Category: Game Post

  • Game 2009.113: Tigers at Red Sox

    PREGAME: For everyone expecting fireworks tonight I think you’ll be disappointed. Yes, there is considerable hate and vitriol between the fan bases today, but Jim Leyland and Terry Francona have likely spoken to each other and their teams and have no interest in seeing this continue. Throw in the fact that the umpires are likely on high alert and warnings and ejections would come quickly and most likely nothing happens tonight.

    Not to mention the fact that Zach Miner who pitched 2 innings on Monday night is the emergency starter. And Freddy Dolsi who was recalled to take Chris Lambert’s spot pitched 2 innings last night. And Leyland would probably like to give Fu-Te Ni another night off. And the Tigers just don’t have a lot of pitching options at this point.

    Oh, and Miguel Cabrera is out of the lineup tonight with Marcus Thames taking his spot in the lineup and Carlos Guillen taking his spot in the field (*gasp*).

    And Josh Beckett is starting for the Red Sox. Things certainly aren’t tilting the Tigers way heading into tonight’s game…then again how big would a win be tonight?

    Detroit vs. Boston – August 12, 2009 | MLB.com: Gameday

    POSTGAME: Well we knew this one was an uphill battle from the start. But through 4 innings I actually felt pretty good about things. Zach Miner wasn’t nibbling, and he was battling a small strike zone (more on this in a minute) and for those first 3 innings there were only 2 balls hit hard off of him – they both left the yard – but he wasn’t pitching bad. On the other side Josh Beckett was tossing a perfect game, but the Tigers were putting in good at-bats. After 4 innings Beckett had thrown 69 pitches, and he’d only allowed one batter, meaning the Tigers were averaging over 5 pitchers per plate appearance.

    A Carlos Guillen lead off homer in the 5th and I started to dream a little. What if the bullpen can hold them at 3 or 4 runs the rest of the game? What if they chase Beckett by the 7th? Could they get a bloop and a blast and tie it?

    Then the bottom of the 5th happened.

    It was a brutal, miserable, Metrodome type of inning. With 2 outs the Sox posted a double, then a single. And Miner was done at that point, having gone an inning farther than I thought he would have. Freddy Dolsi got 2 strikes on Mike Lowell, sawed him off, but Lowell placed an infield single between the mound and second base. Then there was a walk. Another single loaded the bases for Varitek who then “walked.”

    Freddy Dolsi walks Jason Varitek
    Freddy Dolsi "walks" Jason Varitek

    I mentioned a small strike zone earlier. Here is the gameday image of the “walk” to Jason Varitek. I really don’t know what else Dolsi could have done in that at-bat, but in the end it ended up an RBI for Varitek. Now the small zone wasn’t just an issue for the Tigers, it was pretty uniformly small for both teams. The biggest squeezing just happened to come at the worst possible time for the Tigers.

    After the walk things got really ugly. There was a passed ball. And another error. And a reminder why Guillen no longer plays first base. And there were more hits. And then the game was practically over and you just hoped nobody got hurt.

    • The Tigers didn’t strand any runners in scoring position tonight
    • They only had to cobble together 8 innings from their pen
    • Fernando Rodney and Brandon Lyon are both fresh and ready to go tomorrow
    • Marcus Thames homered.

    See. There was lots of good news.

  • Game 2009.112: Tigers at Red Sox

    PREGAME: The Tigers look for an elusive road win once again, this time it will be against Junichi Tazawa making his first big league start. Tazawa will take on Rick Porcello who has already had one rough start against the Red Sox this year.

    Tazawa is a righty, but he fared much better against lefties in his minor league stint. He fans 25% of lefties and only 20% of righties. Righties tag him for a 16% line drive rate and lefties are only at 10.6%.

    The Tigers will hope to get Porcello through 6 innings which will be no small feat. Although the last time Edwin Jackson lasted only 4 innings, Porcello came back and gave the team 8 innings of work.

    Your Adam Everett-less lineup is:

    1. Granderson, CF
    2. Polanco, 2B
    3. Thomas, LF
    4. Cabrera, 1B
    5. Guillen, DH
    6. Ordonez, RF
    7. Avila, C
    8. Inge, 3B
    9. Santiago, SS

    Detroit vs. Boston – August 11, 2009 | MLB.com: Gameday

  • Game 2009.111: Tigers at Red Sox

    PREGAME: The Tigers once again venture out beyond the gated community at Montcalm and Witheral to slay road dragons. The Red Sox 35-17 home mark is pretty daunting, but the Sox are struggling and have dropped 6 games in a row and are now tied for the Wild Card with the Rangers.

