Maybe coincidence or not, but the team seems to have gone into an immediate funk since the Skubal news.
Besides Skubal, the Tigers have been absolutely clobbered with injuries lately (losing Torres has also hurt), but McGonigle, Greene, Keith, Tork, Carp, Dnigler, etc. are healthy and their bats have gone to sleep, especially their power (apart from Dingler occasionally).
When they have gotten hits they are mostly singles.
I'm a bit disappointed that Keith still isn't developing the power he showed in the minors. Sure, he's hitting .327, but he only had 6 extra-base hits (all doubles and no homers) on the season. He's a defensive liability so it's not like his bat is so good
it can overcome poor defense.
McGonigle is in a bit of a slump, although he's been getting some crappy luck lately. He scorched a ball last night that was caught.
I read that McGonigle has hit into the most outs on 100+ mph exit velocity balls in MLB. He's getting some of that Torkelson bad luck.
Greene's power has dropped off this year, although he's drawing a lot more walks, striking out a bit less, and keeping his batting average near .300 and his OBA near .400. I like this year's version of Greene better than last year's despite less power. Maybe
he'll hit more homers as the season progresses. Last night Greene had a chance to get the Tigers back into the game, but he struck out swinging on a cutter that was off the plate with 2 runners on and 1 out. Greene had gotten 2 hittable fastballs in that
AB but fouled them off.
Also disappointed in Carpenter. He's striking out 35% of the time and hitting only .210. He's actually improved his walk rate a lot this year (almost 10%), but he's not making a lot of contact. I keep using the Rob Deer analogy, but Carp has sort of become
a lefty Rob Deer. The guy swings from his heels on anything he thinks he can attack, but unfortunately he misses a lot of pitches. I'd rather see the Carpenter that hit .270-.280 a couple of years ago, but we probably won't see that again.
Tork is Tork. A very streaky Rob Deer TTO type hitter who gets a lot of bad luck on balls in play. Tork has a habit of hitting it to the wrong part of the ballpark when he does make contact.
Dingler's average has fallen to .248. He still provides a bit more consistent power than some of the other guys. Overall he's still an above-average hitting catcher (and great defensive catcher).
Peter