What does a guy have to do to lose a spot in the rotation?

I was hoping that I’d be able to link to a story about how Adam Bernero has been demoted from the starting rotation after another ineffective outing. Alas, no such article exists…yet. Bernero’s ERA has climbed all the way to 6.05. He failed to go 4 innings for the second time in his last 4 starts, and hasn’t had a quality start since June 11.

What’s frustrating is that the Tigers have other options to take his spot. Wil Ledezma definitely comes to mind (although he didn’t help his cause giving up a couple runs last night). Also, Shane Loux has pitched well for Toledo (8-4, 2.79 ERA). I don’t know that Ledezma or Loux will be great starters, but given Bernero’s recent performance the time has come to give either one a chance.

Miscellaney Gene Kingsale cleared waivers and accepted an assignment to Toledo… Anthony Giarratano and Jay Sborz both signed, leaving Kyle Sleeth as the only one of the top 5 picks not signed.

Munson unlikely to play catcher

Munson unlikely to play catcher

“Because of a lack of production at the position, the thought of trying Eric as a catcher has come up occasionally in our meetings,” Tigers president and general manager Dave Dombrowski said. “But it’s not something to think about right now.

This discussion would have made sense before they had moved Eric to third base. He’s done an admirable job of making the switch, and I think another position change at this point might ruin him. Although, I would have given this more serious consideration if Travis Chapman were still on the roster.

Tigers not likely to Make Deadline Moves

From Jason Beck (MLB.com)

The end of contracts to Halter, Sparks, Craig Paquette and Dean Palmer removes nearly $18 million from the Tigers payroll, not including the end of obligations for former GM Randy Smith and ex-manager Phil Garner.

Really, there is very little tradeable value on the team. I heard one rumor that Houston was interested in Shane Halter, but I wouldn’t see the Tigers getting much in return. I don’t think any team would offer enough to get Dmitri Young away from the Tigers. First his salary is prohibitive. Second, if you take Dmitri off this team, you’re going to have a hard time spending that $18 million that frees up next year because no one will come here. They’ll have a tough enough time enticing free agents as it is.

The only other tradeable players are in the bullpen, and they are Jamie Walker and Steve Sparks. After Avery’s first few outings, he looked like a possible trade candidate (veteran/lefty/cheap). Unfortunately he has struggled since and probably has no trade value.

Other than some Detroit-Toledo shuffling, I would be surprised to see the Tigers roster change until the September call-ups.

Half way to 40

At the half way point of the season, the Tigers are on pace to go 40-122. What’s surprising is that the Tigers won their second game in a row against the Blue Jays. It’s only the 4th time this season they’ve had a mulitple game win streak, and it will be thier first series win at home this year.

Matt Roney gave up 1 hit in 7 innings of shut out ball. Actually, the hit he did allow went off the glove of Shane Halter and may have been an error. In the end it was probably better that it was ruled a hit so that Tram wouldn’t have had to pull Roney with a no-hitter on the line (he threw 96 pitches). It was a tremendous performance from Roney, who failed to go 4 innings in his first two starts. Granted, those starts were at Coors and Fenway, two places that aren’t the pitcher friendly park that Comerica is. However, Comerica’s spacious outfield wasn’t really a factor because 12 of Roney’s outs were ground balls (okay, so the long infield grass may have helped).

Offensively the Tigers deposited two home runs over the temporary fence in left. Those two homers came from Craig Monroe in the first, and shockingly Ramon Santiago. It was Santiago’s first home run since June 19th, 2002. Santiago has reached base safely in all 5 games since assuming the starting shortstop role from Omar Infante. Trammell rewarded him by moving him up to the number two spot tonight.

Sidenote Welcome to all of you who are coming over from Baseball Musings. Thanks to Dave Pinto for the plug. His is a great site. Also, if you’re looking for a Toronto Blue Jays blog, check out the Batter’s Box.

