Jesse joined ESPN Chicago in September 2009 and covers MLB for ESPN.com.
IN THE SIXTH inning of Game 2 of the American League Division Series, Detroit Tigers ace Tarik Skubal threw the biggest pitch of his career. It was a 97 mph fastball down in the zone, a pitch that induced Cleveland Guardians hitter David Fry to bounce into an inning-ending double play and preserve a scoreless tie.
Shortly after came the signature moment of his postseason dominance: As he walked off the mound, the game broadcast showed Skubal yelling a few choice words at the Progressive Field crowd booing him.
“I probably shouldn’t say some bad words with some cameras on me with kids watching,” Skubal said after the start. “But it was just emotion, raw emotion.”
The show of emotion made the rounds on social media, with Skubal’s own mother, Laura, scolding her son in a response to one of the most popular posts — an irony noted by Skubal on Friday.
“It’s interesting my mom went to Twitter to say that,” he said. “You should hear my mom. I’ve seen her get ejected from plenty of high school basketball games.
“I guess it might run in the family there.”
That kind of competitive fire is why there is no pitcher on the planet to whom the Tigers would rather hand their season to in Saturday’s winner-take-all Game 5 in Cleveland. The best pitcher in the AL this year is now tasked with extending Detroit’s improbable postseason run.
“No moment is too big,” Tigers first baseman Spencer Torkelson said. “There is so much conviction behind every pitch. So much fun to play behind. He’s special and he’s only just getting started.”
THE TIGERS MIGHT not have had the luxury of turning to the American League Cy Young favorite in an elimination game if not for one unexpected draft-day phone call in 2018.
After Detroit took righty Casey Mize with the No.1 overall pick, Tigers executive David Chadd got a call from an agent friend during the middle of the second round.
“Your best player isn’t even on your board,” the voice said.
The call was from Scott Boras, who had an early idea of what Skubal could become; former client Bill Caudill had recommended to check him out.
“My god — this guy has arm strength like you wouldn’t believe,” Boras told colleagues after seeing Skubal for the first time.
Skubal was not a well-known name in the scouting world; he had undergone Tommy John surgery the previous year and was playing college baseball at Seattle University. His junior year numbers were more OK than outstanding, especially given the mid-major competition he was facing: He had a 4.16 ERA, giving up 66 hits in 80 innings to go along with 106 strikeouts.
“He was coming off an injury so I don’t think the industry had a lot of looks at Tarik,” said Chadd, who works for the Philadelphia Phillies now. “We had minimal looks at Tarik.”
Chadd and then-Tigers scouting director Scott Pleis had doubts but were convinced enough to make Skubal a ninth-round draft pick. They paid him a $350,000 signing bonus — more than double slot value — to keep him from returning to college for his senior year.
Those doubts were erased as soon as Detroit’s brass got a look at him. They quickly realized they had something special.
“I think we knew immediately what we had when he first stepped on the mound,” Chadd said. “We were taken aback by the ability at that point.”
Skubal pitched well enough during his professional debut that summer to be promoted from rookie ball, first to Low-A Connecticut and then to Single-A West Michigan. From then on, he was seen in the organization in the same tier as first-round picks Mize and Matt Manning. Two years later, he joined the two more heralded pitchers on Kiley McDaniel’s 2020 list of the baseball’s top 100 prospects.
Even so, Skubal made his August 2020 MLB debut with little fanfare. He went 1-4 with a 5.63 ERA over eight games in the pandemic-shortened season but showed improvement the next year, making 29 starts with a 4.34 ERA in 2021. He took another big step in 2022, posting a 3.51 ERA. But another elbow injury shut him down 21 starts into his 2022 campaign. He underwent flexor tendon surgery in August, opting against a second Tommy John, which allowed him to return in July 2023. He’s been one of the best pitchers in the sport ever since.
“He deserves all the credit for taking the mindset into rehab of ‘I’m going to come back better than before I got hurt,'” Tigers president of baseball operations Scott Harris said. “He made some mechanical changes and developed his changeup while rehabbing. … He’s an intense competitor. And his stuff plays in the zone which keeps him pitch efficient.”
