Tag: Detroit Tigers

Miguel Cabrera Trade Rumors: Latest News, Speculation on Tigers 1B

Miguel Cabrera has been the face of the Detroit Tigers since they acquired him before the 2008 season, but with the franchise boasting a large payroll featuring a lot of players over the age of 30, the two-time American League MVP could find himself on the trade block this offseason.  

Continue for updates. 


Tigers Open to Trades

Friday, Oct. 21

Per ESPN’s Buster Olney, the Tigers are willing to listen to offers for everyone on their roster, including Miggy.

The key phrase there is “willing to listen.” There’s a difference between taking a phone call when an opposing general manager asks about a player and actively shopping a player. 

The Tigers are in a difficult spot right now. They won 86 games in 2016, finishing two losses out of a wild-card spot, so it would be easy for general manager Al Avila to make a few tweaks in hopes of making a playoff push next season.

Per MLB.com’s Jason Beck, Avila said at his end-of-year press conference the Tigers want to add more youth and be able to run an organization “without having to go over our means.”

At some point, though, the front office can’t continue to spend so much money. The Tigers spent $198.5 million on payroll in 2016 and have $176.2 million on the books for 2017, per Cot’s Baseball Contracts

Cabrera is signed for $212 million through 2023 with vesting options for 2024 and 2025 at $30 million per season, so if he makes it all the way through his deal, he will be 42 years old. 

While he is still a great hitter, posting his eighth straight season with at least a .300 average and .500 slugging percentage, owing a player who is already 33 years old that much money over such a long period is a way to cripple the payroll. 

It’s a bad time to trade Cabrera because of his age and what he’s still owed, especially since the Tigers could seek multiple top-tier prospects in exchange for him. But Avila has to try whatever he can to help the team keep pace with the Cleveland Indians in the American League Central. 

With players such as Cabrera, Ian Kinsler, Victor Martinez, Justin Verlander, Anibal Sanchez and Jordan Zimmermann all on the wrong side of 30, this Tigers are built around an aging core that’s not going to have many years of peak performance left. 

A team needs to take drastic measures when it is spending more than it ever has without making a playoff appearance since 2014. Exploring the market for a hitter like Cabrera would fall into that category. 

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Brad Ausmus’ Contract Option Picked Up by Tigers: Latest Comments, Reaction

Despite missing the playoffs for the second consecutive season, the Detroit Tigers exercised manager Brad Ausmus‘ fourth-year option for 2017. 

The Tigers announced the news Wednesday. 

“Brad was instrumental in leading the team through adversity and with the development of our younger players, particularly the young starting pitchers,” executive vice president and general manager Al Avila wrote in a press release. “The team improved from last season, and under the leadership of Brad and his coaching staff, the ballclub kept fighting and remained in contention for the postseason. Moving forward we want to build off that progress.”

Chris McCosky of the Detroit News was the first to report the move Tuesday night.

The Tigers went 86-75, missing the playoffs by 2.5 games. Consecutive losses to the 68-93 Atlanta Braves to close out the season ended their chances of securing one of the two wild-card spots in the American League.

Detroit is 250-234 during Ausmus’ three years at the helm, including a playoff appearance in 2014 that resulted in the team getting swept by the Baltimore Orioles in the American League Division Series.

The Tigers had made three straight trips to the postseason prior to Ausmus’ arrival, including a World Series loss under Jim Leyland in 2012.

When asked about his desire to remain as manager following the conclusion of the 2016 regular season, Ausmus said the following, per Anthony Fenech of the Detroit Free Press: “Yeah. It’s a team that’s got a chance to win that’s got some good young pitching now. You know, it’s got a bona fide ace at the top, and it’s got some good young pitching that will, theoretically, just grow and get better.”

With a starting rotation featuring the likes of Justin Verlander, Michael Fulmer, Jordan Zimmermann and Daniel Norris and a lineup with hitters such as Miguel Cabrera, Justin Upton, Ian Kinsler and J.D. Martinez, the Tigers have the talent to make a deep run next season.

They have faltered despite their talent over the past couple of years, and while Ausmus has yet to pay the price for that, his leash isn’t likely to be long in 2017, especially since he’ll be managing for a new contract.

     

Follow @MikeChiari on Twitter.

