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2020 Detroit Tigers season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2020 Detroit Tigers
LeagueAmerican League
DivisionCentral
BallparkComerica Park
CityDetroit, Michigan
Record23–35 (.397)
Divisional place5th
OwnersChristopher Ilitch; Ilitch family trust
General managersAl Avila
ManagersRon Gardenhire (until September 19)
Lloyd McClendon (as of September 19)
TelevisionFox Sports Detroit
(Matt Shepard, Kirk Gibson, Jack Morris)
RadioDetroit Tigers Radio Network
(Dan Dickerson, Jim Price)
StatsESPN.com
Baseball Reference
← 2019 Seasons 2021 →

The 2020 Detroit Tigers season was the team's 120th season. This was the team's third and final year under manager Ron Gardenhire, and their 21st at Comerica Park.[1][2] The start of season was delayed by four months due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Tigers finished the season with a 23–35 record, ranking last in their division and third-worst in the major leagues, and missed the playoffs for the sixth consecutive season. For the second straight season, the Tigers pitching staff compiled the MLB's worst team ERA (6.37).[3]

The Tigers franchise experienced a major loss on April 6 when Hall of Famer Al Kaline died at the age of 85. Nicknamed "Mr. Tiger," Kaline had been affiliated with the team for 67 years in various roles: first as a player, then as a broadcaster, and most recently, as an executive.[4] The Tigers wore a No. 6 patch this season to honor him.[5]

On September 19, manager Ron Gardenhire announced his retirement from baseball effective immediately, due to recent health concerns including stress, a bout with prostate cancer, and a stomach virus due to food poisoning. Bench coach Lloyd McClendon was named interim manager for the remainder of the season.[6]

Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic

[edit]

On March 12, 2020, MLB announced that because of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the start of the regular season would be delayed by at least two weeks in addition to the remainder of spring training being cancelled.[7] Four days later, it was announced that the start of the season would be pushed back indefinitely due to the recommendation made by the CDC to restrict events of more than 50 people for eight weeks.[8]

On June 23, commissioner Rob Manfred unilaterally implemented a 60-game season. Players reported to training camps at their regular season home stadiums on July 1 in order to resume spring training, which included only inter-squad games, and prepare for a July 23 or 24 Opening Day.[9] In an effort to slow the spread of the virus, teams only played their own division and the opposite league's corresponding geographical division, e.g. the Tigers only played American League Central (40 games total) and National League Central (20 games total) opponents.[10] Games were played behind closed doors, with artificial crowd noise played over loud speakers.[11]

On June 24, two members of the Tigers organization (later identified as pitcher Daniel Norris and a coach) tested positive for COVID-19.[12][13] Norris was later cleared to join the Opening Day roster.[12]

The Tigers' August 3–6 series against the St. Louis Cardinals was postponed several times after 17 of the latter's members tested positive for COVID-19. Two of the games were eventually canceled outright.[14]

Roster moves

[edit]

Coaching staff

[edit]

Releases

[edit]

Signings

[edit]
  • On December 8, the Tigers signed outfielder Jorge Bonifacio to a minor-league contract, with an invitation to spring training.[35]
  • On December 12, the Tigers claimed pitcher Rony García from the New York Yankees organization in the Rule 5 draft.[36]
  • On December 13, the Tigers signed catcher Austin Romine to a one-year, $4.15 million contract.[37]
  • On December 18, the Tigers signed pitcher Shao-Ching Chiang to a minor-league contract.[38]
  • On December 20, the Tigers signed pitcher Zack Godley to a minor-league contract.[39]
  • On December 21, the Tigers signed first baseman C. J. Cron and second baseman Jonathan Schoop to one-year, $6.1 million contracts.[40]
  • On January 4, the Tigers signed pitcher Alex Wilson to a minor-league contract, with an invitation to spring training.[41]
  • On January 6, the Tigers signed pitcher Michael Fulmer to a one-year, $2.8 million contract, avoiding arbitration.[42]
  • On January 10, the Tigers avoided arbitration when they reached one-year deals with pitchers Matthew Boyd ($5.3 million), Buck Farmer ($1.15 million) and Daniel Norris ($2.962 million), and outfielder JaCoby Jones ($1.575 million).[43]
  • On January 13, the Tigers signed pitcher Iván Nova to a one-year, $1.5 million contract.[44]
  • On January 22, the Tigers signed pitcher Hector Santiago to a minor-league contract, with an invitation to spring training.[45]
  • On January 30, the Tigers signed shortstop Jordy Mercer to a minor-league contract, with an invitation to spring training.[46]
  • On February 12, the Tigers signed outfielder Cameron Maybin to a one-year, $1.5 million contract which could increase to $2.8 million with bonuses.[47]
  • On August 31, the Tigers claimed pitcher Dereck Rodríguez off waivers from the San Francisco Giants.[48]

