Category Archives: Tigers Posts

How Was The Game? (August 17, 2014)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

Ugly.

Mariners 8, Tigers 1

I don’t really want to tell you about this game, but let me give you the basics. Robbie Ray (5 GS, 25.1 IP, 5.33 ERA, 3.65 FIP, 0.4 fWAR) was okay, giving up four runs in five innings while allowing seven hits and a walk and striking out two. He wasn’t horrible, but he didn’t do much to help the team win. To his credit, the offense and defense were worse and combined with the bullpen to allow an additional four runs to come across. There wasn’t a lot to like. Max Scherzer (25 GS, 169 IP, 2.98 ERA, 2.76 FIP, 4.6 fWAR) gets the ball Tuesday against the Rays.

The Moment: Jim Johnson made a pretty nice defensive play?

How Was The Game? (August 16, 2014)

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Worth the Price of admission.

Tigers 4, Mariners 2

With big crowds converging on Detroit for dream cruise, One Direction concert, and marquee matchup at Comerica, David Price (26 GS, 193.1 IP, 3.12 ERA, 3.01 FIP, 4.2 fWAR) did not disappoint in his home debut. Price gave the Tigers eight innings of one run baseball, courtesy of three hits, three walks, and seven strikeouts. The bats had a tall order, facing the AL’s best starter in Felix Hernandez, but they wore him out early and were in to the pen by inning number six. They grabbed a run in the second, Nick broke a 1-1 tie with a blast in the 4th, and then the Tigers added on a pair of runs with three hits and a walk in the 7th. Price loaded the bases with one out in the 8th, but he punched out Jackson and induced a ground ball to escape. Nathan didn’t lose it in the 9th but allowed a run, giving the Tigers a big win against the league’s toughest pitcher. They’ll go for the series win behind trade-centerpiece Robbie Ray (4 GS, 20.1 IP, 5.31 ERA, 3.57 FIP, 0.4 fWAR) on Sunday.

The Moment: Price leaves the bases loaded in the 8th, leaves to a standing ovation.

How Was The Game? (August 15, 2014)

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Deflating. 

Mariners 7, Tigers 2

The Tigers welcomed Austin Jackson and the wild card rival (?!) Mariners to Detroit on Friday and it didn’t exactly go as planned. Rick Porcello (23 GS, 156.1 IP, 3.28 ERA, 3.65 FIP, 2.6 fWAR) hung in there for six innings but he wasn’t at his best and had to pitch around some very sloppy Tigers defense. He allowed three in the 2nd and one each in the 3rd, 4th, and 5th, but kept it from getting totally out of hand and draining the bullpen on day one. The bats didn’t do much, grabbing a run on a triple and ground out from Davis and Kinsler for their only early run, to which they would add to with one in the 8th. Melvin Mercedes made his MLB debut and retired six batters, but nothing else of note came of the late innings. The Tigers will need to punch back on Saturday in a battle of titans, with David Price (25 GS, 185.1 IP, 3.21 ERA, 3.03 FIP, 4.0 fWAR) lining up against King Felix.

The Moment: The Comerica faithful gives Austin Jackson a warm welcome.

Max Scherzer Forgot To Change Anything

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Max Scherzer had his best season to date in 2013. After it was over, my basic message about Scherzer was that he will continue to be good but he had simply reached his peak and his career year was already behind him. In a way, I was sort of right. In another way, I was totally wrong. You see, Max Scherzer didn’t get better this year but he also didn’t get worse. Max Scherzer is exactly the same pitcher he was last year to the point where it is actually a little bit weird.

Let’s run through the numbers a little bit:

Season GS IP
2013 32 214.1
2014 25 169

Technically, he’s getting one extra out per game, averaging 6.2 innings in 2013 and 7 in 2014. Oh well, look at this! Just look at it!

Season K% BB% HR/9
2013 28.7 % 6.7 % 0.76
2014 28.7 % 6.7 % 0.75

What? Like serious, Max what the hell? Are you a robot?

At least his BABIP is way different, which means we’re probably going to see a big swing in ERA.

Season BABIP ERA FIP xFIP RA9
2013 0.259 2.90 2.74 3.16 3.07
2014 0.312 2.98 2.76 3.01 2.98

Oh.

