- Thread Author
- #21
Wednesday night felt depressingly similar to the night before. And too many nights before that.
Same story, different night — another non-competitive baseball game played by the Tigers.
If Justin Verlander or Michael Fulmer isn’t starting for the Tigers, the game is likely to follow what has become a very familiar and tedious script.
The Yankees scored five times in the third inning Wednesday and were never hedged, beating the Tigers 10-2. It was the Tigers’ eighth loss in nine games, and in six of those, the Tigers faced deep early deficits.
The last time the Tigers won a game not started by Verlander was Aug. 2. The rest of the rotation since that win, including Fulmer, had gone 0-9 with a 9.28 ERA and a .354 opponents’ batting average before Wednesday.
Starting pitcher Jordan Zimmermann was battered early, the Detroit Tigers fell into a big hole and the New York Yankees cruised to a 10-2 victory.
Zimmermann allowed seven runs for the third straight start; Tigers lost for 14th time in 17 games.
For just the fourth time in his 11-year career, Zimmermann didn’t record a strikeout. Two of the previous three starts without a strikeout were last season.
Yankees catcher Gary Sanchez hit another first-inning home run, although this one didn't quite go 493 feet, like his blast on Tuesday.
Sanchez came up with the bases loaded in the third and delivered a two-run, bloop single to give the Yankees a 3-0 lead.
That was all they would need with Luis Severino on the mound. He struck out eight in 6 2/3 innings, surrendering only a solo home run to Ian Kinsler in the sixth.
Severino allowed six hits and a run over 6 2/3 innings. He struck out eight. On the night, the Tigers struck out 13 times. Former Tigers farm hand Chad Green struck out four in 1 1/3 innings.
Shortstop Jose Iglesias added a two-out, two-strike home run in the bottom of the ninth.
NOTABLE
Zimmermann is the first Tiger to give up seven or more earned runs in three consecutive starts since Tommy Bridges and Schoolboy Rowe both did so in 1935, the year the Tigers won their 2nd World Series.
Jeremy Bonderman also had three consecutive starts allowing more than seven earned runs, but they stretched over different seasons and different teams. The first two came with the Tigers in 2010; the last one came in 2013 with the Seattle Mariners.
They have been outscored 22-5 in the first two games of a three-game set against the New York Yankees.
With the loss, the Tigers fall to 54-71, 17 games under the .500 mark for the first time since Sept. 29, 2005.
Zimmermann has allowed 21 runs and 27 hits in his last 13 2/3 innings.
https://www.mlb.com/gameday/yankees...nal,lock_state=final,game_tab=box,game=491989
Boxscore.
The only other takeaway from this game is that Luis Severino is really good. Anyway...
Roars
Ian Kinsler: Ok, a home run, you get a roar.
Jose Iglesias: Hey, a home run, you get one as well.
Hisses
Jordan Zimmermann: Yeah this isn’t working out. Poor location, poor depth on his slider, and a lot of hard contact again. No strikeouts.
Stats and Info
I’ve got nothing to offer right here. Your team is bad. My team is bad. But, as Leonard Cohen would’ve told you, Everybody Knows.
Same story, different night — another non-competitive baseball game played by the Tigers.
If Justin Verlander or Michael Fulmer isn’t starting for the Tigers, the game is likely to follow what has become a very familiar and tedious script.
The Yankees scored five times in the third inning Wednesday and were never hedged, beating the Tigers 10-2. It was the Tigers’ eighth loss in nine games, and in six of those, the Tigers faced deep early deficits.
The last time the Tigers won a game not started by Verlander was Aug. 2. The rest of the rotation since that win, including Fulmer, had gone 0-9 with a 9.28 ERA and a .354 opponents’ batting average before Wednesday.
Starting pitcher Jordan Zimmermann was battered early, the Detroit Tigers fell into a big hole and the New York Yankees cruised to a 10-2 victory.
Zimmermann allowed seven runs for the third straight start; Tigers lost for 14th time in 17 games.
For just the fourth time in his 11-year career, Zimmermann didn’t record a strikeout. Two of the previous three starts without a strikeout were last season.
Yankees catcher Gary Sanchez hit another first-inning home run, although this one didn't quite go 493 feet, like his blast on Tuesday.
Sanchez came up with the bases loaded in the third and delivered a two-run, bloop single to give the Yankees a 3-0 lead.
That was all they would need with Luis Severino on the mound. He struck out eight in 6 2/3 innings, surrendering only a solo home run to Ian Kinsler in the sixth.
Severino allowed six hits and a run over 6 2/3 innings. He struck out eight. On the night, the Tigers struck out 13 times. Former Tigers farm hand Chad Green struck out four in 1 1/3 innings.
Shortstop Jose Iglesias added a two-out, two-strike home run in the bottom of the ninth.
NOTABLE
Zimmermann is the first Tiger to give up seven or more earned runs in three consecutive starts since Tommy Bridges and Schoolboy Rowe both did so in 1935, the year the Tigers won their 2nd World Series.
Jeremy Bonderman also had three consecutive starts allowing more than seven earned runs, but they stretched over different seasons and different teams. The first two came with the Tigers in 2010; the last one came in 2013 with the Seattle Mariners.
They have been outscored 22-5 in the first two games of a three-game set against the New York Yankees.
With the loss, the Tigers fall to 54-71, 17 games under the .500 mark for the first time since Sept. 29, 2005.
Zimmermann has allowed 21 runs and 27 hits in his last 13 2/3 innings.
https://www.mlb.com/gameday/yankees...nal,lock_state=final,game_tab=box,game=491989
Boxscore.
The only other takeaway from this game is that Luis Severino is really good. Anyway...
Roars
Ian Kinsler: Ok, a home run, you get a roar.
Jose Iglesias: Hey, a home run, you get one as well.
Hisses
Jordan Zimmermann: Yeah this isn’t working out. Poor location, poor depth on his slider, and a lot of hard contact again. No strikeouts.
Stats and Info
I’ve got nothing to offer right here. Your team is bad. My team is bad. But, as Leonard Cohen would’ve told you, Everybody Knows.
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