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Detroit
Tigers
Information from this
site
Click here for official
Tigers' Website
The Detroit Tigers baseball franchise played their first game for
the newly established American League on April 25, 1901 at Bennett
Park in front of 10,000 fans. A legend holds that the Detroit Tigers
got their nickname, which they have held for over a century, after
a sportswriter (a graduate of Princeton University, whose sports
teams were called the "Tigers") wrote that the team "fought
back like tigers".
In 1905, the team acquired Ty Cobb, a player who would be considered
one of the greatest of all-time. Ty Cobb posted a .367 career batting
average to set an all-time major league record, won a record 12
batting titles, and hit over .300 in every year but his rookie season.
In 1911, Cobb put
together one of the most remarkable seasons in baseball history.
He topped the AL in batting, RBIs, runs, hits, doubles, triples,
and stolen bases. The addition of Cobb to an already talented team
that included Sam Crawford, Hughie Jennings, Bill Donovan, and George
Mullin quickly yielded results, as the Tigers won three consecutive
American League Championships from 1907-09. However, the team came
up short in the World Series each time, and would not win its first
World Series until 1935. The team won additional World Series crowns
in 1945, 1968 and 1984. In sixty two of their first 100 seasons
the team finished with a winning record.
The Detroit Tigers are a Major League Baseball team based in Detroit,
Michigan. They are one of five teams that play in the Central Division
of the American League. The "Tiger" nickname came from
the orange striped socks the team wore in the early 1900s. The Tigers
were the first team in baseball, to wear a symbol of their nickname
on their uniform (other than a colored sock). In the early 1900s,
Detroit players wore caps with a tiger patch sown on. Fans of the
team call the Tigers the "Tigs" or the "Bengals,"
and even, in times of losing, the "Pussycats."
The Detroit Tigers were founded in 1893 in the minor Western League.
The Tigers Hall of Famers include Sparky Anderson, Earl Averill,
Jim Bunning, Mickey Cochrane, Sam Crawford, Larry Doby, Charlie
Gehringer, and Goose Goslin. The Tigers uniform color consists of
Navy blue, White, and Orange; logo design is an Old English font
"D" and a tiger embeds in it. The Detroit Tigers have
won four World Series Championships (1935, 1945, 1968, 1984), nine
American League pennants (1907, 1908, 1909, 1934, 1935, 1940, 1945,
1968, 1984), and three American League East Divisional titles (1972,
1984, 1987). The Detroit Tigers home
ballpark is Comerica Park (2000-present), which has a capacity of
40,000.
The Detroit Tigers Have retired the following numbers, #2 belonging
to Charlie Gehringer, #5 worn by Hank Greenberg, #6 belonging to
Al Kaline, #16 worn by Hal Newhouser, #23 belonging to Willie Horton,
#42 worn by Jackie Robinson. Ty Cobb and Ernie harwell have retirement
honors as they played in the era prior to Uniform numbers. In 2004,
the team signed or traded for several talented but high-risk veterans,
such as Ivan Rodriguez, Ugueth Urbina, Rondell White, and Carlos
Guillen, and the gamble paid off. The '04 Tigers had a 29 game improvement
over the previous season, one of the greatest improvements in baseball
history.
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