
Tigers Q&A: Answering key questions on trade deadline needs and more
Here are highlights from Tuesday's live discussion. To see answers to many more Tigers questions, read the full Q&A.
Note: Questions and answers have been lightly edited for clarity and length.
Do the Tigers need to get a third baseman on the trade market? — Patrick B.
Colt Keith moving back to third makes the need a lot less urgent. I'd rank the deadline priorities as …
1. A swing-and-miss reliever. Maybe two.
2. A reliable starting pitcher
3. A right-handed bat
With Matt Vierling back and Keith able to play third, there isn't a pressing need to acquire an everyday third-base type. Plus, other than Trey Sweeney (back with Kerry Carpenter going on the injured list), there aren't many candidates to be removed from the roster.
Advertisement
Jahmai Jones has played well, but the Tigers could seek a more proven right-handed platoon type in his place. I could see them being more interested in someone like Amed Rosario than a player like Eugenio Suárez.
What is your take on Báez's turnaround this year? What are you seeing, and what does the 'eye test' tell you that is different from or better than the last few years? It seems like the hip surgery helped. I'm also wondering about the impact of having his pal Gleyber Torres on the team (it could be mutually beneficial; he's doing well, too). What will it take for Javy's performance improvements to be sustainable? — Patrick B.
So many of the numbers still don't support Báez's play being sustainable. And yet, he just keeps producing.
One number that is encouraging: He's hitting .281 against fastballs. He hit .197 and had a negative run value against four-seamers last year, and he hit .179 with a minus-8 run value against fastballs in 2023.
He's been on time more often, and that has made a big difference, even though he's still chasing at a super-high clip and has a lower barrel rate than last year.
The bat speed has always been there, but it's possible the surgery is allowing him to move better and more comfortably in the box. And yes, Torres has been a great positive influence.
Plus, Báez always thrived on winning teams and big crowds.
We have heard and read various comments from Scott Harris and Tarik Skubal regarding an extension for the reigning AL Cy Young Award winner. But there doesn't seem to be much coming out about Riley Greene's long-term future in Detroit. Have you heard anything on that front? — Thomas W.
As of this past offseason, there hadn't been any dialogue between the Tigers and Greene's camp about an extension.
Greene is a great player, but his injury history and the fact that he's already getting slower physically (his average sprint speed has declined from the 59th percentile last year to the 34th percentile this season) make it an interesting discussion.
He's a proven All-Star worthy of a nine-figure deal. But if I'm the Tigers, I'd want to see as much of Greene as possible before committing to him long-term.
He's great. But a lot of people are concerned about how he's going to age.
Who would the Tigers build a trade around if they went after a pitcher with years of control left? Other than Sandy Alcantara, is anyone out there? — Zac S.
I like Edward Cabrera, Alcantara's teammate. He's under control through 2028, and Stuff+ models love him, but he's still unproven enough that he wouldn't be enormously expensive.
Advertisement
(Addendum: We don't know if the Miami Marlins are shopping Cabrera. He's young enough to remain an asset for them. He had a 3.78 ERA with 9.65 strikeouts per nine innings this season entering Tuesday. His overall Stuff+ ranks 22nd among MLB pitchers who have thrown at least 60 innings. Fun to wonder what the Tigers could do with a talent like that. Plus, Jackson Jobe's injury could give them more incentive to think ahead to next year and beyond.)
Is there a starting pitcher the Tigers could conceivably get at the deadline who would be better than a 'fixed' Jack Flaherty? Same for the pen with Tyler Holton and Alex Lange. Fans are fixated on the deadline, but last year the Tigers got more out of Sean Guenther, Brenan Hanifee, Will Vest and Beau Brieske than pretty much any team got out of anyone they traded for. What do you think? Are deadline concerns misplaced? — Robert J.
This is a good point worth mentioning. It sounds exactly like something Harris would say! But it's also not wrong.
An improved Flaherty (or even a healthy Reese Olson) is an addition in itself. Same with someone like Holton getting back to form.
The Tigers are still likely to go after outside upgrades in the bullpen. But they'll also bank on a few of their existing guys getting right.
Torkelson appears to have cooled off after a hot start. Do you have any insight into how he's perceived in the building right now and long term? He's obviously well liked, but what is he viewed as from a team-building perspective? — Dante U.
Yeah, I'd be curious to get unfiltered thoughts from the front office on Tork. I'd guess they are encouraged but not over the moon.