Trades

[edit]

Season standings

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American League Central

[edit]
AL Central
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
Minnesota Twins 36 24 .600 24‍–‍7 12‍–‍17
Cleveland Indians 35 25 .583 1 18‍–‍12 17‍–‍13
Chicago White Sox 35 25 .583 1 18‍–‍12 17‍–‍13
Kansas City Royals 26 34 .433 10 15‍–‍15 11‍–‍19
Detroit Tigers 23 35 .397 12 12‍–‍15 11‍–‍20


Record against opponents

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Source: MLB Standings Grid – 2020

Team CWS CLE DET KC MIN NL
Chicago 2–8 9–1 9–1 5–5 10–10
Cleveland 8–2 7–3 5–5 3–7 12–8
Detroit 1–9 3–7 4–6 4–6 11–7
Kansas City 1–9 5–5 6–4 5–5 9–11
Minnesota 5–5 7–3 6–4 5–5 13–7

American League Wild Card

[edit]
Division Leaders
Team W L Pct.
Tampa Bay Rays 40 20 .667
Oakland Athletics 36 24 .600
Minnesota Twins 36 24 .600
Division 2nd Place
Team W L Pct.
Cleveland Indians 35 25 .583
New York Yankees 33 27 .550
Houston Astros 29 31 .483
Wild Card teams
(Top 2 teams qualify for postseason)
Team W L Pct. GB
Chicago White Sox 35 25 .583 +3
Toronto Blue Jays 32 28 .533
Seattle Mariners 27 33 .450 5
Los Angeles Angels 26 34 .433 6
Kansas City Royals 26 34 .433 6
Baltimore Orioles 25 35 .417 7
Boston Red Sox 24 36 .400 8
Detroit Tigers 23 35 .397 8
Texas Rangers 22 38 .367 10


Season highlights

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Individual accomplishments

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Pitching

[edit]

Hitting

[edit]

Team accomplishments

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Hitting

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  • On August 8 against the Pittsburgh Pirates, the Tigers hit four home runs in the first inning for the first time since 1974, and the first time the Tigers hit four home runs in any inning since 2013. This was the first time an MLB team accomplished this since the Kansas City Royals in 2018. The Tigers hit three consecutive home runs in an inning for the first time since 2017.[61]

Other

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  • On August 21, the Tigers ended a franchise-record 20-game losing streak against the Cleveland Indians, winning 10–5. Only one MLB team has had a longer losing streak against another team, that being the Kansas City Royals who lost 23 straight to the Baltimore Orioles between May 10, 1969, and August 2, 1970.[62]

