Skip to content
The Warm Take
  • Home
  • Articles
    • Detroit Lions
    • Detroit Pistons
    • Detroit Tigers
    • Detroit Red Wings
    • Michigan Football
    • Michigan Basketball
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • About
THE WARM TAKE - Tigers Blue Detroit Tigers

Detroit Tigers 2020 Season Recap: Fun While it Lasted

  • September 29, 2020September 29, 2020
  • by Jon Hamilton

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…

26-year-old Jeimer Candelario over his last 81 ABs:

• 1.165 OPS
• 9.9% BB, 18.7% K
• 27.0% LD ✅
• 46.9% Hard
• 15.6% Barrel

With a 90.1% Z-Contact & 25.5% O-Swing over that span, Jeimer is honing in on pitches he likes in the zone & mashing them 💥#FantasyBaseball pic.twitter.com/mJPPObJDxp

— Fantasy Central (@FantasyCentral1) September 12, 2020

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.

Willi Castro is an A.L. Rookie of the Year candidate:

Exhibit A: pic.twitter.com/64UBVAhb96

— Detroit Tigers (@tigers) September 25, 2020

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.

"I'm not lost," Casey Mize said. "I feel like I have the stuff to be here. It's just execution, command, sequencing, all that stuff. I'm struggling with that right now. Pretty bad timing on my part."

— Jason Beck (@beckjason) September 24, 2020

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.

Home Alone

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?

Kevin McCallister

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).

Wink

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

The Warm Take - Comerica Park Detroit Tigers

Detroit Tigers Q1 Report: Pleasantly Surprising

  • August 13, 2020August 17, 2020
  • by Jon Hamilton

Surprising is definitely a word I would use to describe the year 2020, which can go straight to hell and take COVID-19, police brutality, embarrassing presidential candidates (plural), and murder hornets with it. And don’t even get me started on the price of Youtube TV going from $50 to $65 per month. But surprising as it relates to the 2020 Detroit Tigers? In a good way? Didn’t exactly see that one coming.

But I’ll take it.

Read more “Detroit Tigers Q1 Report: Pleasantly Surprising” →
The Warm Take - Tigers Orange Detroit Tigers

Detroit Tigers Opening Weekend Observations

  • July 27, 2020July 27, 2020
  • by Jon Hamilton

So, it looks like we’re really doing this, eh?

Yes, despite a Toronto Blue Jays team that was literally homeless on opening day after being denied the approval to play in their home country by the Canadian federal government and Juan Soto, the best player for the defending champion Washington Nationals, testing positive for COVID on opening f’ing day, major-league baseball is back and soldiering on with this season that in so many ways seems doomed to fail.

Read more “Detroit Tigers Opening Weekend Observations” →
THE WARM TAKE - Tigers Blue Detroit Tigers

Detroit Tigers in 2020: Win, Lose, or COVID?

  • July 14, 2020July 15, 2020
  • by Jon Hamilton

We are just days away from the return of Detroit Tigers (ir)regular-season baseball, and the COVID altered campaign will undoubtedly look unlike anything we’ve seen before. A 60-game sprint to the finish line is what some are calling it. I think the 100-meter hurdles sounds more appropriate, given the fact that the Coronavirus – the undisputed champion of 2020 – is sure to take out many a ballplayer along the way as the rest of the league soldiers on.

Read more “Detroit Tigers in 2020: Win, Lose, or COVID?” →
The Warm Take: City of Champions Detroit Lions

Ranking the Current Regimes in Detroit Sports

  • June 27, 2020June 29, 2020
  • by Jon Hamilton

In the past week, we’ve seen Sheila Ford Hamp take over the title of Principal Owner and Chairperson of the Detroit Lions from her 94-year-old mother Martha Firestone Ford, while Troy Weaver took the vacant position of General Manager of the Detroit Pistons. Combine that with the recent return of Stevie Y to Hockeytown (can you believe it’s barely been a year since he was named GM?) and a group of head coaches who are all in their first five years on the job, and that adds up to a lot of new and unproven regimes in Detroit sports.

