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

November 12 in Tigers and mlb history:

1920: Owners unanimously elect Kenesaw Mountain Landis chairman for seven years. The owners' action comes in direct response to the Black Sox Scandal, which threatens the integrity of the game. Landis accepts, but only as sole Commissioner with final authority over the players and owners, while remaining a federal judge (with his $7,500 federal salary deducted from the baseball salary of $50,000).

1923: New York Giants manager John McGraw trades outfielders Casey Stengel and Bill Cunningham along with shortstop Dave Bancroft to the Boston Braves for pitchers Joe Oeschger and Bill Southworth.

1927: Lou Gehrig, Knute Rockne and Babe Ruth pose before a NotreDame football game at Yankee Stadium.

1939: The youngest of the three DiMaggio brothers, Dom DiMaggio, is bought for $40,000 by the Boston Red Sox from the San Francisco team (Pacific Coast League).

1939: In the Japanese Professional Baseball League, pitcher Victor Starffin wins his 42nd game in a 96-game season, leading the Yomiuri Giants to the pennant, and setting a post-1900 world record for season victories that will be equaled by Kazuhisa Inao in 1961 but never broken. Born in Russia, Starffin moved to Asahikawa, Hokkaido at a young age, and was picked as part of the national baseball team for an exhibition game against the United States in 1934. From 1936 through 1955 he will win 303 games, the first pitcher in Japanese baseball to top the 300 mark.

1944: Frankie Sinkwich runs for two touchdowns and kicks 3 extra points as the Lions win 21-7 at Briggs (Tiger) Stadium.
They beat the Card-Pitts, a wartime merger of the Cardinals and Steelers, nicknamed the "carpets," who went winless that year.

1952: The Baseball Writers Association of America name Philadelphia Athletics pitcher Bobby Shantz the American League Most Valuable Player. Shantz posted a 24-7 record with 152 strikeouts and a 2.48 ERA during the regular season.

1956: Having won the AL Triple Crown (.353 BA, 52 HR, 130 RBI), Mickey Mantle is named AL MVP in a unanimous vote.

1958: New York Yankees pitcher Bob Turley, who had 21 wins and 19 complete games, is named the Cy Young Award winner. With only one award given for the two leagues, Turley gathers five votes to four for last year's winner, the Milwaukee Braves' Warren Spahn.

1959: Chicago White Sox second baseman Nellie Fox wins the American League MVP Award. Teammates Luis Aparicio and Early Wynn finish second and third respectively.

1964: Fred Hutchinson dies of cancer at age 45. Tigers pitcher & manager in the 1940s & 50s. His brother William founded the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in 1975. Hutchinson was Al Kaline's first manager.

1965: The Hutch Award was created in 1965 in honor of the late Fred Hutchinson, the courageous and inspirational former Major League Baseball player and manager, who died of cancer one year earlier at the age of 45.

1966: The Los Angeles Dodgers complete an 18-game tour of Japan with a 9-8-1 record, the most losses ever for a major league club touring the Far East.

1969: Minnesota Twins infielder Harmon Killebrew, who led the American League with 49 home runs, 140 RBI, and a .430 on-base percentage, is voted AL Most Valuable Player.

1971: Tigers catcher Jim Price retires rather than accept a demotion to Toledo, calls for reserve clause reform.

1975: Tom Seaver of the New York Mets wins his third Cy Young Award. He posted 243 strikeouts with a 2.38 ERA and led the National League with 22 victories.

1980: Baltimore Orioles pitcher Steve Stone, who led the American League with 25 victories, wins the Cy Young Award over Mike Norris of the Oakland Athletics.

1985: Tom Brookens of the Detroit Tigers granted free agency.
1985: Doug Flynn of the Detroit Tigers granted free agency.
1985: Kirk Gibson of the Detroit Tigers granted free agency.
1985: Aurelio Lopez of the Detroit Tigers granted free agency.

1986: Jack Morris of the Detroit Tigers granted free agency.
1986: Lance Parrish of the Detroit Tigers granted free agency.
1986: The Detroit Tigers released Larry Herndon.

1996: The Anaheim Angels selected Todd Van Poppel off waivers from the Detroit Tigers.

