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

September 8 in Tigers and mlb history:

1901: The Players Protective Association instructs members to sign one-year contracts only, and not recognize the reserve clause.

1903: New York's Christy Mathewson and Brooklyn's Bill Reidy hook up for the third time in a week, and the rubber game ends in a tie, 4 - 4. The match is called by ump Tim Hurst after eight innings because of darkness.

1904: The visiting Phillies stop the Giants' win streak at 12 when the beat up Dummy Taylor to win, 9 - 8. Bill Duggleby is the victor. New York then wins the nitecap, 4 - 1 as Christy Mathewson notches his 30th victory, over Tully Sparks. Darkness ends the game in the 7th inning.

1908: Christy Mathewson's 30th win is a gem - an 11-inning 1 - 0 win over the Superbas' Nap Rucker. A single by Al Bridwell drives home Cy Seymour with the winning tally.

1908: Boston's Cy Young defeats Washington, 3 - 1, for his 20th win.

1908: Christy Mathewson's 30th win is a gem - an 11-inning 1 - 0 win over the Superbas' Nap Rucker. A single by Al Bridwell drives home Cy Seymour with the winning tally

1916: In front the smallest crowd in American League history, with 23 fans attending the game, A's catcher/outfielder Wally Schang becomes the first switch-hitter in major league history to homer from both sides of the plate in the same game.

1917: Detroit beats the Browns 1 - 0 in 12 innings. Ty Cobb triples off the RF fence in the 12th and scores on a sacrifice fly by Bobby Veach.

1919: Babe Ruth hits home run No. 26 off Jack Quinn in New York, breaking Buck Freeman's 1899 home run mark of 25.

1922: Detroit beats the Browns 8 - 3, on Bobby Veach's two homers off Urban Shocker. First baseman Lu Blue pulls off two unassisted double plays, tying the American League record, and both are off line drives by Johnny Tobin.
Veach has 5 rbi in the game, Cobb with 2.

1924: Washington, with a 2-game lead in the American League, beats the A's, 8 - 4. Despite giving up solo home runs by Joe Hauser and Bing Miller, Walter Johnson wins his 10th straight and his 20th of the year.

1925: The Yanks top the Red Sox, 7 - 4, as Babe Ruth pounds his 300th career homer, off Buster Ross.

1930: Old Timers' Day at Braves Field, Boston! Players include Cy Young, Ty Cobb, Billy Hamilton, Eddie Collins, Tris Speaker, Chief Bender, Harry Hooper & Home Run Baker!
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1932: The Yankees and Tigers replay their protested August 1 game as the nightcap of a doubleheader, but end in a 7 - 7 tie. After the game, Babe Ruth experiences abdominal pains he believes are an appendicitis attack. He will be out of the lineup indefinitely. Sammy Byrd, subbing for Ruth in the opener, collects five hits for the Yankees, including two home runs in a 5 - 4 win.

1935: The Cards fail to increase their lead as they split with the Phils. In the opener, Dizzy Dean wins his 25th game, but the Birds lose, 4 - 2, in the nightcap when they strand 16 runners. St. Louis outhits the Phils, 13 to 4.

1935: In the second game of a twinbill, the A's Jimmie Foxx doubles in the 8th to break up Elden Auker's no-hit bid. Detroit rolls, 15 - 1 collecting 20 hits. Foxx has a pair of homers in the opener, again in vain, as the Tigers win, 7 - 5. Mickey Cochrane has three hits in each game for Detroit.

1940: Johnny Mize hits homers # 38, 39 and 40 in the first game of a doubleheader becoming the first player to hit three homers in one game four times in his career. Despite the "Big Cat"'s heroics, the Cardinals drop a pair to the Pirates, 16 - 14 and 9 - 4.

1941: The New York Yankees traded Billy Hitchcock to the Detroit Tigers for players to be named later. The Detroit Tigers sent Tuck Stainback (December 4, 1941) and Boyd Perry (December 4, 1941) to the New York Yankees to complete the trade.

1946: With the Red Sox running away with the American League race, attention closes in on Bob Feller's strikeout pace. He reaches 300 today, a number reached by Walter Johnson and Rube Waddell twice each.

1946: In the minor leagues Bill Kennedy of Rocky Mount (Coastal Plain League) will be credited with 456 strikeouts, breaking the former mark of 418 set by the Tigers Virgil Trucks in the Alabama-Florida League in 1938.

1948: Paul Hinrichs of the Detroit Tigers granted free agency.

1949: First day-night doubleheader at Briggs (Tiger) Stadium. Tigers beat Cleveland 10-0 and 4-1.

