Tarik Skubal would rather be in Philadelphia.
That was the clear message from the Tigers’ ace Saturday, even with the All-Star break about to pull him away from the spotlight he’s occupied the last two years. Skubal has been a headliner at the Midsummer Classic before, and he made it plain that missing this one doesn’t feel like a relief.
“I would rather be there,” he said before the game Saturday. “I don’t think you take any All-Star Game for granted. Just being in that room with that type of talent and being around those types of guys - yeah, they are extremely talented but they also have some sort of edge that you can take away from them.
“I’d much rather be there, for sure.”
A five-week absence after having a loose body removed from his elbow kept him from earning a third straight selection. So instead of heading to Philadelphia, Skubal will pitch the finale against the Phillies Sunday, then stay put and keep his routine going at Comerica Park. He’s expected to start the first game after the break in Anaheim.
He’s not exactly craving time off, either.
“I’ve had enough breaks this year,” he said. “I don’t look forward to having any more breaks. I already had a vacation in Lakeland (rehab) that I didn’t really want.”
While he won’t be part of the festivities in person, Skubal will have a front-row seat to watch teammates Kevin McGonigle and Dillon Dingler make their All-Star debuts, along with Riley Greene.
“Those guys are extremely deserving,” Skubal said. “And I think it’s funny you saying Riley might be overlooked.
It is boring when you go to three straight All-Star Games. You get bored of it, right?”
The sarcasm was impossible to miss.
“You’re not the new shiny thing anymore,” he said. “Just Mr.
Reliable. It’s going to be really boring when he gets 11 of them and that’s his career.
And then it’s like, he’s had a great career but we’re sick of acknowledging his All-Star nods. You don’t take those things for granted, ever.”
Skubal’s final start of the first half also gives the Tigers a fitting bookend. He opened the season on Opening Day in San Diego, and now he gets the last turn before the break as Detroit tries to keep its surge rolling.
Since June 1, the Tigers have pushed back into contention, and Skubal’s voice has been part of that push. Last month, he said, “My belief in this group has never changed,” before adding that the club needed to raise its level or risk forcing the front office to rethink the roster at the deadline.
Entering play Saturday, Detroit had won six straight and was 22-12 since June 1.
Skubal said he doesn’t want to claim too much credit for the turnaround.
“I don’t know if me saying anything changed anything,” he said. “I don’t want to take credit for how our team is playing baseball.
I just think we’re playing a real good brand, right? We’re running the ball out of the park.
We’re having a lot of quality at-bats. We’re playing great defense.
The starting pitching has been fantastic and the relievers are putting up zeros and doing their jobs.
“It’s just fundamental baseball that we’re playing.”
He also pointed to the way the Tigers have kept moving when bodies have come and gone, noting Jake Rogers stepping in when Dillon Dingler missed a couple games after taking a foul tip off his hand, and Eduardo Valencia making an immediate impact after coming up.
“We’re just playing really complementary baseball right now,” Skubal said. “It’s fun to be a part of it.
I don’t want to go on a break. I want to keep playing.”
Before the game, Skubal also found himself chatting with Phillies slugger Kyle Schwarber, who was taking early batting practice and preparing for Monday’s Home Run Derby. Skubal, Schwarber and Bryce Harper were teammates on Team USA in the World Baseball Classic this spring.
“Just going back and forth with those guys, it’s a ton of fun,” Skubal said. “Obviously, I have a ton of respect for those guys and what they do and how they perform.
And also how they’ve turned their season around. They started 8-18 and now look at them.
Pretty impressive.
“And now we’re doing the same thing.”
Schwarber’s batting practice display was loud, with towering drives into the right-field seats. But Skubal said the first few swings didn’t look quite so clean.
“I was joking around that his back might be sore for (Sunday),” Skubal said. “You’re getting up there in age, might need a day off.”
Then Skubal paused as the clubhouse televisions showed the Tigers making their first-round pick, selecting hard-throwing 6-foot-6 right-hander Cameron Flukey from Coastal Carolina at No. 22 overall. Skubal looked over Flukey’s bio - 95-mph fastball, 19 inches of ride - and gave his verdict.
“Yeah, we're good,” he said.
The Skub seal of approval, not too shabby.
In Other News...
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Jordan Yost, the clubs 2025 first-rounder, is already drawing a C+ grade and leaving observers to wonder what Detroit sees in him. Clark remains in Triple-A, where the Tigers want him to keep developing while also preserving his PPI eligibility for 2027, even as the big-league temptation grows louder. And with the 2026 MLB Draft approaching, Detroit will have four picks after forfeiting its third-round selection by signing Framber Valdez, a reminder that the pipeline is still being shaped not just by who the Tigers choose, but by the roster decisions that come before the draft board ever turns. [Read more 🡒]
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Granillo also arrives with some real pedigree, having once been considered a notable Cardinals prospect before St. Louis moved him to Washington earlier this year. The immediate assignment to Triple-A suggests the Tigers want to see more before giving him a longer look, but his track record and the fact that he has already opened this season in the big leagues make him one of those names worth following if Detroit needs another bullpen option later on. [Read more 🡒]
Tigers Are Rolling And This Phillies Win Changed The Feeling Fast
The Tigers wasted no time turning a tight game into a loud one Friday night at Comerica Park, burying the Phillies 10-2 in the opener of a three-game series. Detroits offense broke through in a big sixth inning, then kept stacking on runs in the seventh, with Eduardo Valencia, Zach McKinstry, James Outman, Colt Keith and Spencer Torkelson all part of the surge that changed the tone fast.
Jack Flaherty helped set the stage by giving Detroit six innings and allowing two runs, giving the club another steady start to lean on as the lineup came alive behind him. The bigger question now is whether this was just one of those nights where everything clicked, or another sign that the Tigers are starting to look a lot more dangerous when a game gets into the middle innings. [Read more 🡒]
