Tigers are buyers
Digest more
Just four draft picks cracked Baseball America's top 30 for the Tigers, though two made the top 10, with outfielder Nick Dumesnil checking in at No. 9, followed by Yost. The 6-foot-2, 210-pound Dumesnil was selected in the eighth round (No. 249 overall) out of California Baptist University.
In T he Athletic’s new midseason prospect rankings, analyst Keith Law placed Kevin McGonigle and Max Clark at No. 1 and No. 2 overall—making Detroit the only team with the top two prospects in all of baseball. For a franchise that’s been building from within and banking on young talent, this is the kind of validation that matters.
The Detroit Tigers don’t have to spend to improve their bullpen, at least not much before MLB's July 31 trade deadline.
The Tigers recently promoted one of their top pitching prospects, Troy Melton, in hopes of getting the team back to playing winning baseball. Melton is set to make his major league pitching debut on Wednesday in the final game of the series against the Pirates.
Four Detroit Tigers are headed to the All-Star Game – and a couple more have a legitimate complaint that they aren’t going. Three Tigers prospects will play in the Futures Game, tying the Seattle Mariners for the most in baseball. Oh, and something else: The Tigers ended the holiday weekend with the best record in baseball.
The Detroit Tigers, already with one of the highest-ranked farm systems in baseball, are sending three prospects to the 2025 MLB All-Star Futures game
The New York Mets have made a strategic move by acquiring left-handed reliever Gregory Soto from the Baltimore Orioles.