1951: At an Old Timer's Day at Yankee Stadium, former manager Joe McCarthy is honored. With the game scoreless in the 7th inning, Mickey Mantle belts a Bob Porterfield pitch into the last row of the RF bleachers, some 460 feet away to break the scoreless tie. Ed Lopat shuts out the Senators for 4 - 0 Yankee win

1951: The pennant race heats up, as Dodger ace Don Newcombe two-hits the Giants, 9 - 0, beating Jim Hearn. Jackie Robinson has three hits and three runs, scoring one run from third base when he provokes Hearn into wild pitching. Giants pitchers contribute 10 walks.

1955: The Detroit Tigers traded Ben Flowers to the St. Louis Cardinals for Bobby Tiefenauer.

1958: In a special meeting of American League owners in Chicago, IL, Washington owner Calvin Griffith succumbs to pressure from other AL owners and that night advises Minneapolis, MN officials that he is staying in Washington, DC.

1961: The Yanks rout the Indians 9 - 1, as Mickey Mantle hits home run #52, off Gary Bell. The Yanks win for their 9th straight while Detroit loses their 8th in a row to drop 10 games back. Tigers will win 101 games but finish second to the 109-win Yankees. During this difficult part of the pennant race Al Kaline bats a hot .421

1961: The Detroit Tigers selected Vic Wertz off waivers from the Boston Red Sox.

1962: George "Sparky" Anderson of the Toronto Maple Leafs hits a go-ahead home run off future Hall of Famer Ferguson Jenkins to break a 2-2 tie as the Leafs beat the #Bisons 5-2.

1963: For the thirteenth and final time in his career, Braves' lefthander Warren Spahn has a twenty-win season as he beats the Phillies, 3 - 2.


1964: Bill Freehan goes 4-for-5 with a grand slam in the Tigers' 11-3 win over the Yankees.

1967: The Tigers move into a first-place tie with the Twins, as Eddie Mathews and Jim Northrup hit home runs, and Mickey Lolich beats Tommy John 4 - 1, at Chicago.

1972: Mickey Lolich wins his 20th game of the year as Detroit tips the Orioles 4 - 3. The Tigers jump on Jim Palmer (18-8) for three runs in the 1st inning.

1972: Beating the Phils, 4 - 3, Fergie Jenkins wins his 20th, the 6th consecutive year he's reached the mark. This ties the Cubs club record set by Three Finger Brown, 1906-1911. Billy Williams' 2-run home run in the 6th ties it at 3 - 3, and a pair of doubles in the 8th wins it.

1974: Bill Freehan goes 4 for 5 with a grand slam and drives in a total of seven runs as the Tigers beat the Yankees 11-3 at New York. 1974 was the only season from 1964-75 that the Detroit catcher was not an All-Star; he also won five Gold Gloves in that stretch.

1979: Kirk Gibson makes his major league debut. Strikes out as a pinch hitter.

1984: Tigers 10 - Blue Jays 4. Home runs by Darrell Evans and Johnny Grubb lead the way. Alan Trammell knocks in 3 more.

1995: The Detroit Tigers selected Steve Rodriguez off waivers from the Boston Red Sox.

1995: The Detroit Tigers traded Juan Samuel to the Kansas City Royals for a player to be named later. The Kansas City Royals sent Phil Hiatt (September 14, 1995) to the Detroit Tigers to complete the trade.

2006: The Milwaukee Brewers selected Chris Spurling off waivers from the Detroit Tigers.

2008: Gary Sheffield hits a grand slam for the official 250,000th homer in major league history. The blow is Sheffield's 2nd homer of the day and his 13th career grand slam. Magglio Ordonez, Miguel Cabrera and Mike Hessman also homer as the Tigers outslug the A's 14 - 8.

2014: The Tigers score 6 runs in the third inning to give them a 9-5 win over the Royals and cut the royal's lead to a half game in the AL Central.
It's the Tigers' 9,000th win in franchise history.

2016: Tigers beat the orioles 4 - 3 on a home run by Victor Martinez.

2017: The Detroit Tigers turned a triple play in the sixth inning of the Sept. 8th game vs. Blue Jays in Toronto.
With a run in and runners on first and second, Drew VerHagen entered the game to replace Buck Farmer on the mound.
The first hitter VerHagen faced was Blue Jays centerfielder Kevin Pillar, who hit a grounder to Jeimer Candelario at third. Candelario had to range to his right to field the ball, where he then stepped on third, then threw to second.
Ian Kinsler took the throw and then relayed to Efren Navarro at first, where the throw beat Pillar by a half a step.
It's the first time the Tigers have turned a triple play since Aug. 1, 2001, against the Mariners.
Nick Castellanos with the grand slam, and Ian Kinsler homers. The Tigers win the game 5 - 4 over the blue jays.
The Tigers hit a grand slam and turn a triple play in the same game for the first time in franchise history.

