Tag: Dontrelle Willis

Dontrelle Willis DFA’d, Detroit Tiger No Longer

The DTrain is going to be laying down new tracks….right out of Detroit. Dontrelle Willis, the struggling left hander, was designated for assignment after Saturday night’s loss to the Oakland Athletics at Comerica Park.

The move removes Willis from the 40 man roster and leaves the Tigers 10 days to trade him, release him, or send him outright to the minor leagues. However, Willis would have the right to refuse any minor league assignment and become a free agent.

This likely ends Willis’ tenure in the Tigers’ organization, which has spanned the past three seasons. 

Willis was acquired from the Florida Marlins as part of the blockbuster Miguel Cabrera trade made during the winter before the 2008 season.

He was signed to a three year contract extension before ever throwing a pitch for the Tigers. The contract was worth $29 million, $12million of that being owed in 2010. The Tigers are still on the hook for the remainder of that $12 million Willis is owed this year.

However, this move is hardly surprising, considering the Tigers spent nearly $13.8 million on outfielder Gary Sheffield after releasing him before the 2009 season.

Cabrera’s emergence as one of the top sluggers in baseball has eased the sting from not getting much out of Willis. 

Over parts of three seasons with the Tigers, Willis has made only 22 starts. His composite numbers from those three years: 2-8, 6.86 ERA with 92BBs and 68Ks in 101 innings pitched. 

Willis spent time on the disabled list in both 2008 and 2009 as a means to try to correct his wildness and ineffectiveness. Said Detroit General Manager David Dombrowski, “He had trouble throwing strikes on a consistent basis.”

With Willis being cut, RHP Max Scherzer will be recalled from Toledo of the International League. Scherzer is scheduled to get the 1:05pm start in the third game of the series against the Oakland Athletics. 

“Willis worked hard, tried to overcome a lot. But we had to make the best [decision] for the club. It’s hard.” said Dombrowski on the decision to designate Willis for assignment.

Ultimately, one has to believe the reason the Tigers’ organization gave Willis such a long leash was not only because of the money he was owed, but the quality of individual and teammate that he is. We wish you all the best, DTrain.

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Does Two Plus Three Equal Roy Oswalt? Lets Ask Mr. Illitch, Pretty Please

Whenever I look at how well a baseball team might fare in the regular season and then play-offs, this is usually my thought process:

#1) Who is your ace? Must have that stud guy who the team can rally around.

#2) Who is the closer? If you can’t finish games, don’t tell me about how well you start.

#3) Do you have a big bopper? Need that guy that the other teams have to work around.

#4) Who are the second and third starters? Need some pitchers to keep things going after the ace.

#5) Got any table setters? Need some players on base for the big guy.

#6) What about bullpen depth? Can’t be losing the game in the seventh inning.

#7) Any protection for the clean up hitter? Got to make them pay if they don’t want to pitch to your big guy.

#8) What about the defense up the middle? Can they make the plays they need to make?

Somewhere after these 8 questions I start thinking about the bottom of the line-up or the 4th and 5th starters. We might argue about the order a bit, but you have answers for those first 8 questions, the rest will play out just fine.

At the start of the year, the Tigers thought they had a lot of the answers. The biggest doubt concerned the matter of setting the table rather than questioning the defense up the middle with a couple of rookies in key positions.

So now it’s time to invoke the “Sparky rule” and see what we have after 40 games. (okay, make that 43 games, I was a little slow out of the box)

Their report card looks pretty good, almost made the Dean’s list:

4 A’s with Ace, Closer, Big Bopper and Bullpen Depth.

2 B’s for the Table Setters and Line-up Protection

1 C+ for Defense Up the Middle

1 F for No. 2 & No. 3 starters.

Yikes, where did that come from?

At the start of the year, we expected the second and third starters to be at least a C, if not a B. Maybe I can now raise them to a D because Porcello seems to be picking it up a little.

But then again, Scherzer is in the minors, so let’s keep it at an F. You have to have both spots filled.

Look, we can talk about trades for a good-hitting catcher or how inconsistent Bonderman and Willis are but truth be told, we can win without that changing.

What we can’t win without is better production out of the second and third starters.

The rest of the answers can have you playing pretty well, maybe even winning the division if Minnesota falters a little.

But you are going to need those pitchers to vie for a pennant or ring. Those two spots are too important to ignore.

