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I sat the whole Batter's Box Roster down last month and we talked about the Tigers' chances in 2004 and beyond. This is the first of 30 team previews Batter's Box will be running over the next month or so.

Enjoy!



Detroit Tigers Preview
by Craig Burley, with the Batter's Box Roster


43-119 record591 runs scored, 13th in AL
5th in AL Central928 runs allowed, 13th in AL
Pythagorean Record : 49-113


Jim Seymour put it very well recently over on Baseball Primer : the Tigers are not yet in rebuilding, but rather are in triage. I think that's right... normally, when you look at a team that goes 65-97 and 69-92 the two years before moving into a new park (as the Tigers did) you are at the bottom of a rebuilding cycle. That never happened. In the four years since moving into Comerica Park:

2000 - 79-83
2001 - 66-96
2002 - 55-106
2003 - 43-119

This team, clearly, is not yet rebuilding, but trying to staunch the flow of blood and get back on its feet. Rebuilding can come when there is talent in the system... the Tigers' minor league affiliates went 332-358; their best power hitter in the minors was 34-year-old Ernie Young. Most of the Tigers' best prospects were actually in the majors last year (4 of the top 5 pre-season prospects according to Baseball America spent most or all of the year in Detroit) and those who weren't mostly played poorly.

Players AcquiredPlayers Lost
C Ivan RodriguezSS Ramon Santiago
P Jason JohnsonIF Shane Halter
OF Rondell WhiteC Matt Walbeck
P Al LevineP Cliff Bartosh
2B Fernando Vina3B/DH Dean Palmer
C Mike DiFeliceOF Gene Kingsale
P Esteban Yan
IF Greg Norton
3B John Gizzi
IF Pablo Ozuna
SS Carlos Guillen


The Tigers have been very active in the offseason seeking free agent tourniquets, and I think they've done rather well. The list of incoming and outgoing players looks like a substantial net gain, especially taking into account the signing of Ivan Rodriguez to a . Every area should be improved by these signings. The infield, the outfield, the rotation, the bullpen, and the catching (even if Rodriguez hadn't been signed, DiFelice is an improvement) will all have more talent in 2004. Even the players lost (Walbeck, Halter, Santiago) may well improve the Tigers, because they performed so poorly that even minor-league free agent talent would be an improvement.

Back in January, before the Rodriguez deal was finalized, I sat the Batter's Box authors down and we had a group discussion on the State Of The Tigers. My lead question to the Batter's Box guys was - are the Tigers moving in the right direction, or are they stumbling around in a daze? And what would moves would you do if you were (shudder to think) Dave Dombrowski?

SPICOL : Signing expensive free agents like Pudge is a waste of cash considering that even the best of players can only improve a team by 5-10 wins. As Pat Gillick was fond of saying, buying established players should be the final move toward a championship roster, not the first.

SCOTT LUCAS : 4 and $40 for Pudge is ridiculous... but I sympathize. Sure, the rejoinder to any FA signing is: "Well, that only gets them to 50-55 wins." Well, they have to start somewhere. Attendance at Comerica has fallen 44% in three years, and the Tigers won only 29 home games last year. Just getting to where they can play .450 ball at home would be a major accomplishment.

ROBERT DUDEK : I'm not a big fan of trying to sign Pudge to a 4-year deal. The odds of him surviving without a major injury in that time is small, and I think 2007 is the earliest this club can expect to field a contender (an 85-win ballclub or better). Better to invest cash in
the farm system, draft and arbitration buyouts of a couple of key players. Dombrowski should try shopping Dmitri Young (a good hitter who plays at the wrong end of the spectrum) for prospects.

SPICOL : What the Tigers really need to do is actually develop their young players and stop using them to fill gaps at the Major League level. Under Randy Smith and even still with Dombrowski, the Tigers didn't use Toledo, their AAA franchise as it should be used. Toledo was a dumping ground for all of the organizational players and almost all of their "ML ready" prospects were housed in AA. Prospects routinely skipped AAA when called to the bigs - Matt Anderson, Franklyn German, Jeremy Bonderman, Nate Cornejo, Brandon Inge, Fernando Rodney and Eric Munson were all in Detroit before being given an opportunity to play a substantial amount of time in AAA or any at all.

Filling the Major League roster with NRI players and cheap free agents until the kids can develop is probably the way to go for the next 3-4 years. Once Carlos Pena, Eric Munson and Jeremy Bonderman are solid major leaguers and the young players have grown in a complementary fashion, then Dombrowski can put cash on the barrel for free agents. Sure, the team will be awful for the near future and Comerica will continue to be two-thirds empty but how is that any different from today? Everything the team does today should be toward a successful 2007. If that includes saving money on the major league roster to pay the Kyle Sleeths of the world, then so be it.

ROBERT DUDEK : Hopefully, the Tigers are through signing the likes of Dean Palmer and Bobby Higginson to mammoth deals and, with all the high draft picks, the farm system might start producing good players in 3 years (much like TB has started to do).

SCOTT LUCAS : For a team to play this badly is a singular event in the Free Agent Era.
We're witnesses to history!

I second the idea of signing FAs to one-year deals in the hope of flipping them for prospects during the season. Would that Detroit had done so. All of their major FA signings (Johnson, White and Vina) were two-year deals. The Vina deal galls me. Is he $2.7 million better than Warren Morris? Is he better than Morris at all? This is Case Example #1 of what the team
should NOT be doing.

To my knowledge, Detroit has no exorbitant contracts aside from Higginson and Dmitri Young. Higginson will receive $8.85 this season and a staggering $11.85 the next. Young gets a hair over $7 each of the next two years. Young, at least, earned his money last year, but his OPS+ had never surpassed 119 before last year's 142. Odds are he regresses. Like Colorado, Detroit anxiously awaits September 2005, when the old-era contracts disappear.

