Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The 2007 Detroit Tigers season was the team's 107th season and its eighth at Comerica Park. The season ended with the 88–74 Tigers finishing runner-up in the American League Central , eight games in back of the Cleveland Indians .
Comerica Park, home field of the Tigers since the 2000 season. This is a list of seasons completed by the Detroit Tigers. They played in the Western League from their inception in 1894 to the 1900 season; in 1900, the league changed its named to the American League and became a major league in 1901.
1898 The Page Fence Giants, based in Adrian, claim the Western Negro baseball league championship. 1932 The Detroit Wolves are the Negro East-West League champions. 1935 The Detroit Tigers win their first World Series. 1935 The Detroit Lions win their first National Football League championship. 1936 The Detroit Red Wings win their first ...
This is a list of the largest National Football League player trades in league history, in terms of the number of players and Draft picks exchanged. In the case of draft picks, names in parentheses indicate the player eventually selected with that pick.
Detroit Lions, 59 years – NFL champions four times in 1935, 1952, 1953, and 1957; appeared in one other NFL Championship Game in 1954; and appeared in two NFC Championship Games in the 1991 and 2023 seasons. [87] New York Jets, 56 years – Won Super Bowl III, 1968 season [88] [n 8] Minnesota Vikings, 48 years – Lost Super Bowl XI, 1976 season
The Detroit Tigers dealt away their Cy Young-winning ace to Houston in 2017. Here's a look back at how the trade has played out. Tigers, Astros meet in playoffs, seven years after blockbuster ...
The 2007 NFL season was the 88th regular season of the National Football League (NFL). Regular-season play was held from September 6 to December 30. The campaign kicked off with the defending Super Bowl XLI champion Indianapolis Colts defeating the New Orleans Saints in the NFL Kickoff Game .
[3] [4] This meant Detroit featured the defending champions in the NFL, NHL and MLB simultaneously from April 11, 1936 through October 5, 1936. Detroit remains the only city to win three major professional sports championships in the same year and until 2020 the only city to win NHL and NFL titles in the same year (a feat it repeated in 1952).