<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?><rss xmlns:atom='http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom' xmlns:openSearch='http://a9.com/-/spec/opensearchrss/1.0/' version='2.0'><channel><atom:id>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13572325/posts/full</atom:id><lastBuildDate>Fri, 10 Nov 2006 04:57:43 +0000</lastBuildDate><title>Detroit Tigers @ Bare Baseball - Baseball MLB Blog</title><description></description><link>http://detroittigers.barebaseball.com</link><managingEditor>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</managingEditor><generator>Blogger</generator><openSearch:startIndex>1</openSearch:startIndex><openSearch:itemsPerPage>15</openSearch:itemsPerPage><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13572325/posts/full/115350218563480419</guid><pubDate>Fri, 21 Jul 2006 17:14:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-07-21T10:16:25.636-07:00</atom:updated><title>Tigers win longest NYP game</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">07/20/2006&lt;br />Deik Scram was having a rough afternoon on Thursday at KeySpan Park.&lt;br />But the center fielder delivered a two-run single in the 26th inning as the Oneonta Tigers defeated the Brooklyn Cyclones, 6-1, in the longest game in New York-Penn League history.&lt;br />An 18th-round pick by Detroit in the 2006 First-Year Player Draft, Scram was hitless in his first 11 at-bats as his batting average fell 38 points to .250. He redeemed himself in the 26th against Mark Wright, a first-year outfielder who had not pitched during three years at the University of Mississippi.&lt;br />After Wright (0-1) walked Jeffrey Kunkel and Joseph Tucker, both of whom moved into scoring position on Louis Ott's sacrifice, Scram singled through the right side to break a 1-1 deadlock. The base hit opened the floodgates for Oneonta (18-11).&lt;br />Singles by Scott Sizemore and Brennan Boesch produced another run before Sizemore scored on an error by first baseman Timothy Grogan to make it 5-1. With two outs, Angel Reyes singled to center field to cap the scoring.&lt;br />"He was trying to make sure he didn't walk anyone else," Brooklyn manager George Greer said of Wright, who pitched in high school. "He laid the ball in there, and they hit some ground balls that found holes."&lt;br />Randor Bierd (1-0), the Tigers' eighth pitcher, capped a spectacular effort by the bullpen with two scoreless innings. He allowed two hits and struck out one to secure Oneonta's fourth straight win.&lt;br />After starter Christopher Cody gave up one run on four hits over six innings, Timothy Robertson, Casey Fien, Derek Witt, Jose Fragoso, Brett Jensen, Christopher Krawczyk and Bierd combined for 20 scoreless frames.&lt;br />Fragoso held the Cyclones (13-16) hitless during his five-inning stint, limiting them to two walks while fanning two.&lt;br />The longest New York-Penn League game had been last year's 22-inning marathon between the Batavia Muckdogs and Auburn Doubledays. That contest started on July 7, was suspended after 20 innings and completed on Aug. 14. The longest game in Minor League history remains Pawtucket's 33-inning victory over Rochester that began on April 18, 1981, and ended two months later on June 23.&lt;br />Brooklyn had a handful of chances to stay out of the history books. In the 11th, the Cyclones' first two batters reached against Witt, but Jacob Eigsti bunted into a forceout, Timothy Grogan grounded out and Ivan Naccarata flied to center field.&lt;br />An inning later, Daniel Cummins reached on catcher's interference to load the bases with two outs before Jonathan Sanchez was retired on a grounder to second base. And in the 16th, Eigsti was hit by a pitch and sacrificed to second by Grogan. Naccarata flied out, Joe Holden was intentionally walked and Fragoso retired Jon Schemmel on a comebacker.&lt;br />"I'm disappointed we didn't win the game," Greer said. "As the opportunities presented themselves to us, we didn't take advantage."&lt;br />Oneonta was not without its chances in extra innings. Ryan Strieby led off the 12th with a double and pinch-runner Brandon Timm took third on Jordan Newton's sacrifice. But he was stranded as reliever Jeremy Mizell retired Tucker on a groundout and got Louis Ott on a called third strike.&lt;br />Tucker drew a leadoff walk in the 15th and made it to third with two outs before Boesch struck out. In the 22nd, the Tigers stranded a runner at third and in the 24th, they left the bases loaded.&lt;br />Brooklyn starter Eric Brown gave up one run on five hits over seven innings. He had a 1-0 lead until Strieby singled home Ronald Bourquin in the fourth. Six relievers blanked Oneonta for 18 innings until the five-run 26th.&lt;br />The teams combined for 34 hits -- just five for extra bases, 14 walks, seven walks and left 43 runners on base in the six-hour, 40-minute marathon. The game featured 684 pitches thrown by 15 pitchers, who combined for 36 strikeouts.&lt;br />Greer watched most of the record-setting marathon from the clubhouse. He was ejected in the bottom of the first after arguing a force play at second base.&lt;br />"It was just different," said Greer, who was involved in 19-inning Texas League game as a player in 1971. "I watched the game on closed circuit TV. ... You're not playing, you're watching. You can't seem to control anything when you're not involved."&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://www.minorleaguebaseball.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://detroittigers.barebaseball.com/2006/07/tigers-win-longest-nyp-game.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13572325/posts/full/115350207349769321</guid><pubDate>Fri, 21 Jul 2006 17:12:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-07-21T10:14:33.500-07:00</atom:updated><title>Notes: Tigers-Sox rivalry heats up</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">07/20/2006&lt;br />DETROIT -- What was originally described as an apology now seems to be part of a developing rivalry between the Tigers and White Sox.&lt;br />Craig Monroe wanted no part Wednesday night of a war of words when asked about his contact with catcher A.J. Pierzynski near home plate following Monroe's go-ahead grand slam. After reading comments from Pierzynski claiming Monroe apologized to him, plus comments from Sox pitcher Javier Vazquez taking issue with Monroe for watching the home run, Monroe wasn't going to keep quiet Thursday.&lt;br />Ironically, it was Vazquez, not Pierzynski, who took issue with Monroe on his home run posture.&lt;br />"He definitely did. But that's part of baseball," Vazquez said of Monroe after Wednesday's game. "Nowadays, guys who have hit 10 home runs in the big leagues think they can do that. That's something we see every day, not only him. Every day we see it."&lt;br />Monroe didn't want to make a big deal out of it after the game, saying he probably wouldn't have done it if he could do it all over. After reading Vazquez's comments, he wasn't quite so forgiving.&lt;br />"Here's 40,000 Tigers fans and probably one of the biggest moments for the Detroit Tigers," Monroe said. "So you know what? It's an exciting time. Don't be mad at me."&lt;br />Because the ball went down the left-field line, Monroe said, he took a second to make sure it was going to stay fair. From there, it was the heat of the moment. If they had wanted to hit him with a pitch for it, he said, he'd be happy to take his base.&lt;br />Dealing with Pierzynski was another matter. Though Monroe originally said the contact was his fault after the game, he also said he didn't want to start anything. Once he read Pierzynski's claims that Monroe apologized when he stepped to the plate in the eighth inning, he realized something had already started.&lt;br />"I don't really know if it was an apology," Monroe said. "Basically, I think I asked him in my sarcastic way, 'Is that elbow necessary? Was that really necessary?' I said, 'You understand the game. It was a big part of the game. It's a big moment.' Come on, let's be honest. It was a big moment for the Detroit Tigers. He nodded his head and sat back down, too. It wasn't really any confrontation. I said what I needed to say to let him know that I thought [the elbow] was unnecessary."&lt;br />Replays showed Pierzynski was right near home plate as Monroe crossed. The brush-up happened just as Monroe turned towards the dugout after being congratulated. The two could be seen exchanging words as Marcus Thames led Monroe back to the dugout.&lt;br />"I'm not trying to hurt my team by doing something to get ejected from the game and cost myself 10 days," he said. "This is a big, important time for us as a team. Why do something right now to cost yourself 10 days and not get a chance to do something to help your team win? I don't know if that's their way, but whatever.