2018: The Tigers honor the 50th anniversary of their 1968 world championship.

2019: The Astros annihilate the Mariners 21 - 1. Gerrit Cole allows just 1 hit and no walks in 8 innings while striking out 15; it is his third straight game of 14+ strikeouts, something accomplished by only one other pitcher since 1908, by Pedro Martinez during his 1999 season.

2020: Pat O'Conner, President of Minor League Baseball since 2007, announces that he will step down at the end of the calendar year. It is a difficult time for the minor leagues, as the whole system has been shut down by the Coronavirus pandemic, and 42 of the existing 160 teams are slated for contraction before next year. It is likely that O'Conner will not be replaced, as what remains of the non-independent minor leagues will become fully owned and operated by Major League Baseball.

2021: Over two years since the last induction ceremony was held in July of 2019, four new Hall of Famers, all resulting from the 2020 Hall of Fame Election, are inducted in Cooperstown: Derek Jeter, Larry Walker, Ted Simmons and Marvin Miller. Attendance is limited and fans have to reserve their place in advance, but there is a sense of returning normalcy after long months dominated by the Coronavirus pandemic. It should be noted that no one was elected in 2021 Hall of Fame Election, which would have posed a content problem had events not forced organizers to combine the two classes in one ceremony.

2022: By making their 324th start as a battery, P Adam Wainwright and C Yadier Molina of the Cardinals tie the all-time mark set by Mickey Lolich and Bill Freehan of the Tigers in the 1960s and 1970s. Molina marks the occasion by going deep twice - his first long balls since May - but the Cards lose to the Nationals, 11 - 6. The pair will set the new record on the 14th.

Tigers players birthdays:

Lou Sleater 1957-1958.

Casey Wise 1960.

Mike Rivera 2001-2002.

Chance Ruffin 2011.

Bobby Parnell 2016.


Drew Carlton 2021-2022.

Tigers players who passed away:

Johnnie Williams 1914.

George Zuvernik 1954-1955.

Baseball Reference
 
DEEPER DISCUSSIONS.
Totally Tigers

Last winter, 3ber Matt Chapman, did not receive a single offer in free agency. It was believed that he would get a multi-year 9-figure contract. His agent is Scott Boras.
It was only towards the end of spring training that he signed with the Giants for 3 years/$54 mill. Player opt-outs were included after each of the first 2 years.
He has played well this year which is also an opt-out year for him where he can re-enter free agency. Chapman slashed .247/.333/.446/.778 . He led all 3Bers in DRS with +15.
This past week, Matt signed a contract extension with the Giants. An additional 6 years at $151 mill. He will receive $25 mill/year.
The offer was made, in part, because the Giants have no clear solutions for 3B on the horizon.
Chapman will be 32 years old when this contract kicks in next year. He’ll be 37 when it ends.

Analysts believe that the first 3 years – half of the contract – will pay off. The other 3 years are considered a “write off.” In just a couple years, Matt will have the advantage of a no-trade clause so the Giants will have him for the duration of the contract.
If the Tigers did not have at least 1 candidate for 3B (Jace Jung), should they have gone after Chapman?
His salary is more than the Tigers’ entire payroll. It is also larger than the payrolls of half of MLB’s teams.
A single year at $25 mill is identical to what the Tigers are paying Javier Baez who is also 31 years old.
Other than Kenta Maeda, only 4 other Tigers are making $1 mill or more. The rest of the roster is making MLB minimum. Tarik Skubal is making less than $3 mill/year.
Is it wise to give out more of these long-term huge contracts to a single player? Or is it better to spread out the payroll money among multiple players?
Should the Tigers at some point in the near future, give another contract to a free agent like Matt Chapman or Javier Baez? A contract of 6 or more years at $150+ mill?
Today’s blog addresses this question and allows readers to share their thoughts in more detail. And hopefully, to actively engage with others by responding to their posts and creating back-and-forth discussion threads. The more the merrier!
For this one blog only, you’ve got 6 sentences max to share your thoughts. Of course, you can also respond to other readers.
TT will supply the ammunition. One thought-provoking question. Several options provided. One hard choice to be selected. One vote.
Ready?

Should the Tigers offer another 6+yr./$150+mill contract?

1. Yes

2. No

VOTE
 
Sweeney, Madden help Tigers climb in Wild Card chase'.
Tigers official site

Boxscore.

Video highlights of the Tigers win over the a's.

