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4 Sortable batting statistics of Detroit Tigers batters with 1500+ at bats current through 2014 season. ... List of Detroit Tigers team records.
The Tigers won 101 games in 1961 but fell short of the pennant by eight games. Six years later, they finished one game short of the Boston Red Sox for the pennant after losing the last game of the year. The following year, they would take hold of the pennant with 103 victories while McLain won the MVP Award and the Cy Young Award.
Mullin's 11–0 start in 1909 was a Tigers record for 104 years, finally being broken by Max Scherzer's 13–0 start in 2013. [37] [38] [39] It was hoped that a new opponent in the 1909 Series, the Pittsburgh Pirates, would yield different results. The Tigers performed better in the Fall Classic, taking Pittsburgh to seven games, but they were ...
The Tigers won the 1934 AL pennant with a 101–53 record, at the time a team record for wins, and still the best win percentage (.656) in team history. [41] The Tigers infield (Hank Greenberg and Charlie Gehringer, along with shortstop Billy Rogell and third baseman Marv Owen ) accumulated 462 runs during the season, with Gehringer (214 hits ...
The 2003 Detroit Tigers stood at 38–118 after 156 games, but won five of their last six games. On September 27, in their penultimate game, the Tigers came back from an 8–0 deficit to beat the Minnesota Twins 9–8. [2] When the Tigers won the season finale to avoid tying the record, they received a standing ovation from the crowd.
Detroit Tigers manager A.J. Hinch finished third in the voting for the 2024 American League Manager of the Year Award on Tuesday evening, receiving one of 30 first-place votes.
April 19: The Tigers fail to tie the AL record of 10 straight to open a season. Bret Saberhagen of the Royals beats them, 5–2. April 22: The Tigers complete a 3-game sweep of the White Sox in Detroit. The Tigers win, 9–1, after a 90-minute snow delay. April 24: The Tigers score 3 runs in the 9th inning to beat the Twins‚ 6–5.
The 2003 Detroit Tigers season was the team's 103rd season and fourth at Comerica Park.The team went 43–119, which surpassed the 1916 Philadelphia Athletics for the most losses in American League history (though not for the worst winning percentage) and came within one loss of tying the 1962 New York Mets of the National League for the most losses in modern major league history. [1]