Going into the season, we were planning on getting a little less from Scherzer in 2014 simply due to normal regression, but Max, ever the intellectual, completely avoided what was supposed to happen. If you know baseball well enough, you know that this is completely ridiculous. Even if he was exactly the same pitcher, you couldn’t have had identical results like this if you tried.

Max is very good and did a nice job staying on top of his game, but what you’re seeing him do this year is one in a million.

How Was The Game? (August 14, 2014)

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A Scher thing.

Tigers 5, Pirates 2

Max Scherzer (25 GS, 169 IP, 2.98 ERA, 2.75 FIP, 4.6 fWAR) was tired of fan malaise and just decided to make sure no one was complaining after this one. He started by getting his first seven outs on strikeouts, mixing in a cost stealing, and winding up adding eight more over the course of his afternoon. He was dominant and most of the Pirates had no chance up there today as he went full on Blue Eye. The Tigers got a big home run from JD Martinez and tacked on another run, but then busted it open in the bottom of the 8th to avoid any unpleasant “Joe Nathan pitches.” Coke got the 9th, walked the leadoff man and allowed a home run but Joba made sure it ended there. The two home wins in the series were much needed and they’ll get a chance to put some distance between themselves and Austin Jackson’s Mariners starting Friday behind Rick Porcello (22 GS, 150.1 IP, 3.11 ERA, 3.61 FIP, 2.6 fWAR).

The Moment: Scherzer gets a ground out and pumps his fist to a standing ovation after 8 scoreless.

How Was The Game? (August 13, 2014)

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Much needed.

Tigers 8, Pirates 4

Buck Farmer (1 GS, 5 IP, 7.20 ERA, 5.33 FIP, 0.0 fWAR) was called on to play the role of stopper. Wait, what? Farmer has some nice moments and flashed some potential, but five innings of four run baseball won’t get you a contract extension. He gave up a bomb, six hits, a walk, and punched out four in his debut. Granted, he probably needs two more years of seasoning, so that’s not a bad outing at all. The bats woke up too. Castellanos plated VMart in the 2nd, Avila homered in the 5th, and then lots of guys helped add two more later in that inning. Nick untied it in the 6th with a blast and then the Tigers added three more in the 7th. Joba did the trick and Nathan put two on and survived. The win was needed and the Tigers will look to split with Max Scherzer (24 GS, 161 IP, 3.13 ERA, 2.88 FIP, 4.2 fWAR) on the hill Thursday.

The Moment: Nick hits a go ahead homer in the 6th.

How Was The Game? (August 12, 2014)

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A long hangover.

Pirates 4, Tigers 2

Robbie Ray (4 GS, 20.1 IP, 5.31 ERA, 3.58 FIP, 0.4 fWAR) went from being the Tigers number six starter to their number four starter in a hurry and he pitched about like you’d expect from a backend guy on a normal team. He gave the Tigers five innings of four run baseball while allowing six hits and two walks. He also punched out five. The bullpen didn’t allow any runs, but it was already two late as the Tigers got one run in the first and then another on an Alex Avila home run in the 4th before they quieted down for the evening. They gave it a run in the 9th, but fell short. Given the state of the pitching staff, it’s hard to be shocked by losing a pair in Pittsburgh, but the Tigers will have to straighten things out in short order to make sure they don’t dig much of a hole. Buck Farmer (MLB Debut) will try his hand at the MLB level on Wednesday, because yes, it’s come to this.

The Moment: Avila launches a solo shot.

The Tigers Offense Is NOT Under Achieving

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I think it’s probably safe to say that most people are upset about the state of the Tigers offense. We’re resigned to the bullpen woes, defensive struggles, and bad baserunning, but people counted on this offense to be better. Not so fast. Not so fast, at all.

The Tigers offense is not under achieving at all. They may go into slumps, but this is exactly how they were expected to perform. Allow me to demonstrate.

I grabbed all 13 players that have at least 50 plate appearances. We don’t care if Tyler Collins was bad in  a dozen trips and we don’t care about how Iglesias was supposed to hit. No one would criticize a team for playing poorly because guys got hurt. What we care about is how the players who are on the team have performed relative to our expectations about them specifically.

Certainly, Cabrera is hitting worse and we all seem to think that’s because he’s injured, but let’s look at those 13 players with their preseason Steamer projections. Steamer is a projection system that forecasts how a player should perform based on their history. Below is a table of relevant wOBA’s.