&lt;br />"To me, that's a sign that [Pierzynski] wants to do something. He wants to get in their heads. He wants to [tick] you off. He wants to make you mad. So now you get out of your game plan. You get out of what you're trying to do, and now you're playing mad and you're trying to do more, when in reality I don't have to do more, just continue to relax. Well, they're not going to change my mindset. I'm going to continue to do what I do."&lt;br />Thursday's remarks were news to Pierzynski, who said it was "bush league" for Monroe to alter his remarks.&lt;br />"He hits me and now he's accusing me of throwing an elbow," Pierzynski said. "You know, whatever. He's the one who made the mistake and now I'm being blamed for it. Like I said last night, he apologized to me and now he's changing his story. I don't know where that's coming from.&lt;br />"It's kind of funny that all of a sudden the story got completely turned around. Now, I'm the one ... just standing there. I don't know where I'm supposed to go. The guy hits a home run and you just stand there behind home plate. I don't remember going anywhere else. It's kind of funny."&lt;br />Monroe, too, had a chuckle about it. So did some of his teammates, who were at Wrigley Field last month when the best-selling T-shirts in Chicago featured a photo of Cubs catcher Michael Barrett punching Pierzynski with the words, "Who said the Cubs can't hit?" At least two players were wearing those shirts Thursday.&lt;br />"You know what, guys? The bottom line is everybody in baseball knows that's A.J.," Monroe said. "Let's be honest. That's him. He likes confrontation. He likes to play this role like he's so tough. Well, that act is just tired. It's just tired."&lt;br />More on Monroe: He started in left field Thursday for the first time since July 2 at Pittsburgh. Marcus Thames started at designated hitter, where Monroe had been playing for most of the last month after returning from a sprained ankle in June.&lt;br />"I'll mix that up probably quite a bit before the end of the season," Jim Leyland said. "One will play left. One will DH."&lt;br />Dmitri back soon? The more Dmitri Young hits for Triple-A Toledo -- he had two more hits Wednesday at Pawtucket to improve to .500 (13-for-26) with the Mud Hens -- the more his return to Detroit becomes a matter of when rather than if. It appears it could be this weekend.&lt;br />Asked whether Young's rehab assignment will run its full course of 20 days through Monday, Leyland said, "No, it won't run its full course." He would not elaborate.&lt;br />The Athletics are scheduled to start right-handers in all three games this weekend at Comerica Park, creating an opportunity for the switch-hitting Young.&lt;br />Celebrity sightings: Famed actor Tom Hanks and director Ron Howard were seen in the stands at Comerica Park Thursday, a day after they were spotted at Cincinnati's Great American Park.&lt;br />Hanks -- who was wearing a Tigers cap -- Howard and comedian Dennis Miller are traveling around on a short tour of ballparks following Hanks' 50th birthday earlier this month. They had also been to Camden Yards in Baltimore and PNC Park in Pittsburgh.&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://detroit.tigers.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://detroittigers.barebaseball.com/2006/07/notes-tigers-sox-rivalry-heats-up.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13572325/posts/full/115350192191815537</guid><pubDate>Fri, 21 Jul 2006 17:10:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-07-21T10:12:01.920-07:00</atom:updated><title>Zumaya's triple-digit heat stifles Sox</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">07/20/2006&lt;br />DETROIT -- Plenty of young relievers thrive on adrenaline. Joel Zumaya hits triple digits on it. The White Sox are discovering how much adrenaline he has.&lt;br />When Zumaya entered Thursday's rubber game in the seventh inning, the Tigers had just tied it. When he went out for his second inning of work, the Tigers had given him a lead to protect. He doesn't need much motivation to throw 99 mph, but an extra burst of energy will help him get to 101.&lt;br />On Thursday, he hit that mark no fewer than five times, no matter which radar gun was being read. His energy didn't register with the Sox until his fist pump on his way off the mound.&lt;br />"That's what makes him so good," first baseman Chris Shelton said after the 2-1 win. "Even when his adrenaline gets pumping, he doesn't let it work against him. It just helps him."&lt;br />Zumaya hadn't pitched in six days since fixing a mechanical flaw over the weekend. The Tigers had rested him for a few days to have him ready for Chicago, but with Tuesday's loss and Fernando Rodney protecting Wednesday's lead, the 21-year-old right-hander hadn't had a chance to enter.&lt;br />Once he entered Thursday's game in the seventh, it was as if he had six days of pent-up energy propelling his pitches towards home plate. His first pitch hit 100 mph on the Comerica Park radar gun, 99 on the ESPN broadcast. Chris Widger bunted that pitch foul, and ended up striking out on three pitches, the last hitting 101.&lt;br />After Brian Anderson connected for a one-out single, Zumaya fired away at pinch-hitter Scott Podsednik and Tadahito Iguchi. He overpowered the latter with four straight triple-digit fastballs, the last of which Iguchi grounded to third base to end the inning.&lt;br />Some late-inning relievers have trouble sitting in the dugout between innings, especially if a rally forces them to sit for an extended stretch. Once the Tigers took the lead, Zumaya seemingly had a new burst of life to go with a one-run advantage. He had the middle of the White Sox order coming up, but it didn't matter.&lt;br />"I wasn't thinking about anything," he said. "My job is to go out there and get those guys. I've faced those guys plenty of times already. I know what my job is, and I know how to pitch to guys."&lt;br />Unlike his work in the seventh, when he threw just one offspeed pitch the entire inning, Zumaya mixed his stuff more often in the eighth. He didn't give Jim Thome two straight fastballs, inducing a groundout on a 2-2 offspeed pitch. He threw back-to-back changeups to start off against Paul Konerko and missed on his way to a four-pitch walk.&lt;br />With the potential tying run on base, Zumaya went back to his power arsenal. He threw back-to-back fastballs past Jermaine Dye before spotting a breaking ball on the outside corner for a called third strike.&lt;br />That brought up Joe Crede, who had homered in each of the first two games of the series and driven in Chicago's only run Thursday. Zumaya went after him with three straight fastballs clocked at 100 mph, putting Crede in a 1-2 count. His next fastball registered at a mere 98 mph, but it was high, and it sent Crede down swinging.&lt;br />Zumaya pumped his fist and hopped off the mound towards the dugout. Crede, taking none too kindly to the display, stared out towards him. His White Sox teammates weren't happy about it afterwards.&lt;br />"I think we've gotten used to it," Konerko said. "He's got a great arm. What can you say? I guess ... the only thing you can say about that is if it ever works the other way, you can't take offense to what happens. I don't think we have guys that would do anything there ..."&lt;br />Ironically, the first Major League home run given up by Zumaya came off Konerko's bat here April 10.&lt;br />Zumaya wasn't sure what the big deal was about.&lt;br />"Put [yourself] in my shoes," he said. "You've got the fans all standing up. They know you have 1-2 on the guy and you've got to go right after them. I reared back and threw as hard as I could and ended up getting the guy out.&lt;br />"That was a big out, man. You've got the tying run on first and Crede can easily take that ball out. It was a really big out, and that's just the way I pitch. I show a lot of emotion when I get a big out like that."&lt;br />It might end up being another piece of what seems to be a simmering rivalry between two teams that entered Thursday with the best records in baseball. But Zumaya feeds off competitive fire enough as it is.&lt;br />"I think Zumaya's a pretty confident kid," manager Jim Leyland said. "He's going to have some ups and downs, but he's a tough kid."&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://detroit.tigers.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://detroittigers.barebaseball.com/2006/07/zumayas-triple-digit-heat-stifles-sox.