Blogs > Out of Left Field

A sometimes-irreverent look at Detroit's Boys of Summer, the Tigers, as they try to return to the top of the American League Central.

Friday, May 23, 2014

Tigers outright contract of Francisco Martinez to make room for Corey Knebel


DETROIT — No doubt about it, Corey Knebel is one of the Detroit Tigers’ hottest minor-league commodities.

But when the Tigers decided Thursday they were bringing him up, there was one snag: He was not yet on the 40-man roster.

The Tigers took care of that Friday, when they actually made the transaction, outrighting the contract of Francisco Martinez to Double-A Erie. Robbie Ray was sent to Triple-A Toledo after Thursday’s start to clear room on the active roster.

According to MLB.com’s preseason list, Knebel ranked as Detroit’s 16th-best prospect (Ray was No. 3). Martinez used to be perceived that well.

When he was included in the trade to bring Doug Fister to the Tigers from the Seattle Mariners, Martinez was ranked as the No. 4 prospect in the Detroit farm system. After a disappointing stint in the Mariners’ system, Martinez was sent back to Detroit in trade, after being designated for assignment last June.

The Tigers had to designate Quintin Berry for assignment to add Martinez to the 40-man at that time, and ended up losing him, before seeing him again in the playoffs with the Red Sox.

After hitting .295 with 13 doubles and three home runs with Hi-A Lakeland in his return to the Tigers’ system last season, Martinez is hitting .228 with one home run and five doubles in 37 games with Erie this year.

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Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Game 5 ALDS lineups/match-ups (Tigers at Yankees)

DETROIT TIGERS at NEW YORK YANKEES
Best of 5 series tied 2-2

When: Thursday, 8 p.m.
Where: Yankee Stadium, Bronx, New York
TV: TBS
(Brian Anderson, play-by-play; John Smoltz and Ron Darling, color)
Radio: WXYT-FM (97.1) and AM (1270)
(Dan Dickerson, play-by-play; Jim Price, color commentary)

DETROIT TIGERS
(series average in parentheses)
Austin Jackson, CF (.083, 1-for-12, 2R, 4BB, 5K)
Don Kelly, 3B (.429, 3-for-7, 2R, 1RBI, 2R)
Delmon Young, LF (.267, 4-for-15, 3R, 2HR, 2RBI, 2BB, 1K)
Miguel Cabrera, 1B (.250, 3-for-12, 2R, 1HR, 3RBI, 4BB, 3K)
Victor Martinez, DH (.214, 3-for-14, 1R, 1HR, 2RBI, 2BB, 5K)
Magglio Ordonez, RF (.375, 3-for-8, 1R, 1BB, 1K)
Jhonny Peralta, SS (.267, 4-for-15, 2-2B, 1RBI, 4K)
Alex Avila, C (.000, 0-for-12, 1RBI, 2BB, 6K)
Ramon Santiago, 2B (.200, 2-for-10, 1-2B, 2 RBI, 1K)

Starting pitcher:
Doug Fister
, RHP
2011 regular season: 11-13, 32 GS, 2.83 ERA, 216.1 IP, 146K, 1.063 WHIP, 0.5 HR/9 (led AL)
2011 with Detroit: 8-1, 1.79 ERA, 70.1 IP, 57K, 0.839 WHIP, 6.9 H/9
2011 road splits: 5-7, 15 GS, 3.36 ERA, 8 HR, .243 BA, 11 GDP, 1.082 WHIP
Game 1 line: 4.2 IP, 7H, 6 ER, 2 BB, 6 K, 1.929 WHIP

Relief pitching: Manager Jim Leyland has said Justin Verlander is not going to be used in relief, and he'd like to keep from using anyone but Fister, LHP Phil Coke, RHP Joaquin Benoit and closer Jose Valverde. Game 2 starter Max Scherzer is also available, per reports from NY today.