    The Tigers send out Edwin Jackson who pitched into the 9th inning his last time out. Jackson faced the Red Sox 4 times last year, but didn’t get a win despite the fact that 2 of his starts were quite impressive.

    Brad Penny goes for the Red Sox tonight. He’s allowed at least 5 runs in 3 of his last 4 starts. The Tigers saw Penny once last year, and chased him in the 4th inning after 7 runs had scored.

    Detroit vs. Boston – August 10, 2009 | MLB.com: Gameday

    POSTGAME: This one was a heartbreaker. Not because this was one of the games where the pitching match-up favored the Tigers, but because the Tigers played a pretty good game but just came up a run short despite the fact their starter only recorded 12 outs. They played good defense, they got some clutch hits, they hit the ball hard pretty consistently, but in the end they came up a run short, and left the tying run on 3rd and the go ahead run on 2nd in the 8th inning…

    The Adam Everett at-bat was awful. One of the worst things I’ve ever seen with 3 swings at balls that weren’t even in the vicinity of the strike zone. Which begged the question as to why he wasn’t pinch hit for, and I can actually defend it. Everett is a bad hitter, but the Tigers didn’t need a hit. They needed somebody to put the ball in play. Aside from Polanco do you know who strikes out least frequently on the entire team? Adam Everett. That he failed so spectacularly and in the fashion he did was a surprise.

    • Everett had that awful at-bat, but he also played some terrific defense tonight and had a sacrifice bunt.
    • Jackson wasn’t good. He was hit hard and often and he threw a lot of pitches. I did like the one he planted in Youkilis’ ribs after Cabrera was hit the inning before.
    • Fu-Te Ni gave up a monster induced homer, but otherwise battled for 2 innings as he amassed 50 pitches.
    • Magglio Ordonez is ripping the ball all over the place and it’s nice to see even if it means the option vests.
    • Placido Polanco is ripping the ball all over the place and his average touched 280 after his 2 out rbi single
    • Zach Miner since July 1st has pitched 16.2 innings and allowed 11 runs, 11 walks, and 19 hits. His place on the team is befuddling to me right now.
  • Game 2009.110: Twins at Tigers

    PREGAME: Well, at least the Tigers aren’t facing Carl Pavano again today. Instead they get Scott Baker who more than holds his own against the Tigers. The Tigers send out Jarrod Washburn who has hopefully overcome his new-team jitters (why didn’t Pavano have new-team jitters?).

    Minnesota vs. Detroit – August 9, 2009 | MLB.com: Gameday

  • Game 2009.109: Twins at Tigers

    PREGAME: Normally when Justin Verlander takes the mound I like the Tigers chances of winning. But he hasn’t yet faced the unstoppable force that is Carl Pavano. In an effort to irritate Tigers fans everywhere the Twins acquired Pavano in a waiver trade and inserted him into the rotation.

    After Pavano stymied the Tigers for a 3rd time last weekend, he lowered his ERA against Detroit to 1.93. He has a 6.16 ERA in the rest of his starts.

    Verlander is coming off another dominating 7 inning shut out performance. Those 7 innings came after a 5 run first inning though.

    Minnesota vs. Detroit – August 8, 2009 | MLB.com: Gameday

  • Game 2009.108: Twins at Tigers

    PREGAME: The Tigers come into this series having just won 2 of 8 games they’ve played against the Twins this year. That’s not good, but with 6 of the 8 games so far coming in the Metrodome it is at least understandable. With this weekend’s games in Detroit though there are no excuses and the Tigers need to take care of business.

    The Twins are sitting 4.5 games out of the lead while the Tigers cling to a 2 game buffer in the Central. This is a big series for both teams with the Tigers needing to take care of things while at home and the Twins trying to stay in the race.

    Minnesota sends out Anthony Swarzak. The numbers aren’t overly impressive (3.1 BB/9, 5.0 K/9) but he is a 23 year old roookie and with a 4.69 ERA over his first 9 starts he is holding his own. In his brief career his numbers are much better on the road where he has held the opposition to a .534 OPS in 4 starts.