ROBERT DUDEK : I've just finished reading The Curse of Rocky Colavito by Terry Pluto. One of the things Pluto mentions is the trades the Indians made in the early '90s which helped them build their great teams. The key deal was acquiring Baerga (and Sandy Alomar) for established vet Joe Carter. If the Tigers can pull something off like that with Dmitri Young, or one of the vets they've signed this off-season during the course of 2004, and get really good prospects back, that might vault them into contention sooner than we expect.

GERRY MACDONALD : Yes, I would follow what Dombrowski seems to be doing. Sign some good major league talent to one year deals and hope to trade them in summer for a prospect or two. Major free agent signings (Pudge) are stop gaps for now as they will likely be gone before the Tigers challenge again.

MIKE DENYSZYN : Much like the Rockies' ability to flip hitters who put up ridiculous Coors stats for value, the Tigers should be able to "churn" pitchers whose numbers will be aided by park effects. I would take some NRI chances specifically on HR-prone vets. As the deadline approaches, Dombrowski might be able to make a Suppan-style deal. (Mind you, Jose Lima sure didn't work out in the D-Ro.)

They need to add some semblance of a power dimension, badly, to their lineup. They don't walk, but there's no reason for pitchers to nibble against them because of their lack of pop. With Comerica Park, they'll never compete with Texas or Boston for home runs...but there's no obvious excuse for being last in the league in doubles. They strike out a lot, which is costly when not accompanied by slugging.

If they can't put together a team with sock in that ballpark, then employing the running game is OK -- but not if they do it as foolishly as they did last season. They were tied for fifth in the league in steals, but first in the AL in caught stealing. Put differently, the D-Rays -- who weren't all that much better on paper last season, but were a lot less fun to face -- stole 44 more bases and were caught 21 *fewer* times.

GERRY MACDONALD : I think the Tigers situation has some similarities to what J.P. Ricciardi faced when he took over the Blue Jays. A team that has not made the playoffs, that does not look like it will, that does not have a clear sense of what it stands for, and a farm system that needs some work. Obviously the Tigers are in a much deeper hole but I think if you want to look at making the playoffs Dombrowski has to start with the farm system. A strong farm system gives you either players or trade bait. Dombrowski needs both. Last year one of the Tigers many problems was a lack of tradeable players. If we accept that the Tigers are at least three years from challenging for a playoff spot then we need to work with that timeline in mind.

The Tigers need to build a strong farm system, and the Tigers top 10 prospects from spring 2003 as selected by Baseball America did not have a good 2003. Bonderman and Infante made the major league team, but nearly all others struggled or were injured. There does not appear to be a lot of help on the horizon. So my recommendation would be to select college players in the draft. As JP has shown us these picks have less risk and can get to the big leagues more quickly than high school picks.

JORDAN FURLONG : Like Gerry suggested, it's even worse than it appears for Los Tigres. Here's how their ten best minor leaguers (according to BA) coming into 2003 fared last year.

1. Jeremy Bonderman, RHP, 20, MLB: 6-19, 5.56
2. Preston Larrison, RHP, 22, AA: 4-12, 5.61
3. Franklyn German, RHP, 23, MLB: 2-4, 6.04, 5 Sv
4. Omar Infante, SS/2B, 21 MLB: .222/.278/.258 AAA: .223/.299/.295
5. Eric Munson, 1B/3B, 25, MLB: .240/.312/.441
6. Scott Moore, 3B, 19, Low-A: .239/.325/.363
7. Nook Logan, OF, 23, AA: .251/.316/.333, 37 SB
8. Rob Henkel, LHP, 25, AA: 9-3, 3.38 (25 in Double-A?)
10. Anderson Hernandez, SS, 20, High-A: .229/.278/.295

And their top draft pick, Kyle Sleeth, held out for a $3.35M signing bonus and didn't pitch all year. It's disturbing enough that two of their top ten were 25 years old last year, and that three of them spent the year overmatched in the majors. But consider the combined BB/K rate of the hitters on that list: 266/523. They're overmatched at every level.

I haven't yet seen BA's 2004 Tigers top ten, but I can't imagine it's gotten a whole lot better. [Editor's note : Baseball America's 2004 Tigers Top Ten is now available online for subscribers.] Even with a smart, college-oriented draft that would start this June, I can't see the Tigers producing solid homegrown players for at least three years, which means Tiger fans should look forward to 90- and even 100-loss seasons almost to the end of the decade.

MIKE DENYSZYN : As far as drafting hitters goes -- and the Tigers need hitters on all levels -- I wouldn't rigidly adhere to Gerry's suggestion to draft college players. Taking signability issues out of the equation for a moment, I wouldn't have any problem with a very-high-ceiling HS hitter with the #1 pick in the '04 draft, or in their certain-to-be excellent picks in the next couple of drafts. The Tigers need a jolt as a franchise, and if they can land a potential superstar from HS, they can afford to be patient. I guess the more concise way to put it is "best player available," at any position and from any source.

JOHN NEARY : I'm with Mike D on drafting. The Tigers have no impact players on their major league roster and no terribly exciting prospects in the minors. They are precisely the sort of team that should embrace a high-risk, high-reward drafting strategy.

MIKE DENYSZYN : There's an argument for college emphasis in Detroit. You could look at the division and argue that some excellent college drafts might vault the club into semi-contention in the near term, against four clubs that won't spend freely. But in my opinion, even if you assume that the AL Central will continue to suck, competing with the other small fish shouldn't be the longer-term goal of the Tigers. They need an influx of talent, period, and if it means looking to Latin America or the prep ranks... hey, why not?

JOHN NEARY : The Jays were in a completely different situation when Ricciardi was hired in 2001. Their biggest need was to jettison overpriced mediocrities and middle-of-the-road guys so that they could keep their stars around. Ricciardi doesn't get nearly enough credit for the speed and precision of his house-cleaning.

