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The Tigers were established as one of the
eight AL charter franchises in 1901. They were a minor league team in the
Western League in 1894 where they are the only team that still remains in its original
city and is the oldest continuous one name, one city franchise in the AL.
·
They got their name from the nickname of
the members of Michigan’s oldest military unit the 425th National
Guard infantry regiment which fought in the Civil War and the Spanish-American war.
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They play their games at Comerica Park
which is located in Downtown Detroit, Michigan.
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They have made the playoffs seventeen
times with one wild card berth and seven divisional titles.
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They have won eleven AL Pennants and four
World Series Championships in 1935, 1945, 1968 & 1984.
Batting Lineup:
1.
LF Sam Crawford
2.
2B Charlie Gehringer
3.
CF Ty Cobb
4.
RF Al Kaline
5.
DH Hank Greenberg
6.
1B Norm Cash
7.
3B George Kell
8.
SS Alan Trammell
9. C Bill Freehan
Starting
Rotation:
1.
Jack Morris
2.
Jim Bunning
Bullpen:
1.
Closer: Todd Jones
4.
John Hiller
Bench:
INF-Lou Whitaker
INF-Travis Fryman
Coaching Staff:
Manager-Sparky Anderson
Sparky
Anderson managed the Tigers for seventeen seasons where he finished with the
most wins with 1331, was elected into the Hall of Fame in 2000 and they retired
his number 11. He guided them to two divisional titles, one AL Pennant and one
World Series Championship in 1984. He also won two AL Manager of the Year
Awards.
Bench Coach-Hughie Jennings
Hughie
Jennings managed the Tigers for fourteen seasons where he finished with the
second most wins with 1131, was elected into the Hall of Fame in 1945 and his name
is honored by them. He was their player manager for twelve of those seasons and
led them to three consecutive AL Pennants.
1B Coach-Jim Leyland
Jim
Leyland managed the Tigers for eight seasons where he finished with the third
most wins 700. He guided them to one wild card berth, three divisional titles
and two AL Pennants. He also won AL Manager of the Year once and was the
seventh manager to win a pennant in both leagues.
3B Coach-Bucky Harris
Bucky
Harris managed the Tigers for seven seasons where he finished with the fourth
most wins with 516 and was elected into the Hall of Fame in 1975. He guided
them to three winning seasons and was a player-manager for two seasons.
Hitting
Coach-Steve O’Neill
Steve
O’Neill managed the Tigers for six seasons where he finished with the fifth most
wins with 509. He guided them to one AL Pennant and one World Series
Championship in 1945.
Pitching
Coach-Fred Hutchinson
Fred
Hutchinson managed the Tigers for three seasons after his career as a pitcher
for them where he finished with the eighteen most wins with 155. He pitched ten
seasons for them where he made one All-Star appearance and was a player manager
for two seasons.
Bullpen Coach-Del Baker
Del
Baker managed the Tigers for eight seasons where he finished with the seventh most
wins with 417. He started off as a third base coach and a former player behind
the plate for them two seasons. He managed them to three AL Pennants as their manager
or interim manager.
There
have been twenty nine Hall of Fame players who have played for them at different
points in their respective careers.
They
have retired seven numbers for players, one number for a manager, six names for
players, one name for a manager and one name for a broadcaster.
Ty
Cobb spent twenty two seasons in the outfield for the Tigers as their greatest
player/greatest center fielder/greatest outfielder/longest tenured
outfielder/longest tenured center fielder where he put up numbers that speak for
themselves that got him elected into the Hall of Fame in 1936 and his name is
honored by them. He won twelve batting titles, led the AL in home runs once,
led the AL in RBIs once four times, led the AL in stolen bases six times, won
one Triple Crown, won the 1911 AL MVP while there and has highest career
batting average in MLB history. He also was their player manager for seven seasons where
he finished with the sixth most wins with 479. He also finished as the
franchise leader for many offensive categories in Tigers history like having
the highest batting average, on base percentage, highest offensive WAR, highest
WAR for position players, most at bats, plate appearances, runs scored, hits,
total bases, doubles, triples, RBIs, stolen bases, singles and extra base hits.
