Monday Morning Manager: My Weekly Take on the Detroit Tigers
Last Week: 2-4
This Week: at Min (6/29-7/1); SEA (7/2-4)
So what happened?
It was a disappointing and predictable week on the road.
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The Detroit Tigers were 13-19 for away games when last week began. The Tigers traveled into the Hornetโs nests of New York and Atlanta, neither of which has aย home team thatย loses all that much.
The result was an unsurprising 2-4 record. The Tigers needed to win the final game of the series both times to avoid sweeps.
It all began in the rain and muck of Citi Field on Tuesday night. Justin Verlander pitched two very shaky innings before the skies opened and a lengthy delay ensued.
The trip ended on a high note, with a 10-4 shellacking of the Braves, whoโve lost only eight home games all season.
The good news was the Twins didnโt do much either. The Tigers actually stayed within a half-game of first place.
But the Chicago White Sox have been re-animated. They are suddenly making the AL Central a three-team race, which seemed an absurd notion just a couple weeks ago.
Hero of the Week
You canโt stop Brennan Boesch, folks. You can only hope to contain him.
And opposing pitchers arenโt even really doing that.
Every time I look up, Boesch is standing on second baseโor rounding third in a trot.
It's getting ridiculous.
Boesch, the Tigersโ rookie dropped from baseball Heaven, could be the teamโs left fielder for the next 10 years. He might combine with Miguel Cabrera to form one of the sickest hitting tandems that youโll ever see in any big league batting order.
The future is exciting to contemplate, isnโt it?
Boesch kept slugging last week, and he was, again, a big factor in the Tigersโ wins.
You keep waiting for the other shoe to drop, i.e. the inevitable cool down, but until then, just enjoy the ride.
Goat of the Week
Itโs time someone wrung their handsย of Johnny Damon.
The 36-year-old left fielder/DH is looking every bit his age, and then some.
Damon is in a 6-for-37 slump, and he was invisible offensively last week. He did steal a couple of bases Sunday, but aside from that heโs been without a pop.
Damonโs average was .294 two weeks ago, and itโs now plunged to .269. And whereโs the power? Damon has three homers in 253 at-bats.
Maybe the Yankees knew something when they dragged their feet negotiating with him after last season.
I was a proponent of bringing Damon to Detroit. And he may yet right the ship. But for the last several weeks, that ship has been banging against the rocks.
Upcoming : Twins, Mariners
Have plenty of Pepto-Bismol and aspirin on hand. Prepare to be put through the wringer.
The Tigers are in Minnesota this week.
The Tigers couldnโt beat the Twins in the Metrodome, and they canโt beat them at new Target Field, having been swept there in May.
But the Twins must look at the Tigers as gnats that wonโt go away.
Here come the Tigers, just a half-game back in the Central Division and tied in the all-important loss column.
The Tigers were nipping on the Twinsโ heels in early May, too, but the sweep knocked them back. The Twinsโ lead has been as large as 5-1/2 games, but their play of late has opened the door for all comersโincluding the surging White Sox.
As for the Seattle Mariners, they are woefulโexcept when they play the Tigers. The Mariners are another weak sister the Tigers seem to have trouble handling.
But the Tigers may have shed that label with their 8-1 run against the horrid Pirates, Nationals and Diamondbacks a couple weeks ago.
Be prepared to hear more about lefty Cliff Lee when Seattle comes to town. The brilliant pitcher has been rumored to be contract shredding and heading to the Twins.
Radio blowhard Mike Valenti of 97.1 The Ticket says if the Twins get Lee, โthe Tigersโ season is over.โ
Bull-oney.
This is a week where the Tigers could find themselves in first place once itโs done.
Stay tuned.
Thatโs all for this weekโs MMM. See you next week!








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