1996: Pat Hentgen of the Toronto Blue Jays edges Andy Pettitte of the New York Yankees for the Cy Young Award in the closest American League voting since 1972 when Gaylord Perry topped Wilbur Wood by six points. Hentgen (with a 20-10 mark), the major league leader in complete games, outpoints Pettitte (21-8) by the narrow margin of 110-104. Yankees closer Mariano Rivera finishes third in the ballot and receives one first-place vote.

1997: Ken Griffey, Jr. becomes the ninth unanimous pick for the American League MVP Award. Griffey hit .304 for Seattle, led the AL with 56 home runs, and led the majors with 147 RBI. He receives all 28 first-place votes and 392 points in balloting to become the first unanimous AL pick since Frank Thomas in 1993, and the 13th unanimous selection overall.

2001: The Detroit Tigers signed Juan Sosa as a free agent.

2001: One year after playing Class-A baseball, Albert Pujols, who hit .329 with 37 home runs and 130 RBI, is named the National League Rookie of the Year by the BBWAA. The St. Louis Cardinals freshman set NL rookie marks in RBI, total bases (360) and extra-base hits (88) and fell one home run shy of tying the NL rookie record of 38 established by Frank Robinson in 1956 as a member of the Cincinnati Redlegs.

2003: Dave Wickersham writes a letter to umpire Bill Valentine absolving him of blame for an ejection that cost Wickersham his only 20-win season.
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2007: The Detroit Tigers signed Todd Jones as a free agent.
2007: The Detroit Tigers traded Omar Infante to the Chicago Cubs for Jacque Jones.

2012: The Detroit Tigers signed Shawn Hill as a free agent.

2012: Bryce Harper of the Nationals is named the National League Rookie of the Year while Mike Trout of the Angels wins the honor in the American League. The two young outfielders wowed observers with their prowess with the bat, Harper becoming only the second teenager to hit 20 home runs in the big leagues, and the 21-year-old Trout being Triple Crown winner Miguel Cabrera's main rival for the MVP Award after hitting .326 with 129 runs. Trout becomes the youngest AL winner, while Harper misses surpassing Dwight Gooden as the youngest NL winner by under a month.

2012: Mike Trout named Rookie of the Year: three months younger than Lou Whitaker was when he became the youngest ever ROY in 1978.

2013: Detroit pitcher Max Scherzer is named the winner of the American League Cy Young Award. Scherzer was 21-3 with a 2.90 ERA and 240 strikeouts in 2013.

2014: Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw is the unanimous winner of the National League Cy Young Award after going a dominant 21-3, 1.77.

2018: Shohei Ohtani, the first two-way player in the major leagues since Babe Ruth, wins the 2018 American League Rookie of the Year Award, beating out teammates Miguel Andujar and Gleyber Torres of the Yankees. In the National League, OF Ronald Acuna wins the award, finishing in front of fellow young outfield phenom Juan Soto and P Walker Buehler.

2020: 1B Freddie Freeman of the Braves is voted NL MVP with 28 of 30 first-place votes, while fellow 1B Jos? Abreu of the White Sox is voted the AL winner. It's a first win for both players.

2022: A glove that was used by Babe Ruth during his playing career sells at auction for a record $1.53 million.

Tigers players birthdays:

Ed Killian 1904-1910.

Red McDermott 1912.

Herm Merritt 1921.

Gary Thurman 1993.

Alex Faedo 2022-present.

Ryan Kreider 2022-present.

Tigers players and managers who passed away:

Fred Hutchinson – Society for American Baseball Research
Fred Hutchinson 1939-1940, 1946-1953, manager 1952-1954.

Baseball Reference
 
‘TIS THE SEASON FOR VOTING.
Totally Tigers
 

Days of Roar Tigers Podcast: Recapping GM meetings for Detroit Tigers: Alex Bregman update, new trade target, pitching chaos. 60 minutes.

