Twins Video
Looking back, it's kind of amazing a team that had Yoenis Cespedes AND David Price, along with Cabrera hitting at an MVP level, in the first half was in position to sell everything by the end of July in a wide open American League.
But that speaks to how badly things went off the rails elsewhere. Verlander missed the first 10 weeks and only sporadically looked like himself after returning. Outside of Price's sterling four months, the entire rotation was a mess around him. Cabrera missed a month with a calf injury. Victor Martinez, MVP runner-up a year earlier, hobbled around on a bad knee and posted career lows in batting average (.245) and OPS (.667).
In many ways, it's tempting to count the Tigers out. Cabrera and Verlander aren't getting any younger, and Detroit's organizational talent was ranked 30th out of 30 clubs by Baseball America last March.
However, their pipeline was reinfused quite a bit last summer by the Cespedes and Price trades. And whereas the Twins have taken a very passive approach this offseason, relying on their talented young core to keep improving and driving further progress, the Tigers have been proactive in reinforcing their aging roster.
The signing of Justin Upton this week to a six-year, $132.75 million contract is an enormous move. Upton is a premium athlete who will thrive offensively in Detroit's park and is only 28.
He drastically upgrades a Tigers lineup that will already be bringing back a healthy Cabrera and J.D. Martinez, who is coming off a 38-homer campaign.
Jordan Zimmermann, one of the best free agent starters on the market, was signed to join Verlander at the top of the rotation and the Tigers are hopeful that our old friend Mike Pelfrey can add a little more reliability at the bottom.
Meanwhile, the acquisition of All-Star closer Francisco Rodriguez from Milwaukee powers up the bullpen significantly.
Even coming off a 74-win season, the Tigers are undeniably a threat, and they could be downright dangerous if Verlander's late-season resurgence (2.30 ERA in his final 10 starts) carries over while a few younger guys emerge.
We'll see whether new general manager Al Avila's profound aggressiveness in the wake of a nosedive pays off.







Recommended Comments
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now