Season standings Record vs. opponents Season summary After having a losing record in
1970, the Tigers were reinvigorated in
1971 and 1972 by their fiery manager,
Billy Martin. The 1972 Tigers were an aging team whose best hitters (
Al Kaline and
Norm Cash) were both 37 years old. Together with the late-season acquisition of 38-year-old slugger
Frank Howard, this led to a group of Tigers batters who were past their prime, and the team finished the year with an anemic .237 batting average—seventh in the AL. Light-hitting
third baseman Aurelio Rodríguez led the team with 142 hits, and the 37-year-olds Kaline and Cash led the way in
batting average (Kaline hit .313),
RBIs (Cash had 61), and
home runs (Cash had 22). The strength of the 1972 team was pitching. The team's
ace,
Mickey Lolich, won 22 games,
struck out 250 batters (2nd best in the AL), and had a 2.50
ERA.
Joe Coleman had 19 wins and 222 strikeouts, and the early August acquisition of
Woodie Fryman proved to be a key element in a tight pennant race. Between August 1 and 17, the Tigers went 5–12, and three of the team's wins were by Fryman. Excluding Fryman's wins, the Tigers were 2–12 in the first half of August. In the final two months of the season, Fryman had a 10–3 record with a 2.06 ERA (
Adjusted ERA+ of 154). Defense also played an important role in the team's success. Rodríguez led AL third basemen with 150 putouts and 348 assists, and
shortstop Ed Brinkman won the
Gold Glove award and led AL shortstops with a .990
fielding percentage (33 points above the league average). Brinkman set a record going 72 games and 331
total chances without an
error from late May through early August. Despite a .205 batting average, Brinkman won the "Tiger of the Year" award from the Detroit baseball writers and finished ninth in the American League MVP voting. The 1972 Tigers outscored their opponents 558 to 514. The pennant race came down to the final series, a matchup between the first place Red Sox and the second place Tigers. The Tigers won two of three games and finished a half game ahead of the Red Sox. (Because of cancellation of games missed during the early-season strike, the Tigers were scheduled for one game more than the Red Sox.) Detroit's attendance total of 1,892,386 was tops among the twelve American League teams and second in the majors behind the
New York Mets.
Season highlights • April 15: On
Opening Day in Detroit, the Tigers beat the Red Sox, 3–2.
Mickey Lolich got the win, and
Ed Brinkman hit a two-run home run for the Tigers. • April 20: The Tigers lost to the Orioles, 1–0, despite a two-hitter by Detroit pitchers
Tom Timmermann and
Chuck Seelbach.
Paul Blair hit a solo home run for the game's only score. • April 25: Mickey Lolich held the Rangers to four hits, as the Tigers won, 4–1. Second baseman
Tony Taylor hit a two-run triple in the second inning. • April 28: Tom Timmermann held the White Sox to three hits and no runs, as the Tigers won, 12–0. Ed Brinkman went 3-for-4 with two doubles and four RBIs, and
Norm Cash went 3-for-5 with a home run and four RBIs. Having scored more than eight runs for the first time of the season, the Tigers would not do so again until August 12. • April 29: The Tigers beat the White Sox, 6–1, as Mickey Lolich struck out nine batters for his third win.
Mickey Stanley,
Bill Freehan, and
Willie Horton all hit home runs. • May 17:
Tom Haller hit a three-run home run in a 6–1 Detroit victory over Baltimore. Mickey Lolich held the Orioles to four hits and struck out seven for his seventh win. • May 21: Mickey Lolich shut out the Indians, 5–0, and struck out seven for his eighth win. Mickey Stanley hit a two-run triple to break a scoreless tie in the sixth inning, and Norm Cash added a home run. • May 27: Surprise hitting star Ed Brinkman had an RBI single and scored the game's only other run, as Detroit beat the Yankees, 2–1.