The Jays weren't rebuilding from the ground up, and they had a few prospects coming through the pipeline. It made sense for them to go with a low-risk strategy of drafting college players because they already had a talented nucleus around which to build and they wanted guys who could get to the majors quickly. But if they hadn't had Delgado or FLop or Hudson or Phelps or Wells or Doc or Escobar around, I think they might have taken more chances with their first-round picks, as I think the Tigers should do in the years to come.

JORDAN FURLONG : This organization reminds me of Paul Freeman's line to Karen Allen when she was trying to escape the tents in Raiders of the Lost Ark: "The desert runs for 30 miles in every direction."

GERRY MACDONALD : There is the budget and attendance question. This brings up the chicken or egg question: do the Tigers sign players to be mildly competitive and hope to keep attendance reasonable, or do you focus on player development at the expense of on field results, and perhaps attendance? I think Tigers attendance was good last year, considering the on field performance, so I would manage more for the long term.

ROBERT DUDEK : I think it is crucial to field a team that will be at least respectable. The "New Ballpark" effect has nearly exhausted itself, which means that the Tigers will have to draw fans on merit. Continuing to lose 100+ games will destroy much of the fan base and that will mean Tampa Bay-like revenues.

A 65-97 season should be their target in 2004, and 73-89 in 2005. Carlos Guillen, Jason Johnson, Fernando Vina and Rondell White are decent stop gaps. Dmitri Young and Carlos Pena can be counted on to produce, while one of the youngsters (Infante, Sanchez) will likely improve enough to be adequate.

MIKE DENYSZYN : Even with the left field fence being moved in a bit, the Tigers still play in a unique park. Detroit really needs to address their outfield defence, and their CF defence in particular. It'll give them the flexibility to add flyball pitchers (if otherwise effective) to their staff.

ROBERT DUDEK : I like Alex Sanchez in centrefield. He ought to cover a lot of ground out there once he gets comfortable. With the right coaching, he could produce .350 OBPs. They would then need to find a big bat for the other corner outfielder slot, preferably 2 if they can trade Young.

They ought to be asking the Jays about Gabe Gross, though I don't know what they have that would entice Toronto to trade Gross.

JORDAN FURLONG : I'd take Bonderman [for Gross]....

MIKE DENYSZYN : How did Sanchez do defensively last year -- either through subjective evaluations or UZR, DER, etc.?

CRAIG B : Sanchez has done well according to UZR... he is +7 runs over average per 162 games in his 222-game career in centerfield (but -5 runs in his arm rating, indicating either that guys take the extra base on him, or more likely he has to make a lot of deep throws because of his park and pitching staff). That squares with my only impression of Sanchez which is that he runs REALLY fast. I don't know how quick a jump he gets, haven't seen him enough.

ROBERT DUDEK : Diamond Mind rates him AVERAGE range, POOR throwing arm.

I look for Bonderman to improve this year and for Fernando Rodney to become a premier reliever over the next few years. Cody Ross is one of the few good prospects in the minors, but I don't expect him to contribute until 2005.

CRAIG B : Yes, Bonderman should improve. I thought the fact he was able to survive at 20, given all the pressure, was pretty impressive. He definitely is learning how to battle hitters - I wonder though if he might turn a bit gunshy though.

His "most-similar" at age 20 is very interesting... not that I put a lot of stock in these things, but it was another Detroit starter, Fred Hutchinson, a guy who missed *five* years due to the war right after that age-20 season. Hutchinson was actually famous as a superb control pitcher - at a time when control pitchers routinely got their butts handed to them, but he had a terrific career.

Bonderman, for his part, really impressed me with his control and still managed to strike out six per nine innings. I think with a better defense behind him, he'd have been much, much better. He does seem to feel the pressure with men on base - he had an absurd number of wild pitches, though of course the Tiger catchers probably didn't help him any.

ROBERT DUDEK : Bonderman has a great curveball, he could become a righthanded Barry Zito. But I worry about his development. It seems that players, particularly pitchers, don't seem to develop well in struggling organisations. The Tigers will have to break the cycle of failed prospects if they are to contend within 5-7 years.

MIKE MOFFATT : Florida manager Jack McKeon called the Tigers "lousy". Here's Dmitri Young's response from a mlb.com story:

"He's got to realize we're just one or two players away from doing what he did last year... He must be thinking of the Detroit Tigers from the mid-90s or something. I don't know."

You can't write better comedy!

MICK DOHERTY : I was going to reply, "Sure, Alex Rodriguez and Mark Prior," but then thought... hmmm, put those two guys on the Tigers and they finish, what, 68-94?

DAVE TILL : I think that the Tigers will find it fairly easy to bounce back to about 90 losses or so - they'll sign a couple of free agents, and seem to be inviting everybody and their grandmother to spring training. Plus, they're in the AL Central, which is not exactly a division filled with heavyweights.

Going higher than that will be a challenge - they don't have much in their farm system. Basically, they're starting from ground zero, just like an expansion team, and will need a full rebuilding cycle to climb out of that pit.

CRAIG B : So, predictions for 2004? I will start by saying I think the Tigers will win 65 games.

JORDAN FURLONG : 58.

ROBERT DUDEK : My pick is 67 wins with Pudge.

SPICOL : 62 wins avec Pudge.

SCOTT LUCAS : 57 wins. 660 runs scored, 890 runs allowed. Or so my computer tells me.

COACH : I have learned not to argue with Scott's computer, and I was going to
say 57 anyway.

GWYN PRICE : My computer is not scared of Scott's computer. 65 wins.

DAVE TILL : My computer's big brother can beat up Scott's computer's big brother. In a fit of wild optimism, 67 wins.

MICK DOHERTY : Right now, I am not able to provide the extensive thoughts I have on how the Tigers are going to win the Central at 79-83.

It involves several key Toledo Mud Hens, especially future Cy Young Award winner Shane Loux, a huge 58-save year from Franklyn German, a Comeback Player of the Year Award for Rondell White and a Top 10 MVP finish by Ben Petrick.