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Justin Verlander, Tigers Are Dangerous Wild Card in Potential 1-Game Playoff

If the season ended Thursday, the Detroit Tigers would own the American League‘s second wild-card slot.

And they’d be one dangerous wild card.

After sweeping a doubleheader from the Minnesota Twins on Thursday, Detroit sits at 82-70, a half-game up on the Baltimore Orioles (82-71) and one game behind the Toronto Blue Jays (83-69) in the WC scramble. 

The Tigers have won four straight and will play seven of their final 10 games at home. Their offense is clicking. And they have resurgent ace Justin Verlander ready to pitch in the do-or-die Wild Card Game.

Let’s start with Verlander. The 2011 AL Cy Young Award and MVP winner posted a plus-4.00 ERA in 2014 and logged just 133.1 innings last season, all while battling injuries.

The signs were pointing ominously toward a career on the downslope.

In 2016, he’s regained his Cy Young-caliber form. He allowed two earned runs in six innings with 11 strikeouts in the Game 2 win Thursday and now owns a 3.21 ERA with a Junior Circuit-pacing 234 punchouts in 213 frames. He’s been especially excellent since the All-Star break, posting an AL-best 2.16 ERA.

A great pitcher on an equally great run—that’s precisely who you want on the mound with the everything on the line.

That assumes two things: First, that the Tigers will punch a postseason ticket. Second, that they’ll be able to line up Verlander for the Wild Card Game.

As Evan Woodbery of MLive.com pointed out, “Verlander is currently slated to start on the final game in the season in Atlanta. If the Tigers have clinched a playoff spot by that time, he could be skipped. If they get into a [must]-win game one day earlier, perhaps he could pitch on short rest.” 

If Detroit does return to the October stage after missing the dance in 2015, Verlander won’t be the only reason.

The offense ranks fourth in the AL with a .760 OPS. Miguel Cabrera is hitting .307 with 34 home runs. J.D. Martinez has a .928 OPS and has been an unsung second-half hero. Victor Martinez (.288 average, 25 home runs) and Ian Kinsler (.277 average, 26 home runs) have done their thing.

After a dispiriting start, Justin Upton is finally living up to the six-year, $132.75 million deal he signed with Detroit this winter. He went deep Thursday and has four homers and nine RBI in his last six games.

The rotation isn’t all about Verlander, either. Michael Fulmer is the favorite to take home AL Rookie of the Year honors. The Tigers have notched a victory the last five times 23-year-old Daniel Norris took the ball. And 25-year-old Matt Boyd twirled an eight-inning gem in his most recent turn Sept. 20.

“We wouldn’t be here if those three guys weren’t pitching the way they are,” manager Brad Ausmus said of his young arms, per Anthony Fenech of the Detroit Free Press.

On the other hand, veteran Anibal Sanchez owns a 5.77 ERA, and free-agent pickup Jordan Zimmermann is working his way back from a neck strain.

Add a bullpen that sports a 4.08 ERA, and it’s safe to say the burden will fall on Verlander and the lineup if the Tigers hope to make a deep run.

That said, the American League is wide open. Every contender is flawed. 

The Cleveland Indians, who lead Detroit by seven games in the AL Central, have an injury-depleted starting rotation. It’s almost certainly too late for the Tigers to catch them. But they could hang in a playoff series, just as they could hang with the AL West-leading Texas Rangers and their pedestrian plus-nine run differential. The same goes for the AL East gaggle, though the Boston Red Sox appear to be putting it together at the right time.

We’re getting ahead of ourselves, of course. The Tigers haven’t wrapped up anything. This will likely go down to the wire.

If they do, though, and if they can find a way to put Verlander on the slab with Cabrera and Co. behind him, look out. It’s worth noting that neither the Jays nor the O’sDetroit’s two closest competitors for wild-card positionhave a transcendent, shutdown ace.

Verlander has been under the autumn glare before, logging 98.1 playoff innings scattered over five seasons with a 3.39 ERA and 112 strikeouts.

“I like pitching in big games,” Verlander said, per Fenech. “I always have.”

If the Tigers can keep their claws in for another week-plus, he may well get the chance.

    

All statistics current as of Thursday and courtesy of MLB.com unless otherwise noted.

