Tigers open as faves in balanced AL Central
The Detroit Tigers' Kerry Carpenter, right, celebrates with Javier Báez after Carpenter hit a two-run home run to bring in Báez during the sixth inning in Game 5 of an American League Division Series against the Mariners on Oct. 10 in Seattle. (AP file photo)
The Detroit Tigers and two-time Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal have their sights set on winning the AL Central for the first time since 2014.
The Chicago White Sox would love to simply get out of the division’s basement.
As for the AL Central’s other three teams — the Kansas City Royals, Cleveland Guardians and Minnesota Twins — a wide range of outcomes seem possible. The Guardians have won two straight division titles and are going for a third despite one of the lowest payrolls in baseball.
Here’s a look at one of baseball’s most unpredictable divisions heading into opening day.
How they project
1. Detroit Tigers — The Tigers lost the AL Central to the Guardians after a brutal September collapse but got their revenge in the playoffs, beating the Guardians two games to one in the AL Wild Card Series. They would go on to play the Seattle Mariners tough in the AL Division Series before losing the best-of-five series in five games.
Detroit is aiming to go deeper in the postseason this year, led by Skubal, who returns as the team’s ace. A balanced lineup features Riley Greene, Gleyber Torres, Kerry Carpenter and Spencer Torkelson while top prospect Kevin McGonigle has had a good camp and could open as the team’s starting shortstop.
The Tigers beefed up their pitching staff during the offseason, adding Framber Valdez from the Astros, while 43-year-old Justin Verlander returns to the franchise where he spent his first 13 big league seasons.
2. Kansas City Royals — The Royals were unable to follow their divisional playoff berth in 2024 with a return to the playoffs last year, but they still finished 82-80 after an abysmal start. They have one of the league’s most exciting players in All-Star shortstop Bobby Witt Jr., an emerging star in All-Star third baseman Maikel Garcia, a popular veteran catcher in Salvador Perez and plenty of starting pitchers capable of shutting teams down.
3. Cleveland Guardians — Cleveland’s biggest offseason move was signing superstar third baseman José Ramírez to a $175 million, seven-year contract extension. However, the Guardians still have plenty of questions on who else is going to pick up the slack on offense as they chase a third straight division title.
Ramírez had a .283 batting average and stole a career-high 44 bases last season as the rest of the lineup struggled. Manager Stephen Vogt is hoping for a breakout season from catcher Bo Naylor, who had a woeful .195 batting average in 123 games.
4. Minnesota Twins — The Twins slumped last season to their worst record (70-92) since 2016 and missed the playoffs for the fourth time in the last five years. It’s a franchise in transition since last summer’s trade-deadline selloff when it dealt 10 players off the major league roster, including their top four relief pitchers. Manager Rocco Baldelli was fired and replaced by Derek Shelton.
The only offseason additions were modest, with first baseman Josh Bell, catcher Victor Caratini and reliever Taylor Rogers the highlights.
5. Chicago White Sox — After three straight years of 100-plus losses, including a franchise-record 121 in 2024, it looks as if the White Sox might be moving in the right direction.
Shortstop Colson Montgomery made his major league debut in July and hit 21 homers in 71 games. Young catchers Kyle Teel and Edgar Quero also broke into the majors last year and showed some promising signs. Chicago’s bullpen has a new look after it had a 4.26 bullpen ERA and blew 24 save opportunities last year.
Which way for Baez?
Tigers veteran Javier Báez was one of the game’s young stars with the Chicago Cubs in the late 2010s, but has been mostly a disappointment since signing a $140 million, six-year deal with Detroit before the 2022 season.
He had a brief renaissance last season, making his third All-Star team after hitting .275 with 10 homers in the first half of the season. But Báez regressed in the second half, hitting just .223 with two homers after the break.
The Tigers don’t necessarily need Báez to be a superstar, but if he can provide play close to his early 2025 standard, the Tigers’ lineup becomes even more scary.
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AP Baseball Writer Jay Cohen and AP Sports Writers Dave Campbell, Joe Reedy and Dave Skretta contributed to this story.
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