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词条 2002 Detroit Tigers season
释义

  1. Offseason

  2. Regular season

     Notable transactions  Season standings  American League Wild Card   Record vs. opponents   Roster 

  3. Player stats

     Batting  Starters by position  Other batters  Pitching  Starting pitchers  Relief pitchers 

  4. Awards and Records

  5. Farm system

  6. References

  7. External links

{{Use mdy dates|date=November 2013}}{{Infobox MLB yearly
| name = Detroit Tigers
| season = 2002
| misc =
| logo = DetroitTigersD.jpg
| current league = American League
| y1 = 1901
| division = Central Division
| y2 = 1998
| Uniform logo =
| ballpark = Comerica Park
| y4 = 2000
| city = Detroit, Michigan
| y5 = 1901
| owners = Mike Ilitch
| general managers = Randy Smith, Dave Dombrowski
| managers = Phil Garner, Luis Pujols
| television = WKBD
(Frank Beckmann, Lance Parrish)
FSN Detroit
(Jack Morris, Mario Impemba)
| radio = WXYT (AM)
(Ernie Harwell, Jim Price, Dan Dickerson)
|}}

The Detroit Tigers' 2002 season was a season in American baseball. It involved the Detroit Tigers making a valiant attempt to win the AL Central. However, despite their best efforts and clutch performances, their division winning goal came up far short. They finished last in the division{{citation needed|date=July 2014}}

Offseason

  • December 19, 2001: Adam Riggs was signed as a Free Agent with the Detroit Tigers.[1]

Regular season

On July 2, the Tigers and White Sox set a Major League Baseball record by combining to hit for 12 home runs in one game. The box score for the Home Runs is as follows:

  • Detroit Young 2 (7,1st inning off Ritchie 0 on, 2 out,9th inning off Howry 0 on, 2 out); Fick (11,1st inning off Ritchie 1 on, 2 out); Lombard (1,7th inning off Ritchie 0 on, 1 out); Magee (6,9th inning off Howry 0 on, 0 out); Easley (4,9th inning off Howry 1 on).
  • Chicago Lofton (4,1st inning off Bernero 0 on, 0 out); Ordonez 2 (15,1st inning off Bernero 0 on, 2 out,8th inning off Paniagua 3 on, 1 out); Valentin (11,2nd inning off Bernero 0 on, 0 out); Alomar 2 (6,4th inning off Bernero 0 on, 2 out,6th inning off Lima 0 on).[2]

Notable transactions

  • June 4, 2002: Curtis Granderson was drafted by the Tigers in the 3rd round of the 2002 Major League Baseball draft. Player signed June 28, 2002.[3]
  • July 5, 2002: Jeff Weaver was traded by the Tigers to the New York Yankees, and cash was sent by the Tigers to the Oakland Athletics, as part of a 3-team trade. The Athletics sent Carlos Peña, Franklyn Germán, and a player to be named later to the Tigers. The Yankees sent Ted Lilly, John-Ford Griffin, and Jason Arnold (minors) to the Athletics. The Athletics completed the trade by sending Jeremy Bonderman to the Tigers on August 22.[4]
  • August 16, 2002: Jason Beverlin was selected off waivers by the Tigers from the Cleveland Indians.[5]