Tigers 9 - Athletics 1: Have a day, Trey Sweeney!
The rookie shortstop had four hits and a home run to help the Tigers to an easy victory.
BYBTB

Tigers use big inning to pound Athletics, close gap for wild-card spot.
Detnews

Ty Madden, Trey Sweeney close out run at Coliseum as Detroit Tigers smash Oakland A's, 9-1.
Freep

Tigers rout Athletics in series finale, gain ground in playoff chase.
Mlive
 
September 9 in Tigers and mlb history:

1876: Hall of Famer Frank Chance was born this day in Fresno, CA.
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1897: Hall of Famer Frankie Frisch was born this day in the Bronx, NY.
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1899: Hall of Famer Waite Hoyt was born this day in Brooklyn, New York.
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1907: Boston's Cy Young and the A's Rube Waddell battle to a 13-inning scoreless tie. Neither pitcher walks a batter.

1911: Ty Cobb's sac fly scores the only run in the Tigers' 1-0 win over the White Sox.

1921: An American League record for total runs and hits is made when Chicago beats Detroit, 20 - 15. Each team has 20 hits. Ralph Young, Ty Cobb each have 3 hits and 4 runs scored. Harry Heilmann and Bobby Veach knock in 4 apiece.

1922: Baby Doll Jacobson collects three triples to lead the Browns to a 16 - 0 whitewash of the Tigers. The victory, the most lopsided in Browns history, goes to pitcher Elam Vangilder. St. Louis totals 20 hits with Ken Williams hitting a homer in his 5th straight game, his 37th of the year. George Sisler has three hits to keep his hitting streak alive to 38 games, as the Browns keep pace with New York, winners in 10 innings against Washington.

1924: At the Polo Grounds, Brooklyn ace Dazzy Vance wins his 13th in a row, beating the Giants and pulling the Robins within a half game of the top.

1928: A total of 85,265 jam Yankee Stadium to watch the Yankees sweep two from the A's, 3 - 0 and 7 - 3, to move back into first place to stay. George Pipgras is the winner in the first game while the Yankee star of the nitecap is Bob Meusel, who takes an Ed Rommel knuckler out of the park for a grand slam in the 8th. Waite Hoyt is the winner.

1931: To raise funds to help the unemployed in the Depression, the Yankees, Giants, and Robins agree to a series of benefit games. Sixty thousand fans, paying regular prices, raise $59,000 in the first match-up, as Babe Ruth homers and the Yankees beat the Giants 7 - 2.

1932: The Tigers beat the Yankees 14 - 13 in a 14-inning game in which Lou Gehrig hits a grand slam and drives in eight runs. He has reached this RBI feat twice before. Frankie Crosetti strikes out four times in the game, including twice in one inning. Detroit also tops the Yanks 4 - 1 in five innings to finally complete the protested game of August 1st, and the tie of yesterday. The Yanks score their lone run in the 3rd inning off Buck Marrow with their only two hits of the game.

1933: Joe Hauser, Minneapolis (American Association), hits two home runs to set all-time record of 69. Hauser also set the International League record mark at 63, with Baltimore in 1930.

1934: In one of the most memorable games in Negro League history, the Pittsburgh Crawfords' Satchel Paige duels the Philadelphia Stars' Slim Jones to a 1 - 1 stalemate, called after 9 innings due to darkness. Paige strikes out 12, and Jones, 9, before 30,000 at Yankee Stadium.

1938: The Detroit Lions play their first home game at Briggs (Tiger) Stadium: they beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 16-7.

1937: The Detroit Tigers purchased Woody Davis from Toronto (International).

1938: Lou Gehrig plays his 2,100th consecutive game and has 4 hits to bring his average over .300.

1938: The Detroit Lions play their first home game at Briggs (Tiger) Stadium, defeating the Pittsburgh Pirates 16-7.

1939: Jimmie Foxx is operated on for appendicitis, and will be out for the season. His 35 home runs will still win the title.

1950: The Tigers and White Sox finally finish a game that started in April. The game was originally scheduled as the nitecap of a doubleheader on April 30th, but was halted by darkness after 9 innings deadlocked at 7 - 7. Rescheduled for August 10th, the contest was halted in the 7th with the score 1 - 1. Art Houtteman finally settles it with a 1 - 0, 12-inning win. Hoot Evers triples and scores on a single by Johnny Groth. The league leaders fail to cash in by losing the nitecap 5 - 4, cutting their lead to a half game over New York and a game ahead of Boston.

1951: Sal Maglie wins his 20th game to give the Giants a 2 - 1 win over the Dodgers' Ralph Branca. Monte Irvin's two-run homer in the 4th gives New York all its scoring, The Dodgers score in the 8th on a double by Duke Snider and a triple by Jackie Robinson. But 3B Bobby Thomson snags a ground ball, tags Robby, and throws to first for a double play.

