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Looks great man. If this is half as good as your other chises, it should be great.
Thanks guys.
Originally posted by DET Clutch
I hope Zumaya can rebound. Reading that article got me all excited. He was a lot of fun to use in 2k8, he was unhittable too.
Yeah, I haven't played a baseball game in a while but I used to love playingwith Rob Nenn when he was a Marlin way back in the day. He could throw heat too, love closers who can do that.
Originally posted by Miggyfan99
when Zumaya throws the heat no one can hit it. hopefully he stays healthy this year
lol no kidding. hopefully I can stay away from injuries, unlike my pacers chise.
Tigers pitcher Dontrelle Willis is focused on regaining his touch in 2009 and putting his troubles from last season way behind him.
LAKELAND, Fla. -- Anyone within earshot of the morning conversation with his locker mate, Nate Robertson, could have detected that something was different with Dontrelle Willis.
As in, just about everything.
Willis kibitzed and laughed and looked overwhelmingly relaxed Thursday in the Tigers clubhouse at Marchant Stadium, where pitchers and catchers formally will open spring camp Saturday.
But it was not only his demeanor that suggested a man fresh from a catastrophic 2008 season was perhaps on his way back to becoming a capable big league pitcher. It was the way he looked.
Willis says he's down "about five pounds." It might be the heaviest five pounds any baseball player has ever shed.
Willis, a left-hander, appears to be in the kind of shape a Marine would appreciate, which is a match for the way he feels heading into a 2009 season that he hopes will be a 180-degree turnaround from last season's nightmare.
"It's a lot more fun this year," Willis said as he took a break from his Robertson gabfest to talk about a new season. "I feel stronger, and I feel strong, mentally.
"I'm a human being. I did the best I could do last year, but I didn't get it done," said Willis, who pitched only 24 innings as a knee injury and a horrific inability to throw strikes (35 walks) forced the Tigers to return him to Lakeland for a mechanical and psychological makeover.
"It was a case of me fighting myself, and my knee. It's hard enough to battle opponents and be successful without battling yourself.
"I'm ready to have fun this year and I'm pleased to be employed again. I'm happy, but not content. I know I can help this ballclub. It's a great place to play. The sky's the limit for this team, and everybody seems ready to go."
Willis, 27, came to the Tigers in the December 2007 trade that also brought superstar slugger Miguel Cabrera to Detroit. Willis had exceptional success early in his career with the Florida Marlins, but had begun to have control issues even before the Tigers acquired him.
thats good to see, i've always liked dontrelle. I remember watching a Tigers Indians game last year and they did a side by side of Dontrelle's delivery compared to Cliff Lee's delivery. Dontrelle was dipping and pulling his shoulder out so much that the ball was just flying everywhere. He was a mess mechanically. Hopefully his accuracy is manageable in the show
WOW, this and your pacers chise have made me want to psot here, not nearly as good as yours but i dont know many ppl that are as good as you at this, maybe BDawg35 but thats about it.
Great work mate and good luck with the Tigers.
Thanks a lot dude, that's flattering.
Originally posted by GMSFootballa54
Go Tigers! Hopefully you can win with them in the game, hopefuly they can win IRL.
Good luck with this, looks great so far.
Thanks a lot. I'm hoping I can do big things with them as well.
Carlos Guillen will likely continue to be a strong hitting presence for the Tigers. The real question is how he will adapt to playing left field.
LAKELAND, Fla. -- No hype, little fervor. It's peaceful here at Tigers camp, so quiet you can hear the pop of Joel Zumaya's fastball, so quiet not even Gary Sheffield is saying much.
Ah, that's what a true humbling will do, when a playoff contender becomes a last-place team. It's also what happens when a team's biggest offseason acquisitions were solid, but far from sexy.
Adam Everett was signed to be the shortstop. He's known for being low-key and playing good defense.
Gerald Laird was signed to be the catcher. He's known for being low-key and playing good defense.
Edwin Jackson was signed to be the third or fourth starting pitcher. Brandon Lyon was signed to be the closer. Both are known for being low-key and using the defense by inducing grounders.
Nothing fancy, but there's also no gaudy sense of entitlement, and that can be a good thing. Last year, you couldn't walk through the Tigers clubhouse amid big-name acquisitions like Miguel Cabrera and Edgar Renteria and not get sticky with the hype. Some people foolishly predicted 100 victories. Smarter people like me suggested they'd merely win, oh, 95 or so.
This season? I'll tell you right now, this is a .500 team until it proves otherwise. The potential is still great, but the injury history with the pitching is significant.
Lowered expectations means there are issues, obviously. But this also could be a more relaxed team, a more balanced team, a hungrier team, and, in many ways, a more fundamentally sound team.
Cabrera knows he's the first baseman, not the third baseman, and he also knows he doesn't have to hit 60 home runs to impress.
"We didn't even play the first game last year and everybody says we're going to the World Series," Cabrera said. "It's not that easy. Now, I feel a lot more comfortable."
It shows, in ways subtle and small. The other morning, Jim Leyland came out of his office and was greeted by Cabrera, who leaped up and put him in a bear hug, wrestling him until the manager yelled to be released.
Across the clubhouse, it would take plastic surgery to remove the smile from Brandon Inge's face.
Sheffield, 40, finally looks capable of being somewhat of a force again, more willing to swing hard than swing verbally. He's one home run shy of 500 and coming off his first offseason without surgery in five or six years.
This team has questions, no doubt, mostly with its pitching. But it also could be more settled than a year ago. Every position is spoken for, although I still want to see how Carlos Guillen adjusts to left field. No one on the outside seems to be expecting much, which suits the Tigers fine.
Leyland has spent so much time talking about defense and baserunning, I swear I stumbled into a National League camp.
"We've got a good team, don't get me wrong," Leyland said. "But we're not gonna be the spring training darlings this time."
Not darlings, but certainly not dogs either. Too much was expected last year. If the Tigers actually focus on pitching and defense like they say, too little might be expected now.
Yeah I'm hoping injuries don't plague my team like they did early in my Pacers chise. haha.
It seems like I'm going to have a lot of firepower though. Especially with Shef claiming to be as healthy as he does and with Cabrera, Ordonez, Guillen.
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