Oh, and 22 wins from Steve Avery. Yup.

JOE DREW : Ah, but you are wrong. After a horrifying '03 season, the Tigers will come back to break even at 81-81, delighting their fans and astounding the entire baseball world. The loss of the one-game playoff for Central champions notwithstanding (and even though Pudge strikes out with two men on base to end the game), their franchise is reinvigorated for years to come.

MIKE MOFFATT : Super-Secret-Scientific Batman Methodology: The Tigers were the worst team since the '62 Mets. The Mets won 11 more games the following season. Therefore, the Tigers will win 54 games.


Detroit Tigers Preview | 37 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
Coach - Monday, February 23 2004 @ 11:29 AM EST (#51375) #
I didn't have much to say during the round table. That may have been when I was busy at work and having PC problems at home, but it's also because everybody else stole my thunder.

If I was Dave Dombrowski, I'd be worried, about this job and where I would get the next one. He's already done a lot of things wrong, and as Spicol points out, deserves much of the blame for rushing his best prospects into such a negative situation last year. They could have won 43 games (perhaps a couple more) in 2003 with veteran AAAA talent and given their kids adequate time in Toledo. Instead, they have greatly increased the risk of continuing what Robert calls "the cycle of failed prospects."

I understand what they've tried to accomplish this winter -- generate some favourable headlines and keep the fans pacified a while longer -- but I don't think it will work. As Scott says, signing Vina to bump Warren Morris was an absolutely pointless waste of money. Jason Johnson might have been a decent #4 or #5 on a team with a chance, but he's sure to get the worst of a lot of matchups as the nominal ace, beginning on Opening Day against that Halladay kid. At least Dombrowski won the shortstop swap with Bavasi, which may not make a huge difference in Detroit, but ought to make Seattle fans nervous.

While I think Pudge is a great player, and the Tigers will obviously be a few wins better because of his presence, one guy can't work miracles. Ilitch could go after the likes of Kerry Wood and Carlos Delgado next winter, but they are unlikely to be interested, and they still wouldn't be enough. Dombrowski should have had a better plan in the first place, then stuck to it, even when the owner got impatient. Adding a few expensive "name" players may make the Motor City wheels appear to spin faster, but that won't help them escape the rut of mediocrity. It might even bury them a little deeper.
Mike Green - Monday, February 23 2004 @ 11:30 AM EST (#51376) #
Nice summary. Gizzi for Palmer shows that Dombrowski has not lost his touch!

My drafting theory for the Tigers: best available hitter with 1st round pick, whether from HS or college, and then a mix of mostly college pitchers and position players (from either).

It sure looks like none of the building blocks for the next competitive Tigers' team are there. Maybe Sanchez or Infante will be there.
Lucas - Monday, February 23 2004 @ 12:18 PM EST (#51377) #
Minor oversight: when I mentioned exorbitant contracts, I neglected Mike Anderson's $4.3 million. But at least his contract runs out after this season.

Also, it is unwise to make fun of my computer.
Gitz - Monday, February 23 2004 @ 01:30 PM EST (#51378) #
Gizzi for Palmer shows that Dombrowski has not lost his touch!

I knew I was supposed to be somewhere this week.
robertdudek - Monday, February 23 2004 @ 02:15 PM EST (#51379) #
Lucas,

I think you mean Matt Anderson.
Lucas - Monday, February 23 2004 @ 03:04 PM EST (#51380) #
Okay, I neglected Matt Anderson's salary and his first name. Though, arguably, even the Broncos' Mike Anderson might have offered an improvement over some of Detroit's players last season.
_Mick - Monday, February 23 2004 @ 03:07 PM EST (#51381) #
Especially since the Broncos are about to trade Clinton Portis to Washington, rumor has it. Mike Anderson's value skyrockets and his fantasy value exceeds that of any Tiger, oddly enough, even in baseball leagues.
_Cristian - Monday, February 23 2004 @ 03:32 PM EST (#51382) #
It's not really that odd. I would have taken any Red Wings player instead of any Tiger for my fantasy baseball team.

Does anyone know how active the Tigers were with minor league free agency and the chances of success for their Rule 5 selections?

What I find scariest is that if Dombrowski wanted to be the GM in Toronto he would have been. It's only after he turned the Jays down did Toronto have to 'settle' for JP.
_Ben NS - Monday, February 23 2004 @ 03:48 PM EST (#51383) #
I don't know how the Tigers couldn't imrove victories-wise, but they are worse off as a franchise for spending so much on pudge et al when second tier big leaguers would have worked and been trade bait come July.
_Spicol - Monday, February 23 2004 @ 04:44 PM EST (#51384) #
Yes, the Tigers are doomed. Yes, Comerica will have a pall cast over it for much of the season, not to mention Ferris Wheel related vom. Yes, Dave Dombrowski is doing a poor job with no end in sight. Yes, Alan Trammell's fine name is being dragged down into the dregs of Motor City mediocrity. Yes, Bo Schembechler is somehow to blame for all of this...

But is there any uniform finer than the Tigers' home whites?
Craig B - Monday, February 23 2004 @ 05:03 PM EST (#51385) #
is there any uniform finer than the Tigers' home whites?

They may suck, but they look like MEN in those uniforms. (Just like the Yankees' road grays).

Some uniforms just make you look like a ballplayer.
_Kristian - Monday, February 23 2004 @ 07:24 PM EST (#51386) #
I agree with both Spicol and Craig B, you gotta love the home whites of Detroit. Plus I have always loved the Tigers Caps since I was a huge Magnum P.I. fan.
_woody - Monday, February 23 2004 @ 07:59 PM EST (#51387) #
There is so much wrong about what has been written, I'm not sure where to start. I understand it here because the Tigers only play Toronto 6 times per year now. For the general baseball fan, they played in the equivalent of Siberia last year--no one paid attention until the last week of the season.