The general manager meetings took place last week in San Antoino, giving Evan and Mark plenty of topics to discuss. Evan recaps what he learned about the Detroit Tigers at the GM meetings, including an update on free-agent third baseman Alex Bregman. If not Bregman, should the Tigers trade for Miami Marlins slugger Jake Burger? Burger, a right-handed hitter, blends contact and power on offense and plays third base and first base on defense. Most importantly, the former No. 11 overall draft pick is under team control through the 2028 season. After that, Evan and Mark project the pitching plan for the Tigers in 2025, as well as an early look at the starting rotation. To wrap up, Evan and Mark praise prospect Thayron Liranzo for his game-winning home run in the Arizona Fall League and talk about veteran Justin Verlander in free agency.
 
Skubal named AL Cy Young finalist; Hinch up for MOY.
Tigers official site

Tarik Skubal named one of three finalists for the AL Cy Young award
Tarik Skubal named one of three finalists for the AL Cy Young award.
Skubal should be a lock, while AJ Hinch also made the final three for AL Manager of the Year.
BYBTB

No surprise: Detroit Tigers' Tarik Skubal a finalist for 2024 AL Cy Young Award.
Freep
 
November 13 in Tigers and mlb history:

1899: The National League announces that, starting next season, there will be two umpires working each game.

1911: Hall of Famer Buck O'Neil was born this day in Carabelle, FL.
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1931: New York Yankees owner Jacob Ruppert buys the Newark Bears International League franchise. The Bears will be very successful and will send many players to New York.

1934: Bucky Harris, who managed the 1924 and 1925 American League champion Washington Senators, is hired back to D.C. to replace youthful Joe Cronin, who has been sold to the Boston Red Sox.

1935: Longtime Tigers owner Frank Navin dies of a heart attack while horseback riding on Belle Isle.

1951: Lefty O'Doul's All-Stars, including Joe DiMaggio, Ferris Fain and Billy Martin, lose 3 - 1 to a Pacific League All-Star team. This is only the second time since 1922 that an American professional team has lost to Japan, and the first time to professional players.

1962: Al Kaline hits a 2-run HR and Larry Osborne hits a grand slam in an exhibition in Shizuoka, Japan.
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1967: Following a meeting of National League owners, president Warren Giles says the league will not stand in the way of American League expansion to Seattle and Kansas City.

1968: St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Bob Gibson is named National League MVP after going 22-9, 268 K's, 13 shutouts and a microscopic 1.12 ERA.

1974: Los Angeles Dodgers first baseman Steve Garvey is selected National League MVP, after he hit for a .312 average with 21 home runs and 111 RBI.

1978: The New York Yankees sign free agent pitcher Luis Tiant to a two-year $875,000 contract. Tiant, formerly of the Boston Red Sox, becomes the first player to sign with a new club following this year's reentry draft.

1979: For the first time in major league history, two players share the Most Valuable Player Award. The National League co-winners are Willie Stargell, the spiritual leader of the Pittsburgh Pirates, who hit .281 with 32 home runs, and St. Louis Cardinals first baseman Keith Hernandez, who led the NL in runs (116), doubles (48) and batting average (.344).

1981: Ron Jackson of the Detroit Tigers granted free agency.

1984: Ryne Sandberg wins the National League MVP Award, becoming the first Chicago Cubs player to do so since Ernie Banks in 1959. Sandberg hit .314 with 19 home runs and 32 stolen bases and led the NL in runs (114) and triples (19).

1989: After 16 years with the same team, outfielder Jim Rice is released by the Boston Red Sox. Rice retires from the game with 382 home runs and a .298 average. He will eventually be elected to the Hall of Fame.

1989: Charles Hudson of the Detroit Tigers granted free agency.
1989: Fred Lynn of the Detroit Tigers granted free agency.
1989: Gary Pettis of the Detroit Tigers granted free agency.
1989: Frank Tanana of the Detroit Tigers granted free agency.

1990: Oakland Athletics pitcher Bob Welch is named the 1990 American League Cy Young Award winner. His 27 wins were the most in the major leagues since Steve Carlton in 1972.

1995: Atlanta Braves pitcher Greg Maddux wins the National League Cy Young Award for an unprecedented fourth straight time. Maddux had a remarkable 19-2 record with a 1.63 ERA, the second year his ERA is below 1.80.

1997: Larry Walker of the Colorado Rockies is named National League MVP, becoming the first Canadian in either league to win the honor. Walker, who hit .366 with 49 home runs and 130 RBI, caps off a big week for Canada.

