The Detroit Tigers are just one day away from kicking off their 2026 season with fans as excited as they have ever been for Opening Day coming off a huge offseason.
The Detroit Tigers head into their 2026 opener against the San Diego Padres with their roster officially set. The position player picture had been mostly clear for days, but the bullpen kept things interesting right up until the end.
The Detroit Tigers have generally maintained a policy of not playing any of their prep draft picks until the following year, and so the Spring Breakout games each spring have become a sort of coming out party for the next wave of prospects each March.
The Detroit Tigers open up their 2026 campaign on Thursday afternoon on the West Coast against a National League opponent for the second-straight year, looking to make it to the playoffs for a third-straight season.
Kevin McGonigle is pulling a George Costanza as he make his way to the big leagues. The Detroit Tigers announced the exciting news on Tuesday that their infield phenom McGonigle has made the team’s roster for Opening Day.
As Spring Training opens for 2026, all 30 teams have high hopes and big questions. These are the storylines to follow for each team heading into Opening Day.
The Detroit Tigers faced the Colorado Rockies this afternoon in their final exhibition game before the regular season. Ahead of the game today, the Tigers optioned outfielder Trei Cruz, Wenceel Perez, and infielder Jace Jung to Triple-A Toledo.
Switch-hitting outfielder Wenceel Pérez entered camp this spring needing to make a strong case for an Opening Day outfield slot. He failed to do so, putting up ugly numbers all spring.
From holding onto Tarik Skubal (for now, at least) to adding Framber Valdez, Justin Verlander and Kenley Jansen to earning early buzz as the favorite in the AL Central this season, the Detroit Tigers have plenty reason for optimism.
The Detroit Tigers made exciting news on Tuesday with their confirmation that shortstop Kevin McGonigle, the #2 prospect in baseball (h/t MLB Pipeline), would be on their opening day roster.
The 2026 MLB season is right around the corner, and it is never too early to start thinking about how it might unfold. Seemingly, every year, we have a decent handle on who should contend and who is likely to struggle, which makes looking ahead to the trade deadline inevitable.
The Detroit Tigers are currently gearing up for the 2026 MLB season, which is slated to begin later this week. The Tigers are looking to build off the success of last year, which featured a run to the ALDS, where they lost to the Seattle Mariners in five games.
After a great showing in spring training, rookie infielder Kevin McGonigle made the Detroit Tigers' Opening Day roster, the team announced Tuesday. The Pennsylvania native is baseball’s No.
It’s official. The Tigers announced Tuesday that infielder Kevin McGonigle, the consensus No. 2 prospect in baseball, will make their Opening Day roster.
The Tigers announced that they have signed right-hander Connor Seabold to a split contract worth $800K at the big-league level. It hasn’t been reported what he would make if sent to the minors.
Nobody wants to say it out loud, but the Detroit Tigers are built to win right now. Not in a “maybe in a couple years” way. Not in a “if everything goes perfectly” way.
Gleyber Torres has had an excellent month of March. The 29‑year‑old veteran second baseman spent time away from the Detroit Tigers and spring training to suit up for Team Venezuela at the World Baseball Classic, where he helped his country win the gold medal.
The Detroit Tigers will start the season on Thursday on the road against the San Diego Padres. Everyone knows Tarik Skubal will get the ball to start the 2026 season but who follows him is now unknown.
The Detroit Tigers are going all in for the 2026 MLB season in what could potentially be left‑handed ace Tarik Skubal’s final year with the organization.
The year was 2024. Down 3-0 in the top of the ninth with the bases loaded and a full count, Parker Meadows drove a ball to deep-left field for a go-ahead grand slam in San Diego.
Instead of hiring a qualified manager, USA went with Mark DeRosa who consistently exposed himself for being completely out of his element as a leader and decision-maker.