Al
Kaline spent twenty two years in the outfield for the Tigers as their greatest/longest
tenured right fielder where he put up numbers that speak for themselves that
got him elected into the Hall of Fame in 1980 and they retired his number 6. He
made all eighteen of his All-Star appearances, won all ten of his gold gloves,
won one batting title, won the Roberto Clemente Award and was on one World
Series Championship team in 1968 while there. He also finished in the top 10
for many offensive categories in Tigers history like having the most games
played, home runs, walks, second most extra base hits, singles, RBIs, total
bases, hits, plate appearances, at bats and second highest WAR for position
players to name some.
Hank
Greenberg spent twelve seasons in the infield for the Tigers as their greatest
first basemen where he put up numbers that speak for themselves that got him elected
into the Hall of Fame in 1956 and they retired his number 5. He made all five
of his All-Star appearances, led the AL in home runs four times, led the AL in
RBIs four times, won two AL MVPs and was on two World Series Championship teams
in 1935 & 1945 while there. He also finished in the top 10 for many
offensive categories in Tigers history like having the highest slugging
percentage, third highest on base percentage, fourth most home runs, fifth most
extra base hits, sixth most RBIs, eight highest batting average and eight
highest WAR for position players to name some.
Charlie
Gehringer spent nineteen seasons in the infield for the Tigers as their greatest
second basemen where he put up numbers that speak for themselves that got him elected
into the Hall of Fame in 1949 and they retired his number 2. He made all six of
his All-Star appearances, won one batting title, led the AL in stolen bases once,
won the 1937 AL MVP and was on one World Series Championship team in 1935 while
there. He also finished in the top 10 for many offensive categories in Tigers
history like having the second highest offensive WAR, second most runs scored,
doubles, third highest WAR for position players, third most at bats, plate appearances,
hits, total bases, triples, walks, singles and extra base hits to name some.
Sam
Crawford spent fifteen seasons in the outfield for the Tigers where he put up
numbers that speak for themselves that got him elected into the Hall of Fame in
1957 and his name is honored. He led the AL in RBIs three times, led the AL in
home runs twice, led the AL in triples six times while there and has the most
triples in MLB history. He also finished in the top 10 for many offensive categories
in Tigers history like having the second most triples, third most stolen bases,
fourth most singles, fifth highest offensive WAR, fifth most hits, RBIs, sixth most
total bases, at bats, plate appearances and games played to name some.
George
Kell spent seven seasons in the infield for the Tigers as their greatest third basemen
where he put up numbers that speak for themselves that got him elected into the
Hall of Fame in 1983 and his name is honored. He made six of his ten All-Star appearances,
hit for the cycle, had six hits in one game, won one batting title, led the AL
in hits twice and led the AL in doubles twice while there. He also finished
with the fifth highest batting average in Tigers history.
Alan
Trammell spent twenty years in the infield for the Tigers as their greatest/longest
tenured shortstop where he put up numbers that speak for themselves that got
him elected into the Hall of Fame in 2018 and they retired his number 3. He made
all six of his All-Star appearances, won all four of his gold gloves, won all
three of his silver sluggers, won one World Series MVP and was on one World Series
Championship team in 1984 while there. He also managed them for three seasons
and is a special assistant to the GM now. He finished in the top 10 for many
offensive categories in Tigers history like having defensive WAR, fifth most
games played, at bats, plate appearances, stolen bases, singles, fifth highest
WAR for position players, sixth most doubles, runs scored, seventh highest
offensive WAR, seventh most hits, total bases and walks to name some.
Jack
Morris pitched fourteen seasons for the Tigers where he put up numbers that
speak for themselves that got him elected into the Hall of Fame in 2018 and they
retired his number 47. He made four of his five All-Star appearances, pitched a
no-hitter, led the AL in strikeouts once, led the majors in wins once and was
on one World Series Championship team in 1984 while there. He also finished in
the top 10 for many pitching categories in Tigers history like having the second
most games started, third most strikeouts, fourth most innings pitched, fifth most
wins and sixth highest WAR for pitchers to name some.