Closing the books on June

Alan Trammell said that when the weather warmed up, so would the bats. Unfortunately it was the opponents bats who got hot. The Tiger pitchers had a brutal month with a team ERA of 5.36, almost a run a game higher than they had coming into the month. Everybody thought that the Tiger pitching staff was a pleasant surprise so far. I hope this isn’t a sign that they are returning to their “true” talent level. Nate Cornejo had a particularly rough month going 0-3 in 6 starts with a 6.96 ERA. (I’m working on some additional Nate Cornejo analysis that I should have in a week or so). Jeremy Bonderman on the other hand had a pretty strong month. He led Tiger pitchers in innings for the month. Don’t worry, he’s not being abused as pitch counts in his six starts were 92-81-91-90-91-106. He has a string of 5 consecutive quality starts and he hasn’t allowed a walk in 27.2 innings. Not surprisingly, Tram shook up the rotation, inserting Matt Roney and demoting Gary Knotts.

Month Record Runs Per Game
(AL Rank)
BA
(rank)
OPS
(rank)
BB
(rank)
ERA
(Rank)
OPP OPS BB
(rank)
April 3-20 2.35 (14) .184 (14) .520 (14) 69 (12) 4.82 (11) .806 (11) 75 (4)
May 11-18 3.55 (T-13) .242 (13) .668 (13) 90 (T-3) 4.16 (5) .695 (2) 103 (14)
June 5-22 3.52 (14) .247 (13) .617 (14) 66 (13) 5.36 (10) .805 (11) 91 (11)

The offense put up very similar numbers in June as they did in May. This seems to indicate that this team is in fact a .245 hitting team, and not just hitting poorly for 3 months. The most disturbing drop-off is in walks. In May, the Tigers did a good job of drawing walks. In June, their walks dropped by a third. I don’t know if this is because pitchers aren’t the least bit afraid of the Tigers, or if it’s because the Tiger hitters are pressing and swinging at more bad pitches. As far as individual performances go, Dmitri Young continues to swing well (.326/.414/.652) and will actually be a legitimate All-Star instead of just the token Tiger rep. Also, despite a recent slump, Eric Munson has hit .282/.313/.500 for the month (despite some shaky defense). Kevin Witt has filled in nicely for Carlos Pena hitting .289/.304/.434. Warren Morris has been a pleasant surprise and has added some offense to the number 2 slot. The rest of the team has still been bad. Especially bad has been Bobby Higginson. For the month he has hit Inge-like numbers of .156/.230/.195. That type of production isn’t acceptable from a back-up catcher-let alone your corner outfielder/number 3 hitter.

June also marked the start of the Toledo-Detroit shuttle bus. Brandon Inge, Omar Infante, Franklyn German, Gary Knotts, and Gene Kingsale were all sent down this month. Andres Torres recently began his second tour of duty, and Ernie Young has already come and gone. It’s hard to say what other moves we can expect in July. I would suspect that Steve Avery is close to making a Toledo return. Since his first couple outings, he’s been hit hard. Also Adam Bernero is probably close to losing his spot in the rotation. The likely candidates to replace him are Wil Ledezma or Shane Loux.

Highlight of the MonthAfter taking the first two games against San Diego, the Tigers weren’t the worst team in baseball. A distinction they held for all of 17 hours
Lowlight of the MonthPretty much everything since then.

Maroth slows down the Jays

When the Tigers beat the Blue Jays last night, they not only snapped a nine game losing streak, they also broke a string of 7 straight losses to Toronto. Maroth pitched well, giving up 2 runs in 7 innings, and this time he had something to show for it. With the exception of a bloop induced jam in the 7th, it was the only time Maroth ran into trouble. Chris Mears came on and pitched 2 scoreless innings, with some nice defense from Pena and Torres.

Offensively, the Tigers dropped 3 bunts for hits, and Ramon Santiago reached base 3 times (twice on HBP’s). The difference was the Tigers got hits with men on. Morris doubled in a run, Munson had a pinch hit single with the bases loaded, and AJ Hinch hit a two run homer.

For the second game in a row the Tigers went with Sanchez in center, and Torres in right. While Torres isn’t great defensively, he can get to more balls than Sanchez can. I’m just not sure why Sanchez continues to play center. Regardless, the Tigers got number 19. Let’s just hope that 20 comes soon.