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Justin Upton Injury: Updates on Tigers LF’s Calf and Return

The Detroit Tigers announced outfielder Justin Upton left Monday’s game against the Minnesota Twins with a left calf strain.

Continue for updates.


Upton Ruled Day-to-Day

Monday, Sept. 12

The Tigers noted Tyler Collins replaced Upton in left field and called their starter “day-to-day” after the setback. Upton dealt with right quad tightness earlier in the season, which forced him to miss some action.

The Tigers brought the three-time All-Star and two-time Silver Slugger to Detroit in the offseason to add some pop alongside Miguel Cabrera and Victor Martinez. Upton was slashing .239/.297/.424 with 22 home runs and 70 RBI entering Monday’s game.

He played for the Arizona Diamondbacks, Atlanta Braves and San Diego Padres before joining Detroit and boasts five seasons with 25-plus home runs, including his strong 2011 campaign, when he hit .289 and drilled a career-best 31 long balls for Arizona. He counts five seasons with at least 18 stolen bases on his resume as well.

Upton is also a solid defensive outfielder who was responsible for eight total defensive runs saved above average in left field last season, per FanGraphs.

The Tigers will likely continue to rely on the versatile Collins while Upton is out. Collins can play all three outfield spots and gives manager Brad Ausmus the ability to mix and match his lineups on a daily basis.

However, Collins doesn’t bring the type of offensive and defensive prowess Upton does on a daily basis. Detroit has postseason aspirations and needs its starting left fielder to be healthy as it attempts to make a charge in the American League Central.

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Can Tigers Survive AL Wild-Card Chase Without $110M Man Jordan Zimmermann?

When the Detroit Tigers gave Jordan Zimmermann a $110 million contract over the winter, they could have imagined his spearheading a charge into the postseason when September came around.

Now they must worry about whether he’ll contribute anything at all, and how many chips that stacks against them in an American League wild-card race that’s getting tighter by the day.

This kind of hand-wringing can’t be avoided after the loss Zimmermann and the Tigers endured at the hands of the Baltimore Orioles at Comerica Park on Saturday. Making his first start since Aug. 4 and only his second start since June 30, Zimmermann doomed the Tigers to an 11-3 defeat by collecting only three outs and surrendering six runs on four hits and three walks. Three of the hits left the park.

In other words, he was somehow even worse than he was in his last start back in early August. Zimmermann lasted only an inning and two-thirds in that one, giving up six runs on six hits and two walks to the Chicago White Sox. That’s a 49.09 ERA in his last two outings, a mark that makes only Allan Travers look good by comparison.

Zimmermann was obviously rusty in each of these starts. The veteran right-hander apparently wasn’t fully recovered from a nagging neck injury in the first one, as it put him right back on the disabled list afterward. He may not be fully recovered now, either.

“I have no expectations,” Tigers manager Brad Ausmus said beforehand, via Chris McCosky of the Detroit News. “I want him to pitch well, but he’s been hurt.”

This situation is similar to what the Los Angeles Dodgers are going through with Clayton Kershaw, save for one major difference. He at least showed good stuff in his return from a long DL stint Friday, so he only needs to find his command to reestablish himself as an ace in the coming weeks. Zimmermann showed neither of these key components Saturday.

“Zimmermann threw 42 pitches. He did not look particularly sharp, or crisp, on any of them,” Anthony Fenech of the Detroit Free Press wrote.

The data bears this out. Per Brooks Baseball, Zimmermann sat at 91.8 miles per hour with his fastball, thus continuing a downward trend that hit a nadir in his last outing:

To boot, Zimmermann threw most of his low-velo fastballs right down the heart of the plate. It’s a trend that predates even his last two stinkers. His usual hard-high, slow-low approach has been compromised.

Metrics like FIP and xFIP suggested Zimmermann was lucky to have started the season out with a 2.58 ERA through his first 10 starts. If he were due for a regression no matter what, all his neck woes did was hasten its arrival. Now it’s fair to wonder if this regression is permanent.

If nothing else, it’s a bummer the first year of the Tigers’ big investment would go into the books as a bust. It would be an even bigger bummer if not having a vintage Zimmermann for the stretch run proves to be the difference between the Tigers going to the postseason and them going home.