Season standings

{{2002 AL Central Standings|highlight=Detroit Tigers}}

American League Wild Card

{{2002 AL Wild Card standings|highlight=Detroit Tigers}}

Record vs. opponents

{{2002 AL Record vs. opponents|team=DET}}

Roster

2002 Detroit Tigers
Roster
Pitchers
  • {{MLBplayer|57|Juan Acevedo}}
  • {{MLBplayer|14|Matt Anderson}}
  • {{MLBplayer|24|Adam Bernero}}
  • {{MLBplayer|31|Jason Beverlin}}
  • {{MLBplayer|34|Nate Cornejo}}
  • {{MLBplayer|61|Eric Eckenstahler}}
  • {{MLBplayer|52|Jeff Farnsworth}}
  • {{MLBplayer|62|Franklyn Germán}}
  • {{MLBplayer|50|Seth Greisinger}}
  • {{MLBplayer|41|Oscar Henríquez}}
  • {{MLBplayer|63|Jason Jimenez}}
  • {{MLBplayer|30|Kris Keller}}
  • {{MLBplayer|42|José Lima}}
  • {{MLBplayer|58|Shane Loux}}
  • {{MLBplayer|46|Mike Maroth}}
  • {{MLBplayer|58|Matt Miller}}
  • {{MLBplayer|38|Brian Moehler}}
  • {{MLBplayer|22|José Paniagua}}
  • {{MLBplayer|28|Danny Patterson}}
  • {{MLBplayer|45|Terry Pearson}}
  • {{MLBplayer|40|Matt Perisho}}
  • {{MLBplayer|40|Brian Powell}}
  • {{MLBplayer|55|Mark Redman}}
  • {{MLBplayer|56|Fernando Rodney}}
  • {{MLBplayer|58|Erik Sabel}}
  • {{MLBplayer|48|Julio Santana}}
  • {{MLBplayer|37|Steve Sparks}}
  • {{MLBplayer|50|Andy Van Hekken}}
  • {{MLBplayer|32|Jamie Walker}}
  • {{MLBplayer|36|Jeff Weaver}}
Catchers
  • {{MLBplayer|12|Brandon Inge}}
  • {{MLBplayer|21|Mitch Meluskey}}
  • {{MLBplayer|33|Eric Munson}}
  • {{MLBplayer|49|Mike Rivera}}
  • {{MLBplayer|45|Matt Walbeck}}
Infielders
  • {{MLBplayer|22|Hiram Bocachica}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 9|Damion Easley}}
  • {{MLBplayer|17|Shane Halter}}
  • {{MLBplayer|20|Omar Infante}}
  • {{MLBplayer|12|Damian Jackson}}
  • {{MLBplayer|39|José Macías}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 7|Dean Palmer}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 8|Craig Paquette}}
  • {{MLBplayer|43|Carlos Peña}}
  • {{MLBplayer|40|Oscar Salazar}}
  • {{MLBplayer|39|Ramón Santiago}}
  • {{MLBplayer|35|Randall Simon}}
  • {{MLBplayer|27|Chris Truby}}
  • {{MLBplayer|26|Dmitri Young}}
Outfielders
  • {{MLBplayer|44|Jacob Cruz}}
  • {{MLBplayer|25|Robert Fick}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 4|Bobby Higginson}}
  • {{MLBplayer|20|Ryan Jackson}}
  • {{MLBplayer|30|George Lombard}}
  • {{MLBplayer|29|Wendell Magee}}
  • {{MLBplayer|21|Craig Monroe}}
  • {{MLBplayer|44|Andrés Torres}}
Manager
  • {{MLBplayer|33|Phil Garner}}
  • {{MLBplayer|53|Luis Pujols}}
Coaches
  • {{MLBplayer|?|Felipe Alou (Bench)}}
  • {{MLBplayer|?|Jeff Jones (Bullpen)}}
  • {{MLBplayer|?|Rafael Landestoy (1st Base)}}
  • {{MLBplayer|32|Doug Mansolino (3rd Base)}}
  • {{MLBplayer|?|Steve McCatty (Pitching)}}
  • {{MLBplayer|56|Ed Ott (Bullpen)}}
  • {{MLBplayer|53|Luis Pujols (Bench)}}
  • {{MLBplayer|19|Merv Rettenmund (Hitting)}}
  • {{MLBplayer|10|Juan Samuel (1st Base), (3rd Base)}}
  • {{MLBplayer|31|Dan Warthen (Pitching)}}
  • {{MLBplayer|00|Dennie Taft}}
  • {{MLBplayer|23|Kirk Gibson (Roving)}}
Worst Seasons in Detroit Tigers History
Rank Year Wins Losses Win %
1 2003 43 119 .265
2 1952 50 104 .325
3 1996 53 109 .327
4 2002 55 106 .342
5 1975 57 102 .358

Player stats

Batting

Starters by position

Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in
PosPlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI
CBrandon Inge 95 321 65 .202 7 24
1BCarlos Peña 75 273 69 .253 12 36
2BDamion Easley 85 304 68 .224 8 30
3BChris Truby 89 277 55 .199 2 15
SSShane Halter 122 410 98 .239 10 39
LFBobby Higginson 119 444 125 .282 10 63
CFWendell Magee 97 347 94 .271 6 35
RFRobert Fick 148 556 150 .270 17 63
DHRandall Simon 130 482 145 .301 19 82

