Detroit Tigers
{{MLB infobox |
name = Detroit Tigers |
established = 1894 |
misc = |
logo = DetroitTigersD.jpg|
WS = (4) |
WORLD CHAMPIONS = 1984 • 1968 • 1945 • 1935 |
LEAGUE = AL |
P = (9) |
PENNANTS = 1984 • 1968 • 1945 • 19401935 • 1934 • 1909 • 19081907 |
misc1 = |
OTHER PENNANTS = |
DIV = Central |
DV = (0) |
Division Champs = None |
misc5 =
East Division Champs (3) |
OTHER DIV CHAMPS = 1987 • 1984 • 1972 |
WC = (0) |
Wild Card = None |
misc6 = |
current league = American League |
y1 = 1901 |
division =
Central Division |
y2 = 1998 |
misc2 =
**
East Division (
1969-
1997) |
nickname = Detroit Tigers |
y3 = 1901 |
misc3 = |
ballpark =
Comerica Park |
y4 = 2000 |
misc4 =
*
Tiger Stadium (
1912-
1999)
**a.k.a. Briggs Stadium (
1938-
1960)
**a.k.a. Navin Field (
1912-
1937)
*
Bennett Park (
1901-
1911) |
Uniform logo = Al 2005 detroit 01.gif |
Retired numbers = 2
5
6
16
23
— | Retired names =
Charlie Gehringer♦
Hank Greenberg♦
Al Kaline♦
Hal Newhouser♦
Willie HortonTy Cobb♦
[1] |
Mike Pacioni Retired pos =
2B1BOFPOFOF | Retired date = 06/12/1983
06/12/1983
08/17/1980
07/27/1997
07/15/2000
| misc7 =
[1] - Cobb has retirement honors, as he played in the era prior to uniform numbers. |
Team = Tigers |
Team1 = Tigers
The
Detroit Tigers are a
Major League Baseball team based in
Detroit, Michigan. They are in the
American League Central Division. Since 1992 they have been owned by
Mike Ilitch, founder of
Little Caesars Pizza and owner of the
NHL's
Detroit Red Wings. Ironically, Ilitch acquired the club from a pizza rival,
Tom Monaghan, the founder and CEO of
Domino's Pizza, who owned the club from 1984 through 1992.
The early years
The
Detroit Tigers are one of the eight charter members of the
American League, and one of four (along with the
Boston Red Sox,
Chicago White Sox, and
Cleveland Indians) to have remained in its original city. They are also the only charter member of the
Western League to have remained in its original city.
Detroit's first major league entry was the
Detroit Wolverines, members of the
National League from 1881 through 1888. The nickname came from
Michigan's nickname, "The
Wolverine State." The nickname "Wolverines" is now associated with the
University of Michigan. The Wolverines' best year was 1887, when they won the National League pennant and also won the
World Series over the
American Association champions, the
St. Louis Browns. The Wolverines' top players were
Hall of Famers "Big Sam" Thompson and
Dan Brouthers. Thompson won the 1887 NL batting championship, and thus is the answer to the trivia question, "Name the only person ever to win the
National League batting championship while playing for Detroit."
Despite their championship, the team did not draw enough fans to stay solvent at the major league level, as Detroit had not yet become the large, industrial city it is today. Thus the team was disbanded after the 1888 season, and the city of Detroit was temporarily relegated to
minor league status. A new team formed and joined the
International League in 1889, and promptly won the league championship. Their fans' joy came to an abrupt end as the league temporarily disbanded in mid-1890, and took the Detroits with them. An attempt was made to revive the old Northwestern League in 1891, but it also collapsed in mid-season, and Detroit professional baseball took a short hiatus.
When the Western League reorganized for the 1894 season, the Detroit club was a charter member. By 1896, they had acquired the nickname "Tigers" (see below). They had also built a new ballpark, at
the corner of Michigan and Trumbull Avenues, which would remain their base of operations for the next 104 seasons. When the Western reorganized in 1900 as the American League, it was still officially a minor league, but the following year the league broke with the National Agreement and declared itself a major league.
The
Detroit Tigers played their first game as a major league team on
April 25,
1901 at
Bennett Park in front of 10,000 fans against the
Milwaukee Brewers. After trailing 13-4 entering the ninth inning, the team staged a dramatic comeback to win the game 14-13.
That 1901 team eventually finished third in the eight team league. Eleven years later, an elegant stadium was constructed on the site of Bennett Park and named Navin Field. In 1961, Briggs Stadium, as it was then known, was renamed
Tiger Stadium. Tiger Stadium was used by the Tigers until the end of the 1999 season. Since 2000, the Tigers have played in
Comerica Park.
"The Tigers"
There are various legends about how the Tigers got their
nickname. One has to do with the orange stripes they wore on their black stockings. Another has to do with a sportswriter equating that 1901 Detroit club's opening day victory to the ferocity of his alma mater, the
Princeton Tigers.
However, the truth is revealed in Richard Bak's 1998
book,
A Place for Summer: A Narrative History of Tiger Stadium. In the
19th century, the city of Detroit had a military unit called the Detroit Light Guard, who were known as "The Tigers." They had played a significant role in certain
Civil War battles and also in the then-recently-fought
Spanish-American War. The ballclub had informally acquired that nickname as a minor league club, but upon entry into the majors they sought and received formal permission from the Light Guard to use their
trademark, and from that day forth the ballclub was officially the
Tigers.
In short, the Tigers wore stripes because they were already Tigers, rather than the other way around which is the conventional story.
The Cobb era
In
1905, the team acquired
Ty Cobb, a fearless player with a mean streak, who would be considered one of the greatest of all-time. The addition of Cobb to an already talented team that included
Sam Crawford,
Hughie Jennings,
Bill Donovan, and
George Mullin quickly yielded results, as the Tigers won their first American League pennant in
1907.
