in the fifth. It was just the third time in his career he’s thrown 100 or more pitches in a start.

Detroit Tigers' Casey Mize sets career high with 10 strikeouts in 8-1 loss to Phillies.
Freep
 
June 25 in Tigers and mlb history:

1902: A federal court judge rules that Brooklyn has no claim on C Deacon McGuire, who jumped to Detroit. Two weeks later, another U.S. judge denies jurisdiction to stop Nap Lajoie from playing for Cleveland, thus ending the Phillies' chances of regaining him legally.

1912: New York's Rube Marquard runs his win streak to 17 games by edging the Phillies, 2 - 1.

1915: In Boston, Babe Ruth blasts his 3rd homer of the year, off Ray Caldwell, and is the second player to hit a ball into the RF seats at Fenway Park. Ruth strikes out eight in pitching a complete game, 9 - 5, win, and adds a single off reliever Bill Donovan, Yankee skipper and his former manager.

1919: The Washington Senators traded Doc Ayers to the Detroit Tigers for Eric Erickson.

1934: Lou Gehrig hits for the cycle for the first time in his career, and the Yankees regain first place from the Tigers, losers 13 - 11 in Philadelphia.

1935: The Detroit Tigers released Hub Walker.

1941: Baseball greats Ty Cobb and Babe Ruth play a charity golf match in Massachusetts (Trophy donated by screen legend Bette Davis!).
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1950: Ralph Kiner leads the Pirates to a 16 - 11 win at Brooklyn by hitting for the cycle, adding a 2nd home run, and driving in eight runs.

1953: Signed to a contract with the Detroit Tigers less than a week ago, after graduating from Baltimore Southern high school, 18 year old teen phenom Al Kaline makes his major league debut vs. the Philadelphia Athletics and pitcher Harry Byrd.
Twenty two years later Kaline will have set ML records, and finished in the top 5/10/15/20 in many offensive and defensive career leaderboards.
Kaline's throwing arm is considered one of the Strongest in MLB history, as well as the Most Accurate of All Time. Kaline becomes a lifelong Tiger after his HOF playing career as a broadcaster with fellow HOF George Kell, a Spring Training Coach in Lakeland Florida, and as a front office adviser to the Ownership of the Team. Kaline's 67 years with the Tigers organization up to his passing in April of 2020, is rightfully given the name of Mr. Tiger.
He was loved by Millions of Tigers fans, baseball fans, spanning Generations, along with generations of baseball players from every team.
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1961: Vic Power is the baserunner on first base in the bottom of the 9th, when Chuck Essegian pinch-hits a single. Power, thinking it is a home run, waits to shake hands with Essegian, and is forced out at second base. Detroit and Jim Bunning win 6 - 3. Norm Cash hits two home runs.

1962: The Tigers traded Charlie Maxwell to the White Sox for OF Bob Farley.

1968: Trailing 5-1, the Tigers rally with a 6-run 7th, punctuated by a Willie Horton 2-run triple to the CF monuments at Yankee Stadium. Tigers win 8-5. It's the Tigers' 22nd (!) winning rally in the 7th inning or later this season.
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1971: Tigers 6 - indians 1, Bill Gilbreth pitches a complete game win in his major league debut Gene Lamont as his catcher.
Al Kaline with a pinch hit 2 run homer.

1974: Tigers workhorse Mickey Lolich completes his 11th straight start. He?s 9-2 with a 1.98 ERA in 100 IP.

1976: Ranger Toby Harrah becomes the only shortstop in major league history to go through an entire doubleheader without a fielding chance. At the plate, Harrah makes up for the inactivity, collecting six hits, including a grand slam in the opener and another round-tripper in game 2. The Rangers beat the White Sox in the first game 8 - 4, but lose the nightcap, 14 - 9.

1980: Five Cleveland pitchers issue 14 walks, including five with the bases loaded, in a 13 - 3 loss to Detroit.

1991: Detroit trades former franchise stalwart pitcher Dan Petry to the Braves.

1998: Sammy Sosa hits his 19th home run of the month at Tiger Stadium, breaking the major league record set by the Tigers' Rudy York. But the Tigers win 6 - 4 on Tony Clark's 3-run home run.

2002: For the first time ever, a major league game pits two Dominican Republic born managers against each other, as Luis Pujols of Detroit and Tony Pena of kansas city match wits. The president of the Dominican Republic is on hand for the game, which is broadcast all over Latin America.

