powered by Google  
CBSSports.com In perfect harmony, Tigers set to return to glory days of '84 - MLB Sports News   Track your favorite teams and players.
Free membership, Register Now
Already a member, Log In
 


Community | Help
  Home   Fantasy     NFL  |  MLB  |  NBA  |  NHL  |  College FB  |  College BK  |  Golf  |  Racing  |  Tennis  |  Cycling  |  MMA  |  More CBS College | High School | Mobile | Shop  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Horses Home
 Live Racing
 Youbet Update
 Carryovers
 Free Selections
 Contests
 U. of BET
 Message Board
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Cycling Home
 Results
 Standings
 Stages
 Teams
 Riders
 Message Board
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Arena Football
 Boxing
 CBS College Sports
 CBS Sports TV
 College Baseball
 College Hockey
 Horse Racing
 Collegiate Nationals
 Message Board
 Poker
 Soccer
 SPiN
 Tour de France
 Video
 WNBA
 Women's Coll BK
 World Sports
 
 Site Index
 
 
 CBS College Sports
 Coll Sports Tonight
 Get CBS Coll Sports
 XXL - Watch Now
 Talent Bios
 Schedules
 School Sites
 
 
 Find your School
 '08 Football Preview
 Football Rankings
 Football Stats
 Hoops Recruiting
 Hoops Rankings
 Hoops Stats
 Video Highlights
 
 
 Featured Application
 Mobile Web
 Alerts
 Applications
 Video
 
 
 Home
 NFL
 NCAA
 MLB
 NBA
 NHL
 Fantasy
 
MLB Home | Scoreboard | Standings | Schedules | Stats | Teams | Players | Transactions | Injuries | Video | Fantasy News
 

In perfect harmony, Tigers set to return to glory days of '84

 

Tigers: Five things to know

LAKELAND, Fla. -- What's immediately visible above the surface in Detroit this spring is a lineup that could blow past 900 runs as rapidly as Bob Seger once scored gold records.

What's beneath the surface, and the key to what might become the most memorable baseball season in Michigan since 1984, is an unusual degree of unselfishness in a superstar-stacked clubhouse.

Take Carlos Guillen.

Carlos Guillen volunteers to switch his shortstop spot. Now, that's a team player. (Getty Images)  
Carlos Guillen volunteers to switch his shortstop spot. Now, that's a team player. (Getty Images)  
Late last season, he padded into manager Jim Leyland's office, volunteering to vacate his beloved shortstop position and move to first base if it would put more teeth into the Tigers.

Now this had been discussed before. The Tigers even said when they signed Guillen to a four-year, $48 million extension last March that he probably would be shifted to first base by the time the contract was finished.

But just one year in?

Maybe general manager Dave Dombrowski still trades for shortstop Edgar Renteria last October even if Guillen wasn't so willing to give himself up for the team.

But maybe then things move toward the edge of ugliness.

"Not only is he a good player, he's a winning player," Dombrowski says. "You win with players like Carlos Guillen."

As the Tigers were winning all the way through October in 2006 -- up until they ran into St. Louis in the World Series -- Leyland went out of his way to describe Guillen's intelligence. If there's anybody in this clubhouse who has the acumen to manage, Leyland said then, Guillen is it.

"He could," Leyland was saying the other day in the tiny manager's office at Joker Marchant Stadium. "He has a great feel for the game. He has a great feel for people. He's one of the finest people I've ever been around.

"He would be a great leader of men. I really mean that. His primary language is Spanish, but he's got a comprehensive knowledge of both people and the game."

Leyland pauses, then offers a wry smile.

"He knows when I screw up," he says.

This spring, Guillen, 32, has gone out of his way to watch over Miguel Cabrera, the mercurial young 24-year-old slugger whose lack of self-discipline in Florida was threatening to corrode an incredibly promising career. Guillen and Cabrera are natives of Aragua, Venezuela, and Guillen, a two-time All-Star with a .290 lifetime batting average and a .358 career on-base percentage, has known the third baseman since Cabrera was 16.