Cobb and the Tigers disappointed in the 1907
Fall Classic against the
Chicago Cubs. With the exception of Game 1, which ended in a rare tie, the Tigers failed to score more than one run in any game and lost four straight. The Cubs would deny Detroit the title again in '08, holding Detroit to a .209 batting average for the series, which the Cubs again won in five games. It was hoped that a new opponent in the 1909 Series,
Pittsburgh, would yield different results, but the Tigers were blown out 8-0 in the decisive seventh game at
Forbes Field.
In the teens and twenties, Cobb remained the marquee player on many Tigers teams that would remain mired in the middle of the American League. Cobb himself took over
managerial duties in 1921, but during six years at the helm, his Tigers never had a record better than 86-68.
The Tigers break through
The Tiger teams of the 1930s were consistently among the league's best with "Black Mike"
Mickey Cochrane behind the plate,
Hank Greenberg, one of the greatest Jewish baseball players of all time, at first, and
Charlie Gehringer, "The Mechanical Man" at second. They would be denied again in the 1934 World Series in seven games by the
Gashouse Gang St. Louis Cardinals. Again, when the chips were down in the deciding game, Detroit folded, giving up seven third-inning runs and losing Game Seven 11-0 at
Navin Field (Tiger Stadium). The game was marred by an ugly incident. After spiking Tiger third baseman Marv Owen in the sixth inning, the Cardinals' Joe "Ducky" Medwick had to be removed from the game for his own safety by Commissioner
Kenesaw Mountain Landis after being pelted with fruit and garbage from angry fans in the large temporary bleacher section in left field.
The Tigers finally reached the Promised Land the following year, defeating the Cubs 4 games to 2 to win the 1935 World Series, which concluded with
Goose Goslin's dramatic walk-off single, scoring Cochrane to seal the victory.
The Tigers returned to the middle of the American League in the late 30s and World War II era before the timely return of
Hank Greenberg from the military helped the Tigers to the 1945 American League pennant. With Virgil Trucks and Hall of Famer
Hal Newhouser on the mound and Greenberg leading the Tiger bats, Detroit responded in a Game 7 for the first time, staking Newhouser to a 5-0 lead before he threw a pitch en route to a 9-3 victory over the Cubs. Because many baseball stars had not yet returned from the military, some baseball scholars have deemed the '45 Series to be among the worst-played contests in Series history. Prior to the Series, Chicago sportswriter
Warren Brown was asked who he liked, and he answered, "I don't think either one of them can win it!" But the Cubs had no answer to Greenberg, and the Series went Detroit's way.
Glory in '68
|
The classic Detroit Tigers logo. 1961-1993 |
Detroit began its slow ascent to success by an outstanding 1961 campaign which saw them win 101 games, 8 games back of New York, one of the few times a team failed to reach the postseason despite winning over 100 games. That year also saw first baseman
Norm Cash have the best batting average in the American Leaguethe youngest player ever to do so. During this time, several players besides Cash and Kaline became established on the Detroit roster who would prove key to the success that followed. Thereafter, they would post winning records yearly except 1963. After falling just short in 1967 (being eliminated on the last day of the season), the stage was set for their historic 1968 campaign, the last under a one-division format.
The 1968 title, which occurred one year after the
1967 race riots ravaged Detroit, is thought to have helped to heal citywide tensions. The Tigers easily won the American League with many dramatic, come-from-behind victories during the regular season. In the "Year of the Pitcher", the controversial
Denny McLain became the first
pitcher since
Dizzy Dean in 1934 to win 30 games with a 31-6 record.
In Game 1 of the 1968 World Series, McLain was overshadowed by Cardinals' ace
Bob Gibson, who struck out 17 Tigers in a 4-0 shutout. The Tiger bats won the day in the second game in St. Louis.
Mickey Lolich held St. Louis to a single run on six hits and added a home run in his own cause. The Tigers lost badly in Games 3 and 4 at Tiger Stadium, 7-3 and 10-1. In Game 4, some accounts accused Tigers manager
Mayo Smith of stalling in hopes that the game would be washed out by an approaching storm. With their backs against the wall, Lolich took the mound again in Game 5. The Tigers were eight outs away from elimination before a two-run single from
Al Kaline and another RBI by
Norm Cash gave Detroit a 5-3 lead they would not relinquish. As the series returned to St. Louis, McLain pitched on two days' rest. Any concerns about the Tigers' ace having a sore arm were quickly laid to rest. The Tigers scored 10 runs in the third inning, including a grand slam from
Jim Northrup, in a 13-1 laugher. The deciding Game 7 pitted Lolich, pitching on two days rest, against Gibson. The Tigers struck first with a Jim Northrup's triple scoring Cash and
Willie Horton to give the visitors a 2-0 lead. Catcher
Bill Freehan added a double to give Lolich a 3-0 lead with nine outs to go.
Don Wert's RBI single in the ninth added an insurance run, and a ninth-inning solo shot from
Mike Shannon of St. Louis was the Cards' only response.
Tim McCarver, the next batter, popped up to Freehan in foul territory and the Tigers were Champions of baseball again.
A slow decline
Detroit finished second to the dominant
Baltimore Orioles, who won 109 games, in defense of their '68 title. Smith was let go after the 1970 season, to be replaced by
Billy Martin. After a second-place finish in 1971, the Tigers captured the
American League East title in 1972. Oddities of the schedule due to an early-season strike allowed the Tigers to win the division by just 1/2 game, just as they had in 1908.
In Game 1 of the ALCS in Oakland, Lolich, the hero of '68, took the hill and went nine innings.
Al Kaline hit a solo homer to break a 1-1 tie in the 11th inning, only to be charged with an error on
Gonzalo Marquez's game-tying single that allowed
Gene Tenace to score the winning run.
Blue Moon Odom shut down Detroit 5-0 in Game 2. As the series returned to Detroit, the Tigers caught their stride.