Jim
Bunning pitched nine seasons for the Tigers where he put up numbers that speak
for themselves that got him elected into the Hall of Fame in 1996. He made seven
of his nine All-Star appearances, led the AL in wins once, pitched a no-hitter
and led the AL in strikeouts twice while there. He also finished with the sixth
most strikeouts in Tigers history.
Hal
Newhouser pitched fifteen seasons for the Tigers where he put up numbers that
speak for themselves that got him elected into the Hall of Fame in 1992 and
they retired his number 16. He made all seven of his All-Star appearances, won
two AL MVPs, led the majors in strikeouts twice, led the majors in ERA twice,
led the AL in wins four times, won one pitching Triple Crown, led the AL in shutouts
once and was on one World Series Championship team in 1945 while there. He also
finished in the top 10 for many pitching categories in Tigers history like
having the highest WAR for pitchers, third most shutouts, fourth most wins, strikeouts,
complete games and fifth most innings pitched to name some.
Harry
Heilmann spent fifteen seasons in the outfield for the Tigers where he put up
numbers that speak for themselves that got him elected into the Hall of Fame in
1952. He won four batting titles, led the AL in hits once, led the AL in RBIs
once and led the AL in doubles once while there. He was their radio play-by-play
man for sixteen seasons as well. He also finished in the top 10 for many
offensive categories in Tigers history like having the second highest, third
most RBIs, fourth most hits, doubles, triples, total bases, extra base hit and
fourth highest offensive WAR to name some.
Norm
Cash spent fifteen seasons in the infield for the Tigers as their second
greatest first basemen/longest tenured first basemen where he made all five of
his All-Star appearances, won one batting title, led the AL in hits once and
was on one World Series Championship in 1968 while there. He also finished in
the top 10 for many offensive categories in Tigers history like having the
second most home runs, sixth most walks, seventh most games played, eight most
RBIs, ninth highest WAR for position players and tenth highest offensive WAR to
name some.
Bill
Freehan spent fifteen seasons behind the plate for the Tigers as their greatest/longest
tenured catcher where he all eleven of his All-Star appearances and won all
five of his gold gloves while there. He was a broadcaster for two seasons for
them. He also finished with the fifth highest defensive WAR, tenth most games
played and home runs in Tigers history.
Mickey
Lolich pitched thirteen seasons for the Tigers where he made all three of his
All-Star appearances, led the majors in strikeouts once, led the majors in wins
once, led the AL in shutouts, led the AL in complete games once, won one World
Series MVP, was on one World Series Championship team in 1968 while there and
has the second most strikeouts for a LHP in AL history. He also finished in
the top 10 for many pitching categories in Tigers history like having the most strikeouts,
game started, shutouts, third most games played, innings pitched and wins to
name some.
George
Mullin pitched twelve seasons for the Tigers where he led the AL in wins once,
pitched a no-hitter, led the AL in games started once, led the AL in complete games
once and led the AL in innings pitched once while there. He also finished in
the top 10 for many pitching categories in Tigers history like having the most innings
pitched, complete games, second most wins, shutouts, third most games started
and sixth lowest ERA to name some. Other notable starters in Tigers history have
been Denny McLain, Earl Whitehill, Bill Donovan, Frank Kitson, Hook Daus, Dutch Leonard, George Uhle, Tommy Bridges, Steve Gromek, Schoolboy Rowe, Elden Auker, Bobo Newsom, Dizzy Trout, Virgil Trucks, Fred Hutchinson, Earl Wilson,
Phil Regan, Hank Aguirre, Frank Lary, Joe Niekro, Joe Coleman, Woodie Fryman, Dan Petry, Frank Tanana, Jeff Weaver, Doug Fister, active players Justin Verlander, Rick Porcello, Max Scherzer, Hall of Famers Stan Coveleski and Waite Hoyt.
Willie
Horton spent fifteen seasons in the outfield for the Tigers as their greatest/longest
tenured left fielder where he made all four of his All-Star appearances, was on
one World Series Championship team in 1968 while there and they retired his
number 23. He also finished with the fifth most home runs in Tigers history. Other
notable outfielders in Tigers history have been Bobby Higginson, Ron Leflore, Gates Brown, Ike Brown, Chet Lemon, Magglio Ordonez, Bobby Veach, Rocky Colavito, John Stone, Charlie Maxwell, Larry Herndon, Doc Cramer, Hoot Evers,
Bill Bruton, Mickey Stanley, Juan Encarnacion, Curtis Granderson, Pete Fox,
Kirk Gibson, Pat Mullin, Vic Wertz, Torii Hunter, Gary Sheffield, Rusty Staub,
active players Justin Upton, JD Martinez, Nick Castellanos, Hall of Famers
Goose Goslin, Heinie Manush and Earl Averill.
