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

January 23 in Tigers and mlb history:

1927: In the continuing clash between Commissioner Kenesaw Landis and American League President Ban Johnson, the AL owners are prepared to censure Johnson. But his serious health problems convince them to change their stance and Johnson is given an indefinite leave of absence instead.
Tigers President Frank Navin takes over control of the league on an interim basis and the owners adopt a resolution repudiating the charges that Johnson made against Landis.

1928: Alfonso (Chico) Carrasquel is born in Caracas, Venezuela. Carrasquel, the first in a great line of Venezuelan shortstops that includes Hall of Famer Luis Aparicio, Dave Concepcion, Ozzie Guillen and Omar Vizquel, will become the first Hispanic to appear in an All-Star Game, in 1951, at Briggs Stadium.

1932: The Brooklyn Dodgers acquire slugger Hack Wilson from the St. Louis Cardinals. Wilson, who costs only $45,000 and a minor league pitcher, will sign for $16,500, half his previous year's salary. He will hit .297 with 23 home runs and 123 RBI for Brooklyn this season.

1956: Hall of Fame umpire Billy Evans dies in Miami, Florida, at the age of 71. Evans began his major league umpiring career in 1906, when he was only 22 years old.

1958: The Washington Senators trade shortstop Pete Runnels to the Boston Red Sox in exchange for first baseman Norm Zauchin and outfielder Albie Pearson. Runnels will win two batting titles, in 1960 and 1962, and just miss a third by six points this season.

1962: Pitcher Bob Feller and infielder Jackie Robinson are elected to the Hall of Fame by the Baseball Writers Association of America in their first year of eligibility. The Brooklyn Dodgers legend becomes the first African American player to be given the honor.


1967: The St. Louis Cardinals name future Hall of Famer Stan Musial as their new general manager.

1968: Outfielder Joe Medwick is voted into the Baseball Hall of Fame. In his brilliant 17-season career Medwick was a .324 hitter with 205 home runs and 1383 RBI. A ten-time All-Star, in 1937 he won the Triple Crown and was named the National League MVP.

1975: Former Pittsburgh Pirates slugger Ralph Kiner gains election to the Hall of Fame in his final year on the ballot. Kiner hit 369 home runs over a 10-year career, leading the National League in home runs each season from 1946 to 1952. In one of the narrowest margins ever, Kiner is elected by just one vote over the 75 per cent minimum required for induction.

1975: The Detroit Tigers released Jerry DaVanon.

1979: Outfielder Willie Mays, considered one of the greatest players of all time, is elected to the Hall of Fame by the BBWAA. Mays garners 409 out of 432 votes and becomes the 14th man to gain election in his first year on the ballot. Mays will officially enter the HOF on August 5th, along with Veterans Committee selections Warren Giles and Hack Wilson.


1981: The Boston Red Sox trade one-time American League MVP Fred Lynn, along with pitcher Steve Renko, to the California Angels for outfielder Joe Rudi, pitcher Frank Tanana and a minor league prospect.

1995: The Detroit Tigers signed Kevin Wickander as a free agent.

1996: The Milwaukee Brewers traded Duane Singleton to the Detroit Tigers for Henry Santos (minors).

2003: The Detroit Tigers signed Steve Avery as a free agent.

2004: The Tigers agree to sign free agent catcher Pudge Rodriguez to a four-year deal. In his 4 1/2 seasons in Detroit, Rodriguez hit .298 with 62 home runs and 300 RBIs. He went to three All-Star Games, won three Gold Gloves and helped lead the Tigers to the 2006 World Series.

2010: A group headed by Hall of Fame pitcher Nolan Ryan and including a number of prominent business people from the Dallas, TX-Ft. Worth area purchases the Texas Rangers from Tom Hicks for a price rumored to exceed $500 million. Ryan will continue as team President, while attorney Chuck Greenberg will be managing partner and Chief Executive Officer. The corporation will be known as Rangers Baseball Express, in honor of Ryan's famed fastball. Because of complications caused by Hicks's bankruptcy proceedings, the deal will not be finalized for another six months.