Joe Coleman held the A's scoreless on seven hits in Game 3, a 3-0 Tiger victory. In Game 4, Oakland score two runs in the top of the 10th put the Tigers down to their last three outs. Detroit pushed two runs across the plate to tie the game before Jim Northrup came through in the clutch again. His single off
Dave Hamilton scored
Gates Brown and evened the series at 2 games apiece. A first-inning run on a
Gene Tenace passed ball gave Detroit an early lead in the deciding Game 5 in Oakland, but
Reggie Jackson's steal of home in the 2nd tied it up. A
Gene Tenace single to left field gave Oakland a 2-1 lead in the fourth inning, and thanks to four innings of scoreless relief from
Vida Blue they took it all the way to the World Series.
Martin did not survive the 1973 season and the Tigers spent much of the next decade in the middle or lower ranks of the AL East. In 1974,
Ralph Houk, who managed the dominant Yankee teams of the early 1960's, was named manager of the Tigers. "The Major" served in that capacity for five full seasons, through the end of the 1978 season. Unfortunately, the roster of players who played under Houk were mostly aging veterans from the 1960's, whose performance had slipped from their peak years. Tiger fans were provided a glimmer of hope when rookie phenom
Mark Fidrych made his debut in 1976. Fidrych, known as "the Bird," was a crazy character known for talking to the baseball. During a game against the Yankees,
Graig Nettles responded to Fidrych's antics by talking to his bat. After making an out, he later lamented that his Japanese-made bat didn't understand him. Fidrych was the starting pitcher for the American League in the
All Star Game played that year in Philadelphia to celebrate the American
Bicentennial. He finished the season with a record of 19-9 and an American League-leading
ERA of 2.34. Sadly, Fidrych was the lone bright spot that year, with those Tigers finishing next to last in the AL East in 1976 and arm troubles ruining Fidrych's once-promising career.
The Bless You Boys
From 1979 to 1995, the team was managed by the colorful, eccentric
George "Sparky" Anderson, one of baseball's winningest managers. When Sparky came on board, he made the bold move of predicting a pennant winner within 5 years.
1984
|
Animated Detroit Tigers Logo ca. 1990 |
The first major news of the 1984 season actually came in late 1983, when long-time owner, broadcasting magnate
John Fetzer, who had owned the club since 1957, sold the team to
Domino's Pizza founder and CEO
Tom Monaghan. The sale of the franchise caught everyone by surprise, as the negotiations culminating in the sale of the franchise were conducted in total secrecy away from the media. There were no rumors or even speculation that Fetzer had put the franchise up for sale.
After acquiring the team, Monaghan told reporters that buying the team fulfilled his childhood dream of owning the Detroit Tigers.However, the pizza magnate probably didn't think that he would win a World Series the first year he owned the team. But the 1984 Tigers did just that, thereby going beyond Monaghan's wildest fantasies. The team led its division wire-to-wire, from opening day and every day thereafter, culminating in a
ALCS sweep of the
Kansas City Royals and a World Series victory over the
San Diego Padres.
The 1984 team started out at a record 35-5 pace (including
Jack Morris throwing a
no-hitter early in the season against the
Chicago White Sox), and cruised to a franchise-record 104 victories. That team featured the great
double play combination of
shortstop Alan Trammell and
second baseman Lou Whitaker; the duo would play together a record 19 seasons. The team also included
Darrell Evans,
Dave Bergman,
Kirk Gibson,
Chet Lemon,
Larry Herndon, Morris,
Dan Petry,
Dave Rozema,
Johnny Grubb, the late
Aurelio Lopez ("Señor Smoke"), and relief ace
Willie Hernandez, who won the 1984 American League
Cy Young Award and
Most Valuable Player just one year after pitching on the
Philadelphia Phillies' National League championship club.
The Tigers faced the
Kansas City Royals in the
American League Championship Series, which would prove to be no contest, not surprising given the fact the Royals won 20 fewer games during the season and had won the AL West by a mere three games over both the
California Angels and
Minnesota Twins. In Game 1, Alan Trammell,
Lance Parrish and
Larry Herndon went deep to crush the Royals 8-1 at Royals Stadium (now
Kauffman Stadium). In Game 2, the Tigers scored twice in the 11th inning when
Johnny Grubb doubled off the late Royals closer
Dan Quisenberry en route to a 5-3 victory. The Tigers completed the sweep at Tiger Stadium in Game 3.
Marty Castillo's third-inning RBI fielder's choice would be all the help Detroit would need.
Milt Wilcox outdueled
Charlie Leibrandt and after Hernandez got
Darryl Motley to pop up to third, the Tigers were returning to the Fall Classic. (Note: At that time, the team with home field advantage in the
ALCS and
NLCS, played the first two games on the road. This changed in 1985 when the format was changed from best-of-five to best-of-seven.)
In the
NLCS, a San Diego rally from 2-0 down prevented a fifth Cubs-Tigers series and meant the Tigers would open the
1984 World Series against the
San Diego Padres in Trammell's home town (had the Cubs won the NLCS, Detroit would have received home-field advantage in the World Series, as
NBC insisted on all midweek games starting at night, something that would have been impossible at the time at
Wrigley Field). In Game 1,
Larry Herndon hit a two-run dinger that gave the Tigers a 3-2 lead. Morris pitched a complete game with 2 runs on 8 hits, and Detroit took first blood. The Padres evened the series the next night despite pitcher
Ed Whitson being chased after two-thirds of an inning after giving up three runs on five Tiger hits. Tiger starter
Dan Petry didn't last long either, exiting the game after four and one-third innings when light-hitting veteran
Kurt Bevacqua's three-run homer gave San Diego a 5-3 lead they would hold onto. When the series returned to the Motor City, the Tigers took charge. In Game 3, a two-out rally in the second inning led to four runs and the yanking of Padre starter
Tim Lollar after one and two-thirds innings. The Padres, plagued by poor starting pitching throughout the series, never recovered and lost 5-2.
Eric Show continued the parade of bad outings in Game 4, getting bounced after two and two-thirds innings after giving up home runs to Series MVP Trammell in his first two at-bats. Trammell's homers held up with the help of another Morris complete game, and the Tigers held a commanding lead.
