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

February 26 in Tigers and mlb history:

1887: Grover Cleveland Alexander is born in Elba, Nebraska. Suffering from epilepsy, haunted by his experiences in combat during World War I, and shadowed by alcoholism, Alexander will still be able to win 373 games during a 20-year career, the third highest total in major league baseball history. He will lead the National League in ERA on four occasions, wins on six different seasons, complete games six times, and shutouts during seven seasons. He will also win 30 or more games in three consecutive seasons, and be the only pitcher in major league history to win the Triple Crown three years in a row. Alexander will gain election to the Hall of Fame in 1938.
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1894: In a series of rule changes designed to help pitchers, all foul bunts will now be called strikes, and the infield fly rule is instituted.

1901: National League officials meet with Charles "Chief" Zimmer, Pittsburgh Pirates catcher and the president of the Players Protective Association, and agree to contract concessions granted by the American League for NL players who will agree not to sign with AL clubs. Zimmer promises suspensions for members of the union who jump to the new league.

1924: Tigers player-manager Ty Cobb bans golf in spring training in Augusta, Georgia.
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1935: The New York Yankees release longtime star outfielder Babe Ruth, freeing him to sign a $20,000 contract with the Boston Braves of the National League. Ruth's new contract with the Braves also gives him a share of the team's profits. In 1934, Ruth endured one of his worst seasons with the Yankees - at least by his lofty standards - with a .288 batting average, 22 home runs and 84 RBI. This season, he will play just only 28 games for the Braves before announcing his retirement on June 2nd at the age of 40. Ruth will hit the final three home runs of his major league career on May 25th against the Pittsburgh Pirates, giving him a total of 714. His last home run will clear the right field grandstand at Forbes Field and will travel an estimated 600 feet.
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1943: The Philadelphia Blue Jays hire Bucky Harris as their manager. It is the fourth major league club Harris has led. He also managed the Detroit Tigers and Boston Red Sox, not counting two stints - later three - with the Washington Senators.
Clark Griffith, Rogers Hornsby, Donie Bush and Bill McKechnie have also managed four clubs. Harris will compile a record of 38-52 in 92 games before being fired, but will resurface as manager of the 1947 World Champions New York Yankees. He will finish his managing career with Detroit in 1956.

1952: Brooklyn Dodgers pitcher Don Newcombe is sworn into the Army. The 26-year old New Jersey native, who posted a 56-28 record his first three years with the team, will miss two seasons.

1956: The New York Giants trade knuckleball pitcher Hoyt Wilhelm to the St. Louis Cardinals in exchange for 1B/OF Whitey Lockman.

1969: Boston Red Sox star Carl Yastrzemski becomes the highest-paid player in American League history after signing a one-year deal worth $130,000. In 1968, Yastrzemski batted a league-leading .301 and also paced the AL with 119 walks.

1991: Bill Veeck, the colorful owner of the Browns, Indians and White Sox (twice), and Yankees great Tony Lazzeri are elected to the Hall of Fame by the Veterans Committee.

1992: Boston Red Sox owner Jean R. Yawkey dies at the age of 83. For the first time in 59 years, someone other than a Yawkey will own the team. Mrs. Yawkey's husband, Tom, became president of the Red Sox in 1933, and was the sole owner of the team for 44 seasons, longer than anyone in major league baseball history.

2011: Major League Baseball names former manager Joe Torre as executive vice-president for baseball operations, replacing Bob Watson who retired after last season. Torre will be in charge of supervising umpires and meting out discipline for on-field incidents.

2015: The Oakland Athletics selected Chad Smith off waivers from the Detroit Tigers.

2021: The Detroit Tigers signed Ricardo Pinto as a free agent.

Tigers players and coaches birthdays:

Rip Collins 1923-1927.

Don Lee 1957-1958.

Johnny Grodzicki coach 1979.

Dennis Kinney 1981.

Tigers players who passed away:

George Uhle 1929-1933.

Ned Garver 1952-1956.

Baseball Reference
 
WATERCOOLER WEDNESDAY.
Totally Tigers

Jace Jung is expected to go into his first full season as the Detroit Tigers’ 3Ber. He started his career as a 2Ber but was moved to 3B less than 2 years ago. Curiously enough, his brother, Josh, plays elite defense at 3B for the Texas Rangers.
Jung was moved, in part, because of Colt Keith and concern over a shoulder injury that moved him to 2B which is Jung’s natural position. In the short time he played 3B, Jace earned a -6 DRS.
It is said that his arm is strong but that his footwork needs much improvement. He continues to work with a number of coaches, including Alan Trammell.
But now, Colt Keith has been moved to 1B and the new 2Ber, Gleyber Torres is here for just 1 year. Torres, for the record, was signed for his bat, not his glove. He has a -11DRS last year to rank at the bottom of 2Bers.
It is not a slam dunk that Jung will be the Tigers’ 3Ber this year. Potentially, he could be sent down to AAA. Matt Vierling, who plays well at the hot corner, will have some time there. Maybe even earning the role of starting 3Ber.
Then there is Hao-Yu Lee who is playing superb baseball both defensively and offensively. A number of analysts predict he will see Detroit this year as either a 2Ber or 3Ber.
Given the rising prospects, coupled with Keith moving to 1B, what should the Tigers do about planning Jung’s future?
Should he stay at 3B short- or long-term? Or should he return to 2B?

What should the Tigers do about Jace Jung?

