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

January 27 in Tigers and mlb history:

1927: Citing accuser Dutch Leonard's refusal to appear at the hearings of January 5th, Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis issues a lengthy decision clearing Ty Cobb and Tris Speaker of any game-fixing charges. Landis orders the Philadelphia Athletics to reinstate Cobb and the Washington Senators to restore Speaker.
Both players are then made free agents. Philadelphia owner Connie Mack will sign Cobb on February 8th, and Speaker will sign with Washington on January 31st for a reported $35,000.

1937: In Cincinnati, OH, the worst flood in the city's history inundates Crosley Field, covering home plate with as much as 21 feet of cold water. The lower grandstand is completely covered. Reds pitchers Gene Schott and Lee Grissom row a boat out from the center field wall and the resulting photo appears across the country. Fortunately, with the season two months away, Opening Day will be unaffected.

1941: The Detroit Tigers signed John McHale as an amateur free agent.

1944: The Boston Braves fire manager Casey Stengel, who becomes the victim of an ownership change when Lou Perini, Guido Rugo, and Joseph Maney take control of the team. In five years, after Stengel will have achieved success at the helm of the Oakland Oaks of the Pacific Coast League, the New York Yankees will hire him as their manager.
The "Old Professor" will guide the Yankees to five straight championships from 1949 to 1953.

1963: John Clarkson, Elmer Flick, Sam Rice and Eppa Rixey are elected to the Hall of Fame by the Baseball Writers Association of America. Rixey will die before the induction ceremonies that summer, marking the first time that a Hall of Famer passes away between the time of election and induction.

1968: The Detroit Tigers drafted Ken Szotkiewicz in the 1st round (3rd pick) of the 1968 amateur draft (January Secondary).
1968: The Detroit Tigers drafted Chuck Scrivener in the 2nd round of the 1968 amateur draft (January Secondary).
1968: The Detroit Tigers drafted Bob O'Brien in the 4th round of the 1968 amateur draft (January Secondary), but was not signed.
1968: The Detroit Tigers drafted Bill Slayback in the 7th round of the 1968 amateur draft (January).
1968: The Detroit Tigers drafted Terry Wilshusen in the 8th round of the 1968 amateur draft (January Secondary), but was not signed.

1977: Boston sports writers honor Luis Tiant as the Red Sox's most valuable pitcher. This is the fifth year in a row that Tiant has won this honor, a record for the award begun in 1952.

1982: The Chicago Cubs make one of the best trades in franchise history, acquiring infielders Ryne Sandberg and Larry Bowa from the Philadelphia Phillies for shortstop Ivan DeJes?s. Bowa and DeJes?s will have a few more productive seasons in the major leagues, but Sandberg, after starting out his career at third base, will become one of the best-hitting second basemen of all time. The winner of nine consecutive Gold Glove Awards from 1983 to 1991, in 1984 Sandberg will lead the Cubs to their first appearance in the postseason since 1945.

1987: The Detroit Tigers traded Chuck Cary and Randy O'Neal to the Atlanta Braves for Freddy Tiburcio (minors) and Terry Harper.

2003: The Detroit Tigers signed Julio Santana as a free agent.

2006: The World Baseball Classic set its pitch limits and mercy rules, designed to protect pitchers in the early stages of spring training and cut short one-sided games.

2013: The National Hockey League's St. Louis Blues pay tribute to a local icon. On the day after Stan Musial's funeral, every player on the team comes out for the warm-up skate before its game wearing jersey number 6, with Musial's name in place of their own.
The Montreal Canadiens had paid a similar tribute to Gary Carter last year, with everyone wearing his number 8 in the warm-up.

2016: The Detroit Tigers traded Jefry Marte to the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim for Kody Eaves (minors).

2020: The Reds sign free agent Nicholas Castellanos for four years and $64 million.

Tigers players birthdays:

Elijah Jones 1907, 1909.

Bill Burns 1912.

Steve Demeter 1959.
On April 12, 1960: Traded by the Detroit Tigers to the Cleveland Indians for Norm Cash.

Rusty Meacham 1991.

Julio Teheran 2021.

Tigers players who passed away:

Emil Frisk 1901.

Merv Shea 1927-1929, 1939.

Reggie Sanders 1974.

Baseball Reference
 
MONDAY MUSINGS.
Totally Tigers
 
January 28 in Tigers and mlb history:

1847: Hall of Famer George Wright was born this day in Manhattan, NY.