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13572325/posts/full/115350177784013517</guid><pubDate>Fri, 21 Jul 2006 17:07:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-07-21T10:09:37.856-07:00</atom:updated><title>Thames, Shelton help Tigers win finale</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">07/20/2006&lt;br />DETROIT -- The Tigers keep opening eyes around baseball. This time, the eyes were Tadahito Iguchi's.&lt;br />Hours after Craig Monroe beat the White Sox with a grand slam Wednesday night, Marcus Thames won the series with a slide. His takeout of Iguchi at second base kept the seventh inning going for Chris Shelton, whose two-out double pushed the Tigers ahead for a 2-1 win Thursday afternoon at Comerica Park.&lt;br />It was the kind of play that usually heats up rivalries. Given the chatter going on between clubhouses Thursday morning, the environment was ripe for that. But it's a play everyone applauded, from the sellout crowd to the visiting dugout.&lt;br />"It was great," White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen said. "That's the way to play the game. That's the way people should play the game. I think when you do that, you show intensity. I was applauding."&lt;br />That's the type of play most any team would make, Tigers manager Jim Leyland said. The idea that only certain teams play hard, he said, is a myth. Every team does. Thames simply had the opportunity to do it at the right time.&lt;br />"It was the difference in the ballgame," Leyland said.&lt;br />It was one of the few opportunities the Tigers had against White Sox starter Jose Contreras. The split-finger artist hadn't lost a decision in a year before falling in his last start. The way he was pitching Thursday didn't show any sign he'd lose again.&lt;br />Contreras scattered three hits through five innings and had retired nine straight batters entering the sixth. Two 3-0 counts from there helped doom him.&lt;br />Contreras fell behind on Curtis Granderson, who hit a 3-1 pitch for a bloop double down the left-field line leading off the sixth. Two batters later, Ivan Rodriguez hit a bouncer through the middle for an RBI single, tying the game.&lt;br />After Joel Zumaya (5-1) relieved Kenny Rogers for a scoreless seventh, the Tigers went back to work against Contreras, who again fell behind a hitter when he couldn't afford it. Thames drew a four-pitch walk with one out in the inning to put a runner on base for Monroe, who had tripled to deep center and flied out to the right-center-field fence in his previous two at-bats against Contreras.&lt;br />This time, Contreras (9-2) got Monroe to hit a ground ball to third base. But Joe Crede's throw to second forced Iguchi across the bag to catch it and drew him into Thames' sights.&lt;br />Thames knows about physical play, having gone to college on a football scholarship, but he doesn't relish contact. When he saw Iguchi coming across his line of sight as he was running into second base, he anticipated a play.&lt;br />"The third baseman hung him out to dry," Thames said. "It was a bad feed from him. I don't want to hurt a guy, but I want him to know I'm coming in and trying to make sure he doesn't get off a good throw."&lt;br />The only toss into the air was Iguchi. The 6-foot-2, 220-pound Thames slid hard and late to the inside of the bag, his legs catching the 5-foot-10, 200-pound Iguchi above his left ankle and flipping him over without a throw.&lt;br />"Everybody in the league would've done that," Leyland said. "The White Sox do that. I don't see anybody not playing hard. That's just baseball, but that's good baseball."&lt;br />It was about as adept as Thames gets when it comes to baserunning. Much of his contribution has been at the plate, where his 19 home runs lead the club. With 37 of his 65 hits this year going for extra bases, he doesn't stop at first base very often. Much like in football, he didn't know he had made a difference until the play was over.&lt;br />"When I got up, I heard the crowd going crazy," he said, "so I knew something good had happened."&lt;br />With Monroe safely at first base, up came Shelton, whose 0-for-14 slump was deeper than the 0-for-10 Monroe carried before his grand slam Wednesday. Shelton couldn't carry the ball out, but his drive to the fence in left-center field was just as effective in allowing Monroe to score.&lt;br />"You just want to contribute," said Shelton. "Anytime you can contribute, it's big. Hopefully this will spark something and we can roll off a few more big hits."&lt;br />Contreras' second straight defeat was also his first loss in his last five starts versus the Tigers, against whom he had been 7-2 lifetime with a 3.36 ERA.&lt;br />As dramatic as Wednesday's win was for the Tigers, Leyland joked that he had awakened in the middle of the night with nightmares about Contreras' pitches. Contreras crossed the Tigers up Thursday by throwing a changeup that they hadn't seen before.&lt;br />"We talked about it before the game: We've gotta go out and be aggressive against him," Leyland said. "If you get something to hit, better get a good swing on it early, because he can pick you apart."&lt;br />Yet the sometimes free-swinging Tigers struck out just once against Contreras, who had fanned at least three batters in all 17 of his previous starts this year.&lt;br />"I wouldn't say we exactly knocked him around," Leyland said. "We didn't knock the [tar] out of him, but we won the game."&lt;br />The only way they could win, Leyland said, was if Rogers gave them a chance. Rogers, who had struggled over his last four starts, had to rely on his craftiness to do it. He loaded the bases with one out in the fourth with help from two walks and escaped with just one run allowed. After taking a line drive off his chest and throwing the ball away for a single and an error, he stranded another runner on third in the fifth by striking out Jim Thome looking at a breaking ball on the outside corner.&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://detroit.tigers.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://detroittigers.barebaseball.com/2006/07/thames-shelton-help-tigers-win-finale.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13572325/posts/full/114321918920047764</guid><pubDate>Fri, 24 Mar 2006 16:52:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-03-24T08:53:09.200-08:00</atom:updated><title>Tigers fall short in loss to Phillies</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/13/2006&lt;br />Tigers at the plate: Alexis Gomez plated the first Tigers run with a two-out double in the fourth inning, and he then scored on a Josh Phelps single.&lt;br />Phillies at the plate: Chris Roberson completed a Phillies' comeback with a two-run double in the bottom of the eighth inning. Shane Victorino singled with no outs and went to third on a Pat Burrell double, setting up Roberson's hit. Ryan Howard, still the team's hottest hitter, clubbed his Grapefruit League-leading seventh homer.&lt;br />Tigers on the mound: Top prospect Justin Verlander made his third appearance of the spring, allowing just one run on one hit (Howard's homer). He walked four and struck out three. The right-hander was selected second overall in the June 2004 First-Year Player Draft. Bobby Seay couldn't maintain the lead in a rough eighth inning.&lt;br />Phillies on the mound: Ricardo Rodriguez started in place of Jon Lieber (who started in a "B" game) and allowed two runs on five hits in four innings, while walking none and striking out one. Reliever Geoff Geary tossed a scoreless inning.&lt;br />Grapefruit League records: Tigers 7-5; Phillies 8-4.&lt;br />Up next: Brett Myers heads to Fort Myers to face the Twins on Tuesday at 1:05 p.m. ET, opposite Boof Bonser. Myers has a 12.00 ERA this spring.&lt;br />Kenny Rogers and top prospect Joel Zumaya are scheduled to pitch for the Tigers on Tuesday against the Indians at 1:05 p.m.&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://detroit.tigers.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://detroittigers.barebaseball.com/2006/03/tigers-fall-short-in-loss-to-phillies.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13572325/posts/full/114321911181466048</guid><pubDate>Fri, 24 Mar 2006 16:51:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-03-24T08:51:51.816-08:00</atom:updated><title>Wind, Boone catch up to Zumaya</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/14/2006&lt;br />LAKELAND, Fla. -- After watching a 14-10 game with nine home runs sailing into a strong breeze blowing out Tuesday, Tigers manager Jim Leyland said he wouldn't judge any pitcher alive on a day like this. Joel Zumaya wasn't so easy on himself.