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

TMLR Spring Training Recap Week 1. 62 minutes.

Brandon Day of Bless You Boys.com stops in to discuss his observations about the early impressions of the minor leaguers in camp.
 
Tanner Kohlhepp brought the funk on Wednesday.
The Tigers reliever has struggled to run through the minor leagues, but he continues to throw some of the sickest stuff in the system.
BYBTB
 
February 28 in Tigers and mlb history:

1900: John McGraw and Wilbert Robinson sign contracts with the Baltimore Orioles of the National League. When the long-rumored move by Baltimore to disband occurs, the two players are assigned to the Brooklyn Superbas, but they will refuse and sit out the first third of the season instead. Finally, McGraw and Robinson are sold to the St. Louis Cardinals.

1903: A syndicate headed by Pittsburgh Pirates owner Barney Dreyfuss and James Potter buys the Philadelphia Phillies from John Rogers and A. J. Reach for $170,000. It will be another seven years before ownership interest in more than one team is prohibited.

1904: The Detroit Tigers purchased Frank McManus from the Brooklyn Superbas.

1916: Future HOFer Sam Crawford on the cover of Baseball magazine.
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1931: Ban Johnson dies in St. Louis, at age 57. Johnson had served as the founder and first president of the American League from 1901 to 1927. He was a dynamic and dictatorial leader until subdued by the advent of Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, who took office as the first Baseball commissioner in January 1921. Johnson will gain election to the Hall of Fame in 1937.

1955: The National League fines the Milwaukee Braves $500 for opening their spring training camp before the official March 1st date.

1959: Mickey Mantle of the New York Yankees ends his holdout after one day. Mantle agrees to a salary of $72,000 and a bonus of $2,000. He had been asking the Yankees for $85,000 after batting .304 with 42 home runs and 97 RBI in 1958.

1962: Mickey Mantle & Roger Maris pose with manager Ralph Houk at New York #Yankees training camp in Florida.

1966: Sandy Koufax & Don Drysdale refuse to report to #Dodgers spring training, beginning their joint holdout for a new contract. They ask for a 3-yr. deal totaling $1,000,000 to be divided equally between them.

1968: Lena Blackburne dies in Riverside, New Jersey, at age 81. A former major league infielder and manager, Blackburne has been the source for his eponymous rubbing mud, used by umpires in both leagues to rub down new balls. He leaves the mud business to his boyhood friend, John Haas.

1969: Mickey Mantle announces his retirement.

1986: In Major League Baseball's sternest disciplinary move since the 1919 Black Sox were banished for life, Commissioner Peter Ueberroth gives seven players who were admitted drug users a choice of a year's suspension without pay or heavy fines and career-long drug testing, along with 100 hours of drug-related community service. Joaquin And?jar, Dale Berra, Enos Cabell, Keith Hernandez, Jeffrey Leonard, Dave Parker, and Lonnie Smith will be fined 10 percent of their annual salaries to drug abuse programs. The commissioner also doles out lesser penalties to 14 other players for their use of drugs.

1989: The Veterans Committee elects Red Schoendienst and Al Barlick to the Hall of Fame. Schoendienst served as a second baseman and manager of the St. Louis Cardinals, and Barlick was a major league umpire for over 29 seasons.

1992: The Detroit Tigers signed Steve Ontiveros as a free agent.

2000: American League umpire John Hirschbeck is elected as the first president of the World Umpires Association, which was recognized by the National Labor Relations Board a few days ago.

2002: Major League Baseball announces it has rehired five umpires who had resigned during the 1999 season as part of the ill-fated strategy concocted by Richie Phillips and the Major League Umpires Association. They are Gary Darling, Bill Hohn, Larry Poncino, Larry Vanover and Joe West. Four other umpires, Drew Coble, Greg Kosc, Terry Tata, and Frank Pulli, are allowed to retire.

2005: The Detroit Tigers signed Dewayne Wise as a free agent.

2011: Miguel Cabrera makes his first appearance since his drunk driving arrest and goes 0 for 2 with a walk in a Tigers victory.

