Inside the Article:
You can play this game in several ways.
I started by noting that the Detroit Tigers, who are 13-17 overall, actually have a better-than-.500 record (12-11) against everyone but the Baltimore Orioles, against whom they are 1-6.
But the fun was just starting. Throw out the Tampa Bay Rays and the Boston Red Sox, who swept the Tigers in the early series, and the โexcept-forโ record improves to 12-5. At this point, youโve got almost the entire American League East in there, so why not remove the series against the Toronto Blue Jays as well? Suddenly the remaining Tiger record is a cool 11-3.
Not bad.
Except, of course, the five series against the four teams mentioned above are part of the schedule just as much as any other. When youโre a Major League team, you have to play the good teams as well as the bad, and thatโs how you end up with your overall record.
If youโre only good enough to do well against bad teams, youโre not good enough.

Plenty Good Against Most of the Good
And yet, thatโs really not the case with the Tigers. Theyโve already won series this year against the Houston Astros, Cleveland Guardians, and Milwaukee Brewers, who are good, and against the New York Mets (who may or may not be good but are certainly expensive) and against the San Francisco Giants, who have the exact same record as the Tigers and also have to overcome the fact that they are managed by Gabe Kapler, which canโt be easy.
The Tigers have shown the ability to play winning baseball against quality teams, even on the road. They just havenโt done it when the opponents are in the American League East.
How Do We Understand These Detroit Tigers?
What can we conclude from that? The thought here is that the Tigers are much better than the 2-9 record they stumbled to in their first 11 games (theyโre 11-6 since), and are starting to show some signs that they understand how to hang in and win difficult games against decent teams.
Sweeping the Mets certainly showed that, especially considering the way they beat up on Max Scherzer on Wednesday night, and the way Eduardo Rodriguez outdueled Justin Verlander on Thursday.
For what itโs worth, the Tigers have five series left this season against American League East teams โ one each against the Red Sox (away); Blue Jays and Rays (both home); and two against the Yankees (one home, one road).
If the pattern weโve seen so far holds, donโt be so quick to give up on this season.