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The Detroit Tigers face bullpen challenges despite a recent positive series record. Key pitchers like Connor Seabold may be injured, and options for relief are limited as they await the return of Troy Melton and others.
The Tigers bullpen ranks 19th in ERA and 23rd in FIP, indicating significant struggles that need addressing.
Connor Seabold left the game with a possible ankle injury but walked off the field, suggesting the injury may be minor.
Troy Melton is reportedly two weeks or more away from returning as he is currently throwing bullpens and preparing for a rehab assignment.
Brenan Hanifee and Ricky Vanasco are among the options, with Hanifee having major league experience and Vanasco performing well in Triple-A.

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Hanifee should be familiar as he threw 60 innings for the Tigers last year with a 3.00 ERA/3.25 FIP combination. His sinker keeps the ball in the park, and his strikeout to walk ratios are good, but he really doesnāt whiff many guys and tends to just pound the zone with 95 mph sinkers, refusing to issues walks and getting tons of ground balls. Thatās not really what the Tigers need right now, but he has a lot more major league experience than Vanasco, and at very least keeps the ball in the park. Heās already on the 40-man as well. Itās easy to be skeptical of relievers that donāt strike many hitters out, but Hanifee has been at least effective for two straight years. Heās at his best when heās 96-97 mph with the sinker and his velocity is down two ticks this spring, but that may just be the April weather conditions talking. For now he appears to be option number one and joined the club on Sunday as Seabold is evaluated.
I keep bringing up the 27-year-old Vanasco because heās been outstanding for the Triple-A Mud Hens this year. The former Dodgers relief prospect was picked up in 2024, but while heās always struck out a lot of hitters, his control issues kept him from breaking through to the major leagues. In eight appearances and 12 innings total this spring, Vanasco has punched out 44.7 percent of hitters faced and kept the walks under control. Beyond control though, his big issue has always been a mediocre fastball shape. Heās averaging 95.1 mph with plus extension to the plate, which helps, and has learned to throw a pretty even mix of fourseamers and sinkers to help avoid barrels, but itās still a pretty hittable fastball. His moneymaker is a plus power curveball at 83-84 mph that has always missed a ton of bats and is drawing whiffs at a 40 percent rate this year. He has a solid changeup as well and isnāt afraid to throw it. In the majors, Vanasco will need to lean heavily on the curve and changeup, and a month isnāt quite enough to suggest that heās banished his control issues permanently. Heāll also need a 40-man roster spot, though there are certainly options they could DFA to open a spot.
De Jesus looked pretty great all through spring camp, and pitched really well against tough competition in the World Baseball Classic. His stuff is plenty good enough to be a depth starter in the majors, but only when his command is on point. That command has faltered early on in the regular season, and his meltdown, complete with two mental mistakes fielding his position, against the Brewers last Sunday got him demoted to Triple-A Toledo. De Jesus has generally had good control in his career, so itās unlikely to remain a problem. Still, he canāt be recalled yet and the Tigers are going to want to see him get sorted out and pitching well before he gets another opportunity.
The 25-year-old Sommers made a brief MLB debut last summer. Heās punching out plenty of hitters in Toledo, but his command is still a work in progress. Heās certainly young enough to figure that out, but until he really gets on a consistent run and is commanding his sinker-slider combination, he isnāt an option. Sommers is still a bit of a prospect and has a 40-man roster spot now, but just isnāt ready for prime time.
Finally we have Grant Holman, who is on the 40-man roster already as well. The Tigers claimed him off waivers from the Dodgers back on April 11, and picking up guys from the Dodgers is generally a sound move as theyāre consistently one of the few teams with enough relief depth in the minors to actually have to release someone with real potential. The 25-year-old right-hander has a pretty average mid-90ās fourseam fastball, but his splitter is a good one. He pitched in the major leagues for the Athletics in 2024 and 2025, but only for parts of those seasons as his command still isnāt reliable enough. Standard for non-major league relievers, but like Sommers, heās young enough that itās worth giving him time to develop. He debuted with the Mud Hens on Saturday after some rehab work the previous two weeks in Lakeland. He might become an option but he needs to pitch a bit and settle in before the Tigers give him a look, presumably.
Of all the pitchers mentioned, the Tigers obvious best hope for a good high leverage reliever comes from Melton getting back on the field. His loss this spring was a real blow to the bullpen, and thereās still the possibility that Melton could take over a starting role in the future if his splitter command takes another step. Thankfully, he avoided a major injury this spring when elbow inflammation flared up early in camp. The Tigers shut him down and took their time with him to ensure there would be no recurring trouble. If he comes through this alright the pen will be in a lot better shape overall. The other options in Toledo not yet mentioned are converting a starter, either Sawyer Gipson-Long or Ty Madden, to a long relief role. Neither is going to dominate, but as starting pitchers both have enough control to translate to the pen. They just donāt have the fastball quality to dominate. Instead both would have to lean into their secondary pitches a lot and spot them to be more than depth in the pen. Of the two, Maddenās slider-cutter combination is the more attractive of the two at the moment. He just hasnāt been able to recapture the 95-96 mph gas he had as a prospect since his shoulder issues last spring.