2012: The Detroit Tigers signed Warwick Saupold as an amateur free agent.

2015: Hall of Famer Ernie Banks, one of the best hitting shortstops ever and the most popular player in the history of the Chicago Cubs, dies at age 83.

2019: The Mariners offer a minor league contract to 45-year-old outfielder and living legend Ichiro Suzuki. While the Mariners released him last May, Ichiro has not officially retired and has made it clear that he would love to play for the M's when they open the season in his native Japan on March 20th.

2021: In a rare trade between the two bitter rivals, the Red Sox acquire P Adam Ottavino from the Yankees in return for future considerations.

2024:The BBWAA 2024 elects three players to the Hall of Fame: Adrián Beltré, Todd Helton and Joe Mauer. Beltré, one of the greatest third basemen ever, and Mauer both make it on their first try, while Helton does so in his sixth attempt.

Tigers players and coaches birthdays:

Red Donahue 1906.

Billy Mullen 1926.

Cot Deal coach 1973-1974.

Charlie Spikes 1978.

Juan Rincon 2009.

Dan Fields 2015.

Tigers players who passed away:

Fred Nicholson 1917.

Frank Doljack 1930-1934.

Saul Rogovin 1949-1951.

Paul Foytack 1953, 1955-1963.

Baseball Reference
 
BREGMAN, BORAS AND THE BATTLE.
Totally Tigers
 
January 24 in Tigers and mlb history:

1900: Officials from the National League hold a secret meeting in Cleveland, supposedly to discuss dropping the Baltimore, Cleveland, Louisville and Washington, DC franchises from the league roster. Indeed, the four teams will be contracted before the start of the season.

1900: The A.J. Reach Company is granted a patent for protective headgear known as the "Reach Pneumatic Head Protector." It won't gain acceptance, though a few players, notably Roger Bresnahan, will occasionally wear it.

1913: In a story in the New York Times, Detroit Tigers President Frank Navin blames the length of the games on the coaches' boxes. Navin, reacting to American League President Ban Johnson's complaint that too many games the previous season had taken two hours to play, says the boxes should be moved back so that the catcher can give the pitcher his signals more quickly. From where they are now, he said, the coaching players can detect the catcher's signals unless he takes a lot of time to hide them. Navin said this slow signalling is the reason for the longer games.

1939: Eddie Collins, Willie Keeler and George Sisler are elected to the Hall of Fame by the Baseball Writers Association of America.
Sisler set a major league season-record (later broken by Ichiro Suzuki) with 257 hits in 1920 and batted .420 in 1922 on his way to a .340 career batting average.
Collins batted an even .333 for his career and stole 744 bases as a member of four World Series Champions.
Keeler, who "hit 'em where they ain't", batted .341 and collected 2,932 hits.

1950: Jackie Robinson signs a contract for $35,000, reportedly making him the highest-paid player in Brooklyn Dodgers team history.

1955: In an effort to speed up the game, Major League Baseball announces a new rule which requires a pitcher to deliver the ball within 20 seconds after taking a pitching position.

1973: Left-handed pitcher Warren Spahn is elected to the Hall of Fame by the BBWAA. Spahn, in his first year of eligibility, is named on 316 out of a possible 380 ballots. Spahn won a total of 363 games during a 21-year major league career.
Warren Spahn speaks; "363 wins, 5,200 innings, all after serving in WWII. After what I went through overseas, I never thought of anything I was told to do in baseball as hard work. You get over feeling like that when you spend days on end sleeping in frozen tank tracks in enemy threatened territory.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GEnB79cW0AA6Uca?format=jpg&name=medium

1996: The Detroit Tigers signed Alan Trammell as a free agent.