Which begs the question: Which regime inspires the most confidence that they can lead their team out of the worst era in the history of the city? To answer this question, let’s play a little game called rank the regime.

First, a disclaimer: This is going to be ugly. It is entirely possible that none of these front office combinations are the ones that will be able to lead their respective teams out of the gutter. But let’s talk it out, look for silver linings, and try to uncover some hidden talents that might inspire some hope that better days are ahead.

For this exercise, “regime” consists of the primary owner, general manager (or the person/people most directly responsible for personnel decisions), and the head coach. We’ll start by recapping the cast of characters in each organization. Rankings will follow. Don’t you dare skip ahead and miss out on the context.

Detroit Lions

Principal Owner/Chairperson: Sheila Ford Hamp

The “sell the team” buzzards were swirling this week when news broke that Firestone Ford was stepping down and that her daughter Sheila would be taking over as the face of Detroit Lions ownership. But the news was only in the timing, not the fact that Hamp was named successor.

Hamp was being groomed for this role and had been actively involved in many of the recent team decisions. Perhaps tops among those was the decision to retain Bob Quinn and Matt Patricia after an ugly 2019 campaign. Hamp was one of the major voices in setting the now-infamous “playoff contention” mandate for the duo in 2020. It is unlikely things feel tangibly different after this “ownership change” since it’s obvious that a 94-year-old wasn’t the only one pulling the strings the past six years.

In her new role, Hamp says she wants to put her own stamp on things and will be “a little more hands-on” than her mother. But fair or not, she now inherits the keys to an organization with a massive stigma that is linked to her family name. She’s not starting with a clean slate in the eyes of most fans, but rather 60 years of historical ineptitude since the Lions/Ford marriage began in 1961.

General Manager: Bob Quinn

Quinn is entering year five in Detroit and purely based on results the organization is trending in the wrong direction. 9-7 (playoffs), 9-7, 6-10, 3-12-1 are the final records so far, and while every season tells its own story, it’s hard to argue that Quinn’s tenure has been anything but a disappointment.

His free-agent/trade acquisitions have been a mixed bag. Hits include Marvin Jones, T.J. Lang, and the 2018 version of Snacks Harrison. Among the worst misses are Jesse James, Rick Wagner, and the 2019 version of Snacks Harrison (thanks for nothing, big fella). A very promising 2020 free agency haul could eventually tip the scales in Quinn’s favor here.

Quinn’s performance in the NFL Draft might be even more erratic. He struck gold in the third round in 2017 by landing Kenny Golladay with pick No. 96, while 2018 first-rounder Frank Ragnow is quickly turning into one of the top centers in the game. Meanwhile, the two players he selected before Golladay in 2017 were Jarrad Davis and Teez Tabor (remember him?). Yuck.

Clint Eastwood

I’ll throw an ice bucket on the praise Quinn is getting over what appears to be a nice 2020 NFL Draft performance. You know what you can do with all those B+ report cards? If you’re new around here you should know I am the leader of the “no instant draft grades” mafia, because grading future performance is pointless. On top of that, when you head into a draft with the fourth-best allotment of draft resources, you should be expected to do well. That’s the benefit of all that losing on the field and trading away players for future assets. No bonus points yet for the 2020 haul. Down the road? We’ll talk.

Head Coach: Matt Patricia

The only GM/HC combo in Detroit that likely has its futures directly tied. They appear to be a package deal at this point – it’s both or none. Patricia and Quinn’s quest to make the Lions into the Patriots 2.0 ain’t going so hot, and the worst of it has come in the last two years on the watch of Patricia. Billed as a defensive guru, his team narrowly avoided setting a franchise record for most yards allowed in a single season in 2019.

So, on the field…things haven’t been great. Off the field though….also not great. Patricia has a habit of rubbing people the wrong way with his brashness and potty-mouth, from reporters (slouchgate, anyone?) to former players (Quandre Diggs, Darius Slay). Fortunately for Patricia, there are also some that seem to take to his style of coaching (Mike Daniels, Danny Amendola), so the jury is still out on whether or not the results will improve with a group more responsive to his personality.

