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

Jackson Jobe’s 2025 pitch arsenal: Four-seam fastball, Curveball, Cutter, Sweeper, Change up, Two-seam fastball.

 
February 13 in Tigers and mlb history:

1920: Officials organize the Negro National League in a meeting held at the YMCA in Kansas City, Missouri, with the Detroit Stars as a charter member.
Spearheaded by league founder Rube Foster, the NNL will become the most successful of all Negro Leagues ventures and will last until the late 1940s.
Rube Foster established the Negro National League in a meeting held at KC’s Paseo YMCA & boldly proclaimed, “WE ARE THE SHIP; ALL ELSE THE SEA,” serving notice to MLB that a new player had arrived to be reckoned with!

1953: The Philadelphia Athletics change the name of Shibe Park to "Connie Mack Stadium", in honor of their longtime owner and manager. Mack was part-owner and manager of the franchise for a record 50 years. The Athletics will depart Philadelphia at the end of the following season, and the Phillies will continue to inhabit Connie Mack Stadium until the end of the 1970 season, when they will move to Veterans Stadium. After being badly damaged in a fire in 1971, Connie Mack Stadium will continue to decay until being torn down in 1976.

1969: Al Kaline, Bart Starr, and Arnold Palmer visit the White House.
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1970: Commissioner Bowie Kuhn announces investigation into the "off-field activities" of Denny McLain.
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1974: James (Cool Papa) Bell is elected to the Hall of Fame by the Special Committee on the Negro Leagues. Known for his legendary footspeed, Bell joins Satchel Paige, Josh Gibson, Buck Leonard and Monte Irvin, as Negro Leagues greats selected to the Hall.

1987: Detroit Tigers pitcher Jack Morris is awarded a $1.85 million salary by arbitrator Richard Bloch, the highest amount awarded to date through the salary arbitration process.
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1993: The Detroit Tigers signed Willie Fraser as a free agent.

1995: The Los Angeles Dodgers sign Japanese pitching star Hideo Nomo to a contract that includes a $2 million signing bonus. Nomo won 78 games for the Kintetsu Buffaloes over the past four seasons, and he will become the National League Rookie of the Year this year.

2002: The Boston Red Sox sign 43-year-old Rickey Henderson to a minor league contract. Last season with the San Diego Padres, Henderson had his 3000th career hit and broke the major league all-time records for walks and runs.

2008: Roger Clemens and his former personal trainer Brian McNamee spend almost five hours testifying before the U.S. House oversight committee. Both Clemens and McNamee contradict themselves during the course of testimony, providing plenty of fodder for those who criticize the latter as a drug dealer and the former as a user of steroids. Clemens' denials of Human Growth Hormone use look flimsier when teammate Andy Pettitte reveals that Clemens had admitted such usage to him.

2009: The Detroit Tigers signed Jon Huber as a free agent.

2010: Jimmy Lanier dies in Atlanta at age 93. Former neighbor and personal batboy to Ty Cobb.

2018: New inductee Jack Morris visits the Baseball Hall of Fame.
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Tigers players birthdays:

Fritz Buelow 1901-1904.

Ben Dyer 1916-1919.

George Gill 1937-1939.

Hack Miller 1944-1945.

Jim Brideweser 1956.

Frank Williams 1989.

Ryan Perry 2009-2011.

Jose Fernandez 2019.

Angel De Jesus 2022.

Tigers players and bat boy who passed away:

James Fargo Lanier personal Batboy for Ty Cobb 1925-1926.

Earl Rapp 1949.

Tito Francona 1958.

Brian Dubois 1989-1990.

Baseball Reference
 
THOUGHTFUL THURSDAY.
Totally Tigers

Spring training may be here but there are still free agents out there waiting to be signed. Some of them still without teams due to perceived talent, not finding the right fit or asking for too much money.
But for many of them, it’s about the length of the contract. Teams are much more willing to put a few extra dollars into each year’s salary but they are becoming increasingly concerned over the number of years that player will be on the roster.
It was the biggest speed bump when it came to Pete Alonso’s new contract. And it’s the primary reason why Alex Bregman remained unsigned until yesterday.
The Detroit Tigers certainly have had their share of contracts that became painful in the end even with first ballot Hall of Famer Miguel Cabrera. And currently they are suffering from the Javy Baez contract that still has 3 long years to go. Ironically, that contract was created right after Jordan Zimmermann’s horrible contract ended.
Alex Bregman has stated that he does not want a short-term contract and insists on one of at least 6 years. No team yet, including the Tigers, has acquiesced to those demands because of his current age and the concern over when his contract would end.
Recently, we’ve seen the team lock down young prospects like Colt Keith to 6-9 year contracts. It’s an advantage in which the player would still be young at the conclusion unlike the free agent who is already older.
Which brings us to ask fans whether the Tigers should ever again offer a long-term contract (5 or more years) to a free agent?
Is it worth the risk? It is worth the reward? Are there better ways in which the organization can acquire some of the best talent without having to jeopardize their future?
What do you think?

Should the Tigers ever again offer a long-term contract (5+ yrs.) to a free agent?

1. Yes

2. Only one but it must be due to a unique situation.

3. No

VOTE
 

Days of Roar Tigers Podcast: Alex Bregman signs with Red Sox. What now for Detroit Tigers?

The Boston Red Sox signed third baseman Alex Bregman to a three-year, $120 million contract with an opt-out clause after the 2025 and 2026 seasons. Meanwhile, the Detroit Tigers offered six years, $171.5 million with an opt-out clause after the 2026 season. But Bregman turned down a long-term contract from the Tigers in favor of a short-term contract from the Red Sox, giving him $40 million per season and the option to return to the free-agent market as soon as the upcoming offseason. What's next for the Tigers at third base? Could a Nolan Arenado trade happen? Is Matt Vierling the everyday third baseman? What about prospect Jace Jung? This breaking news episode of the "Days of Roar" podcast examines every possibility for the Tigers with 2025 spring training underway.
 
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