Detroit Tigers sweep White Sox on Andy Ibáñez single, 3-2, for first 3-0 start since 2016
CHICAGO — Detroit Tigers manager A.J. Hinch put Andy Ibáñez in a position to take advantage of his strengths.
Ibáñez, a right-handed hitter who is best against left-handed pitchers, entered the game as a pinch-hitter for Parker Meadows, a left-handed hitter, in the top of the ninth inning Sunday afternoon for a matchup with left-handed reliever Tim Hill.
It was the perfect platoon situation, and Ibáñez delivered the game-winning single.
The Tigers won a third straight one-run game against the Chicago White Sox, 3-2, to complete a three-game series sweep at Guaranteed Rate Field. The Tigers (3-0) have won three in a row to begin a season for the first time since 2016.
Right-hander Jack Flaherty — who signed a one-year, $14 million contract in the offseason — led the way for the Tigers in his first start. He allowed one run on four hits, without a walk, across six innings.
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Flaherty struck out seven batters, and his slider was dominant. He departed with a one-run lead, leaving the final 12 outs to the bullpen.
Left-handed reliever Andrew Chafin surrendered a tying home run to Paul DeJong, the second batter he faced, in the seventh inning, making it 2-2.
The score held until the ninth, when Ibáñez hit a single off Hill's inside sinker. He drove in pinch-runner Matt Vierling from second base.
After Ibáñez's big hit, left-handed reliever Tyler Holton struck out Gavin Sheets, a left-handed hitter, to begin the bottom of the ninth for his fourth strikeout against four batters. With one out, Hinch turned to right-handed reliever Jason Foley in a save situation.
Foley retired back-to-back batters to end the game.
Andy gives us the lead! pic.twitter.com/Ka2jy5mgRe
— Detroit Tigers (@tigers) March 31, 2024
Too aggressive
The Tigers, leading 2-1 at the time, squandered an opportunity in the sixth inning.
Gio Urshela hit a slow roller to DeJong at shortstop with two outs, which should've ended in an easy force out, but DeJong threw the ball away while trying to get the runner — veteran Mark Canha — advancing to second base. The ball rolled all the way into foul territory beyond the right-field line.
Right fielder Dominic Fletcher picked up the ball in foul territory, and at that moment, Canha was rounding third base at the request of third-base coach Joey Cora.
There was never a chance.
Canha, whose sprint speed ranked in the 63rd percentile last season, was thrown out without a play at the plate, ending the inning. Cora, known as an aggressive third-base coach, had been waving his arm — the signal for Canha to keep running — from the moment the ball got past second baseman Braden Shewmake.
The next batter, Javier Báez, hit a leadoff single off a slider in the seventh inning.
First start
Before the bullpen, Flaherty maintained a heavy fastball-slider mix to work his way through six innings. He left too many fastballs over the heart of the plate, including a first-pitch fastball that Korey Lee blasted for a solo home run in the third inning, but switched to a slider-heavy approach to get back on track.
The homer from Lee put the White Sox ahead, 1-0.
Flaherty notched his first strikeout in the first inning, when Luis Robert Jr. watched a two-strike slider below the strike zone. Home-plate umpire Dan Merzel called the pitch a strike, in part because of catcher Jake Rogers' pitch framing.
Rogers helped Flaherty take advantage of Merzel's low strike zone.
Jack Flaherty records his first Tigers strikeout with style. ♨️#RepDetroit pic.twitter.com/SJHZ1gTsv3
— Bally Sports Detroit (@BallySportsDET) March 31, 2024
Flaherty threw 40 sliders and 32 fastballs for 82.8% of his 87 pitches. His fastball wasn't sharp, but his slider generated nine of his 13 whiffs and seven of his 16 called strikes.
Jack Flaherty, Wicked 84mph Slider. 🤢 pic.twitter.com/HyvWbasaPN
— Rob Friedman (@PitchingNinja) March 31, 2024
Solo home runs
The Tigers did just enough against White Sox right-hander Erick Fedde, who spent last season pitching in Korea, to support Flaherty through six innings, hitting a pair of solo home runs.
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Rogers, who pummeled more than 20 home runs last season, got just enough of Fedde's full-count sweeper for his first homer of this season in the fifth inning. He hit the ball 348 feet with a 102.5 mph exit velocity.
It was the second of two solo homers.
Kerry Carpenter pulled Fedde's sweeper for a home run — his first homer since Aug. 21 last season, a stretch of 151 plate appearances — in the fourth inning.
The homers put the Tigers ahead, 2-1.
Rake Rogers pic.twitter.com/5iNURyan4P
— Detroit Tigers (@tigers) March 31, 2024
Crushed by Carp 💪 pic.twitter.com/oHwGSfpyQg
— Detroit Tigers (@tigers) March 31, 2024
Contact Evan Petzold at epetzold@freepress.com or follow him @EvanPetzold.
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This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Detroit Tigers sweep White Sox, start 3-0 for first time since 2016