Navin Field

………………………Detroit Tigers Weblog: From “Sock it to ‘em” to “Bless You Boys” to “Gum Time” and beyond…

May
29

Game 53

Posted by Chris

Wire to wire?

No, this is not a story about the 1984 Tigers’ season.  It is about yesterday’s game.  The Tigers led from the get go in this one.  They scored three runs in the first inning, and that was all Armando Galarraga would need.  He ended up going 8 1/3 innings before even getting into a bit of trouble, and if he hadn’t given up a couple runs in the ninth, he would have likely gotten to pitch through the frame and get the shutout.  He only threw 104 pitches.

A couple things took place with the lineup that many fans on many message boards have been screaming for.  First of all, Brandon Inge played third base and made a couple plays look easy that Carlos Guillen has booted in recent games.  Unfortunately for this one, Guillen will likely be the third sacker in upcoming appearances.

Secondly, it looks like Marcus Thames will finally get his shot to show what he has to offer.  We’ve seen it before.  In 2006, Thames had a career year when he actually got to play in 110 games.  For some reason, however, he lost his starting job in 2007 with the acquisition of Gary Sheffield, and then no matter what happened, it looked like he would get blocked by younger, and to this point, less talented players.

This doesn’t really make sense because Jim Leyland will forgo defense at third base, supplanting Brandon Inge, for a better hitter.  He will forgo defense at center field when left-handed pitchers take the ball against the Tigers, supplanting Curtis Granderson for a better hitter against lefties (more on this later), and he will forgo defense at first base to let Miguel Cabrera get a bat in his hands.

For some reason, though, left field has always been a place where Leyland has gone for the better defender as opposed to the better hitter.  Matt Joyce did well, but cooled off, and he is, for the most part, unproven.  Clete Thomas covered center field well with Granderson gone, but he isn’t the power hitter anyone else that could take the position is.  Ryan Raburn is supposed to be better defensively than any left fielder we have out there, but he hasn’t show his skills with the bat as much as anyone that has played for the Tigers as long or longer than Thames.

But for some reason, Leyland likes to put the best defensive option in left.  Maybe it’s because of all the balls getting by Guillen that Inge would swallow up.  Or maybe it is because of all the balls that get through the hole at short because Edgar Renteria has limited range anymore.  It just doesn’t make sense.  Jim Leyland lets offense trump defense at any other position except the least important defensive position on the field.

Until yesterday.

Leyland finally decided to give Thames his shot.  With Sheffield out, there isn’t much more he could do to be honest.  He also decided to allow Granderson to start at leadoff against Joe Saunders, a lefty.

And what do you know, it worked…

Granderson singled to start the game, and two batters later, Thames homered, making the score 2-0.  The Tigers added another run in the frame and then scored two more in the fifth when Thames homered yet again.  Granderson ended up two for five and Thames had four RBI in the contest, making Jim Leyland look like a genius for at least one day.  The problem is, why wasn’t any of this done earlier?

Hopefully, the Tigers, who play the lowly Mariners in a three-game set starting tomorrow will catch a bit of fire on the backs of the new lineup.  Hopefully, they get back to .500 before the All-Star break.  Hopefully, it’s not too late to catch the division-leading White Sox who sit 6 1/2 games ahead of Detroit at this point.  It seems that Jim Leyland is too stubborn to make changes until all else has failed.  He moved Gary Sheffield in and out of left to no avail.  Sheffield started hitting and then came up lame running out a grounder.  What did he go on the disabled list for?  An oblique?  That doesn’t make any sense either.

If Sheffield had a hurt oblique, it was likely hurt before he came up lame on the grounder, but he was too stubborn to take himself out of the lineup.  Leyland, who at times, thinks this team is the 1997 Marlins and Sheffield is still 30 years old, figures the guy’s thirty-year-old body can fight through it.  Unfortunately, the year is 2008, and Sheffield is older than dirt.  The guy needs his rest, and it’s high time he gets it.  Remember, this guy was 20-20 last year, and could have gone 30-30 if it weren’t for late season injuries that he also refused to sit out for.  Maybe history repeats itself.

Well, if Sheffield can come back healthy, he deserves his chance, but if Thames is raking, it will make the decision all that much harder to make to put him back in the lineup.  If Thames hits ten home runs in the next three weeks and then Sheffield is ready to come back, the decision will be difficult to put Sheffield back in at designated hitter.

For anyone except Jim Leyland…

Apr
06

Game 5

Posted by Chris

Starting to get worried here.

I mean it’s only five games, but the Tigers are now officially the last team to get a win. That is, assuming they get a win, which doesn’t look like it will be happening soon.

Dontrelle Willis gave up only one hit.

Which is good.

But he walked seven.

That is bad.

Zach Miner came in and, just like every first reliever before him, couldn’t get it done. He allowed all of Willis’ inherited runners to score, and then he tacked on one of his own, and before you knew it, a 3-0 Tiger lead (their first lead in seemingly forever) was blown, and the score was 4-3 White Sox.