Much criticism has been published about the Tigers signing Pudge. They were interested in Vlad and Tejada but reportedly could not even get a face-to-face meeting with their agents at the winter meetings. Pudge is a huge offensive upgrade over Inge and, give Dombo credit, he protected the Tigers' investment with an injury clause. He is ahead of the curve in that regard.

I wonder if Bonderman will become another Javier Vazquez. Look at Vazquez's numbers from his first few years. He was thrown to the wolves like Bonderman, but pulled through. Bonderman's out pitch is a slider, not a curve. He's really a fastball-slider guy who is still working on a change. Until that becomes servicable, doubt that he'll step forward. No one criticized Detroit over burning one of his six years prior to free agency. If he reaches his potential, he may leave via that route at age 26 or 27.

Most Tiger fans I know really don't like Sanchez. A .350 OBP would make him a solid player, but seems unrealistic to me. He's 27 now and has never showed plate patience. Is it going to happen now?

Dombrowski has made few trades, but he did get Pena and German and Bonderman for Weaver. Each of those 3 have a chance to be above average major leaguers. He got Kody Kirkland, their best 3B prospect, for Randall Simon last offseason. They have been using Rule 5 to inject some talent into the system.

I understand that this team can be easily dismissed and ridiculed, but I expected that a fairer assessment would have been rendered. My interpretation was that analysis quickly gave way to flip remarks in this roundtable.
_David Armitage - Monday, February 23 2004 @ 08:24 PM EST (#51388) #
Just wondering if any of the Bauxites are planning on making the trip to Detroit in April to see the Jays play at Comerica. Going to university in Windsor, it's always tough to get out to the Dome for opening day, but Detroit is five minutes away :)

I don't know if the Cheer Club does field trips, and as bad as the Tigers are they certainly have a great facility to play and watch a game in (maybe not for the team they field but the visitors are usually decent). If anyone is interested in going, email me, I know I'm going to the afternoon game for sure (Thurs. Apr. 15), and probably the other 2 as well (Apr. 13, 14)

David
robertdudek - Monday, February 23 2004 @ 08:35 PM EST (#51389) #
Sanchez' career OBP is .324 and in 2002 he posted a .343 in Milwaukee. Walks are something that usually increase as a player ages. I don't see why he can't get on base 35% of the time if he gets good coaching.

The criticism that was leveled at the Pudge signing had to do with asset management. When Pudge is in the last year of his contract Detroit is still going to be a long way from being a quality major league club. He's caught a phenomenal number of games in his career and is probably the most likely star player to suffer a steep decline over the next 3 years in baseball.

My take on Pudge: I think it depends on how much revenue the team will generate because of his presence, and what they can get for him when he nears the end of his contract and they trade him. I don't think the chances are great that he'll justify the contract, but that isn't one of my firmly held opinions. So I think it's an okay move, in the sense that it's better than doing nothing, but I would have prefered to see that money go into scouting and signing bonuses and possibly Bonderman and Pena arbitration buyouts.

I think you're wrong about Bonderman - his best pitch is the curve and he should use his fastball to set the curve up as an out pitch. Why become just another of the army of fastball-slider-changeup pitchers when you have a rare asset?

You wrote: "No one criticized Detroit over burning one of his six years prior to free agency."

Spicol wrote: "What the Tigers really need to do is actually develop their young players and stop using them to fill gaps at the Major League level."

Bonderman was listed as one of the examples. The service time issue doesn't need to be beaten to death: we've talked about it hundreds of times on this site.
_Spicol - Monday, February 23 2004 @ 08:58 PM EST (#51390) #
There is so much wrong about what has been written, I'm not sure where to start.

Wrong, as in factual Bonderman-throws-a-curveball type mistakes or "wrong" as in a different set of opinions than your own? I get the sense it's the latter Woody, and that's what the comments section is for...share your thoughts. This isn't necessarily a Jays site. It's a baseball site.

I want to go on the record as saying I am a Tigers fan and I was a Tigers fan long before I was a Jays fan. Take my excellent, insightful comments out of the preview and I still think a lot of good and fair points were raised. Mike D's idea about churning out overrated, park-affected pitchers for trade is something Dombrowski should be printing out, highlighting and sticking in the document holder attached to his monitor.

I understand that this team can be easily dismissed and ridiculed, but I expected that a fairer assessment would have been rendered. My interpretation was that analysis quickly gave way to flip remarks in this roundtable.

How do you survive as a Tigers fan if you don't have a sense of humour about them?
_Spicol - Monday, February 23 2004 @ 09:27 PM EST (#51391) #
I think you're wrong about Bonderman - his best pitch is the curve and he should use his fastball to set the curve up as an out pitch.

Bonderman throws mostly fastballs (66.1% of his pitches) and sliders (17.6%) but some do describe the latter as a slurve. It's thrown much faster than Zito's big, bendy thing...Bonderman zips it in there with mid 80s velocity.

So, in a way, you're both right but in another, more accurate way, it doesn't matter.
_Jurgen - Monday, February 23 2004 @ 11:39 PM EST (#51392) #
At least Dombrowski won the shortstop swap with Bavasi...

Taking candy from a baby, Coach.

As bad as the situation is in Detroit, think how quickly it's going to suck in Seattle.

I don't know what I would do if I were a Mariners fan. Curl into the fetal position and sob for a couple of years seems the only rational option.

It's a shame that even if the Mariners didn't really consider new school guys like DePodesta, Tim Purpura, and Chris Antonetti for the top job, they still won't fire Bavasi before any more damage is done and hire someone who fits the Gillick mold AND who doesn't suck. Someone like Dan Evans, who did a good job with the Dodgers.
_woody - Tuesday, February 24 2004 @ 02:11 AM EST (#51393) #
If I understood correctly, one of the criticisms here is that the money given Pudge would be better spent on the draft and scouting. I don't believe it will have any impact on the Tigers' expenditures in these areas. Although they have not necessarily drafted well recently, most of their high draft picks have been signed at fair value (i.e. no signability picks). Unfortunately, the Tigers will not actually have the #1 overall pick in 2004--San Diego gets it because it's the NL's turn.