The latter would be their fate if the season ended today. At 76-65, the Tigers are six games behind the Cleveland Indians in the AL Central race and one game behind the Orioles for the AL’s second wild-card spot. Meanwhile, the New York Yankees are also 76-65 after winning their seventh in a row Saturday. The Houston Astros also won, putting them just a game-and-a-half behind Detroit and New York.

Point being: The Tigers aren’t going to be able to stumble into the postseason. The time is now.

According to Katie Strang of ESPN.com, Ausmus would not commit to starting Zimmermann again when asked after Saturday’s game. As Jason Beck covered at MLB.com, the choice is between sitting him or running him out there again so super-rookie Michael Fulmer can have extra rest. Either choice puts more pressure on Justin Verlander, Anibal Sanchez, Daniel Norris and Matt Boyd to get their jobs done. The only one that inspires real confidence is Verlander.

With their starting rotation not well set up for crunch time, the Tigers’ best hope is that they’ll be able to downplay their starting pitching question marks. And this is not a fool’s hope.

One thing they have is an offense that’s been clicking since a July slump, and which is due to get another weapon back when Nick Castellanos returns to the lineup. It’s easy to imagine a lineup with Castellanos, Miguel Cabrera, Victor Martinez, J.D. Martinez, Ian Kinsler and Justin Upton doing some damage.

The Tigers also have a semi-favorable schedule down the stretch. They’re due to play 12 of their final 21 games at home. They also have seven more games against the lowly Minnesota Twins, and they end the season with a trio of games at the lowly Atlanta Braves.

Compare that to what will be happening in the AL East in the next few weeks. The Orioles, Yankees, Toronto Blue Jays and Boston Red Sox, who are just a game ahead of Toronto in the division race, are going to be beating up on each other. That could prevent any of the four from taking off.

What are the odds the Tigers make it? Pretty good, actually. FanGraphs gives them a 40.4 percent chance of earning a wild-card spot. That’s higher than the Orioles, Yankees and Astros have.

A tad optimistic, maybe. But also believable. As much as getting Zimmermann back at full strength would have helped the Tigers, not having him hasn’t slowed them down in the last two months. While their rotation is in a modest state of disarray with him in its plans, at least the Tigers don’t need to risk letting him drag them down.

There are no promises to make. Not in this year’s AL wild-card race. No, sir. But for a team that’s not getting an ace it paid for, the Tigers could be in a worse spot.

  

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked.

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J.D. Martinez Is the Most Dangerous Hitter No One’s Talking About

When you share a lineup with Miguel Cabrera, it’s easy to get overlooked. Two-time MVPs tend to cast long shadows.

So J.D. Martinez is probably used to toiling in relative anonymity.

He’s having a monster month-plus, though, and has helped propel the Detroit Tigers into the thick of the American League playoff race. 

“He’s been outstanding. He’s been a lot of the offense since he’s returned,” manager Brad Ausmus said, per Anthony Fenech of the Detroit Free Press.

Martinez went down in June with a fractured elbow and didn’t return until Aug. 3. Since then, he’s hit .387 with a 1.114 OPS. 

Entering play Wednesday, the 75-63 Tigers trail the Baltimore Orioles by one game for the second wild-card spot. And they’re only 4.5 games behind the Cleveland Indians for the AL Central lead.

Martinez doesn’t deserve all the credit. But he gets less than his share, as Fox Sports’ JP Morosi underscored in March when he named the Detroit right fielder the fourth-most underrated player in the game.

Martinez, who turned 29 Aug. 21, isn’t a flash in the pan. He made the All-Star team and bashed a personal-best 38 homers with 102 RBI last year for the Tigers.

It’s not as if he needed a dramatic reinvention, in other words. 

As FanGraphsAugust Fagerstrom elucidated in April, Martinez teased a more patient approach early in 2016. That’s since leveled off.

Still, he’s swinging at fewer pitches outside the strike zone (32.8 percent this year compared to 35.5 percent in 2015) and making less soft contact (12.6 percent in 2015 to 9.7 percent this season), per FanGraphs.

In addition to Cabrera, left fielder Justin Upton has been stuffing the stat sheet for Detroit after failing to live up to his nine-figure contract for much of the year. 

The Tigers, who are tied for fourth in the AL in OPS (.764) but eighth in runs scored (637), need all the thump they can get.

