Detroit's Roster Shakeup Might Be A Little Too Late

Despite recent player releases, the Detroit Tigers eye future potential by signing a promising Frontier League pitcher and monitoring Jackson Jobe's recovery progress.

The Tigers trimmed another arm from their minor league mix this week, released a fresh independent-league signing, and got a promising update on Jackson Jobe’s recovery all in the same stretch.

Cole Waites is out after the club released him on Tuesday. Detroit had brought in the former Giants prospect during the offseason shuffle, and he was one of the more recognizable names among the Tigers’ batch of minor league pitching additions. Waites once ranked as high as No. 21 in San Francisco’s system in 2023, but he never got much of a foothold in the majors, logging only eight big league innings before electing free agency at the end of 2025 and landing with Detroit.

His time with the Tigers never really got rolling. Waites spent time on the Development List and also on the IL this season, and he put up a 7.71 ERA at Triple-A in between those stops. That made the move pretty easy to read from Detroit’s side.

He’s not the only offseason arm to disappear from the organization recently. Konnor Pilkington, Dugan Darnell, and Bryan Sammons were all released this month as well.

Detroit also added a new name to the pipeline on Monday. Right-hander Maddox Long signed a minor league deal, according to the Washington Wild Things of the Frontier League. Long took a winding route to the Tigers: he went undrafted after four years at Harding University, spent summers in the Northwoods League, and then turned in a strong senior season at Harding with 108 1/3 innings and a 2.66 ERA.

He’s been sharp since joining the Wild Things at the start of their 2026 season, too. In six starts and eight appearances, Long posted a 1.81 ERA over 44 2/3 innings. He’ll now head to the FCL Tigers as the latest independent-ball arm to get a look from Detroit.

And there was a more encouraging note on Jackson Jobe. According to Chris McCosky of the Detroit News, Jobe threw live batting practice in Lakeland on Saturday for the first time since Tommy John surgery. The Tigers haven’t shared much publicly about the rehab process, but he did throw a bullpen in front of team brass in early June.

Jobe had Tommy John last June, and every update has pointed in the right direction. He’s been working through the recovery privately, but the latest step suggests the slow climb toward a 2026 return is still on track.

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