From what I've read, the Pudge signing seemed to come more from Owner Ilitch rather than Dombo. Dombo had been publicly blunt about the terrible long-term contracts that he inherited. Their offer to Pudge seemed inconsistent with Dombo's philosophy. Ilitch was highly involved and closed the deal as an olive branch to the diehard Tiger fans. It seems like a near no-lose situation to me. On-the-field product is improved as long as he's a Tiger. Dombo probably will trade him for prospects within the next 2 years. They'll need to kick in some $$, but should still get a good return if he's healthy. Dombo also gave them a way out if Pudge's back flares. Whether they insured the contract for other injuries is unknown.

Deciding to go with youth at the major league level was a conscious decision influenced by Trammell who reached MLB at a young age. They figured that the development of young players projected as part of their future core could be furthered by getting major league experience. The 2003 product says it was the wrong choice, but that strategy may yet be vindicated in the years ahead.
Craig B - Tuesday, February 24 2004 @ 08:32 AM EST (#51394) #
Bonderman throws mostly fastballs (66.1% of his pitches) and sliders (17.6%) but some do describe the latter as a slurve. It's thrown much faster than Zito's big, bendy thing...Bonderman zips it in there with mid 80s velocity.

It's reminiscent of Dave Stieb's curveball which was also thrown hard with a hard break. Robert's assessment, that it's a very good pitch that Bonderman can depend on, is (I think) accurate.

I don't know what I would do if I were a Mariners fan. Curl into the fetal position and sob for a couple of years seems the only rational option.

They have *so* much promising young pitching, though, that it's definitely possible that they could pull through.
_Buddha - Tuesday, February 24 2004 @ 08:52 AM EST (#51395) #
As a Tiger fan (and a Craig Burley fan, Hi Craig! Go 1924Browns!), I'd like to say that woody's comments are right on.

I've seen a lot of criticism in the sabermetric community regarding the Pudge signing. A lot of people who are unfamiliar with the Tigers said things like "they should spend their money on scouting" or "why sign him if they're not going to win?" However, Pudge is a HUGE upgrade over Brandon "the worst major leaguer since Ray Oyler" Inge and gives this god-awful team a shot of credibility (did you notice the massive amount of season tickets sold directly after the signing?). Also, signing Pudge is not precluding money from being spent elsewhere. The Tigers do not draft based on signability. They do not scrimp on non-American born talent (see the money the put out for Wilken Ramirez). Signing Pudge does not preclude them from doing anything and it only upgrades the team both on the field and in the eyes of the fans.

Secondly, as to their other free agent signings, the two year deals are perfect for the organization. The Tigers farm system is bereft of talent at the upper levels. However, there is some hope in the lower levels. But that hope is around two-three years away from coming up to the big club. As such, the signings of Vina, White and Johnson are merely stop gap measures until the home grown prospects are theoretically ready for the big time. None of the signings - including Pudge - block any prospects from coming to the majors. The moves were made with the organizational timetable in mind AND with returning the big league club to at least mediocrity.

As for your predictions, I believe they are a little bit low, but not too much. The Tigers were horrid last year, but they were also unlucky. I expect them to be a little luckier this year and to show some improvement at certain positions (Bonderman, Pena and Munson). While I would be shocked if they won more than 75 games, I would not be overly surprised if they won 70.

And, as a Tiger fan who remembers 84 and 87 (sorry jays fans, but you stole the MVP from Alan Trammell and we'll never forget that), I would be happy as long as they don't lose 100 games. And I don't think they will.
_tigermojo - Tuesday, February 24 2004 @ 08:58 AM EST (#51396) #
"Mike D's idea about churning out overrated, park-affected pitchers for trade is something Dombrowski should be printing out, highlighting and sticking in the document holder attached to his monitor." -- Spicol

I think Dombrowski has already done this by trading away Weaver and Redman for three prospects each. Bonderman has the potential to be better than Weaver. Robertson and Henkel have the potential to be better than Redman. Depending how the team is doing by the trade deadline, I'm sure he wouldn't hesitate to make similar trades again.

The Pudge signing is definately a huge risk that could easily blow up in Dombrowski's face but it has created alot of excitement in Detroit. Ticket sales are going up and I read ESPN sent a crew out to see the Tigers at the beginning of spring training. That hasn't happened in awhile. It's good for the Tigers to get some positive attention so the average fan has a reason to go to the ballpark.
Craig B - Tuesday, February 24 2004 @ 09:32 AM EST (#51397) #
The Tigers were horrid last year, but they were also unlucky.

Buddha, no way were they unlucky except in the mildest form. The Tigers were 19-18 in one-run games, about three games better than I would have expected. Their Pythagorean was about 46-116 on the simple model, 49-113 by Pythagenport. Overall, their 43-119 record was within three or four games of the mark.

They had bad "luck" in the sense that some of their young players they expected to play well didn't. They also had good luck in that other players, guys like Warren Morris and Chris Spurling, were better than they could reasonably have hoped. It was a wash.
robertdudek - Tuesday, February 24 2004 @ 10:09 AM EST (#51398) #
"Also, signing Pudge is not precluding money from being spent elsewhere."

This idea is extremely suspect. 29 out of 30 teams operate within a budget, ergo, money spent in one area must necessarily take away from another/other area(s).

When Pudge is making his 10 million or whatever in 2006, it may impact what free agents the Tigers can acquire at that point - free agents that might actually be a part of the next great Tigers team. If/when Ilich starts to cry poor as attendance continues to dwindle, Tigers fans may have a change of heart about the Pudge signing.

