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Tigers ace Tarik Skubal caps dominant season with American League Cy Young Award

DETROIT — Can you imagine a better or more fitting birthday present for Tigers’ lefty ace Tarik Skubal? Or a better way to cap a sensational, breakthrough season?

On Wednesday, the day he turned 28 years old, Skubal was named the American League Cy Young Award winner for 2024 by a vote of the Baseball Writers Association of America.

Happy birthday, indeed.

Skubal becomes the fifth Tigers pitcher to win the award. Denny McLain won it twice (1968 and 1969). Willie Hernandez (1984), Justin Verlander (2011) and Max Scherzer (2013) also won the prize while wearing the Old English D.

Full disclosure: I had a Cy Young Award vote this year and I did not put Cleveland’s dominant closer Emmanuel Clase on my ballot. I have been steadfast on every Cy Young vote I’ve cast over the years that it’s an award for starting pitchers. Relievers have their own award, as they should given the disparity between the two distinct roles.

The lines on this are getting blurrier as starter innings continue to shrink and bullpen roles expand. But this season, after comparing every candidate including Clase on a spreadsheet with every relevant statistical category — sabermetric and traditional — there were five starting pitchers who scored higher than Clase.

Thus, my ballot: 1. Skubal, 2. Kansas City’s Seth Lugo, 3. Seattle’s Logan Gilbert, 4. Kansas City’s Cole Ragans, 5. Baltimore’s Corbin Burnes.

Putting Skubal at the top of the ballot was a no-brainer. And not just because he became the 22nd player in MLB history to win the pitcher Triple Crown, leading the league in wins (18), ERA (2.39) and strikeouts (228).

He joins Hal Newhouser (1945) and Justin Verlander (2011) as the only Tigers to achieve the feat.

It was much more. When manager AJ Hinch said that Skubal was “everything for us,” this is what he meant:

After dealing away Jack Flaherty at the trade deadline, the Tigers were left with two starting pitchers — Skubal and rookie Keider Montero. The other three starting slots in the rotation were, for the final two months, covered by a creative and elaborate mix of openers and bulk relievers.

For that strategy to work, the Tigers needed Skubal, especially, to cover at least six innings in his starts. Here’s how Skubal responded to that challenge:

From Aug. 2 through Sept. 24, he went 6-1 and averaged 6.2 innings in 10 starts. He limited opponents to a .206/.252/.292 slash-line with 74 strikeouts and 11 walks.

He managed to be at his best exactly when his team needed him the most.

The Tigers were 21-10 in his 31 regular-season starts, a stat that held more value to Skubal than his 18 pitcher wins. He won two of his three postseason starts and threw 17 straight scoreless innings until the fatal fifth inning in Game 5 of the American League Division Series in Cleveland (see Lane Thomas homer).

Skubal limited opponents to two runs or less in 24 of his 31 regular-season starts, covering at least six innings in 21 of those.

Skubal day turned into win day for the Tigers. There is no better measure of greatness for a pitcher.

“He’s unbelievable,” said first baseman Spencer Torkelson after Skubal posted his 200th strikeouts of the season in a 2-1 win against Boston on Aug. 31. “It’s not only his stuff. It’s the conviction behind it. The intent and the confidence he has every single pitch he throws.

“You can really look up to somebody like that. He sets the tone. It builds character in our pitching staff and even in the position players.”

He set the tone for his season on the first day of live batting practice in Lakeland when he hit 99.6 mph with his four-seam fastball. He was asked about hitting 100 mph so early in camp.

“It wasn’t 100,” he said. “We don’t round up in the big leagues.”

He would hit and surpass 100 mph legitimately on May 11 against Houston, becoming the first Tigers starting pitcher to hit triple digits since Verlander in 2012.

He took the ball on Opening Day in Chicago and pitched six scoreless innings with six strikeouts. He got the start in the home opener, too, on April 5, making him the first Tigers pitcher to start both the regular-season opener and home opener since Mike Moore in 1993.

He struck out 12 in six innings at Yankee Stadium on May 5. But his most dominant strikeout performance came in Cincinnati on July 7 when he punched out 13 and got a remarkable 23 misses on 51 swings.

By the All-Star break he was 10-3 with a 2.41 ERA and a sub-1 WHIP (0.879) and earned his first All-Star berth. He threw a perfect second inning in the game, setting down Christian Yelich, Alec Bohm and Teoscar Hernandez.

“When you needed a big performance, he was our guy,” Hinch said in an interview with MLB Network earlier this month. “When you really needed a punch-out to get us out of an inning, he was our guy. We you needed someone to show incredible competitive emotion, he was our guy.