In Game 5, Gibson's two-run shot in the first inning would be the beginning of another early end for the Padres' starter
Mark Thurmond. Though the Padres would pull back even, chasing
Dan Petry in the fourth inning in the process, the Tigers retook the lead on a
Rusty Kuntz sacrifice fly, doubled it on a solo
homer by Parrish and then sealed the victory by Gibson's three-run homer off
Goose Gossage in the eighth.
A "Sounds of the Game" video was made during the Series by MLB Productions and played on TV a number of times since then. When Gibson came to bat, in a situation that might call for Gossage to pitch around him, Anderson was seen and heard yelling to Gibson, "He don't want to walk you!" and making a swing-the-bat gesture. As Anderson had suspected, Gossage came in with a fast one, and Gibson was ready. He "swung from the heels", and launched it into Tiger Stadium's right field upper deck.
Tony Gwynn flied out to
Larry Herndon to end the game and send Detroit into a wild victory celebration.
1987
In 1987, the Tigers made a historic rally. Detroit was three and a half games out of first with a week to play. They chased down the
Toronto Blue Jays to win what would be their last
American League Eastern Division Championship (and to date, the last postseason appearance for Detroit). This charge was fueled by the acquisition of pitcher
Doyle Alexander from the
Atlanta Braves in exchange for minor league pitcher
John Smoltz. Alexander started 11 games for the Tigers, posting 9 wins without a loss and a 1.53 ERA. Detroit native Smoltz went on to win a
Cy Young Award and a
World Series title with the Braves.
The Tigers and Blue Jays squared off in seven nail-biting games during the final two weeks of the season. All seven games were decided by one run, and in the first six of the seven games, the winning run scored in the final inning of play. At
Exhibition Stadium, the Tigers dropped three in a row to the Blue Jays before winning a dramatic extra-inning showdown. After a series against the
Baltimore Orioles, the Tigers returned home trailing by a game and swept the Blue Jays. Detroit clinched the division in a 1-0 victory over Toronto in front of 51,005 fans at Tiger Stadium on Sunday afternoon, October 4.
Frank Tanana went all nine innings for the complete game shutout, and outfielder
Larry Herndon gave the Tigers their lone run on a second-inning home run. Detroit finished the season a Major League-best 98-64, two games ahead of Toronto.
The Tigers lost the
ALCS to the underdog, but eventual World Champion,
Minnesota Twins in five games.
Post 1987
1987 proved to be the last season of post season play, with the team once again declining from being a competitor. One bright spot was the ironically named
Cecil Fielder, for his fame came as a power hitter. He led the American League in home runs in 1990 with 51 home runs, and hit at least 30 home runs during the 1991, 1992, 1993 and 1995 seasons, and 28 in the abbreviated 1994 season.
Tigers declawed - the Randy Smith era
The Tigers' last winning season came in 1993, and only twice since then have they even finished within 5 games of .500 (1997 and 2000). In 1996, the Tigers lost a then-team record 109 games. In 2003, the Tigers shattered that mark of futility, by losing a remarkable
119 games, eclipsing the previous American League record of 116 losses, set by the 1916
Philadelphia Athletics. On
August 30,
2003, the Tigers lost to the
Chicago White Sox, putting them with the 1962 expansion
New York Mets as the only modern MLB teams to lose 100 games before September. They avoided tying the 1962 Mets' modern record for losses in one season (120) by winning five of their last six games of the season. They did this when they faced the Minnesota Twins in their final series, as the Twins had already clinched the Central Division and were resting their starters. In the second game of the series they overcame the largest deficit the franchise had overcome in over 30 years to avoid the record.
The man whom many Detroiters blame for the performance of the recent Tigers is former general manager Randy Smith. Under Smith, the Tigers squandered numerous high draft picks on toolsy, but unskilled players. Smith amassed a dismal trading record, trading quality players such as
Luis Gonzalez and
Phil Nevin for spare parts. Smith's most controversial move as GM backfired heavily; in an effort to lure a big-name player, he sent professional hitter
Frank Catalanotto, one time All-Star pitcher
Justin Thompson, top prospect
Gabe Kapler, and future relief ace
Francisco Cordero to the
Texas Rangers for disgruntled and injury-prone outfielder
Juan Gonzalez, plus two role players. Gonzalez played only 115 games in a Tigers uniform before suffering a season-ending injury, and he left the team as a
free agent in the
offseason. Smith had previous ties to the
Houston Astros and
San Diego Padres, with whom there were a number of dubious trades.
Furthermore, Smith hamstrung the franchise by signing mediocre players to lucrative long-term contracts, forcing the team to devote a significant portion of their payroll to players who had long outlived their usefulness. Examples of such long-term signings include
Dean Palmer,
Damion Easley, and
Bobby Higginson.
In July 2005, ESPN.com listed Randy Smith as "the most hated man" among Tigers fans.
Stabilization and recovery
2000
In 2000, the team left legendary Tiger Stadium, then tied with
Fenway Park as the oldest active baseball stadium, in favor of the new
Comerica Park. The argument over Tiger Stadium lasted over a decade, with team management reportedly reviewing options to move to the Detroit
suburbs. Many longtime fans complained that the "CoPa" lacked the charm of its predecessor, while others saw it as a necessary replacement of an aging facility.
In an apparent move to excite fans into coming to the new stadium, the Tigers traded Frank Catalanotto, Francisco Cordero, Bill Haselman, Gabe Kapler, Justin Thompson and Alan Webb to the Texas Rangers for star outfielder Juan Gonzalez, along with Danny Patterson and Gregg Zaun. The trade was disastrous for the Tigers.[
1] Hampered by injuries and unable to adjust to Comerica's dimensions, González had one of the poorest seasons of his career. Fans did not take to González, and attendance was disappointing. González elected not to re-sign with the Tigers at the end of the year.[
2] In addition, in the trade, the Tigers lost a professional hitter in Catalanotto, a quality utility player in Kapler, and a future All-Star in Cordero.