Joe Coleman got the win to extend his record to 7–2. • June 16: Joe Coleman struck out ten as the Tigers beat the Angels, 3–0. Mickey Stanley and
Dick McAuliffe both hit home runs. • June 18: Norm Cash and
Jim Northrup hit solo home runs to help Mickey Lolich win his eleventh game. Lolich struck out eight and pitched a complete-game shutout, 2–0, over the Angels. • June 24: The Tigers beat the Orioles, 2–1, in 12 innings. The game was a pitching duel between Joe Coleman and
Mike Cuellar. Coleman struck out eleven and held the Orioles to four hits through eleven innings. Ed Brinkman hit a
sacrifice fly in the 12th inning, and Norm Cash scored the winning run. Future Tiger
Doyle Alexander took the loss for Baltimore. • June 26: Pitcher
Bill Slayback made his major league debut for the Tigers and allowed no hits through seven innings against the Yankees.
Johnny Callison broke up the no-hitter with a single in the eighth inning, but the Tigers hung on to win, 4–3. • June 27:
Aurelio Rodríguez‚
Al Kaline‚ and Willie Horton hit back-to-back-to-back home runs in the first-inning. Mickey Lolich, pitching on two days' rest, won his 12th game, 5–2. • July 1: The Tigers beat the Orioles, 2–0, in a pitching duel between
Dave McNally and Mickey Lolich. Al Kaline won the game with a home run off McNally. • July 6: Joe Coleman won his tenth game and shut out the Royals, 7–0. Ed Brinkman hit an RBI single and walked with the bases loaded for a second RBI, and Bill Freehan hit a two-run double in the sixth inning. • July 8: Eighteen months after suffering a heart attack, Detroit reliever
John Hiller returned to the mound in a 5–2 loss to the White Sox. • July 16: Bill Slayback pitched a five-hit shutout as the Tigers beat the Royals, 2–0. Norm Cash and Aurelio Rodríguez both hit home runs. • July 20: Slayback struck out 13 batters and allowed 5 hits in a 5–1 victory over the Rangers. • July 21: Mickey Lolich won his 17th game, a 3–1 victory over the Rangers. Dick McAuliffe and Norm Cash homered for Detroit. • July 22: The Tigers beat the Rangers, 6–2, as Joe Coleman won his 12th game. At the All-Star break, Lolich had 17 wins, and Coleman had 12. • July 25: Mickey Lolich held the National League to one hit and no runs in the fourth and fifth innings of the
All-Star Game. Bill Freehan caught the first five innings and scored in the third inning. When Lolich and Freehan left the game at the end of the fifth inning, the American League was ahead, 1–0. • July 31: The Tigers beat the Red Sox, 5–2, as Mickey Lolich won his 18th game, and Aurelio Rodríguez and Bill Freehan hit home runs. After a tremendous start, Lolich won only one game between July 31 and September 6. • August 1: The Tigers lost to the Brewers, 9–0, in a six-inning game called due to rain. As rain threatened to end the game before it became official, Detroit manager
Billy Martin employed stall tactics, and umpire
Frank Umont recommended a $1,000 fine for Martin. • August 4: The Tigers claimed catcher
Duke Sims off waivers from the Dodgers. Over the last two months of the season, Sims hit .316 with four home runs and 19 RBIs and played in four of five games of the
1972 American League Championship Series. • August 5: Detroit shortstop Ed Brinkman committed an error, ending his major league record streak of 72 games and 331 total chances without an error. • August 9: The Tigers beat the Yankees, 6–0, behind the shutout pitching of newly acquired starter Woodie Fryman. Fryman held the Yankees to six hits in nine innings. Aurelio Rodríguez went 3-for-5 with 3 RBIs, and
Gates Brown went 2-for-2 with two RBIs. • August 13: The Tigers beat the Indians, 3–2, behind the second straight strong pitching performance by Woodie Fryman. With the Tigers in a skid through the first half of August, manager Billy Martin picked his starting lineup out of a hat in an attempt to halt the Tigers' skid. As a result of Martin's unusual tactic, Norm Cash hit in the leadoff spot, and shortstop Ed Brinkman hit in the cleanup spot. • August 17: Woodie Fryman pitched his third straight complete game victory since joining the Tigers at the beginning of August. • August 18: The Tigers beat the Angels, 2–0, as Mickey Lolich won his 19th game. It was Lolich's only win in the month of August.