“We leaned on him for so much leadership and performance. And he delivered in all ways. He was the definition of dominant for us and across the league.”

The mantra for the Tigers’ pitching staff all season was “pound the strike zone,” and nobody pounded it more relentlessly and fearlessly than Skubal, evidenced by his 69% strike rate and 68.6% first-pitch strike rate.

To further amplify the point, he had a 30.3% strikeout rate and just a 4.7% walk rate.

Skubal’s 6.3 WAR (baseball-reference) led all big-league pitchers. His pitching run value of 40 (per Statcast) was best in baseball. His fastball run value of 26 ranked in the top 99 percentile.

Opponents hit .197 against his four-seam fastball and .207 off his two-seamer. They hit .216 off his changeup with a 46% whiff rate. His slider (.169) and knuckle curve (.158) rare got hit hard.

“Just Skub being Skub,” said Jake Rogers, who caught every one of Skubal’s starts. “I never get tired of talking about Skub. He’s been big for us all year, and every time he gets on the mound, he gives us a chance to win.

“I’m just really glad he’s on our team.”

Detroit Tigers starting pitcher Tarik Skubal gestures after a double play ends the sixth inning during Game 2 of baseball’s AL Division Series against the Cleveland Guardians, Monday, Oct. 7, 2024, in Cleveland. (PHIL LONG — AP Photo)

Tigers’ AJ Hinch finishes distant third in AL Manager of the Year voting

Milwaukee’s Pat Murphy won National League Manager of the Year on Tuesday after a stellar debut season with the Brewers, while Cleveland’s Stephen Vogt took the AL honors honor after leading the Guardians to 92 wins and a division title in his first year as a skipper at any level.

The 40-year-old Vogt beat Kansas City’s Matt Quatraro and Detroit’s A.J. Hinch, both AL Central rivals. He’s the first AL manager to win the award in his debut season since Minnesota’s Rocco Baldelli did it in 2019. He’s also the first to go from player to Manager of the Year in just two years.

Hinch, a 50-year-old in his fourth season leading the Tigers, also made the playoffs with a torrid second-half despite losing quality players like right-hander Jack Flaherty at the trade deadline.

Murphy, 65, led the Brewers to an NL Central title, a 93-69 record and is the franchise’s first manager to earn the award since it was introduced in 1983. In the playoffs, Milwaukee lost to the New York Mets in a three-games Wild-Card Series.

Murphy had an unusual career path to big league success — he was a longtime college coach at Notre Dame and Arizona State before moving to the professional ranks in 2010. He worked in the Padres’ minor league system until 2015 when he was hired to be Milwaukee’s bench coach under Craig Counsell, who played for Murphy at Notre Dame.

After Counsell left for the Cubs during the offseason, the Brewers quickly turned to Murphy. The transition was nearly seamless.

Murphy beat San Diego’s Mike Shildt and New York’s Carlos Mendoza,. He received 27 of the 30 first-place votes in balloting by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America. Shildt, Mendoza and Philadelphia’s Rob Thomson each received one vote.

The previous fastest was Joe Girardi from 2003 to 2006, when he won NL Manager of the Year with the Florida Marlins.

Vogt received 27 of the 30 first-place votes. Quatraro got two and Hinch one.

Vogt led the Guardians to a 92-69 record and the playoffs in his first season after replacing three-time manager of the year Terry Francona. The former big league catcher took Cleveland to the AL Championship Series before losing to the Yankees in five games.

Vogt is the third Cleveland skipper to win the honor, joining Francona (2013, 2016, 2022) and Eric Wedge (2007).

Mendoza — in his first year leading the Mets — guided the franchise to an 89-win season and an appearance in the NL Championship Series before they lost in six games to the eventual World Series champion Dodgers.

Shildt guided the Padres to the playoffs in his first season in San Diego, winning 93 games. He won the Manager of the Year award in 2019 when he was in charge of the Cardinals.

The 51-year-old Quatraro, in his second season with the franchise, led the Royals to the postseason one year after a 106-loss season. Kansas City finished with an 86-76 record before beating Baltimore in a Wild Card Series.

Kansas City, led by catcher Salvador Perez young star shortstop Bobby Witt Jr., lost to the Yankees in a four-game Division Series.

— By DAVID BRANDT, Associated Press

Detroit Tigers manager A.J. Hinch watches batting practice during a baseball workout in Cleveland, Friday, Oct. 11, 2024, in preparation for Game 5 of the American League Division Series. (PHIL LONG — AP Photo)

Tigers have until Monday to reinstate players from 60-day IL, including Báez, Faedo

DETROIT — Free agency technically began Thursday, but the Tigers could skip the preliminaries.