But time’s a-tickin’.

Detroit Pistons

Principal Owner: Tom Gores

Despite having the least recognizable name among the major Detroit owners (hard to top Ford and Ilitch), Tom Gores has been at the helm of the Pistons for nearly a decade now. He may not be a household name yet, considering his Pistons have been a pillar of mediocrity, winning between 29 and 44 games each season (excluding lockout-shortened 2011-12) since Gores acquired the franchise in 2011. The bottom fell out completely on the 2019-20 season, forcing Gores to accept a rebuilding scenario, something he had been reluctant to do in prior years.

Ultimately an owner from a business background in a salary capped sport is best suited to hiring the best people to run his team and getting the hell out of the way. Gores has a sketchy track record on both counts. His decision to give Stan Van Gundy the role of Head Coach and President of Basketball Operations in 2014 proved a major misstep, as trying to balance both roles ultimately hampered Van Gundy’s performance on both. Meanwhile, Gores let his personal relationship with Pistons “star” (don’t get me started) Andre Drummond get in the way of potential deals that would have sent the most overrated player in the NBA (I’m getting started) out of town years instead of just months ago.

Look at those two sharing a very smooth post-game greeting. Just two BFFs holding each other’s deltoids. Wait, everyone doesn’t do that?

Owners overriding the judgment of the front office executives they hire is a recipe for disaster. Has Gores learned from his past mistakes? This quote would suggest otherwise. From The Athletic:

“If there are big decisions to be made, we’ll all get together…we’re all team players. Whatever I need to do, I’m going to do to help this team, even if it’s not my normal role.“

Feel free to stick to your “normal role”, Mr. Gores. Open up that wallet and pay smart people to make smart basketball decisions.

General Manager: Troy Weaver | Senior Advisor: Ed Stefanski

It’s unclear how the division of power will shake out after the recent hiring of Weaver, a guy who has spent the last 12 years as an Assistant GM with Oklahoma City. Stefanski has been the Senior Advisor to Tom Gores since 2018 and de-facto GM without the formal title. Given the fact that Stefanski said his first order of business would be to hire a GM and wanted to interview Weaver for the position in 2018 but was denied permission, it seems like he had been simply holding down the fort until the day Weaver would be available.

Speaking of holding down the fort, Stefanski has actually done a nice job cleaning up the books and acquiring some good young role players with very limited resources at his disposal. He was brought into a messy situation left by the Van Gundy regime, with bloated contracts around every corner and few draft assets (LAC owned the rights to Detroit’s 12th overall pick in 2018) to build a foundation for the future. That the Detroit job was even appealing to Weaver in the first place is a testament to the flexibility Stefanski has created for this organization the past two years.

Weaver is known for being an “eye for talent” guy, which is critical given the fact that – pending the results of the upcoming draft lottery – the Pistons could be looking at their highest draft slot since 2003 (Darko Milicic [2]). Detroit has the fifth-best odds to land the top pick in a class that is considered wide open. The two times Weaver found himself with a top-5 pick in his time with the Thunder he and GM Sam Presti parlayed them into two guys you may have heard of – Russell Westbrook and James Harden. It’s unclear whether a Westbrook or Harden-caliber player is available in the 2020 draft, but if there is Weaver should be able to spot him.

Head Coach: Dwane Casey

Casey’s next season will be his third in Detroit. He infamously won NBA Coach of the Year in 2017-18 after being fired by the Toronto Raptors. The Raptors went on to win the title the following season, so perhaps they were on to something. Although Casey’s Pistons were 3-0 against Toronto that season and were one regular-season win away from a first-round playoff matchup with the Raptors. Clearly, the Pistons would have swept that hypothetical series, thus changing the course of history. AMIRITE?

Jack Nicholson

At any rate, Casey hasn’t given me many reasons to doubt that he can be the coach to turn this franchise around. Like Stefanski, he was tasked with taking a sloppily constructed roster with limited upside and trying to compete for the playoffs. Now that it’s officially rebuilding time, we can test Casey’s player development reputation that he earned in the early days of his Toronto tenure, taking the franchise to heights it had never before reached.