Martinez may be the key. On Sunday, in a pivotal 6-5 win over the division-rival Kansas City Royals, he cracked a mighty home run “that could be heard all the way from the press box,” per Jason Beck and Jeffrey Flanagan of MLB.com.

Detroit has its flaws, including a pitching staff that sports a middle-of-the-pack 4.17 ERA.

For now, however, this is a team that’s capable of going places in the wide-open Junior Circuit. And Martinez’s shoulders could be strong enough to carry it there.

We know he’s capable of a hot streak. Last year, he hit 19 home runs and drove in 46 runs in June and July, and he posted a 1.003 OPS in July alone.

Mixed in with his latest baseball-bashing spree, Martinez clubbed his 100th career homer Aug. 14 in a 7-0 win over the AL West-leading Texas Rangers.

“It’s a great accomplishment for me, coming through what I had to go through but, obviously, it’s just a number,” he said, per Fenech.

He’s right. On the other hand, numbers can translate to wins, which can translate to playoff spots. For a Detroit team looking to avenge last season’s cellar-dwelling finish and charge back onto the October stage, that’s sweet music.

Cabrera is around, doing Cabrera things. On the pitching side, Justin Verlander is cranking back the clock.

Martinez, however, leads all Tigers in second-half doubles (12) and slugging percentage (.677). If there’s such a thing as a secret weapon that finished 15th in AL MVP voting last year, he’s it.

Martinez is standing in a long shadow. Clearly, it’s time for him to step into the light.

    

All statistics current as of Sept. 6 and courtesy of MLB.com and Baseball-Reference.com unless otherwise noted.

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Miguel Cabrera Injury: Updates on Tigers Star’s Biceps and Return

Detroit Tigers first baseman Miguel Cabrera will miss Tuesday’s game against the Kansas City Royals with a left biceps strain. 

Continue for updates. 


Cabrera’s Injury Not Considered Serious

Tuesday, Aug. 16

According to the team’s official Twitter account, Cabrera is listed as day-to-day. ESPN.com’s Katie Strang confirmed Cabrera was injured during Monday night’s game. 

Cabrera’s injury has not been deemed severe, but losing the 33-year-old for even a couple of games at this point could hurt the Tigers’ postseason chances. 

Detroit is entering Tuesday night’s game against the Royals 2.5 games back in the wild-card standings, and Cabrera is an indispensable piece of the team’s offense who has put up monster numbers all season long. 

Through 117 games, the two-time American League MVP is batting .310 with a .550 slugging percentage, .934 OPS, 27 home runs and 77 RBI. 

Cabrera has also been on a tear of late. In 52 at-bats this month, he’s batting .365 with a .673 slugging percentage, 1.084 OPS, four home runs and 11 RBI. 

Jarrod Saltalamacchia has been tabbed to start at first base in Cabrera’s absence. 

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Cameron Maybin Injury: Updates on Tigers OF’s Thumb and Return

The Detroit Tigers will be without center fielder Cameron Maybin for Monday’s game against the Seattle Mariners because of concerns over his thumb, per Evan Woodbery of MLive.com.

Continue for updates.


Maybin Scheduled for CT Scan

Monday, Aug. 8

Woodbery, who noted Maybin’s thumb was “still giving him problems,” reported the outfielder will undergo a CT scan Tuesday morning. Maybin did take batting practice before Monday’s game, but his thumb was wrapped, according to Woodbery.

Maybin hasn’t played since Detroit’s Aug. 3 victory over the Chicago White Sox.

This isn’t the first health issue for Maybin in 2016. He didn’t make his debut this season until May 16 because of a wrist injury and has appeared in only 63 contests. However, he has been an important part of Detroit’s lineup when healthy and is slashing .325/.394/.398 with two home runs, 29 RBI and 13 stolen bases.

Maybin set career highs with 10 homers and 59 RBI for the Atlanta Braves last season and stole 40 bases for the San Diego Padres in 2011.

While he’s posted impressive offensive numbers for the Tigers in limited action this season, he has struggled to replicate his past effectiveness in the field. He is responsible for minus-11 total defensive runs saved above average in center field this year after posting a minus-16 mark last year, per FanGraphs. For context, he was plus-14 in 2011.