1953: Mickey Mantle's 2-run home run off Chicago's Billy Pierce caps a 7-run 5th inning, as New York wins, 9 - 3, at Yankee Stadium. Returning to CF after the 5th, Mantle is photographed blowing a huge bubble with a wad of gum. Manager Stengel will publicly rebuke the Mick, who will apologize for the indiscretion. However, Mantle does get an endorsement fee from the Bowman Gum company.

1962: Boston's Lou Clinton makes four stellar grabs in the outfield and adds a homer, triple and single as the Red Sox trip the Yankees, 9 - 3, in 16 innings at Yankee Stadium. Dick Radatz takes over for Hal Kolstad and pitches nine innings of relief before leaving in the 16th for a pinch hitter.

1965: Sandy Koufax's perfect game against the Cubs bests Bob Hendley's one-hit effort, 1 - 0. It is the Dodgers southpaw's record fourth no-hitter.

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1965: The Angels waive Lou Clinton and both the Indians and the Athletics claim him. Since the rule on waivers is that the team lowest in the standings gets first dibs, Clinton joins the Athletics. He arrives in mid-game and appears as a pinch-hitter, striking out, as California beats the A's,
7 - 2. He and the Athletics then learn after the game that Clinton has been awarded to the Indians because the Athletics' claim was filed after the
24-hour claiming period had expired. Charlie Finley knew this before Clinton reported to the Athletics, but manager Haywood Sullivan, fed up with Finley's second-guessing, didn't answer the telephone during the game, and therefore didn't find out.

1967: White Sox starter Gary Peters takes a 3 - 0 lead into the 9th inning, but a 7-run 9th including 2 on a Willie Horton single, keeps Detroit tied for first place with the Twins with a 7 - 3 win at Chicago.
Chicago is now in 4th place, two games back, with the Red Sox in 3rd place just a half-game behind.

1970: Bowie Kuhn hands Denny McLain his third suspension of the year, this one for carrying a gun, plus other unspecified charges, and ends McLain's season with a 3-5 record.

1971: The Detroit Tigers signed John Hiller as a free agent.

1976: At Texas, Rod Carew hits a pinch grand slam in the 7th for the Twins, as Minnesota wins, 6 - 0. It is Carew's third grand slam of the year.

1977: In the second game of a doubleheader loss in Boston, Tiger rookies Lou Whitaker and Alan Trammell debut together. They will hold down the 2B and SS jobs in Detroit for a record 19 years and a record for teammates of 1,918 games played together.
The greatest double play combo played together for 19 seasons, combining for seven Gold Glove Awards and eleven All-Star Games.
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1978: Ron Guidry (21-2) gives up two singles in the 1st inning and that's it. New York sends 12 runners to the plate and scores seven runs in the 4th inning to win, 7 - 0, against Dennis Eckersley and cut the Boston lead to a single game. For Guidry, it is his 7th shutout of the year, and the first lefty shutout in Fenway Park since Ken Holtzman fired one on August 5, 1974.

1984: Tigers win 7 - 2 and complete a sweep of the second place Blue Jays to all but lock up the AL East.

1987: Striking out 12 of the final 13 hitters and a total of 16, Nolan Ryan beats the Giants, 4 - 2. The "Ryan Express" whiffs Mike Aldrete to end the 7th inning notching his 4,500th career strikeout.

1988: The Detroit Tigers traded players to be named later and Chris Hoiles to the Baltimore Orioles for Fred Lynn. The Detroit Tigers sent Cesar Mejia (minors) (September 9, 1988) and Robinson Garces (minors) (September 9, 1988) to the Baltimore Orioles to complete the trade.

1988: Bruce Sutter joins Rollie Fingers and Rich Gossage as the only pitchers to save 300 games as Atlanta beats San Diego, 5 - 4, in 11 innings.

1990: Tiger RF Scott Lusader loses the battle to bright sun and soggy turf and makes three errors (two fielding and one throwing) in the 1st inning against the White Sox. It's a first in the American League since 1925. The Sox score seven runs in the inning and coast home 13 - 3, snapping the Tigers' 7-game winning streak.

1992: Milwaukee OF Robin Yount gets the 3,000th hit of his career in his team's 5 - 4 loss to the Indians. He also becomes only the 2nd player in history to record 200 home runs, 200 stolen bases and 100 triples, duplicating Willie Mays' feat.


1992: Brewer owner Bud Selig is selected by the owners to serve as acting baseball commissioner until a permanent successor can be found. It will take nearly six years to name a permanent commissioner - and it will be Selig himself.

1993: The Major Leagues vote to divide each league into three divisions, and add another round of playoffs featuring two wild card teams.

1997: Detroit P Scott Sanders hurls a one-hit, 4 - 0 shutout over the Rangers. 2B Domingo Cedeno's single is the only Texas hit.