2002
Dave Dombrowski, former general manager of the
1997 World Series champion
Florida Marlins, was hired as team president in late 2001 by Ilitch. The move was thought to signify the owner's dissatisfaction with the team's directionâ€"or lack thereof. In 2002, the Tigers started the season 0-6, prompting Dombrowski to fire Smith, as well as manager
Phil Garner.
The firing ended a long string of questionable moves by Smith, including the trade of
Luis Gonzalez for
Karim Garcia; trading
Phil Nevin for Nick Skuse; giving huge contracts to disappointing players Bobby Higginson, Dean Palmer and Damion Easley; and failing to re-sign Hideo Nomo, among others.[
3]
Dombrowski took over as general manager.
2004
Under Dombrowski, the Tigers have shown a willingness to go and try to be a player on the free agent market. In 2004, the team signed or traded for several talented but high-risk veterans, such as
Iván RodrÃguez,
Ugueth Urbina,
Rondell White, and
Carlos Guillén, and the gamble paid off. The '04 Tigers had a 29-game improvement over the previous season, one of the greatest improvements in baseball history. In fact, it was the biggest turnaround in the AL since Baltimore's 33-game improvement from 1988 to 1989. However, it was not enough to avoid an 11th consecutive losing season.
2005
In 2005, the Tigers spent a large sum for two prized free agents,
Magglio Ordóñez and
Troy Percival. On
June 8,
2005, the Tigers traded pitcher
Ugueth Urbina and
Ramon Martinez to the
Philadelphia Phillies for
Plácido Polanco (and later signed him for 4 years). The Tigers stayed on the fringes of contention for the American League wild card for the first four months of the season, but injuries and a lack of player unity doomed them to another losing record and cost Trammell his job.
Dmitri Young got the year started off in impressive fashion, homering three times in an Opening Day blowout of the Royals. But the Tigers suffered a tough blow when slugger Magglio Ordonez, signed to a five-year, $75 million deal in the offseason, suffered a hernia in April that would keep him out until July. Percival tore the
flexor pronator in his pitching shoulder in July, an injury that would prove to be career-ending. Shortstop Carlos Guillen and outfielder Rondell White also missed significant amounts of time. Catcher Ivan Rodriguez played valiantly through injuries, but he wasn't able to replicate his numbers from 2004.
The clubhouse atmosphere soured considerably during the season, with Rodriguez being particularly disgruntled. Because of the team's record and lack of success in returning to the American League elite, Trammell was fired at the end of the season.
Jim Leyland replaced Trammell as manager in October, two months before closer Todd Jones, who spent five seasons in Detroit from 1997-2001, signed a two-year deal with the Tigers. Veteran left-hander Kenny Rogers also joined the Tigers in late 2005, bringing 190 career wins and a 4.21 lifetime ERA to the club's 2006 rotation.
The Tigers hosted the
All-Star Game where Ivan Rodriguez reached the finals of the
Home Run Derby, losing to the Phillies'
Bobby Abreu.
2006: The Tigers roar once more
The Detroit Tigers have been baseball's surprise success story of 2006[
4]. After years of being a laughingstock of the major leagues, the Tigers surged to the top of the American League standings in the first half of the 2006 season[
5]. The play of veterans like starting pitcher
Kenny Rogers and closer
Todd Jones, the emergence of
Curtis Granderson,
Craig Monroe and
Marcus Thames, and significant production from erstwhile All-Stars
Iván RodrÃguez,
Magglio Ordóñez and
Carlos Guillén have all contributed to the team's success, as has the overall good health of the team.
A great deal of credit has also been given to manager
Jim Leyland. On April 17, after a lackluster loss, he launched into a tirade against the team about their lack of effort, and told the media, "We stunk." It appeared to light a fire under the players, and one would be hard-pressed to find a game since then in which the Tigers gave less than their full effort[
6]. Leyland has repeatedly preached the concept of playing hard for nine full innings, and the players have taken up that mantra, as evidenced not just by their words but also by the team's propensity for late-inning clutch hits, rallies and comebacks[
7].
Statistically, the biggest factor in the team's success has been their pitching, which leads the major leagues in ERA, shutouts and saves[
8][
9]. Rookie
Justin Verlander is a candidate for the Rookie of the Year and Cy Young awards, and fellow starters Rogers,
Jeremy Bonderman and
Nate Robertson, as well as rookie reliever
Joel Zumaya, all have had noteworthy seasons. There was concern when starter Mike Maroth had to undergo surgery early in the season, but his replacement Zach Miner has been more than adequate.
The team has held the best record in baseball for most of the season. In addition, the team's success has attracted a whole new generation of fans, who had never seen winning baseball in their town before[
10].
The one doubt many fans and pundits have had was whether the Tigers could compete against other top-tier American League teams, because early in the season they lost series to the Yankees and Red Sox, and lost five of six games to the reigning World Series champion Chicago White Sox[
11]. But on July 20th, at a playoff-flavored home game which featured a particularly stirring rendition of the national anthem by local opera singer Eugene Zweig
[Raskin, D. "Trash the Tuxes," page 51. The Detroit Jewish News, August 3, 2006.], and a standing-room-only crowd that included actor
Tom Hanks and director
Ron Howard[
12], the Tigers beat White Sox pitching ace
José Contreras to take the series, two games to one, from the Soxâ€"the first series victory against an upper-echelon AL team this season. In their next two series, against the AL West division-leading Oakland A's, and the red-hot
Minnesota Twinsâ€"34-8 over their previous 42 gamesâ€"the Tigers also won two out of three.
Despite this success, and despite the return of switch-hitting Dmitri Young from personal challenges, the popular opinion seemed to be that the Tigers needed additional left-handed hitting[
13]. On July 31, Tigers management traded a minor-league pitcher to the
Pittsburgh Pirates in exchange for left-handed hittingâ€"and three-time All Starâ€"first baseman
Sean Casey[
14].