Detroit will likely turn to Tyler Collins, who’s hitting .250 with three home runs, until Maybin returns. Andrew Romine is also versatile enough to play center, but the Tigers need Maybin’s speed and bat in the order if they plan on catching the Cleveland Indians in the American League Central.

They trailed Cleveland by two games entering play Monday.

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Red-Hot Tigers’ Assault on the AL Central Is the Real Deal

The AL Central race had been feeling like a foregone conclusion. The Cleveland Indians took hold of first place in early June and held a lead of at least five games every day between June 25 and July 26.

But now here to crash the proverbial party are the Detroit Tigers.

Faster than anyone could say “Maybe Detroit should sell at the trade deadline,” the Tigers have gotten hot. They swept back-to-back series against the Boston Red Sox and Houston Astros, and made it seven wins in a row with an 11-5 trouncing of the Chicago White Sox on Tuesday.

Mark it eight, dude.

It was a battle, but the Tigers won again Wednesday night thanks to a friend they hadn’t seen in a while. On the first pitch in his first at-bat off the disabled list, J.D. Martinez cranked a long home run off Chris Sale to propel the Tigers to a 2-1 victory. Look upon it now with delight and wonder:

“That was almost like a movie tonight,” Tigers second baseman Ian Kinsler told George Sipple of the Detroit Free Press. “That was special. That was something I probably never seen before.”

Coupled with Cleveland’s 13-5 loss to the Minnesota Twins, the Tigers are now only two games back in the AL Central. FanGraphs’ calculations still give the Indians a 71.2 percent chance of winning the division, but the conclusion is certainly no longer foregone. 

Such a thing is easy to say when you have a team that’s won eight in a row on one hand and a team that’s lost seven out of 11 on the other. But while the Indians are obviously good, they missed out on a huge missing piece at the trade deadline. The Tigers, meanwhile, are a team that’s never really been bad that appears to be coming together at the perfect time.

One thing the Tigers have had little trouble doing is hitting the ball. They entered Wednesday ranked in the top five in the American League in runs and OPS, and have been consistent on a month-to-month basis.

This is despite the fact they’ve just gone almost two months without Martinez in the lineup. With an .878 OPS and 12 home runs in 65 games before he broke his elbow in mid-June and an .890 OPS and 73 home runs since 2014, the hole he left was not a small one.

Having Martinez back for the stretch run could give the Tigers a stronger heart of the order than they had even when he was healthy. After a modest (by his standards) first half, Miguel Cabrera is back to doing Miguel Cabrera things in the second half. Justin Upton has finally come alive. Victor Martinez has been slumping, but his overall season is more than strong enough to give him the benefit of the doubt.

Having a core like that should ensure Detroit’s offense won’t get any worse in the final two months than it’s been all season. The Tigers would only need their pitching to show up, and it’s way ahead of schedule.

Among American League clubs, only the Tampa Bay Rays have come out of the All-Star break with a better ERA than the Tigers. Justin Verlander has been the prime catalyst behind that, claiming AL Pitcher of the Month for July with a 1.69 ERA in six starts.

“It just felt like I had a good month with good feel, just took the ball every time I was called upon and went out there and tried to keep our guys in the game,” Verlander told Jason Beck of MLB.com. “You look back at the body of work this month and yeah, it was pretty good.”

Verlander’s peaks and valleys over the last couple of seasons almost make it hard to believe he can continue this. The one thing he has now that he hasn’t had in a while, however, is velocity. As Brooks Baseball shows, his fastball is sitting around 95 miles per hour for the first time since 2014.

Michael Fulmer has also done his part. His 6.2 innings of one-run ball Wednesday night lowered his ERA to 2.42. That puts him in line to win AL Rookie of the Year, and it sounds like he’s going to get the chance to seal the deal. Per Chris McCosky of the Detroit News, there’s no plan to shut the young right-hander down.

Rejoining Verlander and Fulmer in Detroit’s rotation Thursday will be Jordan Zimmermann. The veteran missed all of July with a bad neck. If he gets back to what he was doing earlier in the year, the front three in Detroit’s rotation will be able to take all comers.

That just leaves the Tigers’ eternally problematic bullpen. But as Matt Snyder noted at CBSSports.com, it was having a strong second half before hitting a rough patch Tuesday. It may be prepared to handle the task of not getting in the rest of the team’s way down the stretch.

