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This is a list of seasons completed by the Detroit Tigers. They played in the Western League from their inception in 1894 to the 1900 season; in 1900, the league changed its named to the American League and became a major league in 1901.
2023 Detroit Tigers season; 2024 Detroit Tigers season; 2025 Detroit Tigers season This page was last edited on 26 May 2021, at 15:26 (UTC). Text is ...
As the series shifted to Detroit, the Tigers caught their stride. Joe Coleman held the A's scoreless on seven hits in Game 3, striking out 14 batters in a 3–0 victory for the Tigers. [196] [197] Game 4 was another pitchers' duel between Hunter and Lolich, resulting again in a 1–1 tie at the end of nine innings.
This is a list of Detroit Tigers single-season, career, and other team records. Single season records. Hank Greenberg, Hall of Famer and 2-time MVP.
The team has had 40 winning seasons, 49 losing seasons, and 6 seasons with as many wins as losses. [15] [3] [4] The Lions were the first franchise to finish a full (non-strike shortened) regular season with no wins or ties, since the move to sixteen regular season games in 1978, going 0–16 during the 2008 NFL season. [16]
The 1899 Cleveland Spiders own the worst single-season record of all time (minimum 120 games) and for all eras, finishing at 20–134 (.130 percentage) in the final year of the National League's 12-team era in the 1890s; for comparison, this projects to 21–141 under the current 162-game schedule, and Pythagorean expectation based on the Spiders' results and the current 162-game schedule ...
The Detroit Tigers have four prospects on MLB Pipeline's preseason top 100 rankings, led by Max Clark, Colt Keith and Jackson Jobe. ... 21 walks and 25 strikeouts across 23 games last season in ...
Lefty Gomez: 13 seasons with the New York Yankees (1930–1942) before ending his career with a single appearance for the 1943 Washington Senators. [178] Hank Greenberg: 12 seasons with the Detroit Tigers (while also missing three seasons due to military service during World War II) before ending his career with the 1947 Pittsburgh Pirates. [179]