&lt;br />The 21-year-old right-hander with the hard fastball wasn't beating himself up over his outing Tuesday, but he clearly had regret over one Major League lesson.&lt;br />"A 3-0 fastball right over the plate," Zumaya said.&lt;br />It was one of the few times Zumaya fell behind on a hitter, but it was the one mistake in his three innings of work with three runs allowed.&lt;br />Having just struck out the red-hot Casey Blake for the second out of the seventh inning with the potential tying run on third base in a 10-9 game, Zumaya fell behind Aaron Boone and tried to get an easy strike. He challenged Boone with a fastball high and over the middle, and Boone belted it onto the left-field berm for a two-run homer.&lt;br />"I know better than that, too," he said. "It's 3-0 and you know he's free-swinging. He's got the tying run on third base. He's going to free-swing. He's on fire right now."&lt;br />It turned an otherwise solid pitching line into something more in line with the rest of the pitchers Tuesday, not that Leyland was judging. Zumaya gave up three hits with a walk and two strikeouts, but two home runs. The other one was Ryan Mulhern's second home run of the game. He took a 2-2 curveball out to left after Zumaya had put him in an 0-2 hole.&lt;br />"There were a lot of home runs hit today," Zumaya said. "A lot of good pieces of hitting today, too. But you can't leave a ball 3-0 up in the zone like that. I don't care how old of a veteran you are or how young of a rookie you are, you're not going to miss a ball like that."&lt;br />Zumaya was the last of the confirmed candidates for the fifth spot in Detroit's rotation to pitch this week. Justin Verlander allowed only a home run in three innings Monday against the Phillies despite four walks before Jason Grilli threw four scoreless innings, while Wilfredo Ledezma struggled at home versus a Pirates split squad. Roman Colon tossed three scoreless innings Sunday against the Blue Jays.&lt;br />The results don't reflect the entire story of Zumaya's outing, which featured a lot of hitters in 0-2 holes. He spent his first nine pitches battling Jason Michaels before giving up a walk leading off the fifth inning. He retired the side in order from there, then put all four hitters he faced in the sixth inning into 0-2 counts. All of them worked the count back to 2-2 or 3-2, with Mulhern's homer the only hit.&lt;br />Zumaya realized his potential miscues there, too.&lt;br />"I got a little excited," he said. "It's me. I'm young. I like to throw the ball hard. That's something I need to work on. I don't need to throw the ball that hard when I have 0-2. I just need to spot up and hopefully let the ball do the work."&lt;br />The aggressiveness is something Leyland could judge Tuesday, regardless of the hits into the wind.&lt;br />"I thought he was fine," Leyland said. "He threw some good curves. The changeup was a little wobbly. But overall, I was pleased with him. I like the look in his eye. You can tell that he was mad at himself.&lt;br />"But this is all a growing process. It's what happens sometimes. These kids don't understand, and I don't blame them, when I say I'm not judging on Spring Training. They're going out there, the poor devils, thinking, 'Hey, if I give up a couple runs, I'm going to lose out.' That has nothing to do with it. You try to convince them of that, but their competitive spirit, they worry about it. I feel sorry for them. It's a tough time for these guys. But it's part of the process."&lt;br />Zumaya seems to understand the process well for his age. He didn't sound like someone who feared he was out of the running for a job.&lt;br />On the contrary, he was looking forward to another matchup against the Indians, whom he's already faced twice. He hopes the third time is in the regular season.&lt;br />"I'm going to continue wanting a shot at these guys," he said. "If I make the team, we're going to play them a lot, so it gives me a great opportunity to face these games. It just gives me a chance to know who's a good hitter and how to pitch these guys. It's a learning process for me."&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://detroit.tigers.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://detroittigers.barebaseball.com/2006/03/wind-boone-catch-up-to-zumaya.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13572325/posts/full/114321902228601158</guid><pubDate>Fri, 24 Mar 2006 16:48:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-03-24T08:50:22.290-08:00</atom:updated><title>Notes: Eyeing more productive at-bats</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/14/2006&lt;br />LAKELAND, Fla. -- Last year, the Tigers had the fewest RBIs with runners in scoring position, the third-fewest RBIs in close and late situations, and the fewest walks in the American League in just about any situation.&lt;br />After a couple weeks of Spring Training games, new manager Jim Leyland can see why.&lt;br />"I can see why we failed in a lot of situations last year offensively," he said Tuesday morning. "It sticks out like a sore thumb."&lt;br />Detroit batters hacked away with glee Tuesday afternoon while the wind blew out and pop flies became home runs. But that's not what Leyland's looking for when he judges his lineup.&lt;br />He has emphasized situational hitting since position players reported last month and tried to make his hitters think about the situation they're in. He has reminded his hitters about the situation when they step out of the dugout or when they step to the plate.&lt;br />After all that emphasis, he still sees a lot of room for improvement.&lt;br />"I talked to them this morning about some things, and it's time to start applying them," he said. "We're basically good hitters. We should've scored eight, nine runs [Monday against the Phillies in Clearwater] and we scored two. We're getting in games where we're a couple runs down and we're [in a] 2-0 [count] and we're swinging at pitches that aren't good.&lt;br />"When we need a guy to get on base, you've got to start thinking baseball. It's about time to do that. We're getting a couple weeks away. I've been turning them loose at 3-0 and everything else so far, but here shortly we start playing regular baseball games where we have to start getting with the program."&lt;br />The program includes a lot of fundamental work in all areas of the offensive game. Leyland had his players running the bases Tuesday morning before batting practice, and he wants his hitters thinking more often about taking the extra base instead of settling for station-to-station baseball. He wants them to look at the outfield alignment, realize who the outfielders are and judge ahead of time whether there's an opportunity.&lt;br />The problem is, he doesn't think this team has done that for a while.&lt;br />"They haven't done it real good, to be honest with you," Leyland said. "They haven't done it real good for a few years, obviously. Those are the things we're pressing upon. It's one thing to listen. It's another thing to hear."&lt;br />Those situations weren't easy to point out on a day when homers were aplenty, but some examples stood out. Nook Logan, who has struggled at the plate, tried to bunt on his own with Ramon Santiago on third base and one out. The bunt didn't work, but Leyland credited him for trying. An inning later, both Vance Wilson and Ramon Santiago kept running on Santiago's pop fly to shallow center that Jason Michaels nearly caught but saw roll out of his glove. Santiago ended up with an RBI double as Wilson scored from first base.&lt;br />Those situations will become more clear when they encounter chilly nights in April with Johan Santana, C.C. Sabathia or just about any White Sox starter on the mound. When runs aren't going to be easy to convert, Leyland wants his players to think about what they're doing and battle for that run that might be the difference in a game. He has not seen enough of that yet.&lt;br />"When you start facing good Major League pitchers, which is what we're going to do, you have to grind out every at-bat," he said. "What you try to do you try to boost your average against the mediocre stuff and you try to fight your [tail] off against the good stuff so you can get a hit. What happens is you have to hope that hit comes at the right time.&lt;br />"If some guy's just nasty on a given day and he gets you out a couple times with nobody on, you have to battle harder when that guy's on. You can't give those at-bats away. I think we give too many at-bats away. I'm not going to get into that because it's Spring Training, but it sticks out."&lt;br />Part of that involves thinking about the situation at hand. The other part, Leyland said, involves thinking positively in the face of a difficult matchup.