1997: Hall of Fame member Richie Ashburn passes away of an apparent heart attack in his New York hotel room following broadcasting a Mets-Phillies game last night. The former Phillies Whiz Kid was an excellent Centerfielder and contact hitter who once fouled off 14 pitches in one at-bat.

1998: The Gem Theatre reopens at Madison & Brush after being moved to make way for Comerica Park.

2002: The Detroit Tigers released Jose Paniagua.

2004: Royals wallop the Tigers 26-5.

2007: Todd Helton hits his 35th double of the season, this one against Joe Thatcher, in a 4 - 2 Rockies win. It makes him the first major leaguer ever to hit 35 or more doubles 10 years in a row; even the legendary Tris Speaker had only had 9 such seasons in a row.

2009: Derek Jeter ties the New York Yankees franchise record for hits held by Lou Gehrig, with his 2,721st hit in the 7th against the Rays. He will pass Gehrig in two days.

2012: Rookie Mike Trout hits a leadoff home run against the Tigers for the second straight game.

2014: The Tigers are again even with the Royals in the AL Central following a 4 - 2 win over their rivals. Max Scherzer is the winner while J.D. Martinez and Rajai Davis both go deep. In the 9th, Tigers closer Joe Nathan escapes a two-on, none out jam with two strikeouts around picking Jarrod Dyson off second base.

2016: Tigers win over the orioles on a home run by Victor Martinez.

2019: Following a 10 - 6 loss to the Yankees but less than a year after winning the World Series, the Red Sox fire President and General Manager Dave Dombrowski, the architect of that World Series triumph. He has received significant criticism for the large contracts handed out before the season to pitchers Nathan Eovaldi and Chris Sale, who have both failed to deliver, and for not re-signing closer Craig Kimbrel or even looking for an adequate replacement.

2020: At the urging of Roberto Clemente's family, Major League Baseball pays tribute to its first Latin American superstar by allowing Puerto Rican players and others to wear his uniform number, 21, in his honor, on this day. This is akin to the wearing of #42 on Jackie Robinson Day. In addition, all members of the Pirates, Clemente's former team, wear the number, the first time it has been worn by a team member since Clemente's passing 48 years earlier.

2021: The Blue Jays complete a four-game sweep of the Yankees at New Yankee Stadium with a 6 - 4 win, pulling within a half-game of their division rivals in the race for the final wild card slot. The two teams are going in different directions, as the Jays have now won 9 in a row, while the Yankees, who had put together a 13-game winning streak a couple of weeks ago, have lost six straight. Worse for them, they never held a lead even once in the four games, something no Yankees team had done in a four-game series since 1908, when they were still known as the "Highlanders".

2022: Major League Baseball announces the adoption of a number of changes to the rules to be introduced at the start of the 2023 season. They include a pitch clock, limits on defensive shifts, and larger bases. All of these changes have already been successfully tested in minor league games and aim to improve pace of play, reduce injuries and create more in-game action.

2022: The Detroit Tigers signed Daniel Ponce de Leon as a free agent.

Tigers players birthdays:

John Eubank 1905-1907.

Waite Hoyt 1930-1931.

Bud Thomas 1939-1941.

Jim Proctor 1959.

Reggie Sanders 1974.

Dan Miceli 1997.

Edwin Jackson 2009, 2019.

Tigers players who passed away:

Ernie Alten 1920.

Orlin Collier 1931.

Doc Cramer 1942-1948.

Jim Donohue 1961.

Baseball Reference
 
QUICK HITS.
Totally Tigers
 
September 10 in Tigers and mlb history:

1889: New York Giants pitcher Mickey Welch strikes out as the first pinch hitter in major league history.

1895: Hall of Famer George 'High Pockets' Kelly was born this day in San Francisco. His nickname came from his height at 6' 4".
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1904: The A's Eddie Plank and Boston's Cy Young face each other, with the Athletics prevailing, 1 - 0, in 13 innings.

1908: Detroit takes its 2nd straight extra-inning game from the White Sox, 6 - 5, in 11 innings, and the Naps beat the Browns, 5 - 2. The American League race leaves Detroit 75-52, Chicago 72-57, St. Louis 71-57.

1912: Boston's Smoky Joe Wood wins his 15th straight, with 9th-inning relief help from Charley Hall, beating the White Sox, 5 - 4. He scatters 12 hits and strikes out 5. There is some question about which pitcher should receive credit for the win, but American League president Ban Johnson will rule in favor of Wood.

1913: Honus Wagner is given a souvenir bat carved from a piece of wood taken from naval hero Oliver Perry's flagship Niagara, which was sunk in Lake Erie 100 years earlier.