1. Keep him at 3B going forward.

2. Keep him temporarily at 3B but move him back to 2B next year.

3. Move him to 2B later this season when Lee comes up.

VOTE
 
Tigers tweak TV broadcasts for 2025; here's who you can expect to see.
Detnews

The Tigers' television broadcasts will be tweaked in 2025, but the faces will be mostly the same.
Jason Benetti is returning for his second year as the Tigers' lead TV play-by-play voice, and his primary analysts will be former Tigers outfielder Andy Dirks and former Tigers pitcher Dan Petry, the team announced Wednesday morning. Also returning as analysts will be former Tigers Kirk Gibson, Todd Jones and Carlos Pena.

A specific workload breakdown for each of the analysts isn't being provided by the Tigers, who say the rotation is subject to change for the FanDuel Sports Network Detroit game telecasts.
 
February 27 in Tigers and mlb history:

1901: The National League Rules Committee decrees that all foul balls are to count as strikes, except after two strikes. To cut the cost of lost foul balls, the committee urges that batsmen who foul off good strikes are to be disciplined. The American League will not adopt this rule for several years.
Other new rules: catchers must play within 10 feet of the batter; a ball will be called if the pitcher does not throw to a ready and waiting batter within 20 seconds, and players using indecent or improper language will be banished by the umpire. A ball will be called when a batter is hit by a pitch, but, in a mail vote, the owners will rescind this in April, and a HBP will earn a batter first base.

1908: The sacrifice fly rule is adopted. No time at bat is charged if a run scores after the catch of a fly ball. The rule will be repealed in 1931, then reinstated (or changed) several times before gaining permanent acceptance in 1954.

1908: In Fullerton, California, Washington Senators pitcher Walter Johnson is operated on for an infection of the mastoid area behind the right ear. The doctors remove a section of the bone, and the recuperation will keep Johnson sidelined until late May.

1909: The New York Giants release pitcher "Iron Man" Joe McGinnity, despite his 11-7 record in 1908. The move ends his 10-year major league career. McGinnity finishes with a 246-142 record and 2.66 ERA. In 1946, McGinnity will win election to the Hall of Fame.

1931: Finally cut loose by the New York Giants, for whom he refused to play in 1930 in a season-long holdout over salary terms, two-time National League batting champ Edd Roush returns to the Cincinnati Reds.

1935: Babe Ruth signs a contract with the Boston Braves. Released by the New York Yankees only one day earlier, Ruth will serve the Braves as a player, coach, and team vice-president.

1937: The Negro American League announces the schedule for its inaugural season.

1948: Newly elected to the Hall of Fame are Herb Pennock and Pie Traynor. Needing 91 votes for selection, Pennock, who died a month before, gets 94 votes, Traynor 93. Just missing are Al Simmons, Charlie Gehringer and Bill Terry.

1962: An architect offers a proposal to encase Candlestick Park in a plastic screen "saran cloth" to shield it from the wind.

1973: Chicago White Sox first baseman Dick Allen signs a three-year deal worth $250,000 per season, the richest contract in major league history. Allen won the American League MVP Award in 1972 after leading the league in home runs, runs batted in, and slugging percentage.
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1988: The Baltimore Orioles trade third baseman Ray Knight to the Detroit Tigers in exchange for pitcher Mark Thurmond.

1990: The Special Veterans Committee fails to elect a single player to the Hall of Fame for the second time in three years.

2002: The sale of the Boston Red Sox to a group headed by John Henry becomes official.

2003: The new Hall of Fame Veterans selection committee, made up of mostly Hall of Famers, fails to select any of the 41 players, executives and umpires being considered. Former Dodgers first baseman Gil Hodges is 11 votes shy of the 75 percent needed for induction receiving 50 votes of 81 cast (61.7%).

2006: Effa Manley is the first woman to be enshrined in the Baseball Hall of Fame.

2011: The "Duke of Flatbush", Hall of Famer Duke Snider dies in Escondido, CA at age 84. Snider was a power-hitting centerfielder for the great Brooklyn Dodgers teams of the 1950s and is immortalized in Terry Cashman's song "Willie, Mickey and the Duke". Snider led the N.L. in various offensive categories through out his career in runs, hits, home runs which included 5 straight seasons of 40 or more Home runs, RBI, Slugging%, OPS, OPS+, and Total Bases.

2018: The MLBPA files a grievance against four teams - the Marlins, Rays, Pirates and A's - accusing them of not investing the money they are obtaining through revenue sharing in the on-field product, as is specified in the Collective Bargaining Agreement. This action is the latest salvo in a war of words between players and ownership that was started by the slow free agent market, resulting in over 100 players still being unsigned when spring training opened two weeks ago.

2020: Major League Baseball announced that veteran umpire Kerwin Danley has been appointed a crew chief, becoming the first African-American to hold such a position.

2021: The Detroit Tigers signed Drew Hutchison as a free agent.

Tigers players, coaches, and executives birthdays:

Walter Briggs co-owner and sole owner 1920-1952.

Cy Perkins 1934.

Johnny Pesky 1952-1954.

John Wockenfuss 1974-1983.

Greg Cadaret 1994.

Matt Stairs 2006.

Craig Monroe 2002-2007.

Anibal Sanchez 2012-2017.

Tigers players who passed away:

Fred Lasher 1967-1970.

Baseball Reference
 
THE RIGHT MIX.
Totally Tigers
 
Matt Vierling has suffered a right shoulder injury, manager A.J. Hinch said. Javier Báez is scheduled to make his spring training debut Friday against the Blue Jays after rehabbing from right hip surgery.
 
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