&lt;br />"I've always believed that psychologically, when the hitter gets in the box and the pitcher gets on the mound, one of them psychologically has given in a little bit. I don't know which one, but you can tell. ...&lt;br />"That's one of my pet peeves. I know they're tough, but this is the big leagues. I can't ask the other manager not to pitch him."&lt;br />Dmitri close to return: Dmitri Young took part in regular activities Tuesday and is poised to return to Spring Training action. He has missed about week and a half with a strained left quadriceps suffered March 4 against Italy.&lt;br />Leyland said he wants to give Young "a couple more days" to ensure he's fully healed.&lt;br />"He was all smiles when he came in," Leyland said of Young. "I learned a long time ago that when they say they're ready, to probably give them two more days and then do it. He's ready to go."&lt;br />Shelton scratched: Chris Shelton was a late bump from Tuesday's starting lineup after complaining of light-headedness during batting practice in the morning. Shelton said afterward he could've played, but Leyland decided to hold him out as a precaution. Shelton felt fine after the game and isn't expected to miss any more time. He was already scheduled to miss Wednesday's trip to St. Petersburg.&lt;br />Tip of the cap: With three World Baseball Classic gamees on television Monday night, Leyland was able to watch many of his regulars playing for their national teams. He saw Carlos Guillen and Magglio Ordonez hitting for Venezuela, Ivan Rodriguez leading Puerto Rico and Fernando Rodney earn a wild save for the Dominican Republic against Cuba.&lt;br />He also saw Rodney's cap lined up nearly sideways as he pitched. "I can promise you one thing," Leyland said. "He won't wear his hat like that for the Tigers. But I don't know, maybe there's something to it. If I'm a hitter and I look out and the guy's like that, it might mess me up."&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://detroit.tigers.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://detroittigers.barebaseball.com/2006/03/notes-eyeing-more-productive-at-bats.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13572325/posts/full/114321872997983735</guid><pubDate>Fri, 24 Mar 2006 16:33:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-03-24T08:45:30.236-08:00</atom:updated><title>Rogers hit hard, but Tigers win</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/14/2006&lt;br />Indians at the plate: Ryan Mulhern hit two home runs, including a two-run homer off Tigers starter Kenny Rogers. Casey Blake, Aaron Boone and Ryan Garko also homered to lead the Indians' offensive effort. Blake complemented his two-run shot with an RBI ground-rule double to deep center and another run scored. Jose Flores added two hits.&lt;br />Tigers at the plate: Omar Infante went 3-for-3 in his second game back from tendinitis in his right shoulder. His two-run homer in the third inning scored Ramon Santiago following Santiago's two-run triple. Santiago added an RBI double in the fourth inning as part of his 3-for-4, three-run, five-RBI performance. Kody Kirkland tripled leading off the bottom of the eighth and scored on Mike Hessman's sacrifice fly to break a 10-10 tie.&lt;br />Tigers on the mound: With the wind blowing out, Rogers saw far more fly balls than usual in his third start of the spring. Five of the seven runs he allowed in four innings of work scored on three home runs. Joel Zumaya followed him with three runs in as many innings on two home runs. Humberto Sanchez (1-0) struck out the side in the eighth.&lt;br />Indians on the mound: Jeremy Sowers didn't get out of the second inning of his third appearance of the spring. He gave up two runs on six hits in 1 2/3 innings, putting five consecutive runners on base in the second after retiring the first two batters of the inning. Edward Mujica yielded a four-run third inning before Steve Karsay gave up four runs in two innings. Danny Graves finally settled down matters with two scoreless frames before Jeremy Guthrie (0-1) suffered the four-run ninth for the loss.&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://detroit.tigers.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://detroittigers.barebaseball.com/2006/03/rogers-hit-hard-but-tigers-win.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13572325/posts/full/114321796359665706</guid><pubDate>Fri, 24 Mar 2006 16:30:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-03-24T08:32:43.600-08:00</atom:updated><title>Leyland says Tigers just too nice</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/15/2006&lt;br />ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. -- A year after the "milk-and-cookies" Tigers were supposedly gone, now they apparently smell like Old Spice.&lt;br />Tigers manager Jim Leyland hasn't had a bad word to say about his players. They've listened, they've been polite, they've acted like good teammates. Still, he sensed something was out of place.&lt;br />Then Tuesday night, he figured it out. They're actually too nice.&lt;br />"This team, it has no personality," Leyland said Wednesday afternoon. "It has no charisma. It has good players. It's got the nicest guys you'll ever meet. I wish I had a couple more [jerks]. I wish people would rant and rave a little bit more. I believe this in all my heart: This team needs to establish some identity. It has none from what I've seen so far."&lt;br />But Leyland isn't talking about just any personality. He means a meaner one, a swagger. He appreciates the business-like attitude that was emphasized when the rebuilding process began three years ago, but this is a different kind of business.&lt;br />"They're as nice a group of guys as I've ever been around," he said. "But they come in and it's like a guy who goes to work at his job at an office. He gets up. He gets his briefcase. He goes to his office. He sets it down. He gets a cup of coffee. He goes up. He does his thing. And at 5 o'clock, he picks up his briefcase, he gets in his car and he drives home.&lt;br />"In between, I want to see a fight once in a while. I want to see somebody mad at me, or somebody throwing a stool. And I don't know that you can make guys do this."&lt;br />It's an odd request unless you consider the source. Aside from winning, Leyland's reputation is built on getting the best out of veteran players who have been difficult for other managers. It's not that Leyland puts up with them. In some ways, Leyland welcomes them.&lt;br />"I've never been around a nicer bunch of guys, and good players," Leyland said about the Tigers. "But you know what? Every good player I've ever been around has that little streak of electricity in him. Some people call it a [jerk]. Every good player I've ever met, and I'm not being disrespectful, has a little [jerk] in him. I don't mean a mean person outside or mean to other people, but mean when you go up there to play and you take the field. And this club has not shown any of that.&lt;br />"It sounds terrible, but these guys were raised too good."&lt;br />As he explained all this, Leyland time and again said he didn't mean this as a criticism. He called it an issue more than a problem. But it's a difference he sees that separates the good teams from the rest. Good teams have a presence when they're on the field.&lt;br />He doesn't think it's a matter of the Tigers becoming used to losing, because he took over a Pirates ballclub that had some of the same problems in the mid-1980s. By the 1990s, they had a swagger with Barry Bonds, Bobby Bonilla and Andy Van Slyke. He suspects this team just has a different personality.&lt;br />"When the good teams take the field, there's an aroma," he said. "There's an odor, there's a feeling. Well, we all smell like Old Spice. And I want some different stuff."&lt;br />Ironically, Leyland's remarks came on the same day one of the most competitive Tigers went to work. With the wind blowing out at Al Lang Field, Jeremy Bonderman gave up five runs on seven hits in four innings, striking out four. A line like that in the regular season wouldn't leave Bonderman in a good mood. He can take it a little better in Spring Training.&lt;br />The assertion from Leyland, though, caught Bonderman by surprise.&lt;br />"I guess I can see that a little bit," said Bonderman, who as a rookie took a bat to the dugout hallway in Minnesota. "But I feel like when I take the mound, I take the mound with confidence. I'll throw it up and in on you. I don't care if you're [ticked] or not. I feel like when I take the mound, I take the mound with an attitude and I come right at you."