Any warm body with a GM title for a half-decade is going to draft a few MLB players, so dropping a list of guys on the current team who were Avila draft picks doesn't mean much. You have to evaluate the results against what would ordinarily be expected given the picks available. By far the easiest picks to evaluate this way are Mize and Torkelson, since the Tigers could literally have had any player they wanted those years. To this point in their careers they have only produced about 5 WAR combined and roughly half of their seasons of team control are already gone. I certainly wouldn't look at what the Tigers have got out of the Mize and Torkelson picks so far and grade Avila positively.
Even if you want to give Avila credit for being a good drafter outside of Mize/Tork (I'm skeptical), the real problem is that he consistently botched the biggest decisions during his tenure. Avila gave money to the Astros so they would trade for Justin Verlander, who then went out and won *two* more Cy Young Awards. Avila set $140 million on fire signing Javy Baez when it should have been clear at the time <
> that it was a really bad idea. That happened right after the Tigers were finally getting out from under Avila's disastrous Jordan Zimmermann contract. All of the little successes along the way really can't make up the difference when you're maximally failing on the high-leverage stuff.
> On Jun 9, 2025, at 9:20 PM, Roger King <
pnag...@pnagency.com> wrote:
>
> Avila also hired Hinch and most importantly Chris Fetter.
>
> As I’ve said before, I think he clearly failed at the first mandate from ownership which was to try to win a championship before Mike Ilitch passed away. He was given lots of money to work with and he spent it poorly.
>
> Then midway through 2017, he was given a completely different mandate, which was to tear it all down and rebuild. On that, he clearly did well. We’re looking at the players now as I outlined below. He had the misfortune of the pandemic interfering with player development. Literally no minor league games were played in 2020, which was a key year in the rebuilding plan for the Tigers.
>
> But then going into 2022, Avila was once again allowed to spend some real money and once again, he spent it poorly.
>
> But on the overview, Tiger fans lambasted Chris Ilich for being cheap and I never really understood it. He had a plan and stuck to it. If people disagreed with the plan, that’s fair game… But he did have a plan. He wanted to see the young talent develop first before committing to significantly increasing the payroll. It worked, though it took a touch longer than some Tiger fans would’ve liked. But again, 2020 was a factor there, plus some bad spending *and* bad luck in 2022.
>
> Anyway, here we are atop all of major-league baseball after an exciting playoff run last season.
>
>
> On Mon, Jun 9, 2025 at 8:36 PM Peter Welch <
pw...@hotmail.com> wrote:
> Not defending Avila, but didn't he hire some of the player development/analytics staff that are still in the organization who are getting credit for the farm system improvements? Of course, Avila hired Sam Menzin and kept him around when it was likely known what a creep he was. Big negative there.
>
> Avila also kept dinosaurs David Littlefield and David Chadd around, and they were terrible.
>
> Avila probably should never have been a GM and just stayed as a head scout. He could identify talent pretty well.
>
> Peter
>
>