    Armando Galarraga gets the start for Detroit. Galarraga was pummeled by the Indians last Sunday kind of erasing some of the progress he had made over his last handful of starts. He’ll be throwing to the Alex Avila again. On the radio pregame show Leyland wanted Avila to catch for Porcello and Galarraga because he felt they were the easiest to catch. I don’t know what that means exactly, but I like the fact he gets to play back to back days.

    Minnesota vs. Detroit – August 7, 2009 | MLB.com: Gameday

    POSTGAME: This game had a little bit of everything. Early offense. Dramatic plays at the plate. An ejection. A near come back. It even had some good pitching (Brian Duensing fanned 5 and last 4.2 innings saving the Twins bullpen from disarray).

    • Alex Avila is making everyone in the Tigers organization look like a genius, and making me look like an idiot for questioning the move. I’d grown leary of calling up a prospect to provide a spark. It’s only been 2 games but so far the sparking is working.
    • Give credit for Leyland sticking with Galarraga after 2 awful innings. He managed to chew through 3 more innings after that. Not that Galarraga was good, but he did make it through 5.
    • On the Granderson play, I was in the car and didn’t see it. The replay available online is inconclusive so I won’t comment on the call.
    • I loved Carlos Guillen going for home on that play. Yeah, he was out, but I don’t mind a smart attempt at a hustle play, and coming after 4 runs it wasn’t a bad gamble. My favorite part of the play though was Rod Allen’s uncontrollable giggling when Guillen was clearly gassed on those last 90 feet.
    • That good bullpenning the Tigers had been getting bailed on them last night with Perry and Rodney both surrendering multiple runs. And Brandon Lyon had already done the heavy lifting for Rodney by getting Mauer/Morneau in the 8th.
    • Yes, the Tigers weren’t good in runner on third less than 2 out situations again, but they did playte 10 runs so it makes it a little harder to complain.
  • Game 2009.107: Orioles at Tigers

    PREGAME: It’s Rick Porcello taking on David Hernandez today. And Alex Avila makes his debut. And Matt Wieters is young. The combined age of the Tigers battery is 42. The combined age of the O’s battery is 47. Play ball.

    Baltimore vs. Detroit – August 6, 2009 | MLB.com: Gameday

    POSTGAME: There’s so much to like  about this game. Avila has a very impressive debut with a single, a double, an RBI, a run scored, and some lengthy at-bats even when he made outs. And he caught 4 innings of no hit ball from Rick Porcello. Not a bad way to start your career.

    Everybody got in on the fun, with the exception of Miguel Cabrera. Brandon Inge hit his first homer since before the All Star Break. magglio Ordonez hit another ball hard. Curtis Granderson flashed some extra base power. Hopefully these are signs the team is breaking out of it’s collective offensive funk. Or maybe it was just a fluke, but at least they won.

    The pitching was quite good with the exception of Bobby Seay who didn’t feel secure in his strike zone. Ni was very good, Lyon bailed out Seay and got the save. And the kid certainly built on his previous outing even though he kind of wore down towards the end. Good win. Good series.

  • Game 2009.106:Orioles at Tigers

    PREGAME: Don’t look know, but the last turn through the Tigers rotation was not good at all. Edwin Jackson threw 115 pitches in 4 innings his last time out. Armando Galarraga was rocked. Justin Verlander gave up 5 runs in his first inning of work. Jarrod Washburn had a less than stellar debut. Rick Porcello was the only bright spot.

    I bring this up because it is Jackson’s turn once again. The Tigers need to start taking care of business against the bottom dwellers in the league and they need their stud pitching to be stud pitching. To channel Jim Leyland, “I’m not calling anyone out and Jackson has been a horse for us, but he needs to give us more than his last time out. That’s not calling anyone out, that’s just a fact.” Of course Jackson nearly had himself a complete game last time out against the O’s, so that is a positive indicator.

    Jeremy Guthrie takes the mound for the Orioles. He’s allowed 26 homers this year. Hopefully we all get some Arby’s tomorrow.

    Baltimore vs. Detroit – August 5, 2009 | MLB.com: Gameday

    POSTGAME: First of all I want to clear up some confusion, Leyland didn’t make the above quote. That was an imitation. Sorry. That said, Jackson certainly delivered tonight. My goodness did he deliver. He was getting all those swings and misses that he couldn’t muster in Cleveland to the tune of 8 K’s. Do you realize the only time an outfielder made a play on a ball for the first 5 innings was when Curtis Granderson chased down Gerald Laird’s errant throw?  It was a remarkable effort.