Casey is an old soul with new school sensibilities. He preaches the timeless sports ideals of competing, fundamentals, and family, while also being savvy enough to understand how the game is evolving and embracing new analytical basketball principals. We should learn a lot more about Casey going forward than we have thus far.

Detroit Red Wings

President and CEO: Chris Ilitch

It’s been three years since the passing of Mike Ilitch, at which point his son Chris took over as controlling owner of the Detroit Red Wings. In fact, Mr. I passed away two months before the Wings’ historic 25-year playoff streak was snapped, while Chris has been left to pick up the pieces and wonder how he could ever raise the Wings back up to those impossible standards.

That being said, the younger Ilitch’s personality seems much more suited for rebuilding an organization than his flashier father. Take this excerpt from a 2017 Freep piece about Chris’ succession:

“Christopher Ilitch has earned a reputation as a careful, deliberative business leader who takes a data-driven, analytical approach to solving problems and who won’t be rushed in his decision making.”

In terms of public perception, Chris Ilitch may be getting a raw deal from fans who claim he doesn’t care as much about winning as his father. The incentive is there to put a winning product on the ice given the fact that the Ilitch family name is synonymous with Detroit, and there are countless Ilitch-owned properties financially tied to the success of the Tigers and Red Wings. I seriously doubt this will be a disinterested/absentee owner situation.

General Manager: Steve Yzerman

Yzerman’s return to Detroit in 2019 was a geek out moment for Red Wings fans. The captain returned home following a crazy good stint at the helm of the Tampa Bay Lightning, where they did pretty much everything but win the Stanley Cup.

How’s this for a fun fact?: Yzerman was the captain of the 1995-96 Red Wings, the team that set the NHL record with 62 regular-season wins. The 2018-19 Lightning went on to tie that record. Yzerman can claim to be the on-ice catalyst and the off-ice architect for the two most prolific regular-season teams in NHL history. Baller.

But wait, I’ve still got some ice left in my bucket after cooling off Bob Quinn’s 2020 draft hype. For those who think that Yzerman will just be able to magically replicate his Tampa success, this cube’s for you.

Ice Cube

No two rebuilds are alike, as Yzerman can attest. The situation in Detroit is far direr than the one he inherited in Tampa. That team included already established stars Martin St. Louis and Vincent Lecavalier, and more importantly, next-generation stars Steven Stamkos and Victor Hedman were already on the ascent. In hindsight, how that was even considered a rebuild in the first place is insulting. Stamkos flirted with 50 goals before he could legally drink for crying out loud. Rebuild, shmre-build.

I’m cautiously optimistic that Yzerman can be our savior once again. But it’s not a given, especially following the latest draft lottery screwjob – the fourth consecutive lottery that saw Detroit slide back in relation to their final position in the standings. Hey, if things don’t work out, at least we got some eye candy for all those “we’ll get ’em next year” pressers. Cuz that is one handsome fella.

The fact that this guy is 20 years older than me is negatively impacting my self-esteem.

Head Coach: Jeff Blashill

Blashill has been the HC in Detroit for five years, and I still don’t know if he’s a good coach. You don’t know either. Nor do I think Yzerman knows yet, which is why he decided to retain Blashill following a season in which the Red Wings finished deeeeeep in the league basement. Like, 23 points deep. And that was with a ‘Rona shortened bailout.

It was Blashill’s impressive run as HC of the Grand Rapids Griffins that earned him the call-up to the big leagues in 2015, so we know developing young players is in his repertoire. I’m guessing he’ll be replaced whenever it is Ilitch and Yzerman feel it’s time to throw some money at free agents and compete again. Until then, Blashill it is.

Detroit Tigers

Chairman & CEO: Chris Ilitch

See above, but with one major caveat…NO SALARY CAP, BABYYYYYY!

If Chris is anything like his pops, when he feels like the Tigers’ young core is ready to compete, he will expedite the rebuilding process with the power of the almighty dollar. From 2005-2017 the Tigers had a payroll that ranked in the top half of MLB every single year, including eight years in the top-5 (Yanks and Sawks territory).

