Updated April 4, 2026, 7:16 p.m. ET
Detroit – It’s not essentially typical the best way the Tigers win baseball video games.
Most groups will not pinch-hit for one in all their hottest hitters in the fourth inning after he is already delivered two hits. But supervisor AJ Hinch does. And he makes no apologies for it.
“It’s part of how this team is built,” he mentioned after the Tigers secured an 11-6, rain-shortened win over the St. Louis Cardinals Saturday at Comerica Park.
BOX SCORE: Tigers 11, Cardinals 6
The Tigers had been up 6-0 when Colt Keith’s third at-bat got here round with one out in the fourth inning. Parker Meadows, who had tripled in a run, was at third and the Cardinals summoned lefty reliever Justin Bruihl to face the lefty-swinging Keith.
Hinch despatched up right-handed hitter Matt Vierling, who delivered a sacrifice fly to attain what for a couple of innings seemed to be an necessary run. The transfer additionally allowed the Tigers to play with their greatest outfield protection for the rest of the sport, with Vierling in proper, Meadows in middle and Riley Greene in left.
Zach McKinstry moved from proper area to interchange Keith at third base.
“We have a massive strength in Matty V.,” Hinch mentioned. “I talked to Colt in the dugout and I didn’t even have to. He totally understands how we’re trying to win.”
Keith was the primary particular person to greet Vierling in the dugout after the sacrifice fly and he was there in celebration line later when Vierling clubbed an opposite-field, two-run house run in the eighth.
“Our guys are all-in,” Hinch mentioned. “That’s why I love them.”
Tigers pitchers get some respiration room
The recreation itself, with 12 walks and 6 hit-batsmen and a ninth-inning rain delay, is not going win any prizes for baseball aesthetics. But the Tigers do not care about model factors.
Any W is an efficient W.
“Amazing,” mentioned Kerry Carpenter, who kick-started the offense with an opposite-field, two-run homer in the primary. “If it was up to us hitters, we’d put up 11 runs every game, but of course it doesn’t always go like that. It was nice to give our pitchers some breathing room. Whatever we can do to help them. They’ve bailed us out a lot.”
McKinstry (three RBI), Gleyber Torres and Vierling additionally hit house runs because the Tigers scored in 5 of their eight innings. Meadows had a pair of hits and a stroll.
The recreation was performed in a gradual rain from the seventh inning on and it was coming down laborious with one out in the highest of the ninth when umpire crew Mark Wegner referred to as for the tarp. The infield was soaked by.
After a few 30-minute delay, the sport was referred to as.
“We talked about the small window we had to work on the field combined with the forecast that was ahead and no assurance that there was going to be more time to play,” Hinch mentioned. “You can’t just get back on the field and play with the way that field was.
“It’s no matter is in the most effective curiosity of participant security.”
Tough day for Tigers’ Jack Flaherty
It was a tough day for Tigers starter Jack Flaherty, who, despite the big lead, never was able to lock in his command. He walked four and hit three, a feat no Tigers pitcher had done since 1925.
“We had a tough time on the mound throughout the board,” Hinch said. “But I assumed Jack collected himself a little bit bit in the center of his outing. But he had a tough time syncing up his supply and the execution that include that. But he made some actually large pitches and did an excellent job of staying robust by some self-inflicted points.”
Flaherty walked and hit a batter in three different innings. Through four innings, he was able to win enough key battles to keep the Cardinals at bay.
“Credit the offense and credit score (catcher Dillon) Dingler for locating a approach to get me by that,” Flaherty said.
Flaherty paid the toll for all the free bases in the fifth. Going through the Cardinals’ lineup a third time, he hit J.J. Wetherhold and walked Ivan Herrera to start the inning and gave up an RBI double to Alec Burleson.
After he walked Nolan Gorman to load the bases, Hinch brought in right-hander Drew Anderson.
Jordan Walker cleared the bases, unloading on a 1-0 four-seamer up and in. The ball flew 459 feet, banging it off the bricks beyond the visitors’ bullpen near Al Kaline’s No. 6 marker. The grand slam cut the Tigers’ lead to one in a hurry.
But that ended up being the Cardinals’ last push.
“The boys got here out and scored some runs and we gained the sport,” Flaherty said. “The bullpen did an excellent job after that fifth inning and we put up 11 runs. We ought to win that recreation each time. Credit to the offense.”
The game offered another teaching point for rookie Kevin McGonigle. He singled and scored on a sacrifice fly by Carpenter in the third inning. When he got to the dugout, Hinch pulled him aside for a base running lesson.
First, he explained why, with a left-handed hitter in the box, he wasn’t going on contact, which normally he would with one out. But that wasn’t the main lesson.
“We need him contained in the baseline (whereas taking his lead from third base), even with their infield in,” Hinch said. “It shuts off the lane for the catcher to throw down to 3rd base. That’s very regular for our guys however Kevin is new and that was one thing we hadn’t gone over. It was our fault we had been educating that through the recreation.
“If he gets hit with a line drive, he’s out. We know that. But the likelihood of that happening is worth the risk of the catcher having an open lane to throw and potentially pick him off.”
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