Detroit Tigers 2020 Season Recap: Fun While it Lasted
The 2020 MLB 60-game regular season has already come to a close, and like a star shooting across the sky, the Detroit Tigers’ expanded playoff hopes burned out before they could reach the finish line. And they didn’t even let ’em play the full 60, finishing the season at 23-35.
That being said, there were a number of interesting items to recap from the COVID-shortened campaign that suggests this season was not a waste.
Here is a collection of thoughts and observations from pandemic baseball, Detroit style.
“Like” The Warm Take on Facebook to help this content reach more eyeballs.
Surprise breakouts
Back in July, just before the season started, I wrote that while most of the focus was (rightfully so) being placed on Detroit’s pool of high-level prospects and if/when we would get to see them make their debuts, we shouldn’t rule out the possibility of a post-hype player breaking out and making some noise. The names I specifically referenced were Christin Stewart and Jeimer Candelario, two players whose shine has dulled over time but remain interesting enough to keep tabs on while waiting for the next wave of stars to fully incubate.
Stewart has since removed himself from the watch list after mustering a putrid .167 BA with three homers over 36 games in 2020. Thanks for coming.
But Candelario? Oh baby. I think I found “my Tiger”.
The Candyman can (and did)
He’s the Candyman now, because studs have nicknames.
Candelario started the year 0-17 at the plate, totally lost and hitless in the month of July. Then, from 8/1 – 9/11, the Candyman logged a .388 BA, tops in the majors over that span. His 21 XBH in 2020 led the team, and going back through the old game notes (yes, I take pen and paper game notes like a real ‘Merican) reminded me just how many of those came in late-inning/game-tying/go-ahead scenarios. Dude was just locked in for the better part of 40 games.
Here’s a lil’ sumn’ sumn’ for all my geeks out there…
A slow finish that culminated with a trip to the injured list resulted in his season BA falling just below .300. But I know what I saw, and I want more. He was also playing some slick defense at the hot corner until he was shoved over to first with the arrival of Isaac Paredes in early August. He then showed his defensive versatility by looking like an above-average first baseman. Personality-wise he hits that sweet spot between being generally laid back with the ability to turn on the fire and intensity when the moment calls for it.
The Candyman was my favorite surprise breakout of 2020, but there are some other candidates who would like a word in this conversation. Here are some honorable mentions, quick-hitter style:
Hail to the Victor Reyes
Reyes went on an absolute tear after earning a shot at the leadoff gig in mid-August, which included multiple four-hit games. His 56 hits led the team in 2020, barely edging out the Candyman (55). Just a consistent contributor at the top of the lineup that seemed to make an impact every game.
To be honest, Reyes probably shouldn’t even qualify for this section considering he already kinda broke out last season. At this stage of his career, with his track record now crossing multiple seasons, Reyes just might be approaching proven commodity status (and he’s only 25).
Big Willi style
Slick Willi Castro is garnering some dark horse AL Rookie of the Year consideration after hitting a cool .349 in 140 plate appearances in 2020. He won’t win that award, because the sample size is too small (only 36 games played) and he was extremely fortunate to reach that lofty number (his .448 BABIP wouldn’t have held up over a bigger sample). Oh yeah, and his defense at short is…um…a work in progress.
But make no mistake, flipping Leonys Martin at the 2018 trade deadline and getting Castro in return is turning into one of Al Avila’s better moves as GM. The list of underwhelming deadline returns/deals that never happened but should have is extensive, so we need to give credit where and when it’s due. If Castro can smooth out some of his defensive wrinkles, cut down on the SOs, and raise the walk rate (.187 BB/K, yikes!), we just might have a shortstop of the future.
Man, that is a laundry list of really important baseball stuff Castro still needs to improve on.
Jones-ing for a healthy season
Jacoby Jones was Detroit’s offensive MVP in the first 20 games or so, when he had a cup of coffee with a top-5 OPS in all of baseball. Though I don’t think Ron Gardenhire noticed, considering he buried his best offensive player in the 9-hole until well after he cooled off and came back to Earth (ahh, the old “don’t mess with what’s working” style of management).
Jones’ season was cut short after just 30 games when he suffered a broken wrist on an HBP. He suffered the exact same fate last season. Gotta feel for the young man, who suddenly ain’t so young anymore (28). But the Tigers made some noise early in the season, sitting in the top half of the playoff bracket at the quarter mark, and Jones was the offensive catalyst.
The kids weren’t alright
And that’s ok.
So much for the narrative that Casey Mize and Tarik Skubal, two of the Tigers’ young stud starting pitchers that made their major league debuts earlier this season, would immediately step in and bring stability to a rotation that was in shambles heading into 2020. I was as guilty as any of pushing this narrative, and that wasn’t fair to the kids.