Other batters

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in
PlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI
Chris Paquette 72 252 49 .194 4 20
Damian Jackson 81 245 63 .320 1 25
George Lombard 72 241 58 .241 5 13
Ramon Santiago 65 222 54 .243 4 20
Dmitri Young 54 201 57 .284 7 27
Mike Rivera 39 132 30 .227 1 11
José Macías 33 107 25 .234 0 6
Hiram Bocachica 34 103 23 .223 4 8
Jacob Cruz 35 88 24 .273 2 6
Matt Walbeck 27 85 20 .273 0 3
Omar Infante 18 72 24 .235 0 3
Andrés Torres 19 70 14 .200 0 3
Eric Munson 18 59 11 .186 2 5
Mitch Meluskey 8 27 6 .222 0 0
Craig Monroe 13 25 3 .120 1 1
Oscar Salazar 8 21 4 .190 1 3

Pitching

Starting pitchers

PlayerGIPWLERASO
Steve Sparks 32 189.0 8 16 5.52 98
Mark Redman 30 203.0 8 15 4.21 109
Mike Maroth 21 128.2 6 10 4.41 58
Jeff Weaver 17 121.2 6 8 3.18 75
José Lima 20 68.1 4 6 7.77 33
Brian Powell 13 57.2 1 5 4.84 30
Nate Cornejo 9 50.0 1 5 5.04 23
Seth Greisinger 8 37.2 2 2 6.21 14
Andy Van Hekken 5 30.0 1 3 3.00 5

Relief pitchers

PlayerGWLSVERASO
Adam Bernero 28 4 7 0 6.11 69
Juan Acevedo 65 1 5 28 2.65 43
Jeff Farnsworth 44 2 3 0 5.79 28
Julio Santana 38 3 5 0 2.84 38
Jamie Walker 57 1 1 1 3.71 40
José Paniagua 41 0 1 1 5.83 34
Oscar Henriquez 30 1 1 2 4.50 23
Fernando Rodney 20 1 3 0 6.00 10
Matt Anderson 12 2 1 0 9.00 8
Matt Perisho 5 0 0 0 8.71 3

Awards and Records

  • On July 2, the White Sox and Tigers set a Major League record by hitting 12 home runs in one game.[2]

Farm system

{{See also|Minor League Baseball}}{{MLB Farm System
|level15=AAA|team15=Toledo Mud Hens|league15=International League|manager15=Bruce Fields
|level16=AA |team16=Erie SeaWolves|league16=Eastern League|manager16=Kevin Bradshaw
|level17=A |team17=Lakeland Tigers|league17=Florida State League|manager17=Gary Green
|level18=A |team18=West Michigan Whitecaps|league18=Midwest League|manager18=Phil Regan
|level19=A-Short Season|team19=Oneonta Tigers|league19=New York–Penn League|manager19=Randy Ready
|level20=Rookie|team20=GCL Tigers|league20=Gulf Coast League|manager20=Howard Bushong

}}[6]

References

1. ^https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/r/riggsad01.shtml
2. ^Box Score of Game played on Tuesday, July 2, 2002 at Comiskey Park II
3. ^[https://www.baseball-reference.com/g/grandcu01.shtml Curtis Granderson] at Baseball Reference
4. ^[https://www.baseball-reference.com/l/lillyte01.shtml Ted Lilly] at Baseball Reference
5. ^[https://www.baseball-reference.com/b/beverja01.shtml Jason Beverlin] at Baseball Reference
6. ^Johnson, Lloyd, and Wolff, Miles, ed., The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball, 3rd edition. Durham, North Carolina: Baseball America, 2007

External links

{{Portal|Baseball}}
  • [https://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/DET/2002.shtml 2002 Detroit Tigers season at Baseball Reference]
{{2002 MLB season by team}}{{Detroit Tigers|width=53em}}

4 : Detroit Tigers seasons|2002 Major League Baseball season|2002 in sports in Michigan|2000s in Detroit

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