Well, well, well. If it isn’t our old pal Charlie Morton making waves again. The 41-year-old pitcher has just been dealt to the Detroit Tigers from the Baltimore Orioles in what feels like an effort to plug a leaky starting rotation. This will be the seventh team he has pitched for in his illustrious 18-year career. Seven. At this rate, Morton should just get a jersey that says “Free Agent Touring Club.“ How will he pitch with the Tigers?
Morton’s rollercoaster career has been anything but dull. He is a two-time World Series champion who has somehow seen both the summit of pitching glory and the Mariana Trench of ERA stats. His stint with the Orioles started horrifically. He had a 10.89 ERA in his first five starts. After mechanically tweaking his delivery, the pitcher found his footing again. Since late May, he’s gone 7-1 in 12 starts with a respectable 3.66 ERA.
If you’re watching the Tigers this season, you know they are clinging to the hope of maintaining their AL Central lead, and desperate times call for desperate measures. Adding Morton into the rotation is a risk versus reward bet, the kind of move that could either nudge them toward postseason relevance or sink their chances.
Why Morton? For one, he’s still got some heat. Despite being old enough to probably lecture rookies about dial-up internet, his fastball still touches 94 mph, which is nothing to scoff at. And while his strikeout numbers aren’t going to make batters quake in fear, his ability to induce weak contact has been on the upswing. A 3.66 ERA post-rotation exile is decent, but Detroit’s gamble hinges on whether that curveball stays sharp and whether games don’t spiral into bullpen nightmares the moment Morton exits the mound.
The Tigers’ pitching depth this year has been as fragile as a wet paper towel, and Morton’s arrival provides what’s essentially a band-aid for deeper problems. Yes, Detroit already snagged Chris Paddack earlier this week. But Morton is not exactly riding in on a white horse to singlehandedly save the Tigers. The guy’s 41, not 25, and “Father Time” is undefeated.
Still, Morton brings postseason experience, and if Detroit does somehow hold on to its top spot, having a seasoned arm ready for October could be invaluable. Could Morton sneak in another iconic moment like his 2017 heroics with Houston? It is a long shot, but hey, that is the fun part of baseball.
Here’s the thing about Morton. His peripheral stats don’t exactly scream “ace.” His ERA might stay palatable post-May, but his inability to generate consistent swinging strikes concerns anyone not blinded by nostalgia. It is all well and good to give up “three or fewer runs in 10 of 12 starts but what happens when the competition gets tougher?
There is an undeniable charm to his story; an aging arm refusing to go quietly, finding ways to remain relevant when most pitchers his age are cozying up in analyst chairs. Whether he ends up igniting Detroit’s playoff hopes or simply fizzles out across the final stretch of the season, one thing’s for sure. We will all be watching.
Detroit fans, temper your expectations. Adding Morton might not turn the Tigers into a powerhouse, but the move does not come without merit. If the veteran can deliver solid innings and keep runs manageable, he is already an upgrade over some of the Tigers’ wounded or underperforming arms.
For now, it is Morton’s job to prove there’s still some magic left in his arm and that age is, as they say, just a number. But as the Tigers cling to their AL Central perch, they can’t afford for this deal to become another what-could-have-been story in baseball lore.
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