The Detroit Tigers don't have much left to play for this season other now that they've fallen to fourth place in the AL Central, so really, the only goal they have is to finish the season without embarrassing themselves. Well, that and try to catch the red hot Cleveland Indians (see, CC Sabathia and Paul Byrd were only holding them back) and reclaim third place.They won't have Todd Jones around to help them, though, as he has thrown his last pitch this season, and probably in his career.
Todd Jones fought back the tears and forced himself to smile as he walked around the clubhouse Wednesday, hugging each of his Tigers teammates and shaking their hands.Unfortunately for Todd, the odds of him coming back aren't very good. Even if he can recover from his shoulder injury this offseason in time to pitch next season, there generally aren't many teams in the market for 40-year old relievers with shoulder problems.
Minutes earlier, in a brief, closed-door meeting, Jones had given them the news: After 16 seasons and 319 saves -- a team-record 235 of them in two tours of duty with the Tigers -- the 40-year-old reliever has probably pitched his last game, at least for the Tigers.
"I'm going home, try to rehab and get better, and see if I can come back," Jones said.
We're only a few days away from baseball's waiver trade deadline of August 31, and though there hasn't been nearly as much wheeling and dealing in August as there was in July, there are still a few moves we may see before the deadline passes.
The Tigers removed
Despite the crackdown on performance-enhancing drugs, pitchers are throwing harder than ever. Eamonn recently passed along speculation that they're managing this thanks to, among other things,
On Wednesday morning I wrote about Tigers manager
The Tigers went for broke this year, bumping their payroll from $95 million last season to $138 million this year in hopes of buying a spot in the postseason. In hindsight, it wasn't meant to be: the Tigers sit 8 1/2 games out of the division lead, and considering they've won just three of their past 12, the deficit seems to grow larger every day.
While the Tigers learned something new about
Normally, when a player spouts off nonsense and his manager is asked for comment, said manager will offer something like, "I just don't know what to say," or "he's entitled to his opinion," or something else deflective and insubstantial.
The Tigers may be eight games in back of a playoff spot, but they're not yet ready to throw in the towel: 