It’s amazing what you can accomplish by throwing absurd amounts of money around. Besides win a World Series in Detroit, that is.

Eastbound and Down

General Manager: Al Avila

Avila is approaching two decades in the Tigers front office, and nearly five years as the head executive in charge. He’s been around for the lowest of lows (2003, 2019) as well as both World Series appearances (2006, 2013). A lonnnnnnnng and depressing rebuild was waiting for Avila upon previous GM Dave Dombrowski’s “release” in 2015, who tapped the reserves of future assets to acquire stars for Detroit’s title runs. Treating future prospects like chess pieces to acquire established talent is certainly a viable strategy, but the big payoff never came and the plug was eventually pulled.

To his credit, Avila has done a nice job building that pool of high-end prospects back up. Pitchers Casey Mize, Matt Manning, and Tarik Skubal are all top-50 prospects on the verge of their big-league debuts, while Riley Greene and newly minted first-overall pick Spencer Torkelson are the impact bats the Tigers’ pipeline has been missing for years.

Then again, losing 114 games and “earning” the first overall pick – for the second time in three seasons – isn’t exactly the measure of a competent front office executive. When angry fans say things like “I could do a better job than ____” it’s usually a plate of fried bologna. But in this case? Could I be the architect of one of the worst teams in American League history, then peruse the top scouting reports and nail the top pick in the draft? Well, I’m not one to brag, but I’m a strong reader. I think I’d smash that scenario.

Monkey reading

What I’m much more interested to see is whether Avila’s recent focus on building an analytics department starts to translate to wins on the field. The Tigers were late to the party when it comes to things like Rapsodo units and Smart Cages equipped with blast-motion sensors. But Avila now believes the Tigers have one of the most technologically advanced systems in baseball, the best behind only the Yankees, Astros and Dodgers.

Manager: Ron Gardenhire

Much like Jeff Blashill, Gardenhire may end up being little more than a transition guy between the rebuilding and competing phases. Gardy has been in the game a long time, and in the AL Central for his entire managerial career. He’s an entirely safe and reasonable option to run this clubhouse the way it’s currently constructed – mostly young unproven kids and low-end journeymen, with a big name/big contract sprinkled in here or there (Cabrera, Zimmerman).

Perhaps telling was the fact that, despite both having contracts that expired after the 2020 season, Avila was given an extension last summer while Gardenhire was not. That’s not to say Gardy can’t earn himself a new deal if the Tigers perform some magic in the upcoming 60-game COVID-shortened season, but Ilitch appears to trust Avila with the future of this organization, while Gardenhire might be little more than a body at this point. Once a perennial AL Manager of the Year candidate, those days are now a decade behind him.

On to the rankings

Jim Carrey

I’m starting to think the previous 3000 words was just me stalling over the fact that I secretly have no idea how to arrange these these groups. I’m a guy who would much rather be right than give “hot takes” (hence the name), but this could very easily play out the opposite of how I slot them.

Alas, we’ve already come this far. Here goes nothing…

4th: Detroit Lions

Too much baggage. Too much history. This organization has done little to earn my confidence, and even when things look to be turning around, outside forces (injuries, refs, the universe, etc.) will throw a wrench in those plans.

Unless Sheila Ford Hamp can rush the passer…

Stafford confused

3rd: Detroit Red Wings

Better days are ahead, but that’s only because they can’t get any worse than what we just witnessed in 2019-20. The Red Wings haven’t had a captain since Henrik Zetterberg in 2018. I say Stevie Y gives it one more go and slaps that C on his suit. He looks like he could still light the lamp.

2nd: Detroit Pistons

Stefanski/Weaver/Casey is probably my favorite front office combination of the four teams, but Gores meddling in personnel matters has proven problematic in the past. There is enough talent (and cap space) here for the Pistons to return to middle-of-the-pack-ish immediately, but will Gores have the patience to let his staff shoot for something greater?