Game log

[edit]
2020 Game Log: 23–35 (Home 12–16, Road 11–19)
July: 5–3 (Home 3–2, Road 2–1)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Record Streak
1 July 24 @ Reds 1–7 Gray (1–0) Boyd (0–1) 0–1 L1
2 July 25 @ Reds 6–4 Farmer (1–0) Iglesias (0–1) Jiménez (1) 1–1 W1
3 July 26 @ Reds 3–2 Cisnero (1–0) Lorenzen (0–1) Jiménez (2) 2–1 W2
4 July 27 Royals 6–14 Griffin (1–0) Funkhouser (0–1) 2–2 L1
5 July 28 Royals 4–3 Alexander (1–0) Zuber (0–1) Jiménez (3) 3–2 W1
6 July 29 Royals 5–4 Garcia (1–0) Kennedy (0–1) Jiménez (4) 4–2 W2
7 July 30 Royals 3–5 Holland (1–0) Cisnero (1–1) Rosenthal (1) 4–3 L1
8 July 31 Reds 7–2 Turnbull (1–0) Castillo (0–1) 5–3 W1
August: 11–13 (Home 6–8, Road 5–5)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Record Streak
August 1 Reds Postponed (inclement weather). Rescheduled to August 2.
9 August 2 Reds 3–4 (7) Iglesias (1–1) Jiménez (0–1) 5–4 L1
10 August 2 Reds 0–4 (7) Bauer (1–0) Norris (0–1) 5–5 L2
August 3 Cardinals Postponed (Cardinals' COVID-19 outbreak). Rescheduled to September 28.
August 4 Cardinals Postponed (Cardinals' COVID-19 outbreak). Rescheduled to September 28.
August 5 @ Cardinals Postponed (Cardinals' COVID-19 outbreak). Rescheduled to September 10.
August 6 @ Cardinals Postponed (Cardinals' COVID-19 outbreak). Rescheduled to September 10.
11 August 7 @ Pirates 17–13 (11) Garcia (2–0) Neverauskas (0–2) 6–5 W1
12 August 8 @ Pirates 11–5 Nova (1–0) Holland (0–1) 7–5 W2
13 August 9 @ Pirates 2–1 Turnbull (2–0) Rodríguez (0–1) Jiménez (5) 8–5 W3
14 August 10 White Sox 5–1 Norris (1–1) Keuchel (2–2) 9–5 W4
15 August 11 White Sox 4–8 Foster (2–0) Alexander (1–1) 9–6 L1
16 August 12 White Sox 5–7 Cease (3–1) Boyd (0–2) Colomé (5) 9–7 L2
17 August 14 Indians 5–10 Civale (2–2) Nova (1–1) 9–8 L3
18 August 15 Indians 1–3 Bieber (4–0) Turnbull (2–1) Hand (5) 9–9 L4
19 August 16 Indians 5–8 Pérez (1–0) Schreiber (0–1) 9–10 L5
20 August 17 @ White Sox 2–7 Heuer (1–0) Boyd (0–3) 9–11 L6
21 August 18 @ White Sox 4–10 Cease (4–1) Skubal (0–1) 9–12 L7
22 August 19 @ White Sox 3–5 Marshall (1–1) Soto (0–1) Colomé (6) 9–13 L8
23 August 20 @ White Sox 0–9 Giolito (2–2) Turnbull (2–2) 9–14 L9
24 August 21 @ Indians 10–5 García (1–0) Plutko (1–2) 10–14 W1
25 August 22 @ Indians 1–6 McKenzie (1–0) Boyd (0–4) 10–15 L1
26 August 23 @ Indians 7–4 Norris (2–1) Carrasco (2–3) 11–15 W1
27 August 24 Cubs 3–9 Mills (3–2) Mize (0–1) 11–16 L1
28 August 25 Cubs 7–1 Turnbull (3–2) Chatwood (2–2) 12–16 W1
29 August 26 Cubs 7–6 Jiménez (1–1) Tepera (0–1) 13–16 W2
August 27 Twins Postponed (strikes due to shooting of Jacob Blake); Rescheduled to August 28.
August 28 Twins Postponed (inclement weather). Rescheduled to August 29.
August 28 Twins Postponed (inclement weather). Rescheduled to September 4 at Target Field.
30 August 29 Twins 8–2 (7) Boyd (1–4) Dobnak (5–2) 14–16 W3
31 August 29 Twins 4–2 (7) Skubal (1–1) Duffey (1–1) Soto (1) 15–16 W4
32 August 30 Twins 3–2 Alexander (2–1) Maeda (4–1) Soto (2) 16–16 W5
September: 7–19 (Home 3–6, Road 4–13)
# Date Opponent Score Win Loss Save Record Streak
33 September 1 @ Brewers 12–1 Norris (3–1) Lindblom (1–3) 17–16 W6
34 September 2 @ Brewers 5–8 Yardley (2–0) Jiménez (1–2) Hader (9) 17–17 L1
35 September 4 @ Twins 0–2 (7) Dobnak (6–2) Boyd (1–5) Rogers (8) 17–18 L2
36 September 4 @ Twins [a] 2–3 (8) Romo (1–1) Jiménez (1–3) May (2) 17–19 L3
37 September 5 @ Twins 3–4 Alcalá (2–1) Cisnero (1–2) 17–20 L4
38 September 6 @ Twins 10–8 Funkhouser (1–1) Romo (1–2) Garcia (1) 18–20 W1
39 September 7 @ Twins 2–6 Pineda (1–0) Fulmer (0–1) 18–21 L1
40 September 8 Brewers 8–3 Turnbull (4–2) Houser (1–4) 19–21 W1
41 September 9 Brewers 0–19 Burnes (3–0) Boyd (1–6) 19–22 L1
42 September 10 @ Cardinals 2–12 (7) Flaherty (3–1) Skubal (1–2) 19–23 L2
43 September 10 @ Cardinals 6–3 (7) Cisnero (2–2) Gallegos (1–2) Garcia (2) 20–23 W1
44 September 11 @ White Sox 3–4 Marshall (2–1) Cisnero (2–3) Colomé (10) 20–24 L1
45 September 12 @ White Sox 0–14 López (1–2) Fulmer (0–2) 20–25 L2
46 September 13 @ White Sox 2–5 Cordero (1–2) Turnbull (4–3) Colomé (11) 20–26 L3
47 September 15 Royals 6–0 Boyd (2–6) Junis (0–2) 21–26 W1
48 September 16 Royals 0–4 Singer (3–4) Skubal (1–3) 21–27 L1
49 September 17 Indians 3–10 Bieber (8–1) Mize (0–2) 21–28 L2
50 September 18 Indians 0–1 Plesac (4–2) Alexander (2–2) Hand (13) 21–29 L3
51 September 19 Indians 5–2 Cisnero (3–3) Maton (2–3) Garcia (3) 22–29 W1
52 September 20 Indians 4–7 Carrasco (3–4) Boyd (2–7) 22–30 L1
53 September 22 @ Twins 4–5 (10) Rogers (2–4) Garcia (2–1) 22–31 L2
54 September 23 @ Twins 6–7 Maeda (6–1) Mize (0–3) Romo (5) 22–32 L3
55 September 24 @ Royals 7–8 Hahn (1–0) Alexander (2–3) Newberry (1) 22–33 L4
56 September 25 @ Royals 2–3 Keller (5–3) Turnbull (4–4) Hahn (2) 22–34 L5
57 September 26 @ Royals 4–3 Boyd (3–7) Hernández (0–1) Garcia (4) 23–34 W1
58 September 27 @ Royals 1–3 Singer (4–5) Skubal (1–4) Hahn (3) 23–35 L1
59 September 28 Cardinals Cancelled
60 September 28 Cardinals Cancelled
Legend:        = Win        = Loss        = Postponement
Bold = Tigers team member