A championship quality team wins about three-quarters with the ace starting, and about half of the games out of the fourth and fifth and spot starters.

The Tigers are fine with that, it’s those 60 or so starts between the ace and the back end.

If we figure Verlander for 34 starts at a 750 clip that’s 25.5 wins. Now add in around 62 starts for the fourth and fifth and spot starters at 500 and it adds up to 56.5 wins.

If you win two-thirds of those last 66 starts you reach 100 wins: champagne and confetti time.

Win half of them and you have 88 wins. Close but no cigar.

But that’s just the math, the real issues go deeper than that.

First, your second and third guys need to be inning eaters. They don’t have to be hogs, but they can’t leave a lot of left overs for the bullpen.

When they consistently do not make it into the seventh inning, it puts a huge strain on the bullpen that over the long haul, and it will bring a pitching staff down.

You know you will need the bullpen when Bonderman and Willis start, any time they get into the sixth inning it’s a good start out of them.

The problem is, you can’t bring in the pitcher you want if he had to throw the night before. So now your chances to win that game are way down.

You can get away with that once in a while, which is why you have a dozen or so pitchers on the staff.

But you get in a habit of it and you’re getting too many innings pitched out of your set-up guys and depending on the 10th, 11th, and 12th pitchers too much. Next thing you know your bringing in Valverde in the eighth inning.

The Tigers are pretty deep in the bullpen with some good spares in the minors, so maybe they can struggle through that with some well-placed roster maneuvering.

Where they are going to need Porcello and Scherzer to fill their role is with momentum.

Teams need a handful of those five- to 10-game winning streaks during the season and those come from your No. 2 and No. 3 starter.

When they are winning by the time they pile on a win by the ace, you’re halfway there. Get a little lucky at four and five and you have a chance with the one, two, and three pitchers coming back up to have a nice little streak.

At the same token, if the two and three split their starts, even with a win out of the ace you have to get a win out of four or five to go above 500, and remember, you have to do that with your 10-12 pitchers filling key relief roles.

So is there any chance this turns around?

There are encouraging signs, like the seven shutout innings by Porcello against the Yankees. But then again, that was in between two pretty bad starts.

We might have to accept that Porcello will be around .500 this year, maybe a little better by the end of the year.

We really should have expected that. This is his second year and most pitchers go through that.

Hitters have seen and adjusted to him, and until he counters he will have some struggles. This is normal. Even Verlander went through it.

He’ll bounce back and be a solid No. 2 or No. 3 starter down the line, just maybe not this year.

The bigger concern is of course Scherzer; the best news we have heard from him lately was a minor league start. We had him penciled him in as a two or three at the start of the year but it was with our fingers crossed.

He has great stuff and there were some great numbers in Arizona, like his 214 hits given up with 240 strike outs in 226 innings. Those kind of numbers are All-Star status.

The problem is he had a career record of 9-5 and only two years experience. Maybe we should have expected this, better figure him for another year, too.

So what do you do?

Chance are the Porcello and Scherzer combination look like a .500 combination all year and that leaves the Tigers out of the play-offs. Just short again.

Dombroski has to make a move and not just any move. The Tigers need a frontline starter, or this season will be lost.

You can add all the good hitting catchers or even replace Inge, it won’t matter if they don’t get some help for the rotation and not just another .500 guy and the closer to an Ace the better. We have to make up for the No. 3 being only 500.

They say Oswalt might be available and yes, that contract is pretty scary and his numbers say he is in decline a little, though he has some nice numbers this year, like a 2.66 ERA and 49/60 Hits/SO ratio.

32 years old is a little iffy but many pitchers like him have had a lot of great seasons after 32. He’s been effective in the playoffs (4-0 3.66), and he’s a solid locker room guy.

We have to assume the Astros would want young players, and they should be interested in young relievers especially. Their top six bullpen guys based on appearances are over 30 and young relievers are right up the Tigers alley.

I would seriously consider any trade built around Zumaya or even Perry. If it took Zumaya or Perry plus Boesch with a minor league pitcher, thrown in as long as it’s not Turner, I’m going to make that deal.

Of course, it’s not my money, and Oswalt gets a lot of money. He might be worth it but can the Tigers afford him?

That’s a fair question, Illitch has spent plenty of money already and upped the budget for top talent before, but there is a line somewhere.