There have been many memorable moments during the season. Among the standouts:
• On April 15, Chris Shelton became the fastest player to eight home runs in American League history, and the Tigers won a 1-0 game behind a sparkling three-hitter by Mike Maroth and one-hit relief by Zumaya and Fernando Rodney[
15].
• On April 19, the Tigers came into the ninth down 3-1, but clutch hits tied the game, and Brandon Inge's resolute 15-pitch walk (Leyland called it a "1 1/2 Marlboro" at-bat) forced in the winning run[
16].
• On May 5, in the eighth inning of a tense pitching duel, Brandon Inge beat a throw to second to avoid a double play, then Alexis Gomez singled him in for a 2-1 comeback victory[
17].
• On May 20, Cincinnati's Ken Griffey Jr. hit a grand slam that put the Reds up, 6-5, but with two outs in the ninth inning, Curtis Granderson hit a home run that tied the game, and the Tigers won in extra innings[
18].
• On June 2, hits by RodrÃguez and Ordoñez (and gum-chewing by Nate Robertson) set up Carlos Guillén's game-winning ("walk-off") single, completing a five-run comeback and defeating the Yankees[
19].
• On June 27, future Hall of Famer Roger Clemens hurled a three-hitter, but Nate Robertson outpitched him and the Tigers won, 4-0[
20].
• On July 15, in a tie game, with two out and two on in the top of the ninth, Todd Jones faced dangerous slugger Mark Teahen. Jones threw Teahen every pitch he could, and Teahen repeatedly fouled each pitch off. Finally Jim Leyland walked to the moundâ€"where he told Jones his visit was a ruse, designed to fool Teahen into thinking Jones would be throwing anything but a fastball. Leyland walked off the field, Jones threw a fastball, and Teahen swung and missed for strike three. Then, in the bottom of the ninth, Carlos Guillén hit the Tigers' first walk-off home run of the season for the victory. After the game, Jones said of Leyland's visit to the mound: "I thought, 'Wow, you're a really good manager[
21].'"
• On July 19, Craig Monroe hit a grand slam in a Tigers victory over the White Sox[
22].
• On July 20 (see above), the Tigers essentially beat the White Sox on a Marcus Thames slide into second. The slide broke up a seemingly sure double play, which allowed the winning run to score later that inning[
23].
• On July 29, the Tigers weathered 12 strikeouts by rookie Twins phenom
Francisco Liriano, and won another tight game with a 10th-inning single by Craig Monroe[
24].
• On August 1, Carlos Guillén
hit for the cycle, becoming the first Tiger since 2001, and the third since 1950, to do so [
25].
• On August 5, in perhaps the most dramatic ending this season, Iván RodrÃguez hit a walk-off home run with two outs in the ninth inning to complete a five-run comeback[
26].
=Return of a Tigers Nation
=The 2006 season has seen many Tigers fans in the ball parks on road games, most notably at the interleague series with the
Chicago Cubs at
Wrigley Field from Friday, June 16 to Sunday, June 18, 2006. The crowd could be heard chanting "Let's Go Tigers!" throughout all three games, all of which were Detroit victories[
27]. The crowd also took up a chant of "Rod-ney, Rod-ney" during pitcher
Fernando Rodney's first career at bat on June 17[
28].
=All Star Game
=For the first time since 1987â€"the last year the Tigers made the postseasonâ€"three Tigers were selected as participants in the 2006 All-Star game. RodrÃguez, Rogers and Ordóñez were all named, with RodrÃguez being voted into the starting lineup, while Rogers was named the starting pitcher by American League manager
Ozzie Guillén[
29]. The battery combination of Rogers and RodrÃguez was the first time a Tigers pitcher threw to a Tigers catcher to start the Mid-Summer Classic since
Denny McLain threw to
Bill Freehan in 1966[
30].
The Tigers' major rival is the
Cleveland Indians, due more to geography than to competitiveness, as while both teams have been pennant contenders at various times, rarely have they both been in the pennant chase at the same time. The two cities are only 170 miles apart by car, and their fan bases overlap. Many of the local radio stations in small towns across Northern Ohio are on the Indians' radio network, while the Tigers' games were broadcast for many years on Detroit AM powerhouse
WJR, whose clear channel signal is easily picked up across Northern Ohio. Thus, both teams have a large following across Northern Ohio. Perhaps symbolic of the overlapping fan bases is the city of Toledo, located just 60 miles from Detroit and 110 miles from Cleveland. The local newspaper, the
Toledo Blade covers both teams extensively, and the Tigers AAA affiliate, the
Toledo Mud Hens, has also been previously the AAA affiliate for the Indians as well.
The 2006 season has seen "mini-rivalries" develop with the White Sox and Twins. The White Sox and Twins are the other two contenders to possibly win the AL Central division. Everytime the Tigers play either team, there is a tense feeling in the stadium.
The Tigers' inter-league
rivals include the teams that play in the
National League Central Division, particularly the
Chicago Cubs and
St. Louis Cardinals. The rivalries are not limited to
geography, but rather the history between the clubs. The Tigers have faced the Cubs in the
World Series four times, the Cardinals twice, and the
Cincinnati Reds once. This history has fueled a rather friendly rivalry, as fans of the clubs for the most part respect the success of another. Additionaly, in some areas of
Western Michigan baseball fans are split between Detroit and the Chicago teams (The city of
Kalamazoo, Michigan is located almost directly between
Detroit and
Chicago on
I-94). During a June 2006 series at
Wrigley Field, Cubs fans could be seen openly rooting for the Tigers. The reasoning was that Cubs fans would rather see the Tigers do better than their hated inter-city rival, the
Chicago White Sox. Inter-league games in Detroit featuring the Cubs and Cardinals have traditionally had a high rate of attendance no matter the Tigers' record.