1890: In the first of many lawsuits filed against Players League members by their former teams, a judge refuses to grant an injunction against John Ward, president of the Brotherhood. His decision, echoed frequently by other judges, states that the "want of fairness and mutuality" in the standard National League contract, specifically the clauses relating to the reserve rule, "[is] apparent."

1901: The American League formally organizes as a major league, having been a top minor league in 1900: the Baltimore Orioles, Philadelphia Athletics and Boston Americans are admitted to join the Washington Nationals, Cleveland Blues, Detroit Tigers, Milwaukee Brewers, and Chicago White Sox.
Three of the original clubs - Indianapolis, Minneapolis, and Buffalo - are dropped.
League power aggregates in Ban Johnson as trustee for all ballpark leases and majority stockholdings, and with authority to buy out refractory franchises.
Player limit is 14 per team, and the schedule will be 140 games. American League contracts give the Players Protective Association what it asked for, with five-year limits on the rights to player services.

1907: In an effort to reduce playing-date conflicts between their leagues, presidents Harry Pulliam of the National League and Ban Johnson of the American League meet to plan schedules. Conflicting dates are reduced to 27.

1949: The New York Giants sign their first black players: Negro League players Monte Irvin and Ford Smith. Both men are assigned to the Jersey City Giants (International League). Irvin will star for the Giants, but Smith will never make the major leagues.

1958: The San Francisco Giants trade infielders Gail Harris and Ozzie Virgil to the Detroit Tigers for outfielder Jim Finigan and $25,000. Virgil becomes the first black player in a Tigers uniform.

1958: Brooklyn Dodgers catcher Roy Campanella's baseball career is tragically cut short when he becomes paralyzed from an automobile accident in Glen Cove, New York.

1962: Edd Roush and Bill McKechnie are added to the Hall of Fame by the Special Veterans Committee.

1967: The Detroit Tigers drafted Mike Adams in the 1st round (2nd pick) of the 1967 amateur draft (January Secondary).

1968: Goose Goslin and Kiki Cuyler are admitted to the Hall of Fame by unanimous vote of the Special Veterans Committee. Goslin was a career .316 hitter who played in four World Series. Hit a walk-off World Series-winning hit in 1935 to give the Tigers their first championship
Cuyler was a .321 career hitter with four stolen base crowns.

1973: The Hall of Fame Special Veterans Committee selects 19th-century players Mickey Welch and George Kelly, plus umpire Billy Evans, for enshrinement in Cooperstown.

1974: Detroit Wolverines and Detroit Tigers Right fielder Sam Thompson, first baseman Jim Bottomley, and umpire Jocko Conlan, are selected to the Hall of Fame by the Special Veterans Committee.

1980: Hank Aaron refuses an award from Bowie Kuhn for his career home run total. He?s displeased with how the league treats retired black ballplayers.

1992: Detroit Tigers first baseman Cecil Fielder avoids salary arbitration by agreeing to a $4.5 million contract, for the largest single-season deal in major league history.

2009: The Detroit Tigers signed Nick Regilio as a free agent.

2011: The Detroit Tigers signed Timo Perez as a free agent.

2014: Major League Baseball announces it has approved the use of a new pitcher's cap with extra padding to try to cut back on injuries from liners to the mound. The headgear, which is a half-inch thicker in the front than a standard cap and an inch thicker on the sides, will be optional for players in the majors and minor leagues, although it is expected to find more users in youth leagues.

Tigers players birthdays:

Ducky Holmes 1901-1902.

Jack Coffey 1918.

Emil Yde 1929.

Rod Lindsey 2000.

Kevin Tolar 2000-2001.

Jacob Cruz 2002.

Oscar Henriquez 2002.

Magglio Ordonez 2005-2011.

Zac Reininger 2017-2019.

Matt Manning 2021-present.

Tigers players who passed away:

Red Oldham 1914-1915, 1920-1922.

Billy Sullivan 1916.

Vern Kennedy 1938-1939.

Rocky Bridges 1959-1960.

Baseball Reference
 
BLAME IT ON BORAS.
Totally Tigers
 
Detroit Tigers star fighting a two-front war after recent media predictions.
The cornerstone piece of the Tigers organization is being noticed, but his organization isn't making it easy.
MCBTB
 
January 29 in Tigers and mlb history:

1901: After rejecting a proposal to ban the bunt, the newly-named Rules Committee composed of Connie Mack, John McGraw and Charles Comiskey recommends no changes at this time.