    And once again it looked like the Tigers team would need every bit of that effort. Clete Thomas and Carlos Guillen made bids for homers to left center, but both were tracked down. It was a Magglio Ordonez line drive homer off a 92mph fastball that looked to be the difference maker, until a 3 run 8th inning provided enough breathing room.

    • Ordonez and Everett put good swings on the ball every time up. Ordonez added a single to the aforementioned homer. He also hit into a GIDP but once again the ball was well hit. Everett sent balls to the warning track in left and right  before getting a big single in the 8th.
    • Speaking of Everett, a day after I ask for more from him on defense he delivers. He made a sensational play to take a hit away from Adam Jones.
    • Two outs on the bases are never a good thing. The Thomas pickoff with 2 outs and Cabrera up wasn’t exactly the way you draw it up. Laird was out on a hustle play, I don’t have too much of a problem with that.
  • Game 2009.105: Orioles at Tigers

    PREGAME: The Tigers certainly keep things interesting for us bloggers. The simple game story would be to talk about Jarrod Washburn’s Tigers debut. But Leyland and Dombrowski shook up the roster and the lineup tonight by recalling Wilkin Ramirez.

    From the Orioles perspective they have a debut of their own with Brian Matusz, their first round pick from last year, making his debut.

    As of “press time” I don’t know the lineup, but visions of a Ramirez/Raburn/Ordonez outfield with Washburn on the mound certainly isn’t reassuring. EDIT: Yep. That’s the outfield tonight.

    Here is your Wilkin-ized lineup:

    1. Ramirez, LF
    2. Polanco, 2B
    3. Ordonez, RF
    4. Cabrera, 1B
    5. Thames, DH
    6. Raburn, CF
    7. Inge, 3B
    8. Laird, C
    9. Everett, SS

    POSTGAME: I’m sure that’s not the way that Jarrod Washburn wanted his debut to go (I encourage you take check out Samara’s Lion King-esque artistic interpretation). The first couple innings were rough for Washburn before he settled in and got on a nice role…until Nick Markakis launched one almost onto the concourse.

    The offense put together good at-bats early on, but not at-bats resulting in enough hits, and once again the big hit never came and the team seemed to press more. Some Zach Miner add on runs and it was a blow-out, the second on in 3 days and both to inferior teams.

    • Adam Everett didn’t make 2 tough plays and both led to runs. Neither play was easy, but those are the plays Everett needs to make. He’s not here for his bat, and as his offensive numbers plummet it’s important he makes the tough and routine plays.
    • Zach Miner has to stop walking people. It cost him and Washburn a run when he walked the number 8 hitter to load the bases.
  • Game 2009.104: Orioles at Tigers

    PREGAME: It’s looking like there might be some weather tonight, and a mid game rain delay would really work against the Tigers with their ace on the bump.

    Justin Verlander has stepped up huge like his last 2 times out with a complete game against the White Sox when the team was reeling, and a 13 K’ performance against the Rangers when the team was reeling. The Tigers are more floundering now than reeling, but another ace-esque performance should come in handy. The O’s ran his pitch count to 112 in 6 innings the last time the teams met.

    Chris Tillman will make his 2nd career start tonight. He was knocked out with 2 outs in the 5th inning after 93 pitches and 3 runs against the Royals in his debut.

    Baltimore vs. Detroit – August 3, 2009 | MLB.com: Gameday

    POSTGAME: Ideally you don’t need a walk-off homer when a rookie pitcher is going up against the staff ace, but a walk-off is a walk-off. No complaints here. Thank you very much Clete Thomas.

    Justin Verlander got knocked around pretty good in the first inning. I was out with the family and was recording the game. I was on fast forward through the opening and before I could hit stop 1 run was in and 2 were on base. I couldn’t believe how the hits rolled of the bat and the night had disaster all over it, but the Tigers answered right away.

    After 2 games with no extra base hits, the Tigers started off triple, double, walk, double. And then Verlander locked in. He came up with 9 K’s and amazingly lasted 8 innings. Verlander is a stud.