2018: Boston Red Sox owner John Henry officially petitions the city of Boston, MA to rename Yawkey Way, which is located just outside Fenway Park. The street was named after former owner and Hall of Fame member Tom Yawkey, but history has not been kind to its namesake's memory, as he is widely blamed for delaying the integration of the team, making them the last major league franchise to have an African-American player in its line-up, 12 years after Jackie Robinson broke the color line.

2019: The Philadelphia Phillies appear to have won the Bryce Harper sweepstakes, finalizing a 13-year, $330 million deal with the free-agent outfielder.

2021: The first games of spring training are played today, a glimpse of normality after one year of upheavals caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. MLB is planning to play a full season this year, and there are some spectators present, with crowds limited to 25% of ballpark capacity.

2022: In a surprise announcement, Miami Marlins President Derek Jeter steps down from his position and also gives up his ownership share in the team, after four seasons at the helm. He explains that: "the future of the franchise is different than the one I signed up to lead." This leaves day-to-day operations in the hands of two women, General Manager Kim Ng for baseball dealings, and Caroline O'Connor for all business matters.

2022: On what was supposed to be the deadline imposed by MLB for the two sides to reach a settlement to the 2021-2022 lockout that would preserve the integrity of the upcoming season, the parties meet for the 8th straight day without success. However, there is enough progress that after 16 hours of talk, the two sides agree to resume these tomorrow and give themselves a further five hours to reach an agreement.

2022: WBSC Europe announces that all Russian and Belarussian teams are banned from competitions in 2022 due to the two countries' invasion of Ukraine. Belarus was slated to play in the 2023 European Championship Qualifiers and teams from those countries have played in the CEB Cup and Federations Cup in recent years. Should the ban continue, Russia will also lose its spot in the 2023 European Championship.

Tigers players birthdays:

Lil Stoner 1922, 1924-1929.

Ron Samford 1955, 1957.

Chad Bell 2017-2018.

Niko Goodrum 2018-2021.

Tigers players who passed away:

Dizzy Trout 1939-1952.

Harvey Kuenn 1952-1959.

Tom Sturdivant 1963.

Alex Johnson 1976.

Baseball Reference
 
FIVE FOR FRIDAY.
Totally Tigers
 
February 29 in Tigers and mlb history:

1896 - Western League president Ban Johnson asserts that "the Western League has passed the stage where it should be considered a minor league - it is a first-class organization, and should have the consideration that such an organization warrants." Four years later Johnson will act upon this belief, taking the first steps toward moving the WL - renamed the American League in 1900 - to major league status.

1940: The First National Bank of Chicago tries to force a sale of the Chicago White Sox by the heirs of the late J. Louis Comiskey. A judge denies the effort of the club's principal lender, saying that Mrs. Grace Comiskey can keep the club for their 14-year-old son, Charles II, until he is 35.

1956 - The Cleveland Indians are sold for nearly four million dollars. The team's present general manager and former player, Hank Greenberg, is one of the new owners.

1968 - Lena Blackburne dies in Riverside, New Jersey, at age 81. A former major league infielder and manager, Blackburne has been the source for his eponymous rubbing mud, used by umpires in both leagues to rub down new balls. He leaves the mud business to his boyhood friend, John Haas.

1972 - Hank Aaron signs a major league record-breaking contract with the Atlanta Braves, calling for $200,000 annually for three years.

2000: Manager Sparky Anderson, 19th century star Bid McPhee, and Negro League slugger Norman (Turkey) Stearnes are elected to the Hall of Fame by the Veterans Committee.
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Daughters, Rosilyn Stearnes-Brown & Joyce Stearnes Thompson, in front of a portrait of their father at
Detroit Historical Society #DetroitStars #BlackHistoryMonth
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2004: Photo shoot inside Tiger Stadium by Tom Szczerbowski for Getty.
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Tigers players birthdays:

Tigers players who passed away:

Ernie Courtney 1903.

Baseball Reference
 
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