Name Proj PA Real PA Proj wOBA Real wOBA Diff
Alex Avila 391 337 0.329 0.313 -0.016
Andrew Romine 155 195 0.278 0.246 -0.032
Austin Jackson 642 420 0.338 0.322 -0.016
Bryan Holaday 163 116 0.281 0.259 -0.022
Don Kelly 364 134 0.299 0.280 -0.019
Eugenio Suarez 131 182 0.282 0.316 0.034
Ian Kinsler 676 520 0.333 0.328 -0.005
J.D. Martinez 69 291 0.304 0.391 0.087
Miguel Cabrera 656 497 0.423 0.376 -0.047
Nick Castellanos 538 399 0.314 0.312 -0.002
Rajai Davis 383 356 0.303 0.331 0.028
Torii Hunter 620 405 0.337 0.335 -0.002
Victor Martinez 567 448 0.336 0.396 0.060

Some players are doing better, some are doing worse. But on the whole, they are hitting exactly as we thought they would.

I took it a step further and weighted this group’s projected wOBA by their projected PA to get a projected team wOBA of this particular set of players. It came out to .334. I did the same thing with their actual performance and it’s .335.

In other words, the Tigers are exactly the offensive club we thought they were.

You’re going to look at this list and see Cabrera and Avila (and Jackson) below their projections and you’re going to say these guys are under-performing. Sure, but you can’t just say that and ignore how much better JDM, VMart, Davis, and Suarez are hitting. That’s cheating! If Romine was hitting like an MVP this year and Cabrera wasn’t a scrub, you couldn’t rightfully say the team was under-performing because Cabrera wasn’t hitting because Romine was over-performing to the same degree.

I’ve said this all season long, the Tigers are an 89-91 win team. They upgraded a little but then got torched by injuries, so they’re probably an 87-88 win team right now. That’s who they are and who they’re playing like. If you think they should be better, that’s a failure of expectation. The preseason projections have been spot on offensively.

How Was The Game? (August 11, 2014)

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Nope.

Pirates 11, Tigers 6

Justin Verlander (25 GS, 158.2 IP, 4.76 ERA, 4.07 FIP, 2.1 fWAR) threw one inning. His shoulder is hurt. Justin Miller and the defense made it worse. So did baserunning. They made a faux-comeback, but not really. I won’t make you relive it. Robbie Ray (3 GS, 15.1 IP, 4.70 ERA, 3.98 FIP, 0.2 fWAR) goes Tuesday.

The Moment: That glorious half inning when the team was winning.

How Was The Game? (August 10, 2014)

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Not a sweep, somehow.

Blue Jays 6, Tigers 5

The Tigers got bad news on Sanchez and Soria before game time, but their bats brought good news in the first inning. Five straight Tigers reached with two outs in the first to push across three runs in support of David Price (25 GS, 185.1 IP, 3.21 ERA, 3.04 FIP, 4.0 fWAR) who wasn’t as dominant as he was in his first start. Price gave the Tigers six innings plus innings of work, but after allowing two runs and leaving two more on he would wind up allowing four runs on the day while surrendering five hits and an uncharacteristic three walks. He also struck out six and pitched around getting hit with a line drive on the left leg. The bats added on in the 3rd and 4th innings to make sure they had a one run lead for Saver of the Day Joba Chamberlain, who relieved a very effective Al Alburquerque by allowing a game tying series of hits. With two on and Baustita up, the Tigers decided to walk him halfway through the at bat to get to a lefty, yet didn’t use their lefty relievers. Chamberlain K’d Francisco, but we were forced to play on.

And on we played through too much to effectively recap. Every reliever pitched. There were jams, there were rallies. There were no runs. Then it was Porcello time in the 17th inning as the entire roster short of Porcello, Verlander, and Scherzer had been expended. It felt as if it might never end, yet it felt as if it would end at any moment. In his third inning of work a botched play on a sac bunt setup a walk off hit by Bautista. Justin Verlander (24 GS, 157.2 IP, 4.57 ERA, 4.08 FIP, 2.1 fWAR) is the only one available tomorrow.

The Moment: Porcello pitches out of a jam in the 17th…wait what?