1998: The Detroit Tigers signed Dean Palmer as a free agent.

2000: Pedro Martinez of the Boston Red Sox becomes the first pitcher to win the American League Cy Young Award unanimously in consecutive years. Martinez, who posted an 18-6 mark with a 1.74 ERA, has copped the "top pitcher" honor three of the last four seasons.

2001: Pitcher Randy Johnson, who posted a 21-6 record with a 2.49 ERA and 372 strikeouts, wins his fourth Cy Young Award.

2006: The Detroit Tigers signed Vic Darensbourg as a free agent.
2006: The Detroit Tigers signed Mike Hessman as a free agent.

2006: Justin Verlander named AL Rookie of the Year. First pitcher to earn the honor since Dave Righetti in 1981.
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2008: Cliff Lee wins the 2008 American League Cy Young Award, taking 24 of 28 first-place votes. Lee went 22-3 with a 2.54 ERA for the Cleveland Indians. He led the league in ERA and wins. Lee is the second straight Indians left-hander to win the award, following CC Sabathia in 2007.

2013: Max Scherzer of the Detroit Tigers, the only 20-game winner in the majors last season, wins the 2013 American League Cy Young Award. Scherzer becomes the fourth Tiger to win (McLain, Hernandez, Verlander).

2013: The Detroit Tigers signed Ronny Paulino as a free agent.

2014: The Toronto Blue Jays traded Anthony Gose to the Detroit Tigers for Devon Travis.

2014: OF Mike Trout of the Angels is the unanimous winner of the 2014 American League Most Valuable Player Award, while P Clayton Kershaw of the Dodgers adds the 2014 National League Most Valuable Player Award to the Cy Young Award he collected a day earlier.

2017: Hall of Famer Bobby Doerr passes away in Junction City, OR at the age of 99. He was the Oldest Living MLB Player and also the last surviving player to have played in the 1930's.

2017: The teams required to pay the luxury tax are announced, with the Dodgers leading the way, as their total salary outlay this year amounted to $244 million. They are joined by the Yankees for the 15th straight year, as their salary mass was the second-highest in the majors and the only other to top $200 million. Boston, the Cubs, Detroit and San Francisco are also assessed the tax, the latter two teams in spite of finishing last in their respective divisions.

2020: The Miami Marlins hire senior MLB executive Kim Ng to be their new General Manager, making her the first woman to occupy such a position in the history of North American men's sports.

2023: The Detroit Tigers signed Bligh Madris as a free agent.

Tigers players birthdays:

Jim Delsing 1952-1956.

Steve Bilko 1960.

Dan Petry 1979-1987, 1990-1991.

Vic Darensbourg 2005.

Gerald Laird 2009-2010, 2012.

Tigers players and executives who passed away:

Heinie Elder 1913.

Frank Navin owner 1908-1935.

Muddy Ruel 1931-1932, farm director 1952-1954, General Manager 1954-1956.

Randy Veres 1996.

Baseball Reference
 
WATERCOOLER WEDNESDAY.
Totally Tigers

For decades, the AL Central was the butt of many jokes. The weakest of all 6 divisions.
But something has been happening over the past couple years. The level of performance has been going up.
This year, the AL Central was the best performing division. The only one in which 4 out of 5 teams finished above .500.

And all 3 skippers nominated for Manager of the Year are from this division.
The Guardians are back on track after going through a year in which their former manager, Terry Francona, experienced serious health problems.
The Royals invested significant sums in their roster.
And A. J. Hinch took his team to the playoffs despite numerous player injuries and the loss of 4 out of 5 starting pitchers.

But is the rise of the AL Central, a good thing for the Detroit Tigers?
Does the increase in more competitive franchises help or hurt Detroit?
Do the better teams inspire the Tigers to raise their own bar and want to build a more competitive roster?
Will it get them to spend more on the roster?
Or do teams like the Guardians and Royals stand in the way of Detroit’s return to the top of the AL Central standings?

Is the rise of the AL Central a good or bad thing for the Detroit Tigers?

1. It's a good thing.

2. It's a bad thing.

VOTE
 
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