It seemed like the whole team gave up right there, the White Sox added an insurance run in the eighth and took the game 5-3.

I’m not quite sure what to say here. I mean every season for the Tigers since 2004 has been more anticipated then the next. It went from being competitive in 2004 to supposedly having a winning record in 2005 to the addition of Kenny Rogers and a healthy Magglio Ordonez in 2006 to attempting to repeat as AL champs in 2007 to the best Tiger lineup ever assembled (or at least since Charlie Gehringer played) in 2008.

But this isn’t working out, and I’m not sure what they need at this point. What would be nice is a win to get them over the hump, because if it doesn’t come tomorrow, it only gets tougher as they face the Boston Red Sox in Boston in the World Series Champs’ home opener starting Tuesday.

Maybe a day off is what they need. Or maybe they need Crash Davis to give them a rainout a la “Bull Durham.” Whatever it is, they need a win to come and come soon. Even though it is a marathon as opposed to a sprint like every pundit and talking head always says, it’s hard to win a marathon if you are kneecapped in the first mile of the race…

Apr
05

Game 4

Posted by Chris

Well, that was ugly.

At least the bats woke up (kind of).

The score was tied at five after three innings and then Robertson settled down. But just like last year, it seemed the Tigers would score a bunch early and then take the rest of the night off.

I’d say the bullpen let us down again, but that’s not really the case. Sure, they gave up three runs in four innings, and didn’t look very great, but the Tigers had six innings and didn’t score any more runs. They should have had at least three more themselves.

I think they miss Curtis Granderson more than one might think. Even when the leadoff hitter gets on, like Clete Thomas did tonight, Placido Polanco just looks uncomfortable out there. He’s hitting .105, and I can’t remember him hitting a ground ball to the right side yet this season.

Granted, I haven’t seen every at bat, but I’ve seen enough to know that he’s off. And how he goes, so go the Tigers. He doesn’t get the RBI’s, but he moves the runner over so a sac fly scores one. If he’s not hitting, it doesn’t matter if Sheffield or Ordonez are or aren’t.

So now the Tigers stand at 0-4. At the beginning of a season, to win 100 games, it would take a .617 winning percentage. To go the rest of the way and win 100, the Tigers would need to win at a .632 clip. It doesn’t seem like much, but, to be honest, the .015 difference is larger than I would have thought.

Hopefully they won’t lose 119 this year…

That would be crazy…

Apr
04

Game 3

Posted by Chris

Okay…

Now, I want to know what is going on. I said yesterday that if the game went 20 innings, the Tigers likely wouldn’t have scored a run, and now the next day, they go another nine and score exactly that. One Run.

Against the Royals. I mean everyone expected them to be better this year, but the pitching is either phenomenal, or the Tigers hitters are in some kind of slump. I missed this game because I was at a training class, but I was watching it on Gameday, and I can’t, for the life of me figure out why Gary Sheffield would try to stretch a single into a double when the team needed baserunners, not one run.

Anyway, the Tigers are now 0-3. Yes 0-3, and they have to go to Chicago for three games starting tomorrow. They haven’t won a season series against the White Sox in as long as I can remember. If they don’t watch it, they will be 0-6, and though it is a long season, no team wants to start in that type of hole.

The worst part is that this purchased lineup, the second biggest payroll in baseball, scored exactly six runs in 29 innings in three games. The Royals now likely have the lowest ERA in baseball, and it is because they beat up on the Tigers. Sure, they still owe the Tigers some payback from beating up on them the last few years, but how about in Kansas City? In May? Not in April in the opening week.

This is embarrassing, if you ask me. 0-3, 159 games to go. Three games behind. At least it is three behind the Royals, and not the Indians…

Apr
03

Game 2

Posted by Chris

Again, the Tigers pitcher got through three innings without giving up a hit. Again, he ran into a bit of trouble but came out of it giving up only a couple of runs, and again, the first reliever couldn’t keep the door shut, and again, the Tigers lose a game.

No biggie. Kenny Rogers looked good. He retired the first nine batters of the season. Hopefully, it won’t be like Rick Vaughn in Major League II. Anyway, he gave up two in the sixth, but got out of it. You have to figure on giving up three or four runs a game and hope your bats pull you out of it.

Anyway, Zach Miner gave up two in the seventh, and the bats never pulled anything out of anything. I don’t think the Tigers would have scored a run if the game went 20 innings, it was that bad. It just stinks that everyone is slumping to start the season. This team should average about six runs a game, and in two games, they have scored five.

The pitching isn’t bad, but Leyland can’t go to the bullpen like he used to with this Motley Crew. They’re all professionals, but the starter is going to have to go seven innings until he can at least get Fernando Rodney in the rotation. Regardless, the Tigers are 0-2 for the first time since 2003.

The worst part about it is that the Royals first two pitchers look better than Justin Verlander and Kenny Rogers. Hopefully, they will come back down to earth or this season could get mighty long.