2001: In what is believed to be an historical first, 68 major league umpires participate in a pre-season session to practice calling strikes as defined by the rule book. With the help of minor league players wearing tapes nine inches above their belts, the men in blue get a good look at pitches, normally called balls, which now will considered a strike as the correct interpretation of the zone will be enforced this upcoming season.

2002: The Detroit Tigers selected Oscar Salazar off waivers from the Oakland Athletics.

2003: The Detroit Tigers signed Kevin Barker as a free agent.

2006: According the New York Daily News, the daughter of Jackie Robinson thinks Major League Baseball should not retire Roberto Clemente's number 21.

2006: More than 1,000 items of Joe DiMaggio memorabilia, including his 1947 American League MVP Award plaque and a signed photo of Marilyn Monroe, will be auctioned in May.

2011: The Tigers trade P Armando Galarraga, who lost a perfect game due to umpire Mike Joyce's blown call on June 2nd, to the Diamondbacks in exchange for minor league Pitchers Ryan Robowski and Kevin Eichhorn.

2012: Rocked by the loss of DH Victor Martinez to an off-season injury last week, the Tigers react by signing the most prominent free agent remaining on the market 1B Prince Fielder. It takes a 9-year, $214 million contract to land the big slugger. The move is doubly surprising because Detroit was not rumored to be among the teams bidding for Prince, and because they already have one the game's premium first basemen, Miguel Cabrera, signed to a long-term deal.

2018: Four players are elected to the Hall of Fame by the BBWAA: 3B Chipper Jones and 1B Jim Thome both make it on their first attempt, while P Trevor Hoffman and OF Vladimir Guerrero, who had both missed induction by a handful of votes in 2017, make it over the 75% threshold this time.

2018: The Detroit Tigers signed Alexi Amarista as a free agent.
2018: The Detroit Tigers signed James Russell as a free agent.
2018: The Detroit Tigers signed Caleb Thielbar as a free agent.
2018: The Detroit Tigers signed Matt West as a free agent.

2019: The Detroit Tigers selected Kaleb Cowart off waivers from the Seattle Mariners.

2023: In the 2023 Hall of Fame Election, the BBWAA elects 3B Scott Rolen, who is named on 76,6% of the ballots after starting off with just above 10,2% in his first year of eligibility in 2018, completing a historic climb. 1B Todd Helton misses election by just 11 votes.

Tigers players birthdays:

Joe Cobb 1918.

Rufus Smith 1927.

Jay Sborz 2010.

Andy Dirks 2011-2013.

Tigers players who passed away:

Monte Beville 1904.

Ralph Young 1915-1921.

Bill Moore 1925.

Julio Navarro 1964-1966.

Baseball Reference
 
FIVE FOR FRIDAY.
Totally Tigers

The Detroit Tigers and Alex Bregman/Scott Boras remain at a standstill regarding a possible contract. It is reported that both sides are still very interested in each other.
Bregman would improve the infield with his defense and his bat would provide some pop to a team in desperate need of offense. However, his age and contract demands would most likely no longer fit the team’s needs after several years.
But the Tigers need to find a solution for 3B. There are other players available via free agency although none as high-profile as Bregman. They could also make a trade.
Jace Jung only played 27 games at the hot corner in 2024 which is not enough time to get a true evaluation. Jung is ranked #6 by MLB in 3B prospects.
Matt Vierling played there last year more than any other player remaining on the roster.
The Cardinals want to trade Nolan Arenado who initially has a no-trade clause to Detroit but rumors say he is reconsidering.
Other than Bregman, there are 6 other free agent 3Bers available. https://www.mlb.com/news/2024-25-mlb-free-agents-by-position
Which of the 5 options (because it’s Friday!) do you believe is the best and most viable one for the Tigers to pursue?

Which player is the best and most viable option to take over 3B for the Tigers?

1. Nolan Arenado

2. Alex Bregman

3. Jace Jung

4. Matt Vierling

5. another free agent 3Ber

VOTE
 
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