The Tigers have some money coming off the books for next year, so Dombroski can probably fit the money in next year, but that’s next year. Still leaves some 10 million for this year that the Tigers would have to take on.

That’s quite a question for Dombroski or really Illitch to answer.

Do they spend $10 million to put them squarely in contention for the World Series? If you have Verlander, Oswalt, and whomever is pitching better out of Porcello and Scherzer as your rotation going into a playoff series you got a real chance against anyone.

Maybe the variables change like Cliff Lee instead of Oswalt, but the question is clear.

Two plus three plus $10 million could equal World Series rings, but take out the cash and it probably means another less than satisfying season.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Dontrelle Willis Dull As Detroit Tigers Fall To Los Angeles Dodgers

Dontrelle Willis just can’t seem to get on an even keel.

It’s a problem that he’s had since he arrived in Detroit two years ago.

There have been times that he has looked like the D-Train of old, back in his Florida Marlin days, when he was a fan favorite.

And more times than not, he appears as the secondary piece of the Miguel Cabrera deal.

Just like he did in the Tigers 4-1 loss to defending National League West champion Los Angeles Dodgers on Friday night.

Most Tiger fans have “at least we have Miggy” in their minds, and look at Willis like a gift that one pretends to like.

“Thanks for the pair of socks. Of course I like them as much as my new iPad.”

To pinpoint an exact moment when Willis began to unravel wouldn’t be a difficult task. 

It was the fifth inning when he threw yet another wild pitch, and gave up two runs.

After he surrendered a single that subsequently put the Dodgers in scoring position, Manny Ramirez, who feasts with runners on, beamed a missile at Detroit third baseman Brandon Inge.

Inge couldn’t corral the liner, and another run crossed the plate.

Perhaps it’s Willis’ history with Dodger-blue that came into play.

It’s no enigma—he just can’t make it happen against Los Angeles’ second favorite team.

In seven career starts against Los Angeles, he has compiled a massive 6.93 ERA, and routinely gets beat like a pinata at a child’s birthday party.

Armando Galarraga (1-0, 1.59 ERA) is slated to take the hill at 4:10 p.m Saturday, and the inter-league series will come to a close Sunday.

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The 5 Best Interleague Match-ups This Weekend

Interleague baseball has been the source of many good and bad feelings within the baseball community. Fans love it, fans hate it.

What interleague brings to a stadium near you is the ability to see teams you normally would not get to see (unless your team sees them in the World Series, or you travel to other ballparks a lot).

There is also the inter-city rivalries, (New York, Chicago, L.A.), and inter-state rivalries (California, Missouri, Florida) that fans will pay to see.

I, personally, do not pay much attention to interleague play because to me it is just another day and another game. Despite that, there are always some added bonuses, like good pitching match-ups and hot teams looking to stay on fire against another team in the same situation.

This weekend poses of few of the aforementioned.

(All stats courtesy of Yahoo! Sports)

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Detroit Tigers: Is The D-Train Back on Track?

Dontrelle Willis pitched arguably his best game for the Detroit Tigers Thursday night, earning his first victory since May of 2009.

This is only Willis’s second victory since arriving in the Miguel Cabrera trade and signing a three year extension.

Willis has struggled since coming to the American league. This is a step in the right direction for Willis who is still a fairly young pitcher at 28-years-old. Its easy to forget Willis has pitched in the world series (2003,) won rookie of the year, and won more than 20 games in a year (2005.)

Willis is extremely important for the Tigers if they are going to be able to contend with the Minnesota Twins and Chicago White Sox for the central division title this year.

Willis is pitching this year instead of throwing. He has a 1.25 K/BB far better than the last two years (.61 and .51) and his WHIP is a respectable 1.54. 

Willis still needs to work on his control and cutting down on the free passes, but he is pitching like he is capable of winning 10-12 games this year assuming the Tigers provide enough offense for him.

The game against the Twins saw Willis strike out six in six innings of work. Willis has never been a big strike out pitcher. In 2005 when he had his best year going 22-10 with a 2.63 ERA Willis only struck out 170 in 236.1 innings. Willis needs to force batters to put the ball in play and rely on his defense.

Its early but so far it appears the D-Train is getting back on the right track. He has given the Tigers a couple of quality starts and is showing he is ready to be a contributor at the major league level again.

For the Tigers and Willis’s sake lets hope so.

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