1915: Rogers Hornsby, brought up a week earlier from Class D Denison (Western Association), makes his major league debut for the Cardinals. With the Cards trailing the Reds, 7 - 0, after six innings, Hornsby plays SS and goes hitless in two appearances against Cincinnati rookie King Lear.

1917: A red-hot Grover Alexander, chasing thirty wins, beats the Braves, 5 - 2, for the Phils.

1918: Players on both sides of the World Series threaten to strike unless they are guaranteed $2,500 to the winners and $1,000 each for the losers. They back off, however, when told they will appear greedy while their countrymen are fighting a war. There are no fines, but no World Series rings or mementos are given out this year.

1919: Ray Caldwell no-hits the Yankees after being struck by lightning two weeks ago. The Indians win 3 - 0, at the Polo Grounds.

1922: The Yankees play their farewell home game in the Polo Grounds. An estimated 40,000 overflow the stadium with another 25,000 turned away. Joe Bush beats the Philadelphia A's, 10 - 3, in the opener, and Waite Hoyt edges the A's in the second, 2 - 1. Plans are in the works to expand the park to 56,000 capacity, but this is the last regular season American League game at the Polo Grounds. The Yanks will play their next 18 games on the road, and then open in Yankee Stadium next spring.

1924: At the Polo Grounds, the Giants rip the Braves, 22 - 1, in the opener of a doubleheader. Frankie Frisch goes 6 for 6 before grounding out.

1930: The Washington Senators purchased Pinky Hargrave from the Detroit Tigers.

1933: The first Negro League East-West All-Star Game is played at Comiskey Park. Willie Foster goes the distance in the West's 11 - 7 victory.

1934: After agonizing over whether to play on Rosh Hashanah, Hank Greenberg hits two home runs to give the Tigers a 2-1 win over the red sox.

1934: Burleigh Grimes, in his second stint with the Pirates this year, picks up his 270th win, in relief, as the Pirates beat the Giants, 9 - 7. It is the Hall of Famer's last major league win.

1934: Dizzy Dean wins his 25th game, beating the Phillies, 4 - 1. It is the fifth straight for the Cards, now four games behind.

1935: Washington's Bobo Newsom scatters six hits to shut out the leading Tigers, 6 - 0. Schoolboy Rowe pitches six innings to take the loss.

1936: The Detroit Tigers traded players to be named later and cash and 3 players to be named to Indianapolis (American Association) for Bob Logan and Dizzy Trout. The Detroit Tigers sent Red Phillips (December 2, 1936) and Salty Parker (December 2, 1936) to Indianapolis (American Association) to complete the trade.

1938: Jimmie Foxx of the Red Sox hits 2 home runs in a game for the 9th time this season, breaking a record held by Babe Ruth and Hack Wilson.

1941: Ted Williams goes 2-for-4 against the Tigers to raise his batting average to .413

1950: The Red Sox win their 22nd in a row at home from the Athletics, 6 - 2, a streak dating back to 1949. The Red Sox won all 11 games two years in a row.

1959: Mickey Mantle goes 5 for 6, including a home run, in a 12 - 1 romp over Kansas City's Ray Herbert.

1960: In Detroit, Mickey Mantle unloads a cannon shot for three runs in the 6th inning, the ball clearing the RF roof and landing in the Brooks Lumber Yard across Trumbull Avenue. New York pins a 5 - 1 loss on Paul Foytack that moves them a half game in first place ahead of Baltimore, losers today.
In June, 1985, Mantle's blow will retroactively be measured at 643 feet, and will be listed in The Guinness Book of World Records at that distance.
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1961: After a disastrous road trip that ended their pennant hopes, the Tigers are greeted at Willow Run Airport by 8,000 fans.

1962: Against Hank Aguirre, Mickey Mantle clouts a 4th-inning home run, the 400th of his career to tie the game 1 - 1. The Yanks score two in the 9th off Aguirre to beat Detroit 3 - 1.
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1963: Stan Musial hits a home run in his first at bat as a grandfather, and Bob Gibson (17-8) blanks the Cubs, 8 - 0.
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1963: On this day, the great Willie Horton made his major league debut in a Tigers uniform with a pinch hit single in a 9 - 8 loss to the Senators.

1963: Hall of Famer Randy Johnson, born this day in Walnut Creek, CA.

1965: The Orioles sweep a pair from Kansas City, 5 - 2 and 10 - 5. In game 2, the O's get consecutive home runs by in 8th from Brooks Robinson, Curt Blefary, and Jerry Adair.

1965: At age 59, Satchel Paige signs a contract to pitch for the Kansas City A's! It's seen as a publicity stunt - but two weeks later he hurls 3 scoreless innings vs. the Boston Red Sox in what will be his last major league appearance.