Notes:

  • a The Tigers were designated the home team for the makeup game from August 28.[63]

Roster

[edit]
2020 Detroit Tigers
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders

Other Batters

Manager

Coaches

Player stats

[edit]

Batting

[edit]

Note: G = Games played; AB = At Bats; R = Runs scored; H = Hits; 2B = Doubles; 3B = Triples; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; AVG = Batting average; SB = Stolen bases

Player G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI AVG SB
Sergio Alcántara 10 21 2 3 0 1 1 1 .143 0
Jorge Bonifacio 30 86 8 19 3 0 2 17 .221 0
Miguel Cabrera 57 204 28 51 4 0 10 35 .250 1
Daz Cameron 17 57 4 11 2 1 0 3 .193 1
Jeimer Candelario 52 185 30 55 11 3 7 29 .297 1
Harold Castro 22 49 6 17 4 0 0 3 .347 0
Willi Castro 36 129 21 45 4 2 6 24 .349 0
C. J. Cron 13 42 9 8 3 0 4 8 .190 0
Travis Demeritte 18 29 5 5 1 0 0 4 .172 0
Brandon Dixon 5 13 0 1 1 0 0 2 .077 0
Niko Goodrum 43 158 15 29 7 1 5 20 .184 7
Grayson Greiner 18 51 8 6 2 0 3 8 .118 0
Eric Haase 7 17 1 3 0 0 0 2 .176 0
Derek Hill 15 11 3 1 0 0 0 2 .091 0
JaCoby Jones 30 97 19 26 9 0 5 14 .268 1
Dawel Lugo 9 10 3 2 0 0 0 1 .200 0
Cameron Maybin+ 14 41 5 10 4 0 1 2 .244 0
Jordy Mercer+ 3 9 1 2 0 0 0 1 .222 0
Isaac Paredes 34 100 7 22 4 0 1 6 .220 0
Víctor Reyes 57 202 30 56 7 2 4 14 .277 8
Austin Romine 37 130 12 31 5 0 2 17 .238 0
Jonathan Schoop 44 162 26 45 4 2 8 23 .278 0
Christin Stewart 36 90 6 15 3 0 3 9 .167 0
Team Totals 58 1893 249 463 78 12 62 242 .245 19

+Totals with Tigers only.

Pitching

[edit]

Starters and other pitchers

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Note: W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; SV = Saves; IP = Innings pitched; R = Runs allowed; ER = Earned runs allowed; BB = Walks allowed; K = Strikeouts

Player W L ERA G GS SV IP R ER BB K
Tyler Alexander 2 3 3.96 14 2 0 36+13 16 16 9 34
Matthew Boyd 3 7 6.71 12 12 0 60+13 46 45 22 60
Michael Fulmer 0 2 8.78 10 10 0 27+23 27 27 12 20
Casey Mize 0 3 6.99 7 7 0 28+13 25 22 13 26
Iván Nova 1 1 8.53 4 4 0 19 18 18 9 9
Tarik Skubal 1 4 5.63 8 7 0 32 21 20 11 37
Spencer Turnbull 4 4 3.97 11 11 0 56+23 25 25 29 21
Jordan Zimmermann 0 0 7.94 3 2 0 5+23 6 5 2 6