    • Miguel Cabrera has been maligned for his lack of clutch production, but he got the big 2 run double in the first and the game tying homer later on. In between he hit a ball sharply up the middle that Brian Roberts made a nice play on
    • The defense was also impressive with Cabrera making a nice play at first and Marcus Thames making some dramatic catches in left field.
    • The offense overall was impressive. They plated 6, but made a number of hard outs as well. They were consistently centering the ball for a change.
    • Fernando Rodney was quite good, fanning Luke Scott and getting a couple of quick outs for the win.
    • But I have to mention one negative and that was Granderson. He’s looked lost at the plate too often since the Texas series. He did smoke his triple tonight, and hit another ball well. But his last 2 at-bats were awful. He got ahead 2-0 in his next to last PA and tried pulling a fastball off the plate. In the 9th he was ahead 3-1 and swung at ball 4, again off the plate, before taking strike 3 right down the middle. I’m not hating on Grandy, he’s still my Tiger, but there have been too many of those types of “backwards” at-bats lately. He’s taking too many good ones and swinging at too many bad ones and the check swings are on the rise. He may need a day off and I wouldn’t mind seeing him take a breather the next time there is a lefty starter.
  • Game 2009.103: Tigers at Indians

    PREGAME: Maybe the third time will be a charm. Armando Galarraga and the Tigers take on Carl Pavano for the 3rd time this year. Galarraga pitched kind of okay in both of the previous outings, and the bullpen would allow an add on run or two. But the Tigers couldn’t do much of anything against Pavano and a bullpen come back ended up a run or two short.

    Time to flip the script today.

    Pavano has thrown his 2 best games against the Tigers but he has allowed 4 homers in each of his last 2 starts. Hopefully the home run ball is still working because a win today means a rare .500 road trip.

    Detroit vs. Cleveland – August 2, 2009 | MLB.com: Gameday

    POSTGAME: Pathetic. I’m not sure what was worse, Galarraga or the 8 guys behind him. Carl Pavano has a 6.16 ERA against teams that aren’t the Tigers and a 1.93 ERA against Detroit. That is all.

  • Game 2009.102: Tigers at Indians

    PREGAME: Not that there isn’t any pressure on Rick Porcello today, but Edwin Jackson’s struggles and some extra innings have thinned out the bullpen a little. Fortunately Jim Leyland made sure that only Brandon Lyon would be unavailable today with everybody else working relatively short outings.

    And things haven’t been easy for Porcello lately. Maybe he was rusty after a multi-week layoff in his first post All Star start. Maybe he was a little amped up on national TV in his second start. Or maybe he’s just struggling.

    The Tigers bats will try to knock around Jeremy Sowers. Sowers shutout the Mariners for 7 innings his last time out, but that has been the extent of good news with Sowers this year. He hasn’t started against the Tigers this year but he held them to 1 run over 6 innings last September.

    Detroit vs. Cleveland – August 1, 2009 | MLB.com: Gameday

    POSTGAME: I recently started a diet and these extra inning games are keeping me up to late and it’s making me hungry, but the postgame celery tastes much sweeter after a win.

    Rick Porcello was outstanding and I’d call this his best outing of the season. He got some swings and misses, and he got lots and lots of swings and ground balls. He kept the ball down, he controlled the sink on his 2 seamer and his breaking ball was excellent. The fact he was able to eat 8 innings on only 91 pitches on a night when the bullpen was taxed was huge. And that brings us to the 9th inning.

    I completely understand the sentiment to keep Porcello on the mound for the 9th. He was cruising and didn’t appear to be tiring and was still a hair under his pitch count limit. Porcello hasn’t gone over 100 pitches this year as Leyland tries to protect his arm for beyond this season. If he was going to let Porcello exceed that limit, today certainly would have been a worthy cause. But I fully support going to Rodney in that situation.

    Porcello hasn’t been stretched out yet and Rodney has been very good in save situations. I’d rather have a fresh guy than someone who was pretty much at the limit his arm has been conditioned for. Rodney blew his first save and Porcello doesn’t get the win, but it doesn’t mean Porcello’s performance was wasted at all.

    As for the offense, the good news is that they kept generating scoring chances and eventually they cashed in. And in watching the at-bats tonight, I thought many of them were decent approaches. They worked the count (after the first time through the order). They fouled off pitches. They drew walks. Inge hit a fly ball to the wall. Raburn and Polanco hit liners to second. Those were simply bad breaks.

    The bullpenning was pretty good and Ryan Perry looks so much better after his stay in the minors. Throw in some Bobby Seay magic and Zach Miner not blowing it and it’s another much needed win.