Lou
Whitaker spent nineteen seasons in the infield for the Tigers as their second
greatest second basemen where he made all five of his All-Star appearances, won
all four of his silver sluggers, won all three of his gold gloves, won AL
Rookie of the Year and was on one World Series Championship team in 1984 while
there. He also finished in the top 10 for many offensive categories in Tigers
history like having the second highest defensive WAR, second most walks, third
most games played, fourth most at bats, plate appearances, runs scored, fourth
highest WAR for position players, fifth most total bases and doubles to name
some.
Travis
Fryman spent eight seasons in the infield for the Tigers where he made four of
his five All-Star appearances and won his only silver slugger while there. Other
notable infielders in Tigers history have been Tony Clark, Cecil Fielder,
Prince Fielder, Carlos Pena, Walt Dropo, Jason Thompson, Rudy York, Lu Blue,
George Burns, Dmitri Young, Eddie Mayo, Frank Bolling, Jerry Lumpe, Placido Polanco, Omar Infante, Dick McAuliffe, Damion Easley, Ian Kinsler, Carlos Guillen, Jhonny Peralta, Ed Brinkman, Harvey Kuenn, Donie Bush, Dean Palmer, Aurelio Rodriguez, Ray Boone, Marty McManus, Pinky Higgins, Don Wert, Brandon Inge, active players Miguel Cabrera and Jose Iglesias.
Lance
Parrish spent ten seasons behind the plate for the Tigers as their second
greatest catcher where he made six of his eight All-Star appearances, won all
three of his gold gloves, won six of his seven silver sluggers and was on one
World Series Championship team in 1984 while there. He has worked a minor league
manager, a major league coach and a broadcaster for them. He also finished with
the sixth highest defensive WAR and ninth most home runs in Tigers history. Other
notable catchers in Tigers history have been Birdie Tebbetts, Brad Ausmus,
Mickey Telleton, active catcher Alex Avila, Hall of Famers Ivan Rodriguez and
Mickey Cochrane.
Todd
Jones was the Tigers closer for eight seasons where he made his only All-Star appearance, won reliever of the year once and led the AL
in saves once while there. He also finished with the most saves, games finished
and sixth most games played in Tigers history.
Aurelio Lopez was the Tigers closer for seven seasons where he made his
only All-Star appearance and was on one World Series Championship team in 1984 while
there. He also finished with the third best win-loss percentage, fifth most
games finished and sixth most saves in Tigers history.
Willie
Hernandez was the Tigers closer for six seasons where he made all three of his
All-Star appearances, won the 1984 AL MVP, won one AL CY Young Award and was on
one World Series Championship team in 1984 while there. He also finished with
the fourth most saves and games finished in Tigers history.
John
Hiller was the Tigers closer for fifteen seasons where he led the majors in
saves once, made his only All-Star appearance and was on one World Series
Championship team in 1968 while there. He worked as a minor league pitching
coach for them. He also finished with the most games played, third most saves,
third most games finished, seventh lowest ERA and tenth highest WAR for
pitchers in Tigers history.
Mike
Henneman was the Tigers closer for nine seasons where he made his only All-Star
appearance while there. He was a roving pitching coordinator for them. He also
finished with the second most saves, games finished, fifth most games played
and fifth best win-loss percentage in Tigers history.
Jose
Valverde was the Tigers closer for four seasons where he made two of his three
All-Star appearances, won reliever of the year twice and led the AL in saves
once while there. He also finished with the fifth most saves and sixth most
games finished in Tigers history. Other notable relievers in Tigers history have
been Ugueth Urbina, Terry Fox, Chief Hogsett, Mike Marshall, Jason Grilli, Al Benton, active players Fernando Rodney and Francisco Rodriguez.
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