They finished the 2024 season with no free agents, so there are no early negotiations or decisions on qualifying offers to tend to. The one player with an option — a team option — is pitcher Casey Mize, but that is a mere formality.

The Tigers won’t exercise that $3.1 million option for 2025. Instead, they will pay Mize a $10,000 buyout and retain control. Mize can either re-sign or head to arbitration.

That’s not to say team president Scott Harris and his staff don’t have some decisions to make. They have until Monday to either reinstate or remove four players from the 60-day injured list to or from the 40-man roster.

The four players are shortstop Javier Báez (hip), right-handed pitchers Alex Faedo (shoulder), Sawyer Gipson-Long (Tommy John surgery) and Brendan White (elbow). Báez, Faedo and Gipson-Long are expected to be put back on the 40-man.

White, who debuted in 2023 but has struggled to stay healthy, could be designated for assignment.

Players currently on the 40-man roster who may be vulnerable include pitchers Ricky Vanasco and Bryan Sammons, and utility players Ryan Vilade and Bligh Madris.

The Tigers also have until Monday to add any potential minor-league free agents to the roster. They did so last year with pitcher Keider Montero. There are no obvious candidates this year, but here is a partial list of soon-to-be minor-league free agents:

▶ Pitchers: Miguel Diaz, Wilkel Hernandez, Jake Higginbotham, Garrett Hill, Freddy Pacheco, Angel Reyes, Devin Sweet, Andrew Vasquez, Troy Watson, Adam Wolf.

▶ Catchers: Eliezer Alfonso, Anthony Bemboom, Tomas Nido.

▶ Infielder: Riley Unroe.

▶ Outfielder: Oscar Mercado.

Casey Mize has a team option for next season, and it’s likely that the Tigers wont pick up that $3.1 million deal. (ROBIN BUCKSON — The Detroit News)

Tigers blank Guardians 3-0 in ALDS with clutch hitting and strong pitching, taking 2-1 series lead

DETROIT (AP) — Riley Greene and Spencer Torkelson each drove in a run, and six pitchers combined to lift the Detroit Tigers to a 3-0 win over Cleveland Guardians on Wednesday and a 2-1 lead in their AL Division Series.

The Tigers, baseball’s hottest team the past two months, will have their first chance to advance in the playoffs since 2013 on Thursday night in Game 4 at Comerica Park.

“We’re human,” Torkelson said. “We know how close we are.”

Cleveland has gone 20 straight innings without scoring since opening the series with a five-run first and a two-run sixth in its 7-0 win. Steven Kwan had three of its six hits in Game 3.

“Short sample size, obviously in the playoffs it’s a lot more magnified,” David Fry said after going 0 for 3 with two strikeouts, contributing to the team’s eight runners left on base. “I think guys have hit balls hard. Balls aren’t really falling.”

After AL Cy Young Award favorite Tarik Skubal helped Detroit shut out Cleveland in Game 2, manager A.J. Hinch put a stream of pitchers on the mound and kept the Guardians quiet at the plate.

Detroit reliever Will Vest entered with two on and two outs in the seventh, and Fry lined to a leaping Matt Vierling at third.

“He likes to pull the ball a lot, so I was ready for anything that came my way,” Vierling said. “I didn’t have time to think. I just had to react.”

Fans were fired up all day, chanting “Let’s go Tigers!” before the first playoff pitch in Detroit since 2014, and 44,885 were in the stands for the largest crowd in Comerica Park’s 25-year history.

“This is a huge victory for us, just to see the stadium and the whole city come out for the first playoff game in a decade,” Vierling said.

Right-hander Keider Montero retired the side in order in the first, and the previously slumping Greene hit a two-out RBI single in the home half.

Brant Hurter gave up five hits in 3 1/3 innings. Beau Brieske pitched two innings and Sean Guenther got one out. Vest threw 1 1/3 innings before Tyler Holton handled the ninth.

“Nothing that happened caught us off guard,” Cleveland manager Stephen Vogt said. “We were prepared for all of it.”

It’s the first time Detroit has recorded two shutouts in a postseason series. It’s also the first time since the 1905 World Series that the first three games of a postseason series all were shutouts.

The Guardians had a chance to score in the third. Kwan reached on a one-out infield single and advanced on shortstop Tyler Sweeney’s throwing error. José Ramírez was intentionally walked with two outs, but Josh Naylor hit an inning-ending groundout.

The Tigers took a 2-0 lead in the third after No. 9 hitter Jake Rogers led off with a double, advanced to third on Parker Meadows’ grounder and scored on Vierling’s sacrifice fly.

