After a horrible start to the 2026 season, the Detroit Tigers have rebounded nicely, posting the best record in the American League since June 1, leaving themselves in position to challenge for a playoff spot and a division title in the second half of the season.
At the end of May, Detroit had plunged to a 22-38 record through 50 games, 16 games under .500 and 11.5 games behind in the AL Central division. The roster, and the pitching rotation in particular, was devastated by injuries, with Tarik Skubal, Casey Mize, Troy Melton, and Justin Verlander all spending time on the injured list. Reese Olson will miss the entire season, while Jack Flaherty and Kenley Jansen struggled early and joined the wounded in June, and Jackson Jobe remains on the 60-day IL.
Rotation chaos is doing just fine
Despite all that, the Tigers now have a healthy rotation, with Verlander and Jobe hopeful for the second half, and their rotation has the fourth-best ERA in baseball, 3.48, at the All-Star break. Tigers starters also have the fourth best BB/ 9 ratio and the lowest home run ratio in the show at just 0.99 homers per nine innings pitched. They have surrendered the third-lowest batting average and the fifth-lowest Walks plus Hits per inning (WHIP) in the majors. Keeping the ball in the yard and runners off the bases is a recipe for success in any league.
Here is where the Tigers’ rotation, bullpen, and pitching staff rank in the major leagues at the All-Star break:
| Metric | SP rank | RP rank | Pitching rank |
|---|---|---|---|
| ERA | 3.50/ 4th | 3.85/ 11th | 3.64/ 7th |
| FIP | 3.66/ 3rd | 4.10/ 15th | 3.84/ 7th |
| K/9 | 8.44/ 17th | 8.38/ 20th | 8.41/ 19th |
| BB/9 | 2.58/ 3rd | 3.59/ 14th | 3.00/ 7th |
| HR/9 | 0.99/ 1st | 1.07/ 15th | 1.02/ 6th |
| WHIP | 1.13/ 5th | 1.32/ 15th | 1.21/ 6th |
| Avg | .223/ 3rd | .240/ 20th | 2.30/ 7th |
| GB pct | 40.8%/ 15th | 48.5%/ 1st | 43.9%/ 5th |
The bullpen, on the other hand, ranks eleventh in ERA, while rating in the middle of the pack in walks, homers allowed, WHIP, and 20th in strikeouts through the first half of the season. What has plagued the bullpen — and the Tigers in general — is that they’ve already blown 19 save opportunities; only one team has blown more leads in the late innings. They have blown 53 percent of save opportunities — the stuff that nightmares are made of.
Kyle Finnegan and Will Vest, who is now out with a stress fracture, have five blown saves apiece, while Jansen has four and Drew Anderson three. The result is a Pythagorean prediction of a 50-44 record, which would put them in first place, but the standings show a record of 44- 52.The Tigers are 6.5 games back in their division and 3.5 games out of a playoff spot.
Tigers’ lineup has not produced
The Tigers lineup has not produced as hoped during the first half, ranking 20th in runs scored. They are hitting just .236 as a team, 25th in the majors. Since June 1, however, Detroit leads the major leagues with 63 homers and they’re up to 11th overall in runs scored in that period of time.
Here is where the Tigers lineup ranks at the All-Star break:
| Metric | Statistic | MLB Rank |
|---|---|---|
| Runs/game | 4.28 | 20th |
| wOBA | .315 | 18th |
| Avg | .236 | 24th |
| OBP | .315 | 18th |
| SLG | .401 | 15th |
| HR | 115 | 14th |
| SB | 31 | 30th |
| BB pct | 9.6% | 8th |
| K pct | 23.0% | 22nd |
The bright spots in the lineup have been Riley Greene, who will start in the All-Star Game for the American League, and will be accompanied by Dillon Dingler and rookie sensation Kevin McGonigle. But they have struggled with too many holes in the lineup on a regular basis.
Here is where the Tigers rank by position through the All-Star break:
| Position | wRC+/ Rank | fWAR/ Rank |
|---|---|---|
| C | .349/ 1st | 4.4/ 1st |
| 1B | .319/ 23rd | 0.0/ 25th |
| 2B | .300/ 21st | 0.9/ 21st |
| 3B | .338/ 6th | 2.3/ 7th |
| SS | .348/ 5th | 3.3/ 4th |
| LF | .365/ 3rd | 2.1/ 5th |
| CF | .283/ 21st | 0.5/ 22nd |
| RF | .268/ 29th | -1.3/ 30th |
| DH | .282/ 29th | -1.2/ 30th |
- Dingler has the Tigers leading the majors offensively and in fWAR at the catcher position.
- Greene has the team in third position in left field.
- McGonigle has split time between third base and shortstop and the team has gotten solid production from both positions.
The rest of the lineup has been mediocre at best. While Gleyber Torres has been above average holding down second base, he has played fewer than half of the team’s games. The team could use his bat atop the lineup. Spencer Torkelson has been just league average at the plate, which is not what they need from his position. Right field and DH have been a black hole, although Kerry Carpenter has mostly produced when healthy.
The lineup has not been without injuries. Center fielder Parker Meadows is out, as are Javier Baez and Gleyber Torres. Kerry Carpenter and Zack McKinstry missed time in May while Wenceel Perez and Trey Sweeney are out for the season.
Baserunning
The Tigers are once again dead last in the major leagues in stolen bases, but they lead the majors in extra bases taken, at 53%. That is, they move runners from first to third and score from second base on a hit more than any other team.
Forecast
Whether the Tigers are the first-half squad that raced out to the best record in the majors in 2025, or the team that choked away the biggest division lead in MLB history in the second half remains to be seen. Their pitching can carry them into and in the playoffs, should they make it to the postseason.