NEW YORK YANKEES
(series numbers in parentheses)
Derek Jeter, SS (.263, 5-for-19, 5R, 1-2B, 2 RBI, 1 BB, 7K)
Curtis Granderson, CF (.250, 4-for-16, 4R, 1-2B, 1-3B, 1 HR, 3 RBI, 6K)
Robinson Cano, 2B (.294, 5-for-17, 1R, 2-2B, 1 HR, 8 RBI, 4K, 2BB)
Alex Rodriguez, 3B (.143, 2-for-14, 1R, 3 RBI, 3K, 3BB)
Mark Teixeira, 1B (.133, 2-for-15, 2R, 1-2B, 5K, 1BB)
Nick Swisher, RF (.200, 3-for-15, 1R, 1 HR, 1 RBI, 4K 1BB)
Jorge Posada, DH (.400, 4-for-10, 4R, 1-3B, 5K, 4BB)
Russell Martin, C (.231, 2-for-14, 3R, 2K, 2BB)
Brett Gardner, LF (.385, 5-for-13, 3R, 1-2B, 5 RBI, 3K, 1BB)

Starting pitcher:
Ivan Nova
, RHP
2011 regular season: 16-4, 27 GS, 165.1 IP, 98 K, 1.331 WHIP
Game 1 line: 6.1 IP, 4H, 2 ER, 4 BB, 5 K, 1.263 WHIP
2011 home splits: 8-2, 14 GS, 4.11 ERA, 46 K, 10 HR, 1.406 WHIP

Relief pitching: Manager Joe Girardi has said everyone — including ace CC Sabathia — is available.

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Saturday, October 1, 2011

Changes to pitching schedule won't faze Tigers a bit

There’s something to be said for the art of managing.

If, as a big-league manager, you constantly fly off the handle, your team is probably going to overreact right along with you.

If, instead, like Detroit Tigers manger Jim Leyland is so often wont to do, you keep an even keel, your team is probably going to reflect that, too.

That “que sera, sera” (whatever will be, will be) attitude is part of the reason the Tigers were able to win 95 games in the regular season, and break their 24-year division title drought.

And it’s why Friday’s deluge — which threw both the schedule of the American Division Series and the pitching rotations therein into confusion — won’t be treated as a the end of the world.

“You know what? This is not a big deal. Everybody does the best they can,” Leyland said after Friday’s game was called after torrential rain stopped the game following top of the second inning; it will be picked up from that point Saturday night. “Everybody’s sort of scurrying around right now, but there’s no sense getting excited. It’s just the way it is.”

And that’s the way the Tigers are handling the fact that — rather than twice, in Games 1 and 5 — ace Justin Verlander will only throw once in the series now. After throwing one inning Friday, he’s been slated to go again on Monday in Game 3 at Comerica Park.

Some are making it out to be a colossal detriment to the Tigers’ chances.

Not Leyland.

“I don’t make a big deal about stuff like that. I think when the manager makes a big deal about things like that, it affects the players. It is what it is,” he said in Friday’s postgame press conference.
“Good lord, it rained. So what? It’s all about three. You know? Win three, lose three. That’s what this is about. The magic number is three. For both teams. That’s the way it is. There’s no sense getting excited.”

Seems to me we’ve been here before.

Back in mid-August, when the Cleveland Indians had closed to a game and a half behind the Tigers entering a head-to-head series, Leyland steadfastly refused to panic, and pitch Verlander in the Sunday finale. Instead, over his ace’s stated objections, Leyland gave him an extra day of rest, saving him to start the next series, on the road in Tampa Bay.

In essence, the skipper’s message to his team was “I think you can win this series without him.”

Boy, did they ever.

The Tigers outscored the Indians 22-9 in the series, winning the finale 8-7 on Austin Jackson’s catch-and-throw double play to nab the potential tying run at the plate for the final out of the game. The Tigers would never lead by fewer than five games the rest of the way.

Leyland will to this day insist that the Tampa series — when the Tigers took three out of four from the eventual AL Wild Card in a low-scoring series — was the pivotal point of the 2011 season.