Bullpen

[edit]
Player W L ERA G GS SV IP R ER BB K
Beau Burrows 0 0 5.40 5 0 0 6+23 4 4 1 3
Anthony Castro 0 0 18.00 1 0 0 1 2 2 1 1
José Cisnero 3 3 3.03 29 0 0 29+23 10 10 10 34
Buck Farmer 1 0 3.80 23 0 0 21+13 9 9 5 14
Carson Fulmer 0 0 6.75 7 0 0 6+23 5 5 3 7
Kyle Funkhouser 1 1 7.27 13 0 0 17+13 14 14 11 12
Bryan Garcia 2 1 1.66 26 0 4 21+23 6 4 10 12
Rony García 1 0 8.14 15 2 0 21 20 19 9 14
Joe Jiménez 1 3 7.15 25 0 5 22+23 19 18 6 22
David McKay 1 0 54.00 1 0 0 13 2 2 1 0
Daniel Norris 3 1 3.25 14 1 0 27+23 10 10 7 28
Nick Ramirez 0 0 5.91 5 0 0 10+23 7 7 4 11
John Schreiber 0 1 6.32 15 0 0 15+23 11 11 4 14
Gregory Soto 0 1 4.30 27 0 2 23 11 11 13 29
Team Pitching Totals 23 35 5.63 58 58 11 492+13 318 308 192 444

Farm system

[edit]
Level Team League Manager
AAA Toledo Mud Hens International League Tom Prince
AA Erie SeaWolves Eastern League Arnie Beyeler
A-Advanced Lakeland Flying Tigers Florida State League Andrew Graham
A West Michigan Whitecaps Midwest League Brayan Peña
A-Short Season Norwich Sea Unicorns New York–Penn League Gary Cathcart
Rookie GCL Tigers East Gulf Coast League Francisco Contreras
Rookie GCL Tigers West Gulf Coast League Ryan Minor
Rookie DSL Tigers 1 Dominican Summer League Ramon Zapata
Rookie DSL Tigers 2 Dominican Summer League Marcos Yepez

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Fenech, Anthony (September 14, 2019). "Detroit Tigers' Ron Gardenhire to return in 2020; contract extension should follow". Detroit Free Press. Retrieved July 28, 2020.
  2. ^ Paul, Tony (May 11, 2020). "For 20 seasons at Comerica Park, here are 20 epic Tigers moments". The Detroit News. Retrieved July 28, 2020.
  3. ^ Petzold, Evan (September 28, 2020). "Detroit Tigers now at crossroads after some bright spots in 2020: 'Rebuild is almost over'". Freep.com. Retrieved September 29, 2020.
  4. ^ Beck, Jason (April 6, 2020). "HOFer Kaline, beloved 'Mr. Tiger,' dies at 85". MLB.com. Retrieved April 6, 2020.
  5. ^ Petzold, Evan (July 24, 2020). "Detroit Tigers to wear No. 6 patch in honor of Al Kaline this season". Detroit Free Press. Retrieved July 25, 2020.
  6. ^ a b Beck, Jason (September 19, 2020). "Citing health, Tigers manager Gardy retires". MLB.com. Retrieved September 19, 2020.
  7. ^ Feinsand, Mark (March 12, 2020). "Opening Day delayed at least 2 weeks; Spring Training games cancelled". MLB.com. Major League Baseball. Retrieved March 14, 2020.
  8. ^ Feinsand, Mark (March 16, 2020). "Opening of regular season to be pushed back". MLB.com. Major League Baseball. Retrieved March 16, 2020.
  9. ^ Lacques, Gabe (June 23, 2020). "Major League Baseball implements 60-game 2020 season as players agree on safety protocols". USA Today. Retrieved July 22, 2020.
  10. ^ Feinsand, Mark (July 6, 2020). "Play Ball: MLB announces 2020 regular season". MLB.com. Retrieved July 7, 2020.
  11. ^ "MLB parks to use crowd noise from MLB The Show during games". ESPN.com. Associated Press. July 16, 2020. Retrieved July 17, 2020.
  12. ^ a b Hutchinson, Derick (July 21, 2020). "Daniel Norris cleared to rejoin Detroit Tigers after positive COVID-19 test". ClickOnDetroit.com. Retrieved July 21, 2020.
  13. ^ Martin, Jill (June 25, 2020). "Red Sox, Tigers, Mariners have positive Covid-19 tests, reports say". CNN.com. Retrieved July 21, 2020.
  14. ^ Rogers, Anne (August 10, 2020). "Cards-Tigers twin bill Thursday postponed". MLB.com. Retrieved August 11, 2020.
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