1st: Detroit Tigers

Avila…fine. Gardenhire…sure, why not? This ranking is about two things…prospects and cashola. The young studs are in the system and waiting to be unleashed. All Chris Ilitch has to do is decide when the time is right to return the Tigers to prominence and open up that checkbook. It’s in his DNA, despite all the methodical, patient mumbo jumbo. The Tigers might not be the first team in town back to mediocrity, but they have the highest potential of the bunch.

Bart signing check

And with that, I’d like to be the first to congratulate the Lions for winning their first division title since 1993.

Either that or sports as we know them are never coming back, so none of this mattered.

With all the changes taking place at the top in #Detroit sports I did an exercise called Rank the Regime. Who has the best chance of emerging from their respective rebuild/general ineptitude? Probably none, but I had to pick a winner. It's probably wrong. https://t.co/QBiDEwv4fY

— The Warm Take (@TheWarmTake) June 29, 2020

Subscribe to The Warm Take to receive the latest articles straight to your inbox

“Like” The Warm Take on Facebook

Follow @TheWarmTake on Twitter

The Warm Take - Comerica Park Detroit Tigers

Detroit Tigers 2020 Draft Recap and Review

  • June 15, 2020July 7, 2020
  • by Jon Hamilton

The Detroit Tigers and GM Al Avila had a relatively low-stress 2020 MLB Draft experience. They’ve known for nearly nine months that they would be selecting first overall, a privilege they “earned” by going 47-114 in 2019. They also had the advantage of resetting their draft board after Round 1, getting a good night’s sleep, then carefully considering who they wanted in Round 2 without the pressure of the clock. These built-in advantages gave Avila no excuse not to hit a home run (too easy) with his draft haul.

So, did he pull it off?

Read more “Detroit Tigers 2020 Draft Recap and Review” →
THE WARM TAKE - Tigers Blue Detroit Red Wings

Tigers and Red Wings Draft Talk: We’re Number 1!

  • June 2, 2020June 17, 2020
  • by Jon Hamilton

It’s mayhem out there folks. We have a seemingly endless stream of police brutality and unequal justice, cities quite literally going up in flames in response to the killing of George Floyd, and a looming election season that has already raised tensions and will only further segment an already divided nation. Oh yeah, don’t forget the unprecedented global pandemic looming in the background of the chaos, wondering how it’s been pushed to footnote status on the day’s events.

Read more “Tigers and Red Wings Draft Talk: We’re Number 1!” →
THE WARM TAKE NEW YEAR Detroit Lions

The Best Detroit Sports Moments of 2019

  • December 31, 2019May 29, 2020
  • by Jon Hamilton

In August of 2019, I decided to start a little passion project called The Warm Take. I love my teams, and I love my hometown. I already spend a significant amount of my time devoted to watching, researching, and expending emotional energy into the Detroit sports scene. Why not put that time to good use and turn my knowledge and opinions into poetry that I can display in my own personal little art gallery? This was going to be fun! I couldn’t wait to get started.

Then 2019 happened. Quite possibly the worst combined year in the history of the four major professional Detroit sports franchises. I should’ve seen that coming. Read more “The Best Detroit Sports Moments of 2019” →

The Warm Take on social media

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
The Warm Take - Subscribe Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • Detroit Lions 2022 Draft Review: Coming up Hutch May 3, 2022
  • A Juwan Howard and Matthew Stafford Therapy Session February 24, 2022
  • Detroit Lions Season Expectations: Losing with Pride September 11, 2021
  • Detroit Pistons 2021 NBA Draft Review: Our Cade Fire! August 2, 2021
  • Pistons Draft Lottery Thoughts: Justice League June 29, 2021
  • Detroit Pistons Final Thoughts: Tanking With ‘Tude May 20, 2021
  • Detroit Lions 2021 Round 1 Draft Review: Penei Pasta April 30, 2021
  • Michigan Basketball: Irregular Season B1G Champions March 11, 2021
Like the warm take on Facebook

© The Warm Take | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Affiliate Disclaimer

Subscribe footer
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter

Terms and Conditions - Privacy Policy