Even his ace doesn’t entirely follow that reasoning.

“I think more the Cleveland series, for me, is the one I kind of look at, especially the way we swept that game with Austin throwing the guy out at home,” Verlander said recently. “That was a real jumping-off point, I thought.”

Another jumping-off point was the acquisition of Doug Fister at the trade deadline. He’s pitched like 1-A in the Tigers’ rotation since mid-August, actually putting up better numbers than Verlander, the prohibitive favorite for the Cy Young, in that span.

And now it’ll be Fister who will probably throw twice in the series. He’ll pitch the resumption of Game 1 Saturday night, then go again in Game 5, if necessary.

“I don’t think it changes a thing,” Verlander told MLB Network, when asked what a difference that makes.

The only thing that changes for the two teams is that pitching depth may be more of a factor.
The Tigers carried all five of their starters on the postseason roster: Verlander and Fister, along with Max Scherzer — who is now slated to go in Sunday’s Game 2 — and Rick Porcello — who will throw in Game 4, as originally planned. They also kept fifth starter Brad Penny, who has more playoff pitching experience than anyone else on the roster, hoping he’d be a bonus, should they need a long reliever or a spot starter.

For the Yankees, who’d planned to go with a three-man rotation, the plan changes more drastically.

Manager Joe Girardi has said that Game 1 starter CC Sabathia, who threw 27 pitches in two innings of work Friday, won’t be back sooner than Monday. Sabathia would have to pitch Sunday at the latest, if he were to be able to pitch a second time in the series himself, going in Game 5 on three days rest.

That forces Girardi to likely have to use a fourth starter — the struggling A.J. Burnett and his 5.15 ERA, probably in Game 4 — after rookie Ivan Nova pitches Saturday, and journeyman one-time Tiger Freddy Garcia pitches in Sunday’s Game 2.

Advantage? Probably the Tigers, who seem to have the advantage of depth.

But most of all, the Tigers have the advantage because they don’t seem to think it’s a big deal, either way.

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Friday, September 9, 2011

Leyland tells Penny to pick up the pace

To say that Brad Penny is "deliberate" in his pace on the mound would be an understatement.

Perhaps the slowest worker among all the Tigers' pitchers, his exaggeratedly slow pace has merely been more noticeable with the addition of Doug "Get Ball, Throw Ball" Fister to the rotation.

It's surely something that every fan has noticed. And it's something that his manager has now spoken to him about.

"I talked to him a little bit in Cleveland about maybe picking up the pace a little bit, just to see if it helps. If it doesn’t work, it’ll be my fault," the manager said before Penny's start against the Twins Friday, noting that he doesn't know if the suggestion will be successful.
"I think sometimes, the longer you take before you throw it again, sometimes you outthink yourself. Get it back, look in for the sign, and throw it. Now, is it going to be that rapid (of) a pace? I can’t swear to that. But hopefully it’ll be a little quicker than it’s been.

"I don’t know that it’s going to help. We need him to pitch good tonight, whether he takes all day to do it. If he pitches good, that’s fine with me."

For Penny, who's in contention for the Tigers' fourth spot in the playoff rotation, a solid outing is a necessity in more ways than one. He's lost four of his last six decisions, dating back to July 23, and has a 6.85 ERA over that stretch.

In fact, according to HardballTalk.com, he has the fifth-worst ERA in the majors (6.49) since the All-Star break.

It's also a necessity for the playoff momentum of the Tigers (81-62), who have won six straight to pare their magic number down to just 12 with 19 games to go.

The theory, of course, is that a starter who works fast keeps the defense on its toes behind him.

"That’s a double-edged sword. Because if you tell somebody to throw it before they’re ready, and it’s not successful, then ..." Leyland trailed off. "I’ve always said it’s like a good or bad movie: If you go to a bad movie, and it’s slow, you leave. If you go to a good movie, and it’s long, you stay."

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