&lt;br />Keep in mind, too, that this is largely the same team that was supposed to have an attitude last year. After bowling over then-Yankees catcher John Flaherty last March 5, Dmitri Young took stitches on his bloody ear and declared, "The days of the nice Tigers are gone." He also said, "Milk-and-cookies teams finish last."&lt;br />The niceness certainly waned last year, whether it was Pudge slamming his bat after popping up, Carlos Guillen charging the mound against Runelvys Hernandez or players ranting in September about what went wrong during the season. Any presence, though, was scattered at best, and it only seemed to show in games Bonderman pitched.&lt;br />"When you watch good players take the field," Leyland said, "when they walk out of that batting cage, there's an air of confidence. There's a sense about those guys. The ultimate is Barry Bonds. He doesn't care about who's pitching, how they throw, where they came from. He knows he's going to whack 'em. And he believes it. And he does it. That's the kind of stuff I'm talking about."&lt;br />Maybe it's because it's Spring Training, and Leyland is trying to test guys. But Leyland says he doesn't see it, and he doesn't know if he can teach it. This might be one way to bring it out.&lt;br />"My concern is that a lot of times, you can't change people," he said. "It's not like I'm trying to change the people. I want to change the atmosphere. I want a swagger. I don't want us tiptoeing out there. I want a swagger. When we take the field, I want a [darn] swagger. That's what I want."&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://detroit.tigers.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://detroittigers.barebaseball.com/2006/03/leyland-says-tigers-just-too-nice.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13572325/posts/full/114321757350730617</guid><pubDate>Fri, 24 Mar 2006 16:23:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-03-24T08:26:13.556-08:00</atom:updated><title>Notes: Phelps knows he can't give up</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/15/2006&lt;br />LAKELAND, Fla. -- Josh Phelps is making the best out of a worst-case scenario.&lt;br />When he signed his Minor League contract during the Winter Meetings, the Tigers were supposedly still pushing to trade one of their three first basemen before the upcoming season. If that happened, Phelps would have a chance to compete for a spot. Once Dmitri Young became a potential utility option and the Tigers could keep all three on their roster, that spot became much less likely.&lt;br />As long as Young, Chris Shelton and Carlos Pena are around, Phelps' road out of Toledo has a giant road block at the Michigan line. But Phelps is still swinging at it.&lt;br />"It's just trying to make the most of an opportunity," Phelps said. "Every at-bat is a chance to show not only this organization, but any organization, what you're capable of doing. That's the approach I've taken."&lt;br />So far, he's showing one of the best springs in the Grapefruit League. With his 3-for-5 performance Wednesday against the Devil Rays, Phelps raised his average to .571, third highest in the Majors. He's 9-for-12 over his last three games, including a streak of hits in six consecutive at-bats Sunday and Monday. Half of his 16 hits have gone for extra bases, including two doubles and a two-run homer Wednesday that broke a 10-10 tie in the ninth inning.&lt;br />"He's had a [heckuva] spring," manager Jim Leyland said.&lt;br />But even Leyland can't say what it means. Asked how Phelps could fit on this roster, Leyland said, "I have no idea."&lt;br />Before brushing it off as a meaningless spring from a veteran Minor Leaguer, look at the player. Phelps is in his fourth organization in three seasons, but he's not the typical well-traveled journeyman. He was a Rookie of the Year candidate with the Blue Jays in 2002, then was Toronto's designated hitter for most of 2003. He batted .268 with 20 homers and 66 RBIs that season, but struck out 115 times in 396 at-bats.&lt;br />He got off to a miserable start in 2004, but hit .318 in July before the Blue Jays tried to sneak him through waivers. The Indians claimed him and watched him hit .303 as a part-time player down the stretch before non-tendering him that winter.&lt;br />The Devil Rays signed him two days after he hit the free agent market to be their regular DH, but his hitting fell after a solid start. He was designated for assignment in June with a .266 average, five homers and 26 RBIs in 47 games -- not horrible numbers, but as he admitted, not what he's capable of doing. He spent the rest of the year at Triple-A Durham.&lt;br />"In a very short amount of time, I've changed jerseys a few times," he said. "Those things, you've just got to roll with it, and you've got to have the mindset that if you keep working hard, good things are going to happen."&lt;br />That's what brought him here. Now 27, he joined the Tigers at year's end with only the guarantee of a regular job at first base in Toledo, but the hope that something bigger might open up. But whether that happens has a lot less to do with him and more to do with other players, most notably Pena.&lt;br />If anything has gone his way, it's the number of at-bats. With many Tigers regulars at the World Baseball Classic and others injured, Phelps has had almost daily at-bats. He had started four straight days through Wednesday, and with the team having split-squad games Thursday, probably will see a fifth.&lt;br />Those at-bats have shown more of what Phelps thinks he can do. Though he has the reputation as a home run slugger, he sees himself as more of a doubles hitter with some home run power, the kind of hitter that can use Comerica Park's gaps.&lt;br />"My situation so far this year, it hasn't been 20 straight at-bats," he said. "You take your at-bats here and not play one day. You just try to keep them as consistent as possible. Fortunately so far, I've been able to keep going pretty well on a chopped-up basis. Those things are just confidence builders that you take on down the road."&lt;br />Even if that road is blocked.&lt;br />"I just have faith that if you work hard, good things are going to happen," he said. "That doesn't mean you're going to break camp with the team, or if somebody gets hurt, you're going to be the one who gets called up. It means you've got to make the most of the situation."&lt;br />Bondo brushes off big flies: No matter where the Tigers play in Florida lately, the wind seems to be blowing out. It helped result in a rough pitching line for Wednesday starter Jeremy Bonderman, who gave up five runs in four innings. Three of them came on a Rocco Baldelli home run in the third inning off a hanging breaking ball, Bonderman's only real mistake pitch of the day.&lt;br />"I thought I threw the ball well," Bonderman said. "It was a lot better than my last start. My command was there, so I'm not really worried about the five runs. I threw all my pitches for strikes, so I can't really complain."&lt;br />Dmitri ready, Monroe advancing: Young had a good workout Wednesday back in Lakeland, Leyland said, and is ready to play for the first time since straining his left quad March 4. He isn't expected to play Thursday, but should play at least some time at DH on Friday against the Twins.&lt;br />Craig Monroe, meanwhile, is improving as well, according to Leyland. No timetable is set for his return.&lt;br />Guillen, Ordonez returning: Leyland also can look forward to the return of Carlos Guillen and Magglio Ordonez, whose duty in the World Baseball Classic ended when the Dominican Republic eliminated Venezuela on Tuesday night. Depending on when they return, Leyland said, they could play Thursday against the Yankees at Joker Marchant Stadium.&lt;br />Since the Dominicans advanced to the finals, second baseman Placido Polanco and reliever Fernando Rodney will be gone a bit longer.&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://detroit.tigers.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://detroittigers.barebaseball.com/2006/03/notes-phelps-knows-he-cant-give-up.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13572325/posts/full/114321626487488621</guid><pubDate>Fri, 24 Mar 2006 16:03:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-03-24T08:04:24.876-08:00</atom:updated><title>Big home runs help lift Tigers</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/15/2006&lt;br />Tigers at the plate: Non-roster invitee Alexis Gomez hit a grand slam in the fourth inning off Rays reliever Chad Orvella. Gomez brought a .357 average into Wednesday's game; his home run was his first of the spring. Former Rays first baseman/DH Josh Phelps -- also a non-roster invitee --bit his former teammates with two doubles and a game-winning two-run homer in the ninth inning.