There's a chance the 2023 version of Torkelson — not the guy who struggled last year or the guy who was red-hot to start this season — is the best representation of him as a player. That means a right-handed first baseman with real power but meh average and OBP and some weak points in the field.
Advertisement
Unless he falls off a cliff in the second half, he has done enough to be the first baseman entering next season. But it's probably more cautious optimism than all-out excitement about him in the long term.
Also, we should still step back and appreciate what Torkelson has done this season. He went from having a 92 wRC+ last season to a career-best 124 wRC+ this year. Even with a cold June, he's been a strong middle-of-the-order bat, and the Tigers need a power hitter like him in the lineup.
(Top photo of Javier Báez: Duane Burleson / Getty Images)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Forbes
12 minutes ago
- Forbes
Athletics Adjust To Their Minor League Home Park In A Major League Way
WEST SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - JANUARY 24: A general view of Sutter Health Park on January 24, 2021 ... More in West Sacramento, Calif. The stadium is the home of the Sacramento River Cats. (Photo by) The team formerly known as the Oakland Athletics is now called the Athletics. That's because the Major League Baseball franchise is planning to move to Las Vegas. The team now plays in West Sacramento, California, which is 82 miles from Oakland. The A's now play their home games at Sutter Health Park, which is also the Triple-A franchise of the Sacramento River Cats, the Triple-A affiliate of the San Francisco Giants. The park opened on May 15, 2000. The seating capacity of Sutter Health Park is 14,611. It is 330 feet down the left field line, 403 feet to dead center field, and 325 feet to right field. Bullpens are behind a low wall in right field. Several small press boxes have been created. This old scout attended a June 20-23 weekend series between the Athletics and the Cleveland Guardians at the Athletics temporary West Sacramento home. It was a unique experience, as the Athletics made every effort to provide the 'look' and 'feel" of a Major League Baseball stadium. In an effort to provide a playing facility in West Sacramento that meets the standards of Major League Baseball, and the Major League Baseball Players Association, the Athletics had to make a considerable number of modifications to Sutter Health Park. SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 17: A detail shot of the shoes worn by Jacob Wilson #5 of the ... More Athletics against the Houston Astros at Sutter Health Park on June 17, 2025 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by) According to some of the changes include: 1- Modification of the the video board. A state-of-the-art video experience, featuring a 75X 32 main display was installed. 2- Modifications were made to enhance the sustainability, performance and playability of the natural grass surface. Since the field is in constant use with the Athletics and River Cats both playing home games at Sutter Health Park, the installation of AirPAT technology is used to help allow the grass to thrive, with good moisture management. As the heat continues to increase in West Sacramento, the grass surface could become an issue. 3- Increased infrastructure for stadium technology will help with device traffic from both fans and media. 4- Renovated clubhouse, dugout, and player amenities help give the Athletics temporary new home a major league fell. The clubhouses are located in the outfield, and players must walk to and from the clubhouses down the left field line to access the clubhouses. But the facilities in the clubhouses and dugouts now include more modernized amenities and space to meet the needs of major league organizations. The Athletics are hoping their new Las Vegas home park will open in 2028. Ground has just been broken for construction of the new, $1.75 billion facility. The new stadium will seat 33,000 guests. WEST SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - JANUARY 24: An aerial view of Sutter Health Park on January 24, 2021 ... More in West Sacramento, Calif. The stadium is the home of the Sacramento River Cats. (Photo by) The Sutter Health Park Experience: This writer was very impressed with the overall environment the Athletics staff has created at their new temporary home. One gets the feel of a major league game, but the 'look' of a minor league facility. The park has only one deck, and that is strikingly different than the massive 30,000 seating capacities most fans experience. The positive attitude and overall friendliness of every staff member this old scout encountered was remarkable. The staff had a smile and a warm welcome for everyone. Fans were treated to a well planned display of interactive videos and music during down times in the games. There was a sense of enjoyment and joy in almost every minute of each game this writer attended. Concession stands bustled with business, and it seemed everyone was enjoying the readily available, common baseball game food. Sutter Health Park looked very clean, and very well maintained. It was a pleasure to attend games at the facility. Crowds for the first two games were just above 8,000 each game. SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 24: Jacob Wilson #5 of the Athletics celebrates a walk-off single ... More that scored Luis Urías against the Texas Rangers in the bottom of the ninth inning at Sutter Health Park on April 24, 2025 in Sacramento, California. The Athletics won the game 4-3. (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images) The Sunday game drew more than 10,000 spectators, as the team gave a Jacob Wilson bobblehead to everyone in attendance. Wilson is All Star Game bound, and he is a fan favorite. He will start at shortstop for the American League. His bobblehead was very popular. The Athletics have an exciting team. They are making the very best of a difficult situation as they await the construction of their new Las Vegas stadium. Until they move to Nevada, West Sacramento, and the staff working at Sutter Health Park can be very proud of the facility they are offering a major league club in their minor league park.
