Tigers vs Padres; April 21-23

Padres at Tigers

Series: Three games at Comerica Park

First pitch: Monday-Tuesday – 6:40 p.m.; Wednesday – 1:10 p.m.

TV/radio: Monday-Wednesday – FanDuel Sports/97.1.

Probables: Monday – RHP Randy Vasquez (1-1, 1.74) vs. RHP Keider Montero (0-1, 9.00); Tuesday – RHP Nick Pivetta (3-1, 1.57) vs. RHP Jack Flaherty (1-1, 2.53); Wednesday – LHP Kyle Hart (2-1, 6.48) vs. RHP Reese Olson (2-1, 4.50).

Vasquez, Padres: He brings six pitches to the fight, leaning hard on his cutter, sweeper and curveball off 92.6 mph four-seamers and sinkers. He doesn’t miss a lot of bats (13% whiff rate) and gets a lot of fly balls (62%). He will also walk you if you let him. He has 14 walks in his 20.2 innings this season.

Montero, Tigers: His stuff was measurably better than the results in his season debut in Milwaukee. The movement profiles on his slider and knuckle-curve were elite, but the pitches he left in the middle of the plate got whacked, specifically third-inning homers by Christian Yelich and Rhys Hoskins.

View Comments

Entering play Sunday, the Tigers were the only team in baseball to boast four starting pitchers with ERAs under 3.00. They were also one of the few to not have a pitcher make a single start on the traditional four days of rest.

Cause and effect?

Probably not. But the extra rest between starts has not been accidental.

“The goal is to routinely give guys extra rest this season,” manager AJ Hinch said before the game. “And that’s been on purpose. It’s been designed and it’s been somewhat of a gift from the schedule with the off days early in the year.”

It’s why Keider Montero was called up last week to enlarge the rotation to six. It’s why Montero will get a second start Monday against the Padres.

“One of the things I said when Keider got here was we wanted to give the rotation an extra day,” Hinch said. “When we decided to push to get him a second appearance, we had the opportunity to insert him whenever we wanted to.”

====

We are going to continue to do this,” Hinch said. “Just being aware of our whole rotation and being proactive on that as opposed to waiting and being reactive. This has evolved into being the best plan to gain the most in terms of rest and recovery.”

It’s not an exact science, of course, but there is some correlation between the extra rest and performance gains.

“Opinions on that vary,” Hinch said. “The information that comes with that can vary pitcher to pitcher. But generally speaking, recovery is the hardest thing to gauge. We’re a sport that thrives on routine. And the everyday component and the history of the game will tell us that these guys like to pitch routinely every five days.

“The rest and recovery information will tell you that stuff is just a little bit better when you get more rest.”

The data gets a little fuzzy, though, when the extra day of rest turns into two and three days of extra rest. Then it becomes a rust vs. rest argument.

“The best laid plans will get messed up by Mother Nature or odd games or uncontrollable circumstances,” Hinch said. “We targeted this part of the schedule because this is the longest stretch of games in the month of April (23 games in 24 days).

“You need to be adaptable and balance the proactive approach with the fatigue and soreness that come with the rigors of the season, and inevitably it comes at a different time for each pitcher. So it may not be the blanket, ‘everybody gets an extra day of rest’ when we chose to do it again.”

1 Like

Sounds like it isn’t as bad as earlier reports sounded, good news for him.

These guys scare me.

Montero starting and Kerry hurt?

Against the Padres?

Scared Horror GIF by SpongeBob SquarePants

At least Cleveland is playing the Yankees over the next few days.

As I said, he isn’t far behind Rogers with glove either.

https://x.com/TheWARmonger_/status/1914095200177102890

4 Likes

Now if only we could develop a catcher that can hit too…been a long time. Wonder what Haase is up to these days.

1 Like

Haase has been shuttled back and forth between Milwaukee and AAA. A few homers but generally not sticking due to his hitting approach. Hes a backup C at his ceiling

Vazquez has been mostly unhittable. Super wild though. Gonna wanna try and run on Diaz when we get on.

Padres are having a worse time with OF than we are and ai think we will miss Jackson Merrill coming back, i think. Keep Machado and Tatis in check and we have a good shot at taking 2 of 3, probably the last 2

1 Like

Good chance you are seeing that develop in Detroit right now.

From Last summer

4 Likes

I love the kid, wears my favorite tiger number (for parrish, not avila don’t start) but the kid hasn’t walked once. to his credit he does seem to put the ball in play but 58 ABs and not even 1 walk is unusual, to me.

That is one heck of a throw. Great velo and accuracy.

Jung’s bat has been heating up in AAA.

https://x.com/DetroitTigersPR/status/1914391378617844081

2 Likes

1 Like

I feel bad for kreidler but man o man is he hard to watch.

3 Likes

Wasn’t terrible at center and good in the infield, but the bat is a problem.
Hoping Jung can step up at third would be a huge plus and keep the bat going.

1 Like

I agree on feeling bad for the kid, baseball is hard and the jump from AAA to the Majors is huge. To put that kind of energy into chasing your dreams, all the credit to him and all the others doing so. The numbers just aren’t on your side to making it and I think that includes 1st round picks.

1 Like

Any word on Carps injury?

Hamstring, 10 DL i believe, not positive on that though, as far as the DL stint. Definite hamstring

1 Like

Full article at link found bottom of post

According to recent comments in an article from Tony Paul at The Detroit News ($), Jung came into camp with a real opportunity to seize a big-league job. But after a rough performance at the plate, the Tigers had him refocus on both his defense and his approach. The results are showing.

“If I would’ve hit, I would’ve made the team,” Jung told the News. “You learn from it, and you keep going.”

He’s done exactly that.

From Plate Discipline to Raw Power

In 2024, Jung posted solid underlying numbers in Toledo:

  • Average Exit Velocity: 87.4 mph
  • Hard Hit Rate: 35.1%
  • Barrel Rate: 8.1%
  • Sweet Spot Rate: 37.1%
  • Average Distance: 171.5 ft

In 2025, those numbers have taken a massive leap:

  • Average Exit Velocity: 91.3 mph
  • Hard Hit Rate: 57.8%
  • Barrel Rate: 22.2%
  • Sweet Spot Rate: 40.0%
  • Average Distance: 216.8 ft

That’s not just marginal improvement. That’s evidence of a hitter who is both making better swing decisions and doing more damage on contact. Keep in mind, this is on a smaller sample size in 2025, but these are the numbers we are working with.

Plate Discipline Still Intact

One of the more impressive aspects of Jung’s development is that his newfound power hasn’t come at the cost of discipline:

  • Swing %: 42.0% in 2025 vs. 41.3% in 2024
  • Chase Rate (O-Swing %): 21.9% in 2025 vs. 21.6% in 2024

The only area with a slight regression is overall contact rate (66.7% vs. 73.6%), but it’s likely a byproduct of swinging with more intent.