Thanks to Detroit’s unexpected October run, a national audience is now seeing what those who have watched — and faced — Skubal have seen for more than a year now.
Skubal is just the fifth pitcher to begin a postseason career with multiple scoreless starts of at least six innings. In his first postseason outing, he stymied the Houston Astros in Game 1 of their wild-card series, showing off stuff that had baseball buzzing. He did the same in Game 2 of this series, shutting out the Guardians over seven innings.
Watching at home, Oakland Athletics slugger Brent Rooker, who has 15 plate appearances against Skubal, second most of any pitcher in his career, took to social media to express his admiration.
Tarik does a thing where he’ll pitch to you at like 94-95 and then get to 2 strikes or a big spot in the game and suddenly ramp it up to 99-100. Very fun as a hitter.
“What makes it elite is how he maintains his arm speed on his changeup,” Rooker told ESPN in a phone conversation after Game 2. “There is nothing in the delivery that tells you it’s coming. Nothing. And it has good fade to his arm side which plays well off his fastball. Combine that with his pitchability, he’s at the top of his game.”
That ability to command his pitches has only gotten better since he returned last season. Previously, Skubal relied on his high-velocity four-seam fastball, but this year, he’s incorporated his changeup and slider more often. And though he’s throwing his heater less frequently, those off-speed pitches are coming in faster. In fact, in ALDS Game 2, his changeup averaged 87.8 mph, topping off at 90.4. League average on changeups is 85 mph.
“It’s just on you,” Rooker said. “He’s fiery, competitive. It’s always a fun battle.”
The skill set and the competitive spirit saw Skubal lead the majors in wins, ERA and strikeouts — and become the runaway favorite to collect his first Cy Young award next month.
“That’s one reason I asked him to sign a ball late in the season,” Rooker said. “I like doing that stuff with great players.”
No one has a better seat for Skubal’s dominant displays than his Tigers teammates, who have appreciated watching a rise to greatness from a fellow homegrown player. They’re as amazed as anyone.
“I want to ask him, ‘How does it feel to walk out on the mound knowing you’re the best pitcher in the world?'” reliever Beau Brieske said recently. “I’d like to know what that feels like, to be quite honest.”
And on Saturday, with a chance to lead Detroit to an American League Championship Series showdown with the New York Yankees, Skubal will walk to the Progressive Field mound hoping to amaze them again.
“He’s got it all,” catcher Austin Hedges said. “He’s a unit on the mound. He’s got crazy deception. He throws 100. He has two different fastballs. He has wipeout off-speed. He’s the ultimate competitor.
“He’s every team’s dream to have as an ace. That guy is as good as it gets in our league.”
SEC commissioner Greg Sankey sent a memo Friday to league athletic directors and head football coaches outlining punishment if players continue to fake injuries in games.
“As plainly as it can be stated: Stop any and all activity related to faking injuries to create time-outs,” Sankey wrote in the memo, a copy of which was obtained by ESPN.
He ended the memo by writing: “Play football and stop the feigned injury nonsense.”
Increasingly over the past few years, coaches have repeatedly accused opposing teams and coaches of faking injuries to disrupt the rhythm and flow of offenses, especially those that are up-tempo and rarely huddle. Broadcasters have pointed out several obvious cases this season when players flopped to the ground near the sideline claiming to be injured just as the opposing offense was about to snap the ball.
Each play where a fake injury might have occurred must be submitted to the SEC for review. Steve Shaw, the national coordinator of football officiating, will determine what constitutes a fake injury. According to Sankey’s memo, those guidelines will range from Shaw determining that a feigned injury has occurred, that it is more likely than not that a feigned injury has occurred, that a player attempted to feign an injury or any other general statement from Shaw establishing the probability of a feigned injury.
Sankey wrote that creating injury timeouts, on offense or defense, is “not acceptable and is disrespectful to the game of football.”
Punishments laid out in Sankey’s memo include the following: for the first offense, a head coach receives a public reprimand and a $50,000 fine; for the second offense, another reprimand and a $100,000 fine; for a third offense, another reprimand and the coach will be suspended for his program’s next game.