1904: Ray Hayworth is born in High Point, North Carolina. Tigers catcher 1926-38. Backup to Mickey Cochrane on the 1935 World Champs. At the time of his death in 2002 at age 98, he was MLB's oldest living former player.

1936: Baseball?s first Hall of Fame class elected, Ty Cobb, Walter Johnson, Christy Mathewson, Honus Wagner, and Babe Ruth as five of the finest players of the era.
The BBWAA and a special Veterans Committee made up of individuals with knowledge about players of the 19th-century, select Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth, Honus Wagner, Christy Mathewson, and Walter Johnson in the first Hall of Fame elections.
Ty Cobb is elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in their inaugural election. He receives 222 out of 226 votes, the most of any player (98.2%).
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FKPoHwlX...g&name=240x240



1948: Commissioner Happy Chandler fines the Yankees, Cubs and Phillies $500 each for signing high school players.

1951: Major League Baseball signs a six-year All-Star Game pact for TV and Radio rights calling for $6 million.
A number of owners criticize Commissioner Happy Chandler, believing that in a couple of years, the broadcast rights will be worth much more than a million per annum.

1953: The Philadelphia Athletics traded Billy Hitchcock to the Detroit Tigers for Don Kolloway.

1957: With the advent of coast-to-coast air travel, Major League Baseball considers a plan creating a player pool to be used in the event of an air disaster.

1958: Stan Musial of the St. Louis Cardinals signs a one-year contract worth $100,000. The deal makes Musial the highest-paid player in the National League. In 1957, Musial paced the NL with a .351 batting mark, while also hitting 29 home runs and driving in 102 runs.

1958: Los Angeles Dodgers catcher Roy Campanella suffers a broken neck in an early morning auto accident on Long Island. Campanella, who has won three National League MVP Awards, will be paralyzed for the remainder of his life.

1961: Billy Hamilton and Max Carey are selected to the Hall of Fame by the Veterans Committee.

1966: The Detroit Tigers drafted Jon Warden in the 4th round of the 1966 amateur draft (January).
1966: The Detroit Tigers drafted Ken Tatum in the 6th round of the 1966 amateur draft (January Secondary), but was not signed.

1967: Former Brooklyn Dodgers executive Branch Rickey and Pittsburgh Pirates outfielder Lloyd Waner are elected to the Hall of Fame by a unanimous vote of the Special Veterans Committee. In 1947, Rickey promoted Jackie Robinson to the Dodgers, effectively breaking the baseball color line in the major leagues.

1971: In accepting the Tris Speaker Award from Houston sportswriters, Roberto Clemente gives a speech which, apart from being called by many of those in attendance "the best talk any baseball player ever made," is the source of Clemente's most famous, if oft misquoted assertion: "If you have an opportunity to accomplish something that will make things better for someone coming behind you, and you don't do that, you are wasting your time on this earth."

1981: American League owners approve the sales of two franchises, the Chicago White Sox to Jerry Reinsdorf and Eddie Einhorn for $20 million, and 80 percent of the Seattle Mariners to George Argyros for $10.4 million.

1987: Boston Red Sox third baseman Wade Boggs avoids going to salary arbitration for the third consecutive year by signing a three-year contract worth over $5 million.

1988: After being granted free agency as a result of owner collusion, the Los Angeles Dodgers sign free agent outfielder Kirk Gibson to a three-year contract worth $4.5 million. Thanks in large part to Gibson's fiery leadership, the Dodgers will win the National League pennant this season.
In Game 1 of the World Series against the Oakland Athletics, Gibson, too hobbled to play the field, will hit a dramatic, game-winning pinch-hit home run off Dennis Eckersley.

1992: The Detroit Tigers signed Eric King as a free agent.

1995: Deion Sanders' appearance with the NFL San Francisco 49ers in Super Bowl XXIX becomes the first athlete to have played in both a Super Bowl and a World Series.

1998: The Detroit Tigers signed Pete Incaviglia as a free agent.

2006: Sparky Anderson attends the dedication of Sparky Anderson Field at California Lutheran University in Thousand Oaks, California.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DvMnqiUWoAE3wLN.jpg:large

2018: The Cleveland Indians announce that they will stop using the image of "Chief Wahoo" on their uniforms starting in 2019. The caricatural Indian mascot, deemed offensive by most Native Americans and by many others, has been used by the team since 1947, but has drawn increasing criticism in the last two decades, prompting Commissioner Rob Manfred to formally ask the team to phase it out.

