The Detroit Tigers didn’t exactly have a pitching problem on Wednesday against the New York Yankees. Their starter turned in a sharp line: 6.1 innings, two hits, no runs, one walk and seven strikeouts. Detroit still wound up winning 6-2 in 11 innings after the bullpen coughed up the lead, and the victory gave the Tigers their first sweep of the Yankees in New York since 2008.
But the more eye-catching story was already in the books by then. A three-game run of elite starting pitching had come to an end, and the names attached to it carried some serious weight.
Before Wednesday’s game, OptaStats pointed out that Tigers starters had struck out at least nine batters while allowing two or fewer hits in three straight games. Jack Flaherty started that stretch on Sunday, Casey Mize followed on Monday and Tarik Skubal finished it on Tuesday. According to OptaStats, it was only the second time that had ever happened in the American League, whether in the regular season or postseason.
Flaherty’s outing against the Houston Astros lasted five innings, but he still held them scoreless and punched out nine. Mize then went seven innings against the Yankees, allowed one hit and struck out 10 in a win. Skubal, a two-time Cy Young winner, worked six innings, gave up one hit, one earned run and struck out nine while also earning a win.
That left Melton two strikeouts shy of pushing the streak into territory no rotation had ever reached.
The history behind the run is what really makes it stand out. The only other time it happened came from Oct. 10-13 in 2013, during the postseason, when the Tigers rolled out Justin Verlander, Aníbal Sánchez and Max Scherzer.
Verlander started Game 5 of the AL Division Series against the Athletics and helped Detroit clinch the series. He threw eight innings, allowed two hits, gave up no runs and struck out 10. Verlander won three career Cy Young awards.
Sánchez followed two nights later in Game 1 of the AL Championship Series against the Boston Red Sox. He went six innings without allowing a hit or a run, walked six and struck out 12. That season, he finished fourth in AL Cy Young voting.
Schzerzer took the ball the next night in Game 2 and worked seven innings, giving up two hits and one run while walking two and striking out 13. He won his first AL Cy Young that season.
If Tigers fans are looking for a reason to dream, this is the kind of run that does it. Flaherty, Mize and Skubal just matched a piece of baseball history once tied to a postseason trio built around Cy Young arms.
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Amid the churn, the more important development for the organization is still the rehabilitation track at the top of the pitching pipeline. Jackson Jobe has started another step in his recovery from Tommy John surgery, an encouraging sign for a player whose long-term value looms much larger than any minor league transaction. The Tigers are still looking ahead to his eventual return, and every checkpoint matters when a rotation piece with that kind of upside is working back toward game shape. [Read more 🡒]
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Tigers Sell Off Talk Just Took A Brutal Turn
The Tigers disappointing season has already pushed them into a familiar and uncomfortable summer conversation, with reports suggesting Detroit could move from hoping to stay in the race to listening on players at the trade deadline. Bleacher Reports Joel Reuter put several names into that mix, including Tarik Skubal, Casey Mize, Jack Flaherty, Gleyber Torres and Kenley Jansen, a list that underscores how quickly a season can shift from expectation to contingency planning.
For a team that still has to decide how aggressively to sell, the real pressure comes from sorting out which pieces matter most to the short-term picture and which ones would bring back the kind of return that changes the organizations direction. Even beyond the headliners, players such as Matt Vierling, Zach McKinstry and Kyle Finnegan suggest there could be more moving parts if Detroit chooses to take the deadline path, and the next few weeks may determine just how far the front office is willing to go. [Read more 🡒]