&lt;br />Rays at the plate: Rocco Baldelli hit a three-run homer off Tigers starter Jeremy Bonderman in the third inning. The home run was Baldelli's first of the spring. Jonny Gomes had a double and scored a run. Wes Bankston hit his first home run of the spring, also off Bonderman, and Carl Crawford added his first off Tigers reliever Franklyn German. Non-roster invitee Greg Norton hit a three-run home run.&lt;br />Tigers on the mound: Bonderman pitched four innings allowing five earned runs on seven hits and two home runs while striking out four; he has allowed eight earned runs in 8 1/3 innings pitched this spring. German allowed two earned runs on four hits; he allowed a home run, struck out one and threw two wild pitches.&lt;br />Rays on the mound: Edwin Jackson made his third start of the spring and got roughed up a bit. After Jackson pitched two scoreless innings, the Tigers got a run in the third. Jackson allowed one run in the fourth before loading the bases and walking in another score. Orvella entered with the bases loaded and gave up the grand slam to Gomez, which made Jackson's final line 3 1/3 innings pitched, five hits, six earned runs, three walks and two strikeouts. Orvella also struggled, pitching 1 2/3 innings and allowing three earned runs on three hits. Orvella had allowed just four base runners and no runs in his previous four outings.&lt;br />Grapefruit League records: Tigers 9-6; Rays 7-7.&lt;br />Up next: The Rays host the Red Sox on Thursday in a 1:05 p.m. ET game at Progress Energy Park, home of Al Lang Field. Left-hander Mark Hendrickson will make his first start of the spring and will be followed by right-handers Doug Waechter and Shawn Camp. Left-hander Jon Lester will start for the Red Sox.&lt;br />The Tigers will play split-squad games against the Yankees and Nationals in 1:05 p.m. contests Thursday. They will start left-hander Nate Robertson as they host the Yankees in Lakeland. He will be followed by right-handers Mark Woodyard, and Eulogio De La Cruz and left-handers Bobby Seay and Hector Mercado. The Yankees will start right-hander Aaron Small and plan to use left-hander Mike Myers.&lt;br />The Tigers will also visit the Nationals at Viera. Right-hander Jordan Tata will start for the Tigers and will be followed by right-handers Preston Larrison, Kevin Hodge and Lee Gardner; right-hander John Paterson will start for the Nationals.&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://detroit.tigers.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://detroittigers.barebaseball.com/2006/03/big-home-runs-help-lift-tigers.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13572325/posts/full/114321620093416799</guid><pubDate>Fri, 24 Mar 2006 16:02:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-03-24T08:03:20.936-08:00</atom:updated><title>Notes: Leyland defends Yankees</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/16/2006&lt;br />LAKELAND, Fla. -- A lot of baseball fans bemoan the Yankees for what's wrong with the sport. Tigers manager Jim Leyland is not one of those people.&lt;br />Leyland, for years the poster manager for the small-market club, is actually close friends with Yankees skipper Joe Torre, one of the faces of baseball's richest franchise. Leyland has considered Torre a friend ever since he managed against him when Torre was in St. Louis, and that didn't change when he went to New York. On the contrary, Leyland has plenty of respect for the job Torre does.&lt;br />"Joe Torre's maybe got the best job in the world," Leyland said, "in the sense that they've got great players. But he also may have the toughest job in the world, because it's not easy to manage all those great players."&lt;br />Yet in the case of Pittsburgh fans, and many in Detroit as well, it's not easy watching all those players sign with the Yankees.&lt;br />"I think a lot of people probably hate the Yankees," Leyland said. "I'm one that has a great deal of respect for the Yankees. People talk about the payroll and the money they spend, but they have won four World Series [since 1996]. It's not like they didn't do anything with their money. Other people spend money and it really hasn't worked out for them. But when the Yankees spend it, they seem to spend it very wisely."&lt;br />In an odd way, Leyland knows how it feels to be labeled as a free-spending team. He heard it while the Marlins were on their way to the 1997 World Series, a label that seemed to stick more after the roster was dismantled that winter. He'll fire back that Florida had the third-highest payroll in the National League that year and the seventh-highest in the Major Leagues.&lt;br />"This has always hit a sore spot with me," Leyland said. "A lot of times in '97, they dropped the point that [Marlins owner Wayne] Huizenga bought the World Series, and that was the farthest thing from the truth. What upset me is that after the fact, they said we bought the World Series. But I checked, and not one of those experts that were saying that picked us [to win]. So they must've thought I was a lousy manager."&lt;br />While Leyland was at it, he took a shot at the parity of the National Football League compared to Major League Baseball. While the NFL's Patriots built a dynasty, he pointed out, the National League hasn't had a repeat champion since the Braves in 1995 and '96.&lt;br />Dmitri defends Pokey: Dmitri Young considers Pokey Reese, a former teammate with the Reds, one of his close friends, and he credits Reese with helping make him a good hitter. That's why Young had a hard time listening to Reese take criticism for leaving Marlins camp unannounced.&lt;br />So far, Reese hasn't answered back. So Young decided to do it for him.&lt;br />"The reason Pokey got out of the game, it was quite noble," Young said. "But because it wasn't put out there, he's made to look like he just turned his back on the game, which definitely wasn't the case."&lt;br />Reese left Marlins camp in the beginning of March without contacting the club. Florida released him on March 5, and the team still hasn't heard from Reese or heard his reasons for leaving.&lt;br />Young said Reese's departure came down to two reasons. Reese, he said, felt like he needed to spend more time with his kids, two of whom lost their mothers at a young age according to past reports. Then, Young said, Reese felt his shoulder pop on a throw during camp, the same shoulder that required two surgeries and forced him out for all of last season.&lt;br />Once he felt his shoulder pop, Young said, Reese decided it wasn't worth it.&lt;br />"He lost the passion for the game," Young said. "You can't really fault a guy for that, because that happens. And he was smart enough to say the money didn't matter to him. It was his own personal happiness."&lt;br />In Reese's case, Young said, happiness involved being around his children more often. Young said Reese is working with his brother on their Charlotte-based business venture.&lt;br />Why Reese didn't tell anyone he was leaving was another matter, whether it was a miscommunication or another reason. Whatever happened, Young supports his former teammate.&lt;br />"Some people might think this or that," Young said. "I'm his friend. I'm going to support whatever he does. I want him to be happy, if that means not coming out [to play]. If he lost his passion for the game, he's not going to hold somebody else up."&lt;br />Injury updates: Young was listed as available off the bench on the lineup sheet for Thursday's game against the Yankees. He had a strong session of batting practice before the game and took ground balls at third base. Leyland said Young should be able to be the starting designated hitter on Friday against the Twins, which would be his first action since straining his left quadriceps on March 4 against Team Italy.&lt;br />Craig Monroe, meanwhile, also had an encouraging day, though it's not certain when he'll be available.&lt;br />Cuts coming: Look for a round of cuts to come Friday or Saturday. Leyland and president/general manager Dave Dombrowski have an early Friday morning meeting scheduled, during which they're supposed to discuss trimming the roster. None of the cuts, Leyland said, will likely be a surprise.&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://detroit.tigers.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://detroittigers.barebaseball.com/2006/03/notes-leyland-defends-yankees.