The Tigers also have an "international" rivalry with the
Toronto Blue Jays. Detroit is just across the river from the Canadian city of
Windsor, Ontario. Some baseball fans in Windsor choose to root for their nation's team rather than the nearby Tigers but the majority of Windsor baseball fans root for the Tigers.
During the 1968 season, the team was cheered on by the phrase, "Go Get 'Em Tigers.
"
During the 1984 World Championship Run, the team was cheered on to the well known cry, "Bless You Boys.
"
For the 2006 season, with the team going into July with the best record in baseball, the phrase "Restore the Roar
" began to catch on, referring to the fact that the Tigers have not had a winning season since 1993 and seemed to be returning to their former glory.
A second rally cry has also now begun to catch on in the Tigers' dugout. In a June game vs. the New York Yankees, Tigers pitcher Nate Robertson was featured on FSN Detroit's "Sounds of the Game", in which the TV station will mic a player on the bench or a coach. To appease the fans, Nate began to stuff Big League Chew bubble gum into his mouth, hoping to spark a late-inning rally. The trend has caught on, with Jeremy Bonderman, Zach Miner, and Justin Verlander all chewing from time to time. The Tigers came back to tie the game, and the phrase "It's Gum Time''" has become a new "Rally-cap" for Tigers nation.
Additionally, the chant of a local panhandler who patrols the streets around Comerica Park yelling out "Eat 'Em Up Tigers! Eat 'Em Up!", has begun to make its way into the park. The chant originated in 1968 when the tigers won their third world series, "Eat 'em Up" referring to the St. Louis Cardinals. People have even been seen wearing homemade shirts with the cheer written on the back as far away as
Miller Park in Milwaukee.
| Year | Record | ALDS (after 1995) | ALCS (after 1969) | World Series |
|---|
| 1901 | 74-61 .548 (3rd in AL) |
| 1902 | 52-83 .385 (7th in AL) |
| 1903 | 65-71 .478 (5th in AL) |
| 1904 | 62-90 .408 (7th in AL) |
| 1905 | 79-74 .516 (3rd in AL) |
| 1906 | 71-78 .477 (6th in AL) |
| 1907 | 92-58 .613 (1st in AL) | Chicago Cubs | L 4-0 |
| 1908 | 90-63 .588 (1st in AL) | Chicago Cubs | L 4-1 |
| 1909 | 98-54 .645 (1st in AL) | Pittsburgh Pirates | L 4-3 |
| 1910 | 86-68 .558 (3rd in AL) |
| 1911 | 89-65 .578 (2nd in AL) |
| 1912 | 69-84 .451 (6th in AL) |
| 1913 | 66-87 .431 (6th in AL) |
| 1914 | 80-73 .523 (4th in AL) |
| 1915 | 100-54 .649 (2nd in AL) |
| 1916 | 87-67 .565 (3rd in AL) |
| 1917 | 78-75 .510 (4th in AL) |
| 1918 | 55-71 .437 (7th in AL) |
| 1919 | 80-60 .571 (4th in AL) |
| 1920 | 71-82 .464 (6th in AL) |
| 1921 | 71-82 .464 (6th in AL) |
| 1922 | 79-75 .513 (3rd in AL) |
| 1923 | 83-71 .539 (2nd in AL) |
| 1924 | 86-68 .558 (3rd in AL) |
| 1925 | 81-73 .526 (4th in AL) |
| 1926 | 79-75 .513 (6th in AL) |
| 1927 | 82-71 .536 (4th in AL) |
| 1928 | 66-86 .442 (6th in AL) |
| 1929 | 70-84 .455 (6th in AL) |
| 1930 | 75-79 .487 (5th in AL) |
| 1931 | 61-93 .396 (7th in AL) |
| 1932 | 76-75 .503 (5th in AL) |
| 1933 | 75-79 .487 (5th in AL) |
| 1934 | 101-53 .656 (1st in AL) | St. Louis Cardinals | L 4-3 |
| 1935 | 93-58 .616 (1st in AL) | Chicago Cubs | W 4-2 |
| 1936 | 83-71 .539 (2nd in AL) |
| 1937 | 89-65 .578 (2nd in AL) |
| 1938 | 84-70 .545 (4th in AL) |
| 1939 | 81-73 .526 (5th in AL) |
| 1940 | 90-64 .584 (1st in AL) | Cincinnati Reds | L 4-3 |
| 1941 | 75-79 .487 (4th in AL) |
| 1942 | 73-81 .474 (5th in AL) |
| 1943 | 78-76 .506 (5th in AL) |
| 1944 | 88-66 .571 (2nd in AL) |
| 1945 | 88-65 .575 (1st in AL) | Chicago Cubs | W 4-3 |
| 1946 | 92-62 .597 (2nd in AL) |
| 1947 | 85-69 .552 (2nd in AL) |
| 1948 | 78-76 .506 (5th in AL) |
| 1949 | 87-67 .565 (4th in AL) |
| 1950 | 95-59 .617 (2nd in AL) |
| 1951 | 73-81 .474 (5th in AL) |
| 1952 | 50-104 .325 (8th in AL) |
| 1953 | 60-94 .390 (6th in AL) |
| 1954 | 68-86 .442 (5th in AL) |
| 1955 | 79-75 .513 (5th in AL) |
| 1956 | 82-72 .532 (5th in AL) |
| 1957 | 78-76 .506 (4th in AL) |
| 1958 | 77-77 .500 (5th in AL) |
| 1959 | 76-78 .494 (4th in AL) |
| 1960 | 71-83 .461 (6th in AL) |
| 1961 | 101-61 .623 (2nd in AL) |
| 1962 | 85-76 .528 (4th in AL) |
| 1963 | 79-83 .488 (5th in AL) |
| 1964 | 85-77 .525 (4th in AL) |
| 1965 | 89-73 .549 (4th in AL) |
| 1966 | 88-74 .543 (3rd in AL) |
| 1967 | 91-71 .562 (3rd in AL) |
| 1968 | 103-59 .636 (1st in AL) | St. Louis Cardinals | W 4-3 |
| 1969 | 90-72 .556 (2nd in AL East) |
| 1970 | 79-83 .488 (4th in AL East) |
