Detroit Free Press

Tigers’ Opening Day roster: Casey Mize and Reese Olson in, Matt Manning out

- Detroit Free Press USA TODAY NETWORK

Evan Petzold

CLEARWATER, Fla. – Matt Manning won’t be getting on the Chicago-bound plane next week.

The Detroit Tigers optioned Manning, one of three pitchers competing for two spots in the starting rotation, to Triple-A Toledo. The Tigers made the decision Thursday night and delivered the news Friday morning.

Casey Mize and Reese Olson won the pitching competitio­n, and join Tarik Skubal, Kenta Maeda and Jack Flaherty in the five-man starting rotation as part of the Opening Day roster. The season begins next Thursday vs. the White Sox.

“This news is hard to deliver, it’s harder to receive,” manager A.J. Hinch said Friday morning. “He’s vowed to go and do his part in Triple-A, but he wasn’t happy. No player is at this point when their expectatio­ns weren’t met.”

Skubal is scheduled to start Thursday’s Opening Day game against the White Sox, followed by Maeda on March 30 and Flaherty on March 31 to complete the three-game series at Guaranteed Rate Field.

Mize, Olson and Skubal are lined up to pitch April 1-3, against the New York Mets at Citi Field. Mize, who turns 27 on May 1, is returning from elbow surgery and back surgery, but he isn’t expected to face any innings restrictio­ns.

“It’s more about where Casey is and where Reese is than necessaril­y negative on Matt,” Hinch said. “Obviously we need to hold our stuff, he needs to control damage a little bit better, but he did a lot of good things.”

Manning, 26, posted a 3.38 ERA with seven walks and 19 strikeouts across 16 innings in five games during spring training. Six of eight hits allowed were home runs, a point of emphasis when the Tigers informed Manning he would begin the season in Toledo’s rotation.

“Controllin­g damage,” Hinch said. “He did give up a lot of homers. I think, when you talk about holding your stuff and your best shapes and your best locations, and even outside the box score, those are things that we looked into.”

But Manning, the No. 9 overall pick in the 2016 draft, has been the best version of himself — mixing two sliders shapes and developing a new changeup — in spring training after incorporat­ing lessons learned in the offseason from the pitching coaches. The Tigers helped him tweak his mechanics to get the most out of his fastball, and throughout spring games, his fastball missed bats at an above-average clip for the first time since his minor league years. A better fastball led to better results with his sliders, changeup and curveball.

He walked back-to-back batters in the fifth inning to finish Thursday’s start against the Mets in Lakeland.

“I had some frustratio­n at the end,” Manning said Friday morning, less than an hour before learning he was getting optioned. “It’s just the feelings of giving up eight hits and six homers, and throwing really good pitches, and then hanging one, I was frustrated taking that into the fifth inning.”

The Tigers expect Manning to help them win games at some point in 2024, just not at the beginning. For now, the Tigers want him to continue learning how to best utilize his pitch repertoire.

“He’s the odd man out to start,” Hinch said. “The competitio­n continues as we get into April.”

Mize, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2018 draft, logged a 2.35 ERA with nine walks and 14 strikeouts across 151⁄3 innings in five games. He gave up 10 hits, and no home runs. Mize, who hasn’t pitched in MLB since April 2022 because of injuries, has locked in his fastball command over the past few games.

His slider and splitter have been inconsiste­nt, but he is throwing the best fastball of his profession­al career with increased velocity at 95 mph and perceived movement. Most impressive is the way Mize has held his velocity while building up innings.

“He’s still rounding into form with the secondary pitches,” Hinch said, “but he — of anybody in our camp, 65-player wide — took this spring as a complete competitio­n, and that was very notable in his work . ... He quickly showed that he was ready to be an option for us by how he came into camp. I thought that was certainly worth rewarding.”

Olson, 24, registered a 3.68 ERA with four walks and 14 strikeouts across 142⁄3 innings in five games. He gave up 11 hits and one home run. The Tigers were impressed with his ability to handle right-handed and left-handed hitters with secondary pitches.

What Olson showed in spring training was a continuati­on of his five starts in September, with a 1.44 ERA, nine walks and 25 strikeouts across 311⁄3 innings for the Tigers.

“Coming into spring, I had a better feel for everything,” Olson said Sunday, when asked about his slider, changeup and curveball. “Some days last year, I would have one and then the other two would be for show, but in most of my outings this spring, I’ve had pretty good feel for all three.”

Last season, Olson generated almost all of his swings and misses with his slider and changeup. He threw both secondary pitches to lefties and righties. A lot of right-handed pitchers are limited to throwing sliders to righties and changeups to lefties.

“He can attack so many different game plans with so many different weapons,” Hinch said. “He gets in-zone miss. He can throw any pitch in any count. He can be unpredicta­ble. He’s really good.”

Olson, whom the Tigers acquired from the Milwaukee Brewers as a lower-level prospect at the 2021 trade deadline, is scheduled to pitch a simulated game Sunday on the TigerTown backfields; Mize will start Tuesday’s spring training finale against the Tampa Bay Rays at Tropicana Field.

Contact Evan Petzold at epetzold@freepress.com or follow him @EvanPetzol­d.

 ?? JONATHAN DYER/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Reese Olson will join Casey Mize, Tarik Skubal, Kenta Maeda and Jack Flaherty in the Tigers’ five-man starting rotation.
JONATHAN DYER/USA TODAY SPORTS Reese Olson will join Casey Mize, Tarik Skubal, Kenta Maeda and Jack Flaherty in the Tigers’ five-man starting rotation.

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