2005: In a game against the Orioles, the Mariners battery consists of a pair of 42-year olds as Jamie Moyer throws to backstop Pat Borders. It marks the first time in major league history that two players 42 years or older have been the starting pitcher and catcher for a team.

2008: The Detroit Tigers traded Denny Bautista to the Pittsburgh Pirates for Kyle Pearson (minors).

2008: Trailing the Cardinals 7-6 in the bottom of the 8th, the #Tigers tie it on an RBI single by Magglio Ord??ez and walk off in the 9th on a Gary Sheffield single that scores Clete Thomas. Carlos Guill?n finishes 4-for-5 with a home run and a double.

2011: The Tigers' Justin Verlander, who strikes out a career-best 14 over 8 innings in beating Arizona, 6 - 0 becomes the A.L. first 10 game winner of the season.

2016: Kirk Gibson is inducted into the Michigan Baseball Hall of Fame.

2018: The Cardinals record the 10,000th win in team history in defeating the Indians, 4 - 0, behind 7 one-hit innings by John Gant. They are the sixth major league team to hit the mark, all of them in the National League.

2020: The Detroit Tigers released Alex Wilson.

2022: Three Astros pitchers combine to no-hit the Yankees, 3 - 0. Cristian Javier handles the first 7 innings and strikes out 13 against just 1 walk, but needs 115 pitches to do so. Hector Neris and Ryan Pressly then pitch one inning each, and although Neris walks a pair in the 8th, they bring the masterpiece home. The Astros score one run in each of the last three innings against the owners of the best record in baseball, who were last victim of a no-hitter back on June 11, 2003 - also a combined effort by Houston, but that one needing six pitchers.

Tigers players birthdays:

John Deering 1903.

Johnny Pasek 1933.

Alex Garbowski 1952.

Don Demeter 1964-1966.

Tigers players who passed away:

George Smith 1903.

Baseball Reference
 
THE BEST LAID PLANS….
Totally Tigers
 
Why Detroit Tigers' Colt Keith has turned the corner in rookie season, plus early look at trade deadline - Days of Roar: A Free Press Sports Detroit Tigers Podcast
Days of Roar Tigers Podcast: Why Detroit Tigers' Colt Keith has turned the corner in rookie season, plus early look at the trade deadline. 63 minutes.

Mark and Evan recap another week of feast or famine type run production for the Detroit Tigers. In the shadow of an offense not built to withstand demotions, injuries and underperformance, the guys talk the upside of Colt Keith's mental tenacity. The guys discuss how the rookie has managed to consistently adjust his play at every level and the promise this shows for his future. Mark and Evan also talk Riley Greene. Has the outfielder swung his way into deserving more recognition and All-Star votes? Later in the pod, "Days of Roar" covers the upcoming trade deadline and what's at stake for the team, POBO Scott Harris and pitcher Tarik Skubal. Would waiting to trade the Cy Young contending starter after the season ends make more sense than at the deadline? What kind of haul should the team expect for pitcher Jack Flaherty? The guys dive into these questions plus they cover a player's season ending injury, the roster nuances of bringing Parker Meadows backup, and player health updates.
 
Tarik Skubal wins battle between aces as Tigers square set with Phils.
Tigers official site

Boxscore.

Video highlights of the Tigers win over the hillies.

Tigers 4 - Phillies 1: A pitchers’ duel with a nice little blip.
One excellent pitcher lived up to the advance billing. The other did as well, save for one crucial inning.
BYBTB

Skubal outduels Suarez, Tigers even series with 4-1 win over Phillies.
Detnews

Detroit Tigers, Tarik Skubal shut down Philadelphia lefties in 4-1 victory.
Freep

Tarik Skubal dominates as Tigers even series with Phillies.
Mlive
 
June 26 in Tigers and mlb history:

1912: Boston's Smoky Joe Wood outguns the Nationals' ace Walter Johnson to win, 3 - 0. Wood allows three hits to the "Big Trains"' 4. Johnson fans 10 batters in the loss.

1914: In Boston, the Giants hammer the Braves for 27 hits, winning 8 - 4 and 10 - 4, and put Boston back in the cellar. Boston had moved into 7th place with yesterday's win over New York. Christy Mathewson wins the opener over Lefty Tyler, and Art Fromme wraps up the nitecap.

1915: Phillie's ace Grover Alexander continues his masterful pitching, topping Brooklyn's Jack Coombs, 4 - 0. Zack Wheat's 8th-inning single is the only Robin safety.

