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The Spot Starters » Blog Archive » Team 109: The 2003 Tigers
Covering the ups and downs of the Detroit Tigers.

Team 109: The 2003 Tigers

October 27th, 2009 Posted in Alan Trammell, Damion Easley, Dmitri Young, Jeremy Bonderman, Mike Maroth, Top 109 Teams
  • Year: 2003
  • Record: 43-119 (worst Tigers record of all-time)
  • Win %: .265 (worst)
  • Win % Change: -77 from the year before
  • Run Differential: -337 (worst for a Tigers team)
  • Pythagorean Record: 49-113
  • AL Finish: 14th of 14 teams
  • Manager: Alan Trammell
  • Best Transaction: On May 22nd, the Tigers signed Jair Jurrjens as a free agent.  Jurrjens didn’t play full-time in the big leagues until 2008, but the Tigers got this one right.  Just try to forget that they later traded him away.
  • Worst Transaction:  This club was not only awful, but they ate a lot of money.  The Tigers released both Damion Easley and Craig Pauquette.  Each player was still owed millions of dollars.  In Easley’s case, he was the most expensive player ever cut at the time of his release.
  • Upper: Dmitri Young was a bright spot on an historically awful team.  Young was in his second season in Detroit and his first full season.  Even though the team was terrible, Young suited up for 155 games and took the team’s Triple Crown (led club in HR, RBI, AVG).  He also posted an OPS+ of 144, the tenth best mark in the American League.
  • Downer:  I would say the losses were a pretty big downer.  The Tigers were a national sports story all year long.  They had to rally down the stretch to avoid 120 losses, the worst mark of all-time.  They ended up winning five of their final six games to avoid the record.  There were too many individual downers to count here, so this big one has to take the cake.
  • Summary:  This season started bad and they never turned it around.  They started the season with records of 0-9, 1-17, and 2-19.  When you’re 2-19 on April 25th, it’s tough to think things will get any better.  At the All-Star break the Tigers were 25-67.  In games decided by five or more runs, the Tigers were usually on the bad side, going 7-40 in those games.  Ramon Santiago was the club’s starting SS and he posted an OPS+ of 59.  Shane Halter and his .217 batting average got nearly 400 plate appearances and ol’ Mike Maroth lost 21 games.  Jeremy Bonderman would have easily lost 20 games had he not been shut down early.  He still finished with 19 losses.  No good way to frame this season, just a total disaster.
BallHype: hype it up!
  1. 4 Responses to “Team 109: The 2003 Tigers”

  2. By Don on Oct 27, 2009

    Ummm, first season without Randy Smith?

    Sorry, looking hard for positives. I still smart from this season.

  3. By Blake VandeBunte on Oct 27, 2009

    Haha, good point. Moving Smith out of there after the first week was a HUGE positive. That guy set the Tigers back a long ways. He helped make that 2006 season all the more impressive. The organization was a total disaster in 2003, DD turned it around in a hurry.

  4. By Travis on Oct 27, 2009

    2003 was an absolute trainwreck. One semi-good thing: buying bleacher seats and sitting 5-10 rows off the field in infield box seats. That was cool up until about the 4th or 5th inning of most games by which point it seemed like the game was already over.

  5. By Blake VandeBunte on Oct 27, 2009

    Good point Travis, I recall doing that a time or two myself. It’s fun to have a rowdy crowd at times, but afternoon games with no one else around certainly had a certain charm.

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