The increased ticket sales due to the signing is going to be a very short-term thing.
Mike D - Tuesday, February 24 2004 @ 10:59 AM EST (#51399) #
Remember, Tigers fans, that this preview was written before the Pudge signing. I had good things to say about the Pudge deal in our earlier discussion of the topic (see, e.g., Post #16) -- and so did many of our other authors. The upgrade from Inge to Pudge is definitely among the most pronounced in recent baseball history...though this is largely because of Inge's historic suckitude in this hitter's era.

If Illitch is simply putting more cash into the Tigers, rather than diverting it from other areas in the organization, then I agree with Buddha -- they're not blocking anybody, so why not plug in players that will make the big club less of a joke?

But the Tigers' minor-league system is thin enough that if it is being neglected in order to sign the Vinas and Whites of the world, it's a bad strategy. The Tigers need young talent at all positions, and they should be scouring the world to find it.
_Buddha - Tuesday, February 24 2004 @ 11:56 AM EST (#51400) #
"This idea is extremely suspect. 29 out of 30 teams operate within a budget, ergo, money spent in one area must necessarily take away from another/other area(s)."

The Tigers budgeted $20 million for this offseason. They've spent less than that. They get HUGE contracts coming off the books soon. Easley and his $6.5 million is off after this year. Higginson and his $8.5 million is off after next year as well as Matt Anderson and his $3.5 million. Young is off the year after that. And the new guys they've signed are all off after two years.

This deal has not prohibited the Tigers from not signing any draft choice (and Sleeth did not "hold out", the Tigers weren't going to pitch him last year whether he signed on day one or day one hundred, they wanted to rest his arm). These deals have not prohibited them from developing and scouting foreign talent (see earlier Wilken Ramirez and others argument).

Robert, neither you nor I know the budget of the Tigers. However, I can point to areas in which they have made investments in player development and scouting and you simply make the general point that "all teams have budgets therfore the Tigers are taking money away from X to pay Rodriguez."

Listen, I understand and agree with the general notion that signing old free agents isn't going to help you unless you're a true pennant contender. That instead, teams should be developing their own cheap talent and building a base from within. But the Tigers are a different case. They were the worst team of all time last season. They went from a franchise that had NEVER had 5 losing seasons in a row to one that has TEN STRAIGHT. People became ambivalent. They became a national joke. They had to do SOMETHING to generate interest. Anything. They tried Tejada. They tried Vlad. Rodriguex was the last option and one that not only upgrades their team IMMENSELY, but also gives them a positive spin at the box office.

Again, the Tigers system has NOTHING at the top levels. No talent. Nada. These guys block nobody and are huge improvements over last year's team. The Tigers' system is not the Brewers system (God, that sounds horrible) or even the Pirates system. Dombrowski inherited nothing. He has to bide his time while he builds a solid base of prospects. And he's doing that. Under him, the Tigers have picked up Pena, Bonderman, German, Kirkland, and Henkle, some of their best prospects. Give it time and the Tigers will have that foundation again, but it's not going to happen for another two or three years.

The Tigers are a special case. A case of a team that had to do something to revive interest. So they did. Are they pennant contenders? No. Are they a much better team than last year? Obviously. Will this hurt their long-term development? Not in the slightest.
Craig B - Tuesday, February 24 2004 @ 12:28 PM EST (#51401) #
Good analysis, Buddha. I think we all agree that the Tigers are a special case, and an unusual one. It's not easy figuring out what to do from such an odd position.
_Buddha - Tuesday, February 24 2004 @ 12:34 PM EST (#51402) #
True. I hope I don't sound too strident. I had a bad day in court!

I like the site and agree with much of the analysis, I just think the Tigers are an unusual case.

Give DD a little time and the foundation will be there. I have faith (cause that's really all we Tiger fans have left...).
Mike Green - Tuesday, February 24 2004 @ 12:47 PM EST (#51403) #
There's one other point that should be made in support of Buddha's position. Rodriguez' ability to handle pitchers and defensive competence (although he no longer has the arm he once had) should help the young pitchers progress. If the Tigers are to break out of their rut, they are more likely to use the 60s Mets' style (by the development of young pitching and good defence) than with a great offence. Rodriguez and the park are two building blocks to moving that process along.

In fact, Rodriguez, Infante, Vina and Sanchez might be a fairly good down-the middle defence right now.
_clemma - Tuesday, February 24 2004 @ 01:49 PM EST (#51404) #
Gentlemen--as a Detroiter and lifelong Tigers fan, it is interesting to read analysis from a non-Detroit perspective. While many insightful points were made, some resonated a bit more with me. The first is evaluating Dave Dombrowski's performance. While he is not bullet-proof, most baseball experts would agree that last year was the culmination of many awful years of bad drafting and signings by his predecessor, Randy Smith. Actually, if you look at all of Dombrowski's significant moves, including trades and free agent signings, I think the only one that is open to a lot of criticism is the Fernando Vina signing. I understand that Vina is a good clubhouse guy who is well respected, but it's hard to overlook his lingering injuries and decrease in production over the last few seasons. Some point to his signing as the reason for the others (White and Johnson) agreeing to come on board. If there is any shred of validity to that, then it probably was a worthwhile investment.

Fortunately for Dombrowski's image, more people in baseball were celebrating his significant contribution to the Marlin's win than the 43 loss debacle. Most savvy baseball insiders attribute the latter to Randy, which is probably why the once "baseball wunderkind" is now collecting frequent flyer miles to Japan and Australia on his never-ending pursuit of top-flight international talent. With any luck, the next Masao Kida will soon emerge in southern CA.