2018: Anger over the slow pace of free agent signings is boiling over. Today, Agent Scott Boras accuses the current system of threatening the sport's integrity, as many teams have seemingly decided not to attempt being competitive. Mariners GM Jerry Dipoto adds that certain team would rather "win the top draft pick [in the amateur draft] than the World Series". A day earlier, Dodgers closer Kenley Jansen vented that players should consider going on strike even though a new collective bargaining agreement was just signed. The reason for this frustration is that a month before the opening of spring training, 130 free agents remain unsigned, including some of the highest-profile players on the market.

2018: The Detroit Tigers signed Travis Wood as a free agent.

2020: The Astros announce that they have hired veteran manager Dusty Baker to replace A.J. Hinch, who was fired earlier this month for his role in the 2017 sign-stealing scandal.

2020: Kris Bryant loses his long-standing grievance against his team, the Cubs, in which he contended that, when he first reached the majors in 2015, they had deliberately kept him in the minors longer than necessary in order to delay the onset of his arbitration clock and of his being eligible for free agency. He will thus become a free agent the 2021 season.

2021: Reporter Ken Rosenthal breaks out a story that the Rockies are about to trade franchise player Nolan Arenado to the Cardinals in return for prospects. Two elements of the deal need to receive approval to make it official, however: first, the Rockies want to include a sum of $50 million to cover part of the years remaining on Arenado's contract, and second the Cards would like part of the money to be deferred. The first requires MLB's approval, while the second needs the okay of the Players Association.

2021: The Detroit Tigers signed Wilson Ramos as a free agent.

Tigers players birthdays:

Hack Simmons 1910.

Ray Hayworth 1926, 1929-1938.

Jair Jurrjens 2007.

Alex Avila 2009-2015, 2017.

Brandon Dixon 2019-2020.

Tigers players who passed away:

Del Gainer 1909, 1911-1914.

Andy Harrington 1925.

Baseball Reference
 
WATERCOOLER WEDNESDAY.
Totally Tigers

The free agency process for the better players can be brutal as this blog published yesterday.

Alex Bregman has been on the market for a full 3 months with multiple interested teams. Yet he remains unsigned as his agent, Scott Boras, attempts to keep raising the price by playing teams off against each other for his client’s services.
There are only 2 weeks left before players start reporting and more than a few teams are waiting to see how the market will settle once Bregman is signed so they can go after the remaining free agents. At least 5 teams have back up options depending upon where Bregman signs. Currently, the free agent market is stuck in neutral until Boras moves his client.
But waiting this long to sign one of the better free agents wreaks havoc on a team’s roster. Not knowing who they will be able to sign until the end. Ending up with none of the players they wanted. Being unable to trade current players because they don’t know if they will acquire the desired free agent.
Currently, the Tigers’ roster is in limbo. There are questions about 3B and on a related issue, also associated concerns about 1B and SS and roles for 3 of their infielders. Depending upon what happens with Bregman, there may also be changes in RF.
And of course, if Bregman does sign with the Tigers, payroll for pitchers may also change as well.
What do you think of the free agent process as a whole?
Should the Tigers return to the days of adding multiple free agents?
Should they only turn to free agency when they need to fill just 1 particular position?
Should they avoid free agency all-together and focus on utilizing their top farm system and via trades?
Or should they simply avoid dealing with Scott Boras? (Note: Boras has 7 Tigers as clients including Tarik Skubal and Jackson Jobe.)

How should the Tigers handle the free agent process going forward?

1. Return to the days of loading up on free agents.

2. Only enter the free agent market when they have 1 crucial need.

3. Supply their needs via the farm system and trades.

4. Use free agency but avoid dealing with Scott Boras.

VOTE
 
The Tigers have signed Tommy Kahnle to a 1 yr, $7.75 Million deal.
2024 stats:42.2 IP 46 K / 19 BB 2.11 ERA 1.15 WHIP .257 wOBA vs LHH .301 wOBA vs RHH
 
Parker Meadows, Austin Jackson and locking down CF for the Detroit Tigers. 35 minutes.
Detroit Tigers center fielder Parker Meadows joins the show and talks playing center fielder in Comerica Park with another electrifying outfielder, cohost Austin Jackson. The Athletic's Cody Stavenhagen and Kieran Steckley are along for the ride as Meadows talks about his offseason, last year's amazing run and even gets some marriage advice from A-Jax.
 
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