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13572325/posts/full/114321613506096573</guid><pubDate>Fri, 24 Mar 2006 16:01:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-03-24T08:02:15.063-08:00</atom:updated><title>Logan's single difference in victory</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/16/2006&lt;br />Tigers at the plate: Three solo homers powered Detroit's offense -- Omar Infante in the third inning, Vance Wilson in the fourth and Marcus Thames leading off the bottom of the seventh. Nook Logan walked twice and also had a stolen base and the game-winning hit, a single in the bottom of the ninth, driving in Brandon Inge.&lt;br />Yankees at the plate: Damian Rolls put New York on the scoreboard with an RBI fielder's choice in the fourth before Felix Escalona hit a hard line drive that hit off shortstop Don Kelly's glove for an RBI single. Marcos Vechionacci briefly put the Yankees ahead in the seventh when he singled, stole second base and came around to score on two errors.&lt;br />Tigers on the mound: Starter Nate Robertson put ground balls to work in his fourth outing of the spring, inducing double plays to end each of his first four innings. Back-to-back walks loaded the bases with no outs in what ended up being a two-run fourth. Eulogio De La Cruz earned the win with two scoreless innings.&lt;br />Yankees on the mound: Starter Matt DeSalvo held the Tigers scoreless until Infante's home run. He gave up three hits in as many innings, scattering three walks and striking out three. Sean Henn took the loss in his second inning of work.&lt;br />Grapefruit League records: Tigers 10-6-1; Yankees 7-9.&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://detroit.tigers.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://detroittigers.barebaseball.com/2006/03/logans-single-difference-in-victory.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13572325/posts/full/114321607051296272</guid><pubDate>Fri, 24 Mar 2006 16:00:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-03-24T08:01:10.513-08:00</atom:updated><title>Tata struggles with control in defeat</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/16/2006&lt;br />Tigers at the plate: Reggie Taylor drove in a run with a double to right-center field off left-hander Valerio De Los Santos in the bottom of the eighth to cut the Nationals' lead to 3-1.&lt;br />Nationals at the plate: Wiki Gonzalez drove in the first run in the bottom of the second inning with a sacrifice fly to score Ryan Church. Damian Jackson knocked in the second run in the fourth inning with a single to left. Marlon Byrd, who leads the Nationals with nine RBIs, drove in Wiki Gonzalez with a double that gave the Nats a 3-0 lead. Nick Johnson and Ryan Zimmerman hit back to-back home runs off Kevin Hodge in the bottom of the eighth inning, when Hodge gave up five runs.&lt;br />Tigers on the mound: Starter Jordan Tata gave up a run in two innings, but the run was not earned. Tata walked four batters and struck out one. Preston Larrison and Lee Gardner gave up one run apiece.&lt;br />Nationals on the mound: Right-hander John Patterson pitched five shutout innings, striking out six batters and walking two. Both Mike Stanton and Felix Rodriguez pitched an inning without allowing a run.&lt;br />Grapefruit League records: Tigers 9-7; Nationals 4-13-1.&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://detroit.tigers.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://detroittigers.barebaseball.com/2006/03/tata-struggles-with-control-in-defeat.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>http://www.blogger.com/feeds/13572325/posts/full/114321583468464389</guid><pubDate>Fri, 24 Mar 2006 15:56:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-03-24T07:57:14.686-08:00</atom:updated><title>Tigers to sharpen focus on fielding</title><description>&lt;div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">03/16/2006&lt;br />LAKELAND, Fla. -- Pardon Jim Leyland if he wasn't in a celebrating mood Thursday.&lt;br />The Tigers beat a Yankees split-squad in the bottom of the ninth inning in a game televised in Detroit, but they made four errors doing it. Meanwhile, Detroit's split-squad made three errors in a loss to the Nationals in Viera, Fla.&lt;br />That's seven errors over 17 innings in the field. Leyland said when Spring Training opened that he didn't want his players afraid to make errors, but this was too much.&lt;br />"Forget the score," Leyland said. "This was a good day for us because we learned some lessons. We gave up too many outs defensively, and that's what I've been talking about. We had four errors, and no tough errors. Those are plays that we've got to make. That's not putting pressure on anybody; that's just a fact. I'm talking about plays that need to be made, routine plays."&lt;br />Against the Yankees, the Tigers "errored" for the cycle -- a bobbled bouncer by third baseman Brandon Inge, a wayward throw by second baseman Omar Infante that erased a potential double play, a ground ball that got past first baseman Carlos Pena and a throw into center field by catcher Vance Wilson. That sloppiness seemed to overshadow double plays that ended each of the first four innings.&lt;br />Leyland doesn't want to pick on any individuals, but he emphasized that team defense must improve. The stats show it's been that way for a while.&lt;br />When former manager Alan Trammell took over the Tigers, he made defense a point of emphasis, and it was a source of frustration. After three consecutive years of placing last in the American League in errors and fielding percentage, Detroit placed third-to-last in 2005.&lt;br />Leyland wants better fielding than that. When he has his full squad back in camp once the World Baseball Classic ends, he plans to make a point of it in a meeting with his players.&lt;br />"I don't want to make it sound like we won the game and this guy's ranting and raving," he said, "but I'm going to mention to them that this just won't work. Nice going, we won, but those are routine plays. They've got to be outs, plain and simple. This is the big leagues. If guys can't handle that, then shame on them."&lt;br />The point already is getting across. Inge cautioned that it's still Spring Training. Sun-drenched days in Florida can make it hard to read a hopper, many players use the time to break in new gloves and the starting middle infield isn't even here. But he sees the message: If a sloppy Spring Training carries over once the team heads north, it'll give opponents too many extra outs, creating a debilitating effect on a pitching staff geared to pitch for ground ball outs.&lt;br />"I hate errors more than anything in the entire game," Inge said. "I hate them when I make them. I hate them when other players make them, and I hope they feel the same way. Defense wins ballgames."&lt;br />Of course, Inge had plenty of errors of his own last year. In his first full season at third base, Inge led American League third basemen with 23 errors. In his defense, he also led the Major Leagues in total chances and range factor, but he admittedly has to improve to play the hot corner full-time.&lt;br />Enter new infield coach Rafael Belliard, one of the better fielding shortstops in the National League during his playing days in Pittsburgh and Atlanta. Belliard has had enough work around the squad, but he's paid particular attention with Inge and fine-tuning his game. They've talked about reading a grounder before it's on him, getting Inge in front of the ball when possible and charging hoppers rather than waiting on them.&lt;br />They've also addressed the mental aspect of being selectively aggressive. Inge still wants to go all out, but wants to use it to his advantage.&lt;br />"Sometimes bunts I know are base hits, I'll still take a charge on," Inge said, "And I end up making a bad throw, which gets him on second. I need to realize when to hold it."&lt;br />On Tuesday, he even received a piece of advice from the opponent. After Inge mishandled the in-between hopper, new Yankees third base coach Larry Bowa -- a solid infielder when he played -- told him to trust his instincts. Inge's first instinct was to charge, but he stopped.&lt;br />He stills wants to be aggressive, and he still anticipates making mistakes on balls others wouldn't reach. But if he can cut down on what he calls the "stupid errors," he thinks that'll make a difference.&lt;br />"I feel like I'm a good infielder," Inge said. "I feel like I still have a lot of things to learn. I don't feel like a catcher going to third base anymore; I feel like I'm an infielder."&lt;br />It would also help keep Leyland more content.&lt;br />&lt;br />Source: http://detroit.tigers.mlb.com/&lt;/div></description><link>http://detroittigers.barebaseball.com/2006/03/tigers-to-sharpen-focus-on-fielding.html</link><author>b2blog@gmail.com (David)</author></item></channel></rss>