Any staff member found to be involved in signaling or directing a player to feign an injury will face the same measures, including financial penalties and a suspension. A player cited for feigning an injury also may be subject to a public reprimand.
Sankey told reporters a few weeks ago at the Oklahoma-Texas game that he was concerned about the growing accusations of faking injuries.
“If somebody’s injured, we need to take that seriously,” Sankey said. “But creating the questions — and I mean this all across the country — needs to stop.”
College Football Senior Writer for ESPN. Insider for College Gameday.
All-American Michigan cornerback Will Johnson is out against No. 1 Oregon on Saturday, sources confirmed to ESPN, leaving the Wolverines without their top defensive player.
Johnson left the Illinois game on Oct. 19 with a lower-body injury and missed the Michigan State game last week. He’s still recovering from that lower-body injury, and his timeline to return is uncertain.
Michigan coach Sherrone Moore said this week that Johnson is expected back at some point this season “for sure” but didn’t specify when.
Johnson is considered the top cornerback prospect for the upcoming NFL draft. He has delivered two pick-sixes this year for the Wolverines, returning interceptions 86 yards against Fresno State and 42 yards against USC.
Last season, he snagged four interceptions for the Wolverines and earned defensive MVP honors for the 2023 national championship game.
247 Sports first reported Johnson’s expected absence.
DEL MAR, Calif. — Citizen Bull won the $2 million Breeders’ Cup Juvenile by 1½ lengths and Gaming was second at Del Mar on Friday, giving Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert a 1-2 finish and his record sixth career victory in the race for 2-year-olds.
Ridden by Martin Garcia, Citizen Bull ran 1¹⁄₁₆ miles in 1:43.07. He paid $33.80 at 15-1 odds.
Citizen Bull earned 30 qualifying points for the Kentucky Derby, where Baffert will return next year for the first time since 2021. His three-year ban by Churchill Downs ended in July.
Gaming was the 6-1 third choice. Baffert’s other entry, Getaway Car, named for the Taylor Swift song, finished fourth at 25-1 odds.
“It’s exciting when your horses show up,” Baffert said. “I was hoping they’d run 1-2-3.”
It was Baffert’s 19th career Cup win and he broke a tie with D. Wayne Lukas for most Juvenile victories. Jockey Martin Garcia earned his fifth career Cup win.
“He always comes through. He’s a big-time rider,” Baffert said of Garcia. “He told me, ‘I’m going to win it.'”
East Avenue, the 8-5 favorite, stumbled out of the starting gate and nearly went down to his knees. He finished ninth in the 10-horse field. Chancer McPatrick, the 5-2 second choice, lost for the first time in four career starts and was sixth.
Racing resumes Saturday with nine Cup races, highlighted by the $7 million Classic.
In other races:
– Immersive won the $2 million Juvenile Fillies by 4½ lengths, giving trainer Brad Cox at least one Cup win in each of the past seven years. Ridden by Manny Cox, Immersive ran 1¹⁄₁₆ miles in 1:44.36 to remain undefeated. Sent off as the 2-1 favorite, she paid $6 to win.
– Lake Victoria overcame a challenging trip to win the $2 million Juvenile Fillies Turf by 1¼ lengths. The 2-year-old filly ran 1 mile in 1:34.28 and paid $3.40 as the 3-5 favorite. Irish trainer Aidan O’Brien and jockey Ryan Moore earned the win.
– Magnum Force rallied to overtake leader Governor Sam and win the $1 million Juvenile Turf Sprint by a quarter-length. The 12-1 shot ran five furlongs in 56.36 seconds and paid $27 to win. Irish trainer Ger Lyons and jockey Colin Keane earned their first Cup victories. Governor Sam, co-owned by Houston Astros free agent Alex Bregman, finished third.
– Henri Matisse won the $1 million Juvenile Turf, with Moore and O’Brien teaming for their second win of the day. Moore won his 16th career Cup race. It was O’Brien’s 20th career Cup win and seventh in the race. Sent off as the 7-2 favorite, Henri Matisse ran 1 mile in 1:34.48. Iron Man Cal was second and Aomori City third. There was a lengthy steward’s inquiry involving New Century, who finished fourth, and Dream On, who was fifth, but there was no change to the order of finish.