| 1971 | 91-71 .562 (2nd in AL East) |
| 1972 | 86-70 .551 (1st in AL East) | Oakland Athletics | L 3-2 |
| 1973 | 85-77 .525 (3rd in AL East) |
| 1974 | 72-90 .444 (6th in AL East) |
| 1975 | 57-102 .358 (6th in AL East) |
| 1976 | 74-87 .460 (5th in AL East) |
| 1977 | 74-88 .457 (4th in AL East) |
| 1978 | 86-76 .531 (5th in AL East) |
| 1979 | 85-76 .528 (5th in AL East) |
| 1980 | 84-78 .519 (5th in AL East) |
| 1981 | 60-49 .550 (4th/2nd in AL East) |
| 1982 | 83-79 .512 (4th in AL East) |
| 1983 | 92-70 .568 (2nd in AL East) |
| 1984 | 104-58 .642 (1st in AL East) | Kansas City Royals | W 3-0 | San Diego Padres | W 4-1 |
| 1985 | 84-77 .522 (3rd in AL East) |
| 1986 | 87-75 .537 (3rd in AL East) |
| 1987 | 98-64 .605 (1st in AL East) | Minnesota Twins | L 4-1 |
| 1988 | 88-74 .543 (2nd in AL East) |
| 1989 | 59-103 .364 (7th in AL East) |
| 1990 | 79-83 .488 (3rd in AL East) |
| 1991 | 84-78 .519 (2nd in AL East) |
| 1992 | 75-87 .463 (6th in AL East) |
| 1993 | 85-77 .525 (4th in AL East) |
| 1994 | 53-62 .461 (5th in AL East) | No Postseason due to player strike |
| 1995 | 60-84 .417 (4th in AL East) |
| 1996 | 53-109 .327 (5th in AL East) |
| 1997 | 79-83 .488 (3rd in AL East) |
| 1998 | 65-97 .401 (5th in AL Central) |
| 1999 | 69-92 .429 (3rd in AL Central) |
| 2000 | 79-83 .488 (3rd in AL Central) |
| 2001 | 66-96 .407 (4th in AL Central) |
| 2002 | 55-106 .342 (5th in AL Central) |
| 2003 | 43-119 .265 (5th in AL Central) |
| 2004 | 72-90 .444 (4th in AL Central) |
| 2005 | 71-91 .438 (4th in AL Central) |
|
*
Totals: 8229-8063 .505 (Not Including 2006)
*
Playoffs: 29-36 .446 (5-7, .417 in Postseason Series')
*
9 American League Pennants
* 4
World Series Championships'''
:
Founded: 1893, in the minor
Western League. In
1900 that league was renamed the
American League, and it became a major league in
1901. Detroit is the only charter member of the Western League to have remained in its original city.:
Home ballpark: Comerica Park:
Former ballparks: Tiger Stadium,
Bennett Park:
Mascot:
Paws:
Uniform colors: Home: Navy Blue Old English "D" on white uniform. Navy is used as an accent color. Road: Detroit script in navy blue outlined in orange and white on a gray background. Navy, orange and white are used as accent colors. The Tigers are, along with the
New York Yankees and
Philadelphia Phillies, one of only a handful of teams that do not wear a colored
alternate jersey; this may be due to the fact that the Tigers home uniforms have been virtually unchanged since the 1905 season (with the exceptions of 1918-1920, 1927, 1930-1933 and 1960) and there is no need for them to sport a "new look" because of this consistency and iconic status of the classic navy on white. The 1960 change to a blue script "Tigers" was particularly poorly received by Tigers fans and the "Olde English D," as the club refers to it, has never been seriously considered for replacement since.:
Logo design: An
Old English font "D" with a roaring tiger walking through it, but that logo has been seen less in recent years. The Old English "D" without the Tiger appears on the home jersey while a slightly different version of the Old English "D" is present on the home cap (white "D" on navy blue) and road cap (orange "D" on navy blue).:
Team motto: Who's Your Tiger?:
Playoff appearances (11):
1907,
1908,
1909,
1934,
1935,
1940,
1945,
1968,
1972,
1984,
1987:
Local Television: FSN Detroit,
WMYD (Commentators:
Mario Impemba and
Rod Allen):
Local Radio: WXYT 1270 AM (Commentators:
Dan Dickerson and
Jim Price):
Famous Fans: Tom Selleck,
Tim Allen,
Jeff Daniels,
Jerome Bettis,
Steve Yzerman,
Kid Rock:
Spring Training Facility: Joker Marchant Stadium,
Lakeland, FL{|valign='top'|Elected at least in part on basis of performance with Tigers
*
Sparky Anderson, MGR, 1979-1995
*
Jim Bunning, P, 1955-1963
*
Ty Cobb, OF, 1905-1926
*
Mickey Cochrane, C, 1934-1937; MGR, 1934-1938
*
Sam Crawford, OF, 1903-1917
*
Charlie Gehringer, 2B, 1924-1942
*
Goose Goslin, OF, 1934-1937
*
Hank Greenberg, 1B, 1930-1946
*
Harry Heilmann, OF, 1914-1929
*
Hughie Jennings, MGR, 1907-1920
*
Al Kaline, OF, 1953-1974
*
George Kell, 3B, 1946-1952
*
Heinie Manush, OF, 1923-1927
*
Hal Newhouser, P, 1939-1953
| Other Hall-of-Famers associated with Tigers *Earl Averill, OF, 1939-1940 *Ed Barrow, MGR, 1903-1904 *Larry Doby, OF, 1959 *Bucky Harris, MGR, 1929-1933 *Waite Hoyt, P, 1930-1931 *Eddie Mathews, 3B, 1967-1968 *Al Simmons, OF, 1936 *Sam Thompson, OF, 1906 |