Yahoo
28 minutes ago
- Yahoo
'That is football': Mauricio Pochettino lauds Guatemala fans, challenges U.S. soccer culture after Gold Cup win
ST. LOUIS — The question was about chance creation. But Mauricio Pochettino wanted to talk about soccer culture. He was speaking after his U.S. men's national team beat Guatemala 2-1 here in a Gold Cup semifinal. But of all the things he witnessed Wednesday, what apparently impressed Pochettino the most was 'the fans of Guatemala … Unbelievable,' he said. Advertisement And then he spoke for two minutes and 40 seconds straight, from the heart, about what he hoped U.S. soccer would learn from the experience. From the passion that filled Energizer Park immediately when gates opened at 4:30 p.m. From the chants that rang and the flags that rippled and 'the energy that translates' to the field, as Pochettino said. It inspired Guatemalan players, who on paper were overmatched, but on Wednesday put a mighty scare into the USMNT. After they came up just short, 'I saw a player of Guatemala crying,' Pochettino said. He congratulated that player, then used him as an example 20 minutes later. 'That,' he said, 'is the way that we need to feel.' Advertisement 'And our fans need to feel the same,' he continued. 'It's not to come here to enjoy all the spectacle, and if you lose, nothing happens. … Things happen.' The thrill of victory and the agony of defeat for Guatemala and its many supporters Wednesday in St. Louis. (Photo by John Dorton/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images) (John Dorton/ISI Photos/USSF via Getty Images) Pochettino is from Argentina. 'In Argentina, it's not the same if we lose. The consequences are massive,' he explained. They're significant as well in Spain, France and England, where he spent 30 years as a player and coach before taking charge of the USMNT last fall. 'Win or lose, it's not the same. It's not the same. It's a lot of consequence,' he reiterated at his postmatch press conference. His stateside move, in this sense, has clearly been a culture shock. He has inherited players who, he seemingly feels, do not have the same level of life-or-death desire that gets ingrained in kids throughout South and Central America. Advertisement In many countries, 'you play [to] survive. You play for food. You play for pride,' Pochettino said. 'You play for many things. It's not to go and enjoy, and go home, and laugh, and that's it. 'The moment that we — now, this roster — start to live in this way, I think we have big room to improve.' He hasn't explicitly said that his players go home and laugh after wins. But many grew up in a country, the U.S., where soccer is not played to survive, to escape poverty, to change a family's life; it typically begins as a recreational pursuit, often in middle-class suburbs. It becomes something more as talented kids join academies, and then turn pro, of course; there is a level of 'desperation,' though — a word Pochettino has used — that is socially ingrained elsewhere but not here. And it's reinforced, if not mandated, by fans. Fans who demand everything by giving everything. Fans who buzz around a stadium at 10 a.m., then fill it at 6 p.m., and stand for 90 minutes, and chant: 'Sí se puede!' Yes we can! Advertisement 'I think the fans gave to you, to Guatemala, an unbelievable energy,' Pochettino said. USMNT's Diego Luna celebrates a goal in front of a majority of Guatemala fans Wednesday in St. Louis. (Photo by Bill Barrett/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images) (Bill Barrett/ISI Photos/USSF via Getty Images) Veteran defender Tim Ream agreed: 'It spurred them on to push and fight.' 'That is football,' Pochettino said, and then he repeated the line twice more. 'That is football. That is football.' That 'connection between the fans and the team,' he said, 'that is the connection that we [would] like to see in the World Cup. That connection that makes you fly.' In his time atop the USMNT, instead, he has seen several half-empty stadiums. And even when full, the environments are relatively laid-back, inorganic or tame. The apathy surrounding the team has likely opened his eyes, and sometimes seems difficult for him to fathom. Advertisement What he hadn't yet experienced, though, until Wednesday, was a true road game at home. 'It was like [playing] in Guatemala,' Pochettino said. 'It was an atmosphere that we didn't expect,' he added. And it clearly had an impact on the game. 'You can't understate what a partisan crowd can do to young minds, guys who haven't experienced it,' Ream said. 'Sometimes, the pressure comes, the fans feel like they're on top of you, the noise is deafening, and you kinda lose it a little bit.' As a few players pointed out, Pochettino should have expected it. It's a reality in the United States, where there are millions of people with ties to soccer-mad countries in Latin America. Advertisement 'We're a country full of immigrants. It was kind of expected for tonight,' defender Chris Richards said. 