Cleveland’s pitchers did enough to keep the AL Central champions in the game, but the lack of offense made it moot.

The Guardians went 0 for 8 with runners in scoring position.

“I thought we did a great job setting the table,” Vogt said. “We just weren’t able to come up with a big hit.”

The Guardians gave righty Alex Cobb the start for his first appearance since Sept. 1. He gave up two runs and three hits in three innings.

Eli Morgan gave up Torkelson’s RBI double in the sixth. The slugger had been 0 for 14 with nine strikeouts in the postseason.

“In the playoffs you don’t get caught up in the numbers, you’re just trying to win and we’re doing that,” Torkelson said. “It felt pretty good to come through there.”

Up next: Cleveland RHP Tanner Bibee is scheduled to start Game 4 while Detroit likely will wait until Thursday to announce who will open on the mound as the first of at least a handful of pitchers it will plan to play.

The post Tigers blank Guardians 3-0 in ALDS with clutch hitting and strong pitching, taking 2-1 series lead appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

Detroit Evening Report: Trump stumps in Detroit; the Tigers’ postseason run and more

On this episode of the Detroit Evening Report, we cover former President Donald Trump and Vice Presidential candidate JD Vance’s visits to Detroit; the Detroit Tigers’ exciting postseason run and more.

Subscribe to the Detroit Evening Report on Apple PodcastsSpotifyNPR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.

Trump stumps in Detroit

Former President Donald Trump will visit Detroit on Thursday as he continues to court Michigan voters in advance of next month’s election. 

Trump is scheduled to speak to members and guests of the Detroit Economic Club. The Republican presidential candidate has made several trips to Detroit in recent months, with a special focus on courting Black male voters.

The Economic Club address will take place at 1 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 10, at MotorCity Casino Hotel.

Vance campaigns at Eastern Market

Republican Vice Presidential candidate JD Vance spoke to voters at Eastern Market in Detroit Tuesday. Many of the speakers at the event urged voters to cast their ballots in the days ahead. Political analysts predict the final election results will be close. Detroit Pastor Lorenzo Sewell gave the invocation before Vance’s address. Republican candidate in Michigan 13th Congressional District race Martell Bivings also spoke at the event.

Detroit casino earnings

Detroit’s casinos continue to bring in tax money for the city and state. The three gaming establishments reported nearly $102 million in revenue for the month of September.  MGM Grand controlled 47% of the market, MotorCity had 31% and Hollywood Casino at Greektown had a 22% market share. Revenues were up at MGM Grand and MotorCity, but fell at the Greektown casino. Together the three casinos paid Detroit $12.5 million in taxes and development agreement obligations in September. They also paid another $8.2 million in taxes to the state of Michigan. 

Halloween in the D

Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan will hold a news conference on Thursday, where he’ll announce details of the 7th annual “Halloween in the D” citywide celebration. The city says the goal of the project is to provide Detroit families with safe experiences for Halloween. The mayor’s news conference takes place at 1 p.m. at the Butzel Family Center.     

Tigers continue postseason run 

Detroiters are celebrating the Tigers as they continue their  run into the postseason.   The Tigers play the Cleveland Guardians this afternoon in Comerica Park. Their American League Divisional Series is tied up at one game a piece. The best three out of five wins the series. Back in August, Detroit was not expected to make the playoffs, but the Tigers won 17 games in September — finishing the regular season with 86 wins and 76 losses, qualifying them for post-season play. The Tigers beat the Houston Astros last week in an American League wildcard series. Game four takes place at 6:08 p.m. Thursday at Comerica Park.

Do you have a community story we should tell? Let us know in an email at detroiteveningreport@wdet.org.

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WDET strives to make our journalism accessible to everyone. As a public media institution, we maintain our journalistic integrity through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

Donate today »

The post Detroit Evening Report: Trump stumps in Detroit; the Tigers’ postseason run and more appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

Tigers gain ground in AL wild card race as Carpenter, Meadows key 4-3 win over Orioles

BALTIMORE (AP) — Kerry Carpenter homered twice, Parker Meadows made a home run-saving grab and the surging Detroit Tigers gained ground in the American League wild card race with a 4-3 victory over the Baltimore Orioles on Sunday.

Carpenter’s third multi-home run game of the season ensured the Tigers their first winning season since 2016 as Detroit (82-74) matched Kansas City (82-74) and moved a half-game in front of Minnesota (81-74) for the final AL wild card spot.

“We still have a long way to go, so we’re going to stay grounded,” said Tigers manager A.J. Hinch. “But both things can happen — we can be proud of what we’re doing and we can stay grounded and look forward to the next series.”