Nolan Ryan was the losing pitcher for the Angels. • August 20: The Tigers beat the Angels, 11–9. After the Angels scored nine runs in the fourth inning, Detroit scored eight runs in the sixth inning. Aurelio Rodríguez had a double and a three-run home run in the Tigers' big inning. • August 27: Joe Coleman pitched an eleven-inning complete-game shutout, as the Tigers beat the Twins, 1–0. Aurelio Rodríguez hit a home run in the 11th inning for the win. This was the third consecutive game in which the Tigers won with 11th-inning home runs. Rodriguez hit one to start the streak, and Willie Horton hit one in the middle game. • August 31: The Tigers acquired 36-year-old slugger
Frank Howard from the Texas Rangers. Howard had seven RBIs in 14 games for the Tigers in 1972. • September 6: In a matchup between the AL's best starting pitchers, Mickey Lolich got his 20th win over
Jim Palmer and the Orioles, 4–3. Lolich had failed in five prior starts to win his 20th. • September 8: Woodie Fryman continued his hot pitching, holding the Orioles to two hits and one run, while striking out eight batters. The Tigers won, 2–1. Gates Brown hit a first-inning home run off
Pat Dobson, and Ed Brinkman added a run-scoring double in the seventh. • September 12: The Tigers beat the Orioles, 3–2, as Woodie Fryman won his sixth game since joining the team in August. • September 16: The Tigers beat the Brewers, 2–1, as Woodie Fryman won his seventh game. Ed Brinkman had the game-winning RBI with a single in the fourth inning. • September 20: Woodie Fryman won his eighth game as the Tigers beat the Indians, 4–1. • September 21–24: The Tigers and the Red Sox split a four-game series as the two teams battled for the lead in the American League East. In the opener, the Tigers won, 10–3, to move the Tigers into a tie for the lead in the AL East. Joe Coleman struck out 10 and had three RBIs. • September 27: Trailing 5–1 to the Yankees‚ the Tigers scored three runs in the eighth inning and two more in the ninth to beat the Yankees and keep their pennant hopes alive. • September 28: The Tigers lost to the Yankees, 3–2.
Roy White hit a home run in the 12th inning to win it for New York. • September 29 – October 1: The Tigers swept the Brewers in a three-game series in Detroit, to keep the Tigers in a tight pennant race with the Red Sox. In the first game, the Tigers scored 12 runs, as Ed Brinkman hit a three-run home run in the first inning, and Al Kaline went 4-for-5 with a home run, a double, two runs, and two RBIs. In the third game, John Hiller pitched a complete game five-hitter against for his first win since suffering a heart attack in 1970. • October 2: The Tigers and Red Sox started a three-game series in Detroit with Boston ahead by a half game. In the first game, Mickey Lolich struck out 15 Red Sox batters. Detroit won, 4–1, in front of a crowd of 51,518 at Tiger Stadium. Al Kaline and Aurelio Rodríguez both hit home runs, and the Tigers moved ahead of the Red Sox by a half game. • October 3: The Tigers clinched the American League East championship as they beat the Red Sox, 3–1, in front of another sell-out crowd at Tiger Stadium. Woodie Fryman got the win, compiling a 10–3 record after joining the Tigers in early August. Boston's only run was unearned on a fielding error by Dick McAuliffe. In the bottom of the seventh inning, Al Kaline hit an RBI single to tie the score, 1–1.
Bill "Spaceman" Lee pitched in relief of
Luis Tiant, and Al Kaline scored on a fielding error by
Carl Yastrzemski. Rookie Chuck Seelbach pitched a 1–2–3 ninth inning for the save. The game ended on a fly ball hit by future Tiger
Ben Oglivie that was caught by Al Kaline in right field. • October 4: In the final game of the regular season, Joe Coleman had a chance to win his 20th game, but the Red Sox beat the Tigers, 4–1.
Notable transactions • June 6, 1972:
Jerry Manuel was drafted by the Tigers in the 1st round (20th pick) of the
1972 Major League Baseball draft. • August 2, 1972:
Woodie Fryman was claimed by the Tigers off waivers from the
Philadelphia Phillies. • August 31, 1972:
Frank Howard was purchased by the Tigers from the
Texas Rangers.
Roster == Player stats ==