'It's beautiful to see how much respect they have, but also how much support they have.' When told that Pochettino was surprised, Richards said: 'I think Mauricio kinda being a little bit newer to the U.S., I think he wasn't quite ready for it.' Ream indicated that some younger players were taken aback, too. He and others called it an ideal 'learning experience' for Sunday's final against Mexico in Houston. 'This game tonight would be like a little brother to the U.S.-Mexico game,' Richards said. They'll go into Sunday better equipped, mentally. Advertisement Pochettino, though, wasn't thinking about how his team would handle that atmosphere. He was dreaming of replicating Guatemala's passion, and its impact on players, in the team that he coaches. 'If you see the big teams or countries [play games], it's not playing,' Pochettino said. 'Today, do you think that was a sport, two teams playing, and doing a spectacle? No. You play for something more. You play for emotion. You play [to], be happy, be sad.' That is what he wants here. It's a dynamic, of course, that takes decades to develop, and might never develop in a nation of unmatched wealth and unparalleled opportunity in other sports and fields. But how can it start? 'I think winning helps. But I also think guys like [midfielder] Diego Luna help. I also think guys like [midfielder] Malik Tillman help,' Ream said. And 'fighting and togetherness' help. 'Doing that fosters that connection with the fans — with the diehards, with the casuals, with everybody. And as long as we continue to do that, that culture grows. The feelings grow. And the connections grow.'
Yahoo
34 minutes ago
- Yahoo
PSG vs Bayern Munich: Club World Cup prediction, kick-off time, team news, TV, live stream, h2h, odds
PSG and Bayern will lock horns in a heavyweight quarter-final clash to determine who will reach the last four of the Club World Cup. PSG come off the back of a 4-0 demolition of Lionel Messi's Inter Miami in the round of 16. Advertisement The French giants have now found the back of the net four times on two separate occasions at this year's tournament, having thrashed Atletico Madrid 4-0 in their opening game. Vincent Kompany's Bayern find themselves in the last eight after beating an impressive Flamengo side 4-2. Harry Kane netted a brace to help send the Bavarians through, and has three goals and one assist in four games in this Club World Cup campaign. Date, kick-off time and venue PSG vs Bayern is scheduled for a 5pm BST kick-off, Saturday, July 5, 2025. The match will take place at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta. Where to watch PSG vs Bayern Live stream: Viewers can watch the action live online via the DAZN website, which is free with a registration. Coverage will begin from 4pm BST ahead of an 5pm kickoff. Advertisement DAZN is the global broadcaster of the new-look Club World Cup and will show all 63 matches of the competition. No subscription is required to watch the game, with the entire tournament available to their 'Freemium' members, which means you only need to sign up for a free DAZN account. Live blog: Follow all the action right here with Standard Sport's live blog! PSG vs Bayern team news When everyone is fit, PSG, probably have the most predictable starting XI in the competition, yet one position could be up for grabs in this quarter-final bout. After coming off the bench in PSG's 4-0 win last time out, Ousmane Dembele could be in contention to make a return to the starting line-up. Advertisement The most likely casualty of Dembele's inclusion would be Bradley Barcola, who played on the right-hand side against Inter Miami, while Desire Doue played more centrally. Elsewhere, Kingsley Coman is a doubt for the German giants after he hobbled off against Flamengo. This means Serge Gnabry, Michael Olise and Jamal Musiala will likely start behind Harry Kane. Leroy Sane has played his final game for the club before joining Galatasaray. PSG vs Bayern prediction It is difficult to look past a PSG victory in this clash of the European heavyweights. The European champions have the most settled team at the tournament, and despite the blip against Botafogo, have sailed seamlessly into the last eight. Advertisement Bayern will by no means concede defeat easily and can boast of an abundance of attacking riches themselves, but PSG's attacking firepower should prove too much for Kompany's side. PSG to win, 2-1 Head to head (h2h) history and results PSG and Bayern recently met in the Champions League, when Luis Enrique's side lost 1-0 in the league phase as Dembele was sent off. PSG wins: 6 Bayern wins: 8 Draws: 0 PSG vs Bayern match odds PSG to win: 11/10 Bayern to win: 17/10 Draw: 21/10 Odds via Betfair (subject to change).