Predicting Tigers' 2021 Opening Day roster
The Tigers¡¯ weekend moves to send top prospects Spencer Torkelson and Riley Greene to minicamp made it clear that these final days will be more about evaluating the roster for April 1 than about getting a look at the kids for the future. And some of those Opening Day roster decisions aren¡¯t easy:
How does Detroit make room for Rule 5 Draft pick Akil Baddoo?
Does Michael Fulmer stay on the roster to work on his pitch mix or head to Triple-A, a move the Tigers can only make without his permission until a couple of weeks into the season based on his service time?
Has Casey Mize made his case to make the rotation, or do the Tigers wait a little while to use his allotted innings for the season?
Those are among the decisions that will echo around the offices at Tigertown over the next week or so. Some decisions need to happen sooner based on opt-out clauses.
Here¡¯s the latest unofficial projection:
Catchers: Wilson Ramos, Grayson Greiner
Manager A.J. Hinch predicted last week that the backup-catcher competition could be the last to be decided. Greiner returned to action a few days ago from a broken nose, thus returning to the catching mix. Jake Rogers picked up a much-needed single on Sunday, but he¡¯s still 3-for-22 with 10 strikeouts for the spring. The bright side for the Tigers is that Ramos looks very much like a No. 1 starter who can handle a regular workload at age 33. He has garnered the bulk of the starts over the past week in an effort to better learn Tigers starters and their tendencies.
First base: Renato Núñez, Miguel Cabrera
Either the Tigers go with N¨²?ez as their starting first baseman or they turn to Jeimer Candelario and then mix Jonathan Schoop and Isaac Paredes at second and third. N¨²?ez slugged his first home run on Tuesday and added a two-hit game Saturday. On the flip side, his miss on a Willi Castro double-play throw Sunday was a reminder that Detroit will have to live with whatever he provides on defense if the club carries him. Meanwhile, Cabrera continues to show a bounce in his step when he¡¯s in the field, fueling optimism that he can handle a game or two a week at first without wearing down while serving as the team's primary designated hitter on other days.
Second base: Jonathan Schoop
The lineup Saturday that had Schoop at third and Paredes at second created some intrigue. Hinch has said he could switch Schoop and Paredes around depending on the opposing lineup and the pitcher they¡¯re playing behind. Still, this is expected to be Schoop¡¯s primary spot.
Third base: Jeimer Candelario
Remember when Candelario went 5-for-36 with no walks and 10 strikeouts last Spring Training and everybody was wondering if his Major League prospects were done and whether Dawel Lugo might win a roster spot by default?
Shortstop: Willi Castro
Castro has cooled off some from his hot start this spring, but his defense has stabilized despite some inconsistent throws. As mentioned several times this spring, the Tigers are going to exercise patience with him and let him grow into the job.
Outfield: Robbie Grossman, JaCoby Jones, Nomar Mazara, Victor Reyes, Akil Baddoo
Baddoo hit his fourth home run of the spring on Sunday, all but sealing his case to make the roster. Seemingly the only question at this point is whether the Tigers carry five outfielders to fit him or send down somebody else to make room for him in a four-man outfield group. Reyes has done his best to catch up after a delayed arrival to camp.
Utility: Niko Goodrum
If Detroit carries five outfielders, that leaves room for only one utility player. Goodrum¡¯s ability to play every infield position with average defense or better makes him the logical option, despite an 0-for-23 Spring Training slump that ended with a home run on Sunday. Paredes remains a player to watch, especially if the Tigers turn to Candelario over N¨²?ez at first base, but Paredes is 4-for-27 with one extra-base hit -- a home run -- and six strikeouts this spring.
Rotation: Matthew Boyd, José Ureña, Julio Teheran, Tarik Skubal, Michael Fulmer
The only change here from last week is Spencer Turnbull, whose absence from camp due to contract tracing from COVID-19 protocols puts his status potentially in question. Hinch said Sunday morning that it¡¯s looking unlikely Turnbull will be able to get much work before the end of camp, which would put the Tigers in the unenviable position of deciding whether to slot him at the back of the rotation to open the season or wait until they go to a six-man rotation to bring him back.
Bullpen: Bryan Garcia (closer), Gregory Soto, Buck Farmer, Joe Jiménez, Jose Cisnero, Derek Holland, Tyler Alexander, Daniel Norris
Alexander continues to make his case as a multi-innings reliever, which could put pressure on the Tigers to figure out whether to keep him in the Majors or leave him as the odd man out due to Minor League options. That debate could also involve Holland, who has dominated this spring as a non-roster invite.