After spending much of last season overweight and habitually late to the park, Cabrera in these early days has dropped the baby fat and is behaving professionally.

"He's around a lot of professional guys here," says Guillen, who leads in a quiet, pull-up-a-chair-and-talk--softly sort of manner. "Over there, maybe there were too many young guys.

"He's learning every day. You learn every day in this game."

Guillen says that his talks with Cabrera aren't so much instructive as simply conversations.

"Sometimes you just need to watch what people do to get better," Guillen says. "Pudge, Sheff, Magglio, Kenny Rogers. ..."

Indeed, one thing that largely goes overlooked amid all the drooling over what this lineup might do is the sheer selflessness from top to bottom.

Leyland slides Pudge Rodriguez up and down the batting order, and the catcher rolls with it.

Leyland pencils in Gary Sheffield as the designated hitter, and though Sheff prefers playing in the field, he leaves it alone and channels everything into his at-bats.

Magglio Ordonez, in producing one of the finest overall offensive seasons in Tigers history in 2007, collected 48 of his 139 RBI on singles. Meaning, time after time in key situations, he cut down on his swing and did what the situation called for.

"That is an impressive stat for me," Leyland says. "He works smart."

Most of them do, and it begins with the manager.

The trust Leyland has earned from his players plays an important part of why they're so quick to move so willingly when the puppet master yanks the strings.

There was a time last year -- specifically in July, when the Tigers were talking with Pittsburgh about acquiring Jack Wilson -- when Guillen muttered that he wasn't going to be moved off of shortstop by just anybody.

Ultimately, though, Guillen had confidence that if he presented the Tigers with options, they'd make the smart decision.

"The front office has been doing a pretty good job," he says. "We have a great manager who's won a World Series before and then got us to the World Series.

"Edgar Renteria is one of the best shortstops in the big leagues. He's a Gold Glove winner, and he won a World Series with the Marlins. I knew they were going to bring in a good player."

Meantime, Guillen, whose surgically repaired right knee should calm down with less wear and tear at first base, already looks at ease in his new position.

"He's a student of the game," Sheffield says. "He's a great guy, a smart hitter and he knows how to play the game.

"He didn't just go to first base. He looks like he's been there forever. You get a shortstop playing first base, a lot of times he'd try and go after every ball.

"But he understands what balls (second baseman) Placido Polanco can get to."

Guillen has been golden ever since Dombrowski acquired him from Seattle for Ramon Santiago in January 2004.

And perhaps these Tigers will wind up shattering the single-season club record of 957 runs set by the 1934 Tigers.

If so, even before the swings, it will begin with the intent.

"Carlos Guillen is a guy who will do whatever is best for the team," Leyland says. "Placido Polanco will do whatever is best for the team. Gary Sheffield will do whatever is best for the team.

"I think the move to first is going to help Carlos and I think it's going to help us."

 
Talk Back
Reputation:91
Level:All-Star
Since:Dec 18, 2006

March 5, 2008 12:45 am

1. We all know Shef is good for about a month before he starts hitting nagging injuries.

2. Willis couldn't stay below 5.00 ERA last year.....in the NL!!!!!!

3. Bonderman has early innning issues.

4. Verlander lacks big game/ big play ability.

= a 2nd place finish in the AL Central, followed by a steady, gradual decline back to the cellar of the AL Central f ...(more)

Reputation:95
Level:Superstar
Since:Sep 27, 2006

March 5, 2008 10:02 am
It is great to see all of the Cleveland and Boston fans coming out of the wood work to hate on the Tigers.  These excuses I hear are ridiculous.  Sheffield is old and injury prone, starting pitching is overrated, looks good on paper.  Give me a break.  If you want to hate on the Tigers bullpen that is fine, because they ...(more)
 
 
 
 
Scott Miller
Recent Columns