I think it's also important to put some context around the recent free agent signings. As others have pointed out, none of the recent signings will block the progress of anyone in the Tiger's high minor leagues, unless anyone is concerned about Danny Klassen or Pat Ahearne getting any quality time in the bigs this season. None were signed to untradable contracts, either in terms of dollars or service, though, admittedly, the team would be hard pressed to move Vina, unless he has a full recovery in terms of his health and his OBP. Completely devoid of catching prospects in the organization, the Pudge signing made sense in filling a need, and from a marketing perspective, attracting fans and possibly, future free agents. As previously noted, the Tigers payroll only increased about $4 million this offseason, which is modest when coming off of a 43 win season. The Tigers will have flexibility to sign additional impact players next offseason, and might be able to actually interest some to come to Detroit without having to pay them a huge premium, once the "stink" of last season has dissipated (hopefully with a 70 win season this year).

As for the Jays? I love what J.P. has done with the organization, and I hazard to say that Dombrowski might have been able to achieve a similar success in the same position. The Jays were not in total disarray and had tradable assets, which made J.P.'s job easier. I would love to see the Jays get to the playoffs, but for as long as New York and Boston compete to prove who has the bigger Johnson, it will be tough to be a Toronto or Baltimore fan. If you live in Tampa Bay, you better pray for a Buccaneer's revival, because that is the only thing to look forward to.

Enjoyed reading your comments and thanks for listening to a Tiger fan.
_Jeff - Tuesday, February 24 2004 @ 07:19 PM EST (#51405) #
I love the optimism of the Tigers fans compared to the "baseball" fans. I am sure the Jays fans are much more optimistic about Toronto chances than "baseball" fans. Anyway, I think I might have posted this same thought before but the impact of Detroit's free agent signings may be a drag on the payroll (did they really need to offer a second year to Vina and White?) but they do accomplish one very important thing - they create a better atmosphere for the young Tigers to develop. Going back to the Spencer Fordin interview, the locker room may have more effect on a players play than we may willing to admit - particularly those of us who have never played sports at an elite level. (Why is it that teams that get off to fast start have tendency to out perform expectations and vice versa?)

The true value in the signings will be the improved play of Pena, Munson, Infante, Bonderman etc. that wouldn't have happened if the team was losing 120 games again. Hope is a very powerful motivator, just ask Andy Dufresne. The Tiger signings have brought hope to spring training and if they can bring hope to May then they were worth it.
_peteski - Wednesday, February 25 2004 @ 01:32 AM EST (#51406) #
It's always nice when you can make a Shawshank reference.
_peteski - Wednesday, February 25 2004 @ 01:34 AM EST (#51407) #
oh and incidentally, the Tigers better get busy living or get busy dying.
_jason - Thursday, February 26 2004 @ 12:46 AM EST (#51408) #
The Tigers were a colossul failure last year. A baseball team with a storied past ranked next to the worst EXPANSION team in terms of futility. I mean that's historic.

Reading the posts from bauxites it appears that the Tigers are without a plan: reading posts from Tiger fans it would appear they do have a plan. I hope for baseball in general and the Tiger fans in particular that the plan is viable.
_Cristian - Thursday, February 26 2004 @ 01:39 AM EST (#51409) #
jason,

I was going to jump all over you for making a gross accusation without any factual basis. Then I reread your post and I realized that you wrote that the Tigers have a storied past...not a steroid past.
_Chris Kelley - Monday, July 19 2004 @ 02:15 PM EDT (#51410) #
My god, you guys were about as wrong as anybody could be. Pudge's contract has an injury clause (tied to his bad back). None of you seem to be fans of the Tigers, so you have no idea what the past 7-10 years have been like.

The signing of Pudge was the start of the rebirth. It's more then what he does on the field, same goes for Guillen and Vina, when he was healthy. They are their to help groom the young guys.

I'm trying to figure out why you wouldn't sign Pudge? considering all the free agen money that is spent, this guy is a great, great ball player. 10 million is a bargain. The fans coming to the park and the excitement, makes his contract pay for itself.

You wanted Illitch to wait another 5 years, by that time, Comerica would be completely empty and he would have no money to sign new guys. The club has generated a lot of buzz, butts are in the seats and they sit 4 1/2 games out in the Central.

We have Robertson, Maroth, and Johnson pitching well and Bonderman has a live arm. Contend in 5 years-- we'll contend right now. We have beaten the Twins 7 of 13, the Yankees 4 of 7, and still have 19 games against the Chisox. I'd say we are contending this year.

To have no clue of what Pudge brought this organization. (work ethic, leader by example, will to win, and obviously from his work w/ the young pitching staff in Florida-- he is able to help get young arms going.

This was a great move. The Tigers are back. It all started w/ pudge, who you seemed to think was a bum.
_Chris Kelley - Monday, July 19 2004 @ 02:16 PM EDT (#51411) #
My god, you guys were about as wrong as anybody could be. Pudge's contract has an injury clause (tied to his bad back). None of you seem to be fans of the Tigers, so you have no idea what the past 7-10 years have been like.

The signing of Pudge was the start of the rebirth. It's more then what he does on the field, same goes for Guillen and Vina, when he was healthy. They are their to help groom the young guys.

I'm trying to figure out why you wouldn't sign Pudge? considering all the free agen money that is spent, this guy is a great, great ball player. 10 million is a bargain. The fans coming to the park and the excitement, makes his contract pay for itself.

You wanted Illitch to wait another 5 years, by that time, Comerica would be completely empty and he would have no money to sign new guys. The club has generated a lot of buzz, butts are in the seats and they sit 4 1/2 games out in the Central.

We have Robertson, Maroth, and Johnson pitching well and Bonderman has a live arm. Contend in 5 years-- we'll contend right now. We have beaten the Twins 7 of 13, the Yankees 4 of 7, and still have 19 games against the Chisox. I'd say we are contending this year.

To have no clue of what Pudge brought this organization. (work ethic, leader by example, will to win, and obviously from his work w/ the young pitching staff in Florida-- he is able to help get young arms going.

This was a great move. The Tigers are back. It all started w/ pudge, who you seemed to think was a bum.
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