1916: Cleveland players, in a game with the White Sox, wear numbers pinned to their sleeves, marking the first time players are identified by numbers corresponding to those on the scorecard. Jack Graney, leading off for the Tribe, is the first batter to wear a number in the 20th Century.

1920: Lou Gehrig gets his first national mention when, as a high school junior for New York City's School of Commerce, he steals the show in a high school championship game against Lane Tech in Chicago. His grand slam home run in the 8th gives the New York team a 12 - 8 victory. Scouts sit with open mouths as the ball sails out of the National League park (later known as Wrigley Field).

1935: Lloyd Waner has a still-standing major-league record 18 putouts in CF in a doubleheader as the Pirates take a pair from the Braves at Boston. The Bucs win, 2 - 1 and 5 - 1, behind Joe Bush and Bill Swift.

1936: 17-year-old Ted Williams signs his first pro contract with the San Diego #Padres of the Pacific Coast League.
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1938: Carl Hubbell wins his 200th game, as the Giants beat the visiting Cubs, 5 - 1, and stretch their lead over the second-place Reds to two games.

1939: In Philadelphia, the Yankees play the first night game in franchise history losing to Connie Mack's A's, 3 - 2.

1944: At the Polo Grounds, with over 50,000 fans looking on, the three New York major league teams play against each other in a six-inning three-team game (each team plays consecutive innings against the other two teams then sits out an inning). The contest, which is played to raise money for war bonds ends with the final score of Dodgers 5, Yankees 1, Giants 0.

1949: Pat Mullin goes 4 for 4 and hits three home runs for the Detroit Tigers in a 12 to 4 win over New York.
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1956: The Detroit Tigers signed Kent Hadley as an amateur free agent.

1960: Hoping to speed up the election process, the Hall of Fame changes its voting procedures. The new rules allow the Special Veterans Committee to vote annually, rather than every other year, and to induct up to two players a year. The BBWAA is authorized to hold a runoff election of the top 30 vote getters if no one is elected in the first ballot.

1961: The Los Angeles Angels purchased George Thomas from the Detroit Tigers.

1962: Earl Wilson pitches a no-hitter, his first major league shutout, as Boston beats the Los Angeles Angels, 2 - 0. The righthander also hits a home run off loser Bo Belinsky, who pitched his no-hitter six weeks earlier.

1966: The Major League Executive Council decides that both the American League and National League will play 162-game schedules in 1969 and operate two 6-team divisions each.

1966: Sandy Koufax (13-2) matches his National League record of seven consecutive strikeouts in consecutive 9-inning appearances on his way to a 2 - 1 win in Atlanta.

1968: Bill Freehan and Willie Horton are named to the American League All-Star team.
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1968: Cardinal Bob Gibson pitches his 5th straight shutout in the first game of a doubleheader with Pittsburgh.

1970: Frank Robinson belts two successive grand slams during a 12 - 2 Oriole romp over the Senators, just the 7th major leaguer to ever accomplish the feat. Dave McNally, the winning pitcher, Don Buford and Paul Blair trot home ahead of him on each blow. They will be Robby's only grand slams for the O's.

1972: Detroit's Bill Slayback makes his major league debut a good one, allowing no hits for seven innings against the Yankees. Johnny Callison's single in the 8th is the first hit, but Detroit hangs on to a 4 - 3 win.

1974: Hall of Famer Derek Jeter, born this day in Pequannock Township, NJ.

1983: Baltimore's Storm Davis holds the Tigers hitless for eight innings, then needs help from reliever Tippy Martinez to complete a 3 - 1 victory. Pinch hitter Rick Leach, who had been in a 3 for 35 slump, breaks up the no-hit bid with his first home run of the year, leading off the 9th.

1983: Met Rusty Staub delivers his 8th consecutive pinch hit in the 9th inning of an 8 - 4 loss to the Phillies, tying Dave Philley for the all-time major league record. Staub's streak will be snapped by the Cards' Bruce Sutter three days from now.

1984: Tigers 9 - Yankees 7 in 10 innings. The Tigers score 3 runs with 2 outs in the 8th to tie the game. Lance Parrish hits a 2-run home run in the top of the 10th.
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1987: Wade Boggs has his hitting streak snapped at 25 games and the Rocket sputters as Roger Clemens fails to hold a 9 - 0, 2nd-inning lead. Boston loses to New York, 12 - 11, in 10 innings. The 9-run comeback ties a Yankee team record: Boston, alas, has blown bigger leads.