The Twins, who won the season series 7-6 with the Tigers, have the second game of their doubleheader in Boston later Sunday. The Twins would finish ahead of the Tigers if they finish with the same record.

The Tigers have won 11 of their last 14.

Baltimore (86-70) lost its fifth consecutive series and fell 5 1/2 games behind New York (91-64) in the AL East race with six to play but is still four games ahead of Kansas City and Detroit for the top wild card spot.

“We had a great chance to win last night, didn’t get it done,” said Orioles manager Brandon Hyde. “We had a chance today also. I thought we just had some unfortunate breaks today.”

Spencer Torkelson homered off Orioles right-hander Albert Suarez (8-7) and Trey Sweeney contributed an RBI double as the Tigers took a 2-0 lead.

Carpenter hit the first of his two homers in the third to make it 3-0.

Cedric Mullins connected with a two-run shot for Baltimore. Jordan Westburg added an RBI double in his first game since July 31 (right wrist fracture) to complete a three-run fifth and tie things up at 3-3.

The damage would’ve been greater without Meadows’ leaping grab over the wall in right-center to deny Colton Cowser a two-run homer off Sean Guenther (2-0) and end the inning.

“I was getting ready to jump at the wall,” said Carpenter, who was in right field with Meadows in center. “And then I saw him. He was locked on that thing.”

Carpenter led off the sixth with his second deep shot and 17th of the season, which cleared the front of the grounds crew shed in right by a few feet.

“It’s huge,” Carpenter said. “They could’ve taken a two-run lead and then two minutes later I hit the homer and we’re up by one. So it changes the entire game.”

From there, Brenan Hanifee and Will Vest bridged the gap to Jason Foley, who worked a perfect ninth for his 26th save.

Trainer’s room

Tigers: INF Colt Keith (right shoulder) made his first defensive start since Tuesday, playing second base. … Hanifee took Ramon Urías’ sixth-inning liner off the left thigh but remained in the game.

Orioles: Reinstated Westburg and Urías (right ankle sprain) from the 10-day injured list and optioned OF Daniel Johnson and INF Livan Soto to Triple-A Norfolk.

Up next

Tigers: Will return to using a conventional starter to begin a home series against Tampa Bay on Tuesday when AL Cy Young contender Tarik Skubal (17-4, 2.48 ERA) makes his 31st start.

Orioles: Dean Kremer (7-10, 4.19) will try to complete six-plus innings for a fourth consecutive start to open Tuesday’s series at the New York Yankees.

By Ian Nicholas Quillen, Associated Press

The post Tigers gain ground in AL wild card race as Carpenter, Meadows key 4-3 win over Orioles appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

The Metro: New ESPN documentary revisits former Tigers pitcher Armando Galarraga’s near-perfect game


A new documentary from the ESPN series E:60 called “28 Outs: An Imperfect Story” is revisiting Detroit Tigers Pitcher Armando Galarraga’s near-perfect game.  

On June 2, 2010, Galarraga was pitching for the Tigers against Cleveland. Galarraga started the season with the Triple-A Toledo Mud Hens and was called up to Detroit the day before. One out away from a perfect game, a blown call created a very different moment.

To help us revisit the game, Cody Stavenhagen joins The Metro. Stavenhagen is a staff writer covering the Tigers and Major League Baseball for The Athletic. 

University of New Mexico Professor Larry Jones also joins the show. He taught a Law and Society class at Monmouth University in 2021 that took a deep dive into the game. At the end of the semester, the class submitted an 80 page document to the MLB, making the case to give Galarraga a perfect game.

More headlines from The Metro on August 26: 

  • The new owners of Florian East Chris Burtley and Shang Kong join the show. The brewery wants to immerse itself in the culture of Hamtramck. Florian East will serve coffee and non-alcoholic beverages during weekend mornings, screen soccer games and host food pop-ups.
  • International Overdose Awareness Day is Aug. 31. Dr. Andy King is the medical director for the Michigan Poison & Drug Information Center and the director of the Tolan Park Research Clinic. He joins the show to help us better understand addiction and treatment.
  • There’s been many studies on hallucinogenic drugs and their potential benefits to treat mental health disorders. Dr. Cassius Drake is the founder of The Drake Center for Transformative Healing in Franklin, Michigan. He joins the show to discuss how ketamine, administered in a medical setting, is helping some people treat depression, anxiety and PTSD.

Trusted, accurate, up-to-date.

WDET strives to make our journalism accessible to everyone. As a public media institution, we maintain our journalistic integrity through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

Donate today »

The post The Metro: New ESPN documentary revisits former Tigers pitcher Armando Galarraga’s near-perfect game appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

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