The Tigers finished with a major league-worst 5.63 team ERA, despite getting solid bullpen contributions from several unlikely sources – relievers Bryan Garcia, Jose Cisnero, Buck Farmer, and pseudo-starters Tyler Alexander and Daniel Norris (long live the piggyback!) all finished with ERAs south of 4.00 for the season.
Mize, one of the top prospects in all of baseball, narrowly avoided an ERA starting with the number seven (6.99).
Full disclosure: these are small samples we are working with here, as Mize only made seven starts for a grand total of 28.1 innings. But the behind the scenes numbers suggest that Mize earned the bloated ERA. Some pitchers are victims of the inherent randomness of baseball, but Mize made his own bad luck in 2020. His 4.13 BB/9, team-worst 19.16 pitches per inning, five hit batters, and two wild pitches are just a smattering of stats that show how Mize lacked the control and polish that had come to define him after being drafted first-overall in 2018.
Amazingly, the only game in which Mize struck out more than five batters and walked fewer than two was his major-league debut on 8/19 vs. the White Sox. He finished the season winless…because he only pitched enough innings to qualify for a win once.
Mize is too good not to use his rough rookie campaign as a learning experience and come out the other side better for it. But he unquestionably hurt this team in 2020.
Skubal, on the other hand, was much better than his 5.63 ERA suggested. The minor league strikeout rate that sent him flying up the Detroit prospect lists immediately translated (10.41 SO/9), and he managed to do this with relatively good control (11 BB in 32.0 innings). Homers (9) were the cause of his ugly ERA, as a disproportionate amount of Skubal’s hits left the yard, including the only two hits he allowed in an otherwise solid season finale.
If you’re taking my temperature regarding the two, I’ll say I’m mildly concerned with Mize (control) and not at all concerned with Skubal going forward. There is some beyond the box score stuff with Mize that doesn’t even quantify just how uncharacteristically wild he was. Austin Romine/Grayson Greiner deserved a couple of Doordash lunches on Mize’s tab (just leave it on the doorstep and get the hell outta here) for some of their in-game heroics keeping the ball in front of them.
Could be the first-year jitters, but Mize’s cool and calm demeanor and walk-free debut fly counter to that logic.
At any rate, calling up these two was the right developmental call in the absence of a true minor league season, and expectations shouldn’t be lessened for 2021 and beyond.
Matt Boyd = Fake ace
60.1 IP | 45 ER | 15 HR allowed (Most in MLB in Back2Back seasons)
Bye bye trade value.
Kevin McCallister, what say you?
Next man(ager) up
We knew that Ron Gardenhire was likely just a managerial bridge in the process of Detroit’s rebuild, but no one could have seen him stepping down in mid-September due to health concerns and stress. An old school baseball guy opting to call it a career rather than toughing out the final week of the season? Heresy!
Yet that is the story the Detroit front office is selling. Gardenhire turned a routine pregame meeting with GM Al Avila into an impromptu retirement presser, complete with a farewell video montage on the Comerica jumbotron.
If you’re into conspiracy theories, check out the work of Holly Horning at Totally Tigers who uses her Tigers knowledge and media consultant background to pick apart the Avila/Gardenhire presser and poke holes in the timeline of events.
Long story short: Front office pressure played just as much of a role, if not more, than Gardy himself in how (and when) this story ended.
Of much greater importance is who the Tigers select to lead them out of the final stages of the rebuild and back into contention.
The next manager should be selected in a way that reflects a clear and consistent message and identity throughout the organization. You hear too often stories of a player having their growth stunted because they have different voices conveying different messages at every step of their career progression.
Detroit was late to the analytics party, but Chris Ilitch has been playing some serious catch up in recent years with his focus on data and technology. The Tigers should hire a forward-thinking manager that will be able to utilize and understand the resources at his disposal.
They actually pulled it off
There was a time when it seemed like this MLB season was doomed to be a COVID casualty. Remember when Canada outsourced the Blue Jays in late-July? Yet here we are at the finish line in one piece, talking about what the future holds for the Detroit Tigers. That’s a win in the grand scheme of things.
Detroit’s 23-35 record prorates out to 64-98 in a typical 162-game season. That’s good for a 16-game improvement over their 114-loss 2019 campaign. No matter how you slice it, that is a big step in the right direction. Barring an altered format, the Tigers are likely to select third whenever it is we get around to the 2021 draft, which is a pretty good consolation prize for a team that played meaningful baseball for most of the season before folding up shop in the final week (Miguel Cabrera, after playing in each of the first 57 games, got a “day of rest” in the season finale. Well played).
While it wasn’t a middle-of-the-pack type of leap, the Tigers appear to have emerged from the league basement. Man, it feels good to…not be embarrassingly bad? Yeah! Go get ’em Tigers!
Subscribe to The Warm Take to receive the latest articles straight to your inbox
“Like” The Warm Take on Facebook
Follow @TheWarmTake on Twitter