SEATTLE — Remember what Javier Báez said on Opening Day?
“It’s not going to be easy,” he said in April, “but it’s going to be fun.”
He ended up being halfway correct.
The Detroit Tigers‘ 2022 season, which concluded Wednesday with a 5-4 loss to the Seattle Mariners, certainly wasn’t easy, but it also wasn’t fun for the players, coaches and organization as a whole.
The Tigers finished 66-96 overall and fourth in the American League Central, one game ahead of the Kansas City Royals, after losing their final three games of a four-game set to the Mariners at T-Mobile Park.
“We obviously want to have a better season and better results next year,” Báez said after Wednesday’s regular-season finale.
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Left-handed closer Gregory Soto threw 26 pitches in the ninth inning and was responsible for two walks, a throwing error, a wild pitch and a walk-off single to Ty France with the bases loaded and one out.
“That’s part of the game,” Soto said. “One of the two teams were going to take the loss.”
A rough first inning
The Mariners launched three home runs.
Left-hander Tyler Alexander allowed two of them in the first inning.
Julio Rodriguez, who ended his season with a franchise rookie-record 28 jacks, and Mitch Haniger went deep before Alexander could collect his second out. Rodriguez slammed a second-pitch cutter above the strike zone, while Haniger connected on a four-seam fastball.
“It didn’t end the way that we liked, but our guys played all the way to the end,” Hinch said. “Those were some close games. It was more of an exhibition game today than a strategic game, but I thought our guys battled. I appreciate their effort.”
Trailing 3-2 in the sixth inning, Luis Torrens hit an 0-2 sinker over the heart of the plate for a two-run home run to left-center field. He put the Mariners ahead 4-3.
Alexander allowed four runs on seven hits and one walk with five strikeouts over 5⅔ innings, throwing 68 of 92 pitches for strikes. He posted a 4.81 ERA, 25 walks and 61 strikeouts across 101 innings in 27 games (17 starts).
The 28-year-old placed third on the Tigers in innings pitched, behind Tarik Skubal (117⅔) and Drew Hutchison (105⅓).
The comeback: Marco polo
The Tigers climbed back from an early deficit by scoring two runs off left-hander Marco Gonzales in the fourth inning. Spencer Torkelson’s walk and Eric Haase’s double put two runners in scoring position for Jeimer Candelario.
Both runners scored on Candelario’s single and a throwing error by third baseman Abraham Toro. The Tigers took a 3-2 lead on Báez’s two-out single to score Brendon Davis in the fifth inning.
“You can’t define the character of the team by the record,” Hinch said. “The record is how we competed, and the results speak for themselves. It’s not good enough yet. But the moral fiber of this team, and the character on this team, is really strong. Our guys care. They’ve put in the effort. We haven’t been productive, but that’s not a knock on them as people.”
Davis notched his second career MLB hit in the seventh inning and traveled from first to third base on Akil Baddoo’s single. With two outs, and the Tigers down by one run, Riley Greene lined a game-tying single to center field.
Gonzales allowed four runs (three earned runs) on eight hits and two walks with five strikeouts. He threw 71 of 106 pitches for strikes.