1987: The Pittsburgh Pirates traded Pete Rice (minors) and Shawn Holman to the Detroit Tigers for Terry Harper.

1991: Mickey Tettleton repeats his feat of four days ago by again hitting a home run out of Tiger Stadium, in an 8 - 7 win over the Brewers. The Tigers break a 7 - 7 tie with two outs in the 9th.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DACInSeXUAAW2M2.jpg

1992: The Detroit Tigers signed Dave Johnson as a free agent.

1992: Star second baseman Lou Whitaker is caught trying to steal twice in one game. It?s the only time that ever happens to him.

1997: In Detroit's 10 - 6 walloping of the Red Sox, Tiger Brian Hunter swipes four bases. Detroit also gets a home run from Shane Mack to offset two Boston homers.
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1997: San Diego Padres legend Tony Gwynn hits an inside-the-park grand slam vs. the Los Angeles Dodgers.


2003: Edgar Martinez, who already holds the Mariners' all-time records for games played, at-bats, hits, doubles, total bases, extra-base hits, walks and runs scored, passes Ken Griffey Jr.'s mark for team career RBIs. His two-run homer in the Mariners' 10 - 6 victory over the Angels gives the All-Star designated hitter 1,153 RBIs - one more than Junior.

2004: Tigers celebrate the 20th anniversary of the 1984 championship.
Eric Munson leads off the bottom of the 9th with a walk-off home run.

2007: Gary Sheffield scores his 1,500th career run. Upper Deck honors the feat with this 2008 card.
Garhttps://pbs.twimg.com/media/Ebcg0UzWsAAVU4Y?format=jpg&name=mediumy

2011: The Detroit Tigers retire Sparky Anderson's number 11, eight months after his death.
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Tigers players birthdays:

Babe Herman 1937.

Mike Myers 1995-1997.

Chris Shelton 2004-2006.

Tigers players who passed away:

Joe Sugden 1912.

Lil Stoner 1922, 1924-1929.

Baseball Reference
 
WATERCOOLER WEDNESDAY.
Totally Tigers

The Detroit Tigers are taking on more water as they struggle to generate offense and win games. They are now 6 games under .500 (through Monday) with only 6 other teams in MLB with worse records.

Their best hitter, Kerry Carpenter, remains on the IL and although he is rehabbing, there is no set date for his return. Almost 36% of the games the team has played this season had 2 or fewer runs scored.
It is expected that winning will become harder with the upcoming trade deadline. The Tigers are expected to lose some of their better players.

Currently, they only have 2 of 8 positions filled going into 2025. Additionally, Colt Keith is rumored to potentially be moved to 1B for the future so his position at 2B is not a slam dunk.

PoBO Scott Harris has stated that the team is looking to build a foundation and a core of players. He has said that acquiring notable free agents isn’t in the cards for the next 2 years as they work towards those goals.
But many believe that more time than that is needed to build a roster given the current status. And after 8 years of rebuilding under Al Avila, many fans are done with rebuilding and need to see a competitive team sooner rather than later. Or really, more accurately, they needed to see it “yesterday.”

So what should the Tigers do about the rest of this season? Should they trade off players for other pieces in an attempt to fill more positions, keep the current roster, or should they start working on the roster now by benching/sending down poor performers and bringing up AAA players to see what they have?

How should the Tigers manage their roster for the rest of this year?

1. Sell off players for new ones who may be part of next year's roster.

2. Keep the current roster as is.

3. Start benching/sending down players and bring up prospects.

VOTE
 
Up-and-down Detroit return a microcosm of Turnbull's tenure.
Tigers official site

Boxscore.

Tigers 2 - Phillies 6: Let’s never play these guys again.
This was a rough week, and it’s only Wednesday.
BYBTB

Tigers held to four hits in 6-2 loss against league-leading Phillies.
Detnews

Detroit Tigers limited to four hits, two walks in 6-2 loss to Philadelphia Phillies.
Freep

Spencer Turnbull exits early with injury but Phillies go on to beat Tigers.
Mlive
 
Days of Roar Tigers Podcast: How Detroit Tigers 2B Colt Keith saved his rookie season. 63 minutes.

On this episode: Mark and Evan recap another week of feast or famine-type run production for the Detroit Tigers. In the shadow of an offense not built to withstand demotions, injuries and underperformance, the guys talk about the upside of Colt Keith's mental tenacity. The guys discuss how the rookie has managed to consistently adjust his play at every level and the promise this shows for his future.
 
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