1967: In the first game of a doubleheader, White Sox Joe Horlen no-hits the Tigers, 6 - 0. Cisco Carlos, Hoyt Wilhelm, and Bob Locker combine to shut out Detroit in the second game.
Minnesota leads the tight American League race after edging the Orioles, 4 - 2, at Baltimore.

1968: Denny McLain strikes out 12 in his 29th win, and goes 3-for-4 with a triple at the plate in the Tigers 7 - 2 win over the angels.

1968: Billy Williams hits three home runs in a game for the first time in his career. It's all the Cubs' scoring, as they beat the Mets, 3 - 1, behind Bill Hands. Added to two home runs on September 8, Williams has a major league-record-tying five over two straight games.

1973: Against the Giants, Hank Aaron connects for his 37th homer (career #710) in the 3rd inning, and then is lifted in the 4th when he doesn't feel well.

1974: Cardinal outfielder Lou Brock ties and breaks Maury Wills' single season stolen base record with his 104th and 105th swipes against the Phillies.
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1977: Lou Whitaker and Alan Trammell turn their first double play: 4-6-3 to Jason Thompson on a grounder by Fred Lynn at Fenway Park.

1986: Eric Davis leads the Reds to a 14 - 2 pasting of the host Giants by belting three home runs, scoring 5 runs and knocking in 4. His first two homers are off starter Vida Blue.

1988: Orel Hershiser shuts out the Reds, 5 - 0, to become a 20-game winner for the first time. It is his 2nd straight shutout.

1999: Umpires opposed to union chief Richie Phillips announce plans to form a new union and seek certification to represent all umpires.

2000: The Marlins defeat the Diamondbacks, 4 - 3, in 12 innings. Randy Johnson strikes out 14 Florida players in seven innings, including Mike Lowell to end the 4th for his 3,000th career strikeout. He is the 12th hurler to reach the milestone. Johnson's 1st strikeout of the game gives him 300 for the 3rd consecutive year. Only Nolan Ryan has reached 300 Ks more times (6).

2005: Carlos Pena ties the game with an RBI single in the 5th inning and hits the go-ahead home run in the bottom of the 8th to give the Tigers a 4-3 win over the Royals.

2007: Troy Tulowitzki homers off of Kyle Lohse. It is his 20th home run of the season and gives him the record for National League rookie shortstops. Ernie Banks had held the record with 19 for 53 years.

2011: Tigers win their 8th straight on a Brandon Inge walk-off home run in Tigers 3 - 2 win over the twins.

2015: The Milwaukee Brewers selected Daniel Fields off waivers from the Detroit Tigers.

2017: The Tigers convert their Lakeland facility to a public shelter from Hurricane Irma.
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2018: Justin Verlander watches a video tribute to his Tiger career from the Comerica Park outfield before his first start in Detroit with the Astros. Amazing how often the durability of Justin Verlander gets overlooked.
Since 2007, Verlander has thrown at least 200 innings in ten of his last 11 seasons ? all with a fastball holding triple-digit capability. Incredible given the frequency of elbow injuries to hard-throwers.


2019: Jordy Mercer's single scores Willi Castro to give the Tigers a wild 12-11 walk-off win

Tigers players birthdays:

Sammie Hale 1920-1921.

Augie Johns 1926-1927.

Bruce Robbins 1979-1980.

Ricardo Ingram 1994.

Dustin Peterson 2019.

Tigers players who passed away:

Roy Johnson 1929-1932.

George Spencer 1958, 1960.

Baseball Reference
 
IN THE KITCHEN WITH SCOTT HARRIS.
Totally Tigers
 

Days of Roar Tigers Podcast: Explaining how postseason tiebreaker impacts Detroit Tigers; Bobby L. Scales II talks hitting. 65 minutes.

The Detroit Tigers traveled to the West Coast and won three of six games against the San Diego Padres and Oakland Athletics. The chase for the postseason continues, as the Tigers are 3½ games behind the Minnesota Twins for the third and final spot in the American League wild-card. However, the Tigers actually sit even further behind the Twins in the wild-card race because of the new tiebreaker rule, which has been in place since 2022 when the playoffs expanded from 10 teams to 12 teams. After talking playoffs, Tigers radio analyst Bobby L. Scales II joins to discuss the high-quality plate appearances, the young core emerging on offense and the clutch gene of Parker Meadows. To wrap up, Mark and Evan provide updates on Reese Olson (right shoulder strain) and Wenceel Pérez (left oblique strain) on their rehab assignments with Triple-A Toledo.
 
“Now people are talking about us a little more.”With 17 wins in their last 25 games, the Tigers find themselves only 3 GB of the 3rd AL Wild Card spot.
 
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