This is not to say catching the Tribe will be easy. They’re still a really good team, and maybe the only team in the American League with enough pitching depth to overcome the absence of a Danny Salazar. The Tigers also won’t get a chance to make up ground directly until September, when seven of their last 16 games are against Cleveland. And despite their current hotness, their 1-11 record against the Indians doesn’t bode well.

The race, however, is most definitely on.

It took some time, but the Tigers are hitting their peak. With the Indians having possibly hit their own peak already, the state of things in the AL Central may be permanently stuck on “interesting” the rest of the way.

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked.

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Fulmer Records 9th Straight Start Allowing No More Than 1 ER

Detroit Tigers rookie pitcher Michael Fulmer saw his historic run come to an end in Sunday’s 4-2 win over the Kansas City Royals, just barely missing out on a 10th consecutive start allowing either one or zero earned runs, per MLB Stat of the Day.

Only seven pitchers have pieced together streaks longer than Fulmer’s nine-gamer, and there have only been 11 instances since 1913 (including Fulmer) of a pitcher going nine or more consecutive starts with one or fewer earned runs allowed, per baseball-reference.com’s play index.

The rookie barely missed out on becoming the eighth pitcher with a 10-start streak, as he held the Royals to two runs (both earned) over eight innings in Sunday’s affair, eventually forced to settle for a tough-luck no-decision that still left his record at a sterling 9-2.

A supplemental first-round pick (44th overall) of the New York Mets in the 2011 June Amateur Draft, Fulmer joined the Detroit organization as the centerpiece of last summer’s blockbuster deal that sent star outfielder Yoenis Cespedes to the Mets.

Although Cespedes struggled during last season’s playoffs, the trade appears to be working out just fine for both sides, as the 30-year-old Cuban outfielder has produced 38 home runs, a .294 batting average, .356 on-base percentage and .589 slugging percentage in 138 regular-season games for the Mets.

Despite being the young centerpiece in a trade for a highly-regarded veteran, the 23-year-old Fulmer has already given Detroit every reason to be pleased with the deal, sporting a 2.13 ERA and 1.07 WHIP through 14 career starts (all this season), with 78 strikeouts and just 28 walks and six homers allowed through 84.2 innings (6.05 innings per start).

After allowing 14 earned runs in just 19.1 innings through his first four MLB outings, the right-hander has been dominant in his subsequent 10 starts, posting a ridiculous 0.83 ERA, 0.81 WHIP and 7-1 record over 65.1 innings (6.53 per outing), albeit with a somewhat modest (but still strong) 55-to-19 strikeout-to-walk ratio in that span.

While Fulmer’s rate numbers might seem to hint at Cy Young candidacy, it will be all but impossible to overcome the reality that he spent his first three weeks of the season in the minor leagues.

His 2.13 ERA would lead all American League starters if he had enough innings to qualify, but his 84.2-inning workload still pales in comparison to those handled by the likes of Chicago White Sox lefty Chris Sale (125 innings, 3.38 ERA, 123 Ks), Boston Red Sox knuckle-baller Steven Wright (120 innings, 2.78 ERA) and Cleveland Indians fire-baller Danny Salazar (104.2 innings, 2.75 ERA, 118 Ks).

Fulmer might still have time to make up ground in a crowded AL Cy Young field that lacks an obvious favorite, if not for the general expectation that he’ll have his work scaled back even if Detroit (48-44) remains in contention, having never pitched more than 124.2 innings in a professional season (2015).

Including his 15.1-inning stint for Triple-A Toledo back in April, the 23-year-old power pitcher is already up to exactly 100 innings this year.

While the Cy Young Award may thus be pipe dream—at least for this season—Fulmer is undeniably building a nice case for AL Rookie of the Year honors, with his 1.8 Wins Above Replacement (WAR) putting him even with Indians outfielder Tyler Naquin (who only has 187 plate appearances) for the lead among AL rookies, per FanGraphs measure of the statistic.

Other AL ROY candidates include Rangers outfielder Nomar Mazara (1.1 WAR), Orioles outfielder Hyun Soo Kim (1.1) and Mariners first baseman Dae-Ho Lee (0.7). Fulmer may only need 150 or so innings to lock down the award.

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