Isaac Paredes made another uncomfortable return to Detroit this weekend, and the Tigers got the full reminder of what he’s been doing to them since the day they moved him.
In the Astros’ four-game series at Comerica Park, the former Tiger went 6-for-15 with a homer and five RBI, and he never struck out once. Detroit did manage to avoid the sweep by taking the second game, but that was the lone bright spot in an otherwise rough weekend.
Paredes has become a familiar problem for his old club. In 29 career games against the Tigers, he’s hit .293 with a .901 OPS, along with five home runs and 18 RBI. The numbers only reinforced what Tigers fans already know: when Paredes shows up across from Detroit, it tends to feel personal.
That feeling got louder after Sunday’s loss, when an old clip started circulating again on Tigers Twitter. During the second game of a Rays-Blue Jays doubleheader in early July, Paredes launched a three-run homer in the fifth inning to stretch Tampa Bay’s lead to 9-1. As teammates congratulated him in the dugout, one voice could be heard saying, “ Hey, the Tigers are f-ing idiots.”
It landed differently this weekend, because plenty of Tigers fans were thinking the same thing.
The painful part is that this isn’t even a Scott Harris story. The trade that sent Paredes to Tampa Bay for Austin Meadows in April 2022 was made by Al Avila, and even at the time it already looked shaky.
Meadows was hitting .250 with a .675 OPS before landing on the IL with vertigo on June 15. He then dealt with a long list of physical and mental issues, left during the 2023 season because of anxiety issues, and was non-tendered that November.
Paredes, on the other hand, has kept building a real major league résumé. He’s been especially productive this season, where he sits third on Houston’s bWAR leaderboard behind Yordan Alvarez (3.6) and Jeremy Peña and Christian Walker, who are tied at 2.0.
It’s no surprise Tigers fans have spent time imagining a way to bring him back. He was traded to the Cubs at the 2024 deadline, then moved again as part of the Kyle Tucker deal to Houston. Detroit couldn’t have known what kind of run it would make after that 2024 deadline, but the idea of getting Paredes that offseason - with years of team control still ahead and all that damage already done against the Tigers - sure looks like the kind of move that might have mattered.
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For the Tigers, the part that matters is how a players rest-of-season value gets weighed against everything else in July. A bat with versatility across the middle infield and a contract situation that can make him more appealing to buyers usually draws notice, and Detroit is the kind of club that has to listen when that kind of name comes back into the rumor mill, even if the health question still clouds the conversation. [Read more 🡒]
Braves Suddenly Have A Real Shot At A Deadline Ace
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For Detroit, any conversation around Skubal carries obvious weight because he is the kind of arm contenders covet and rebuilders rarely move without a steep return. The Braves already have a rotation stretched thin by injuries and uneven results, which is why the fit keeps making sense on paper, but the rest of the equation is still very much unsettled as the deadline picture starts to come into focus. [Read more 🡒]
