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Despite an unsettled start, when he surrendered an RBI single to Curt Flood and a two-run home run to Orlando Cepeda in the first inning, Lolich remained calm and proceeded to pitch eight scoreless innings as the Tigers scored two runs in the fourth and took the lead in the seventh on Al Kaline's bases loaded two-run single. [27]
The Tigers' starting pitcher Mickey Lolich earned a complete-game victory and the Tigers tied the Series. Tiger outfielder Willie Horton hit a home run in the second inning; Lolich also helped his own cause with a homer in the third inning off the Cardinals' starter, Nelson Briles, scoring the eventual game-winning run. This was the only home ...
In Game 2, Mickey Lolich hit a home run and pitched the first of his three complete game victories, as Detroit won, 8–1. Norm Cash and Willie Horton both homered, and perennial Gold Glove winner, Al Kaline, made two sensational catches in right field.
Six future Hall of Famers hit round-trippers in a Home Run Derby of sorts during the 1971 All-Star Game at Detroit's Tiger Stadium.
Mickey Lolich got the win, and Ed Brinkman hit a two-run home run for the Tigers. April 20: The Tigers lost to the Orioles, 1–0, despite a two-hitter by Detroit pitchers Tom Timmermann and Chuck Seelbach. Paul Blair hit a solo home run for the game's only score. April 25: Mickey Lolich held the Rangers to four hits, as the Tigers won, 4–1.
Playing right field in the nightcap, Colavito slammed a home run off Mickey Lolich to help the Yankees sweep the weekend series. (For his MLB career, Colavito pitched 5⅔ innings, allowing no ...
Games started: 45 Mickey Lolich (1971) Complete games: 42 George Mullin (1904) Shutouts: 9 Denny McLain (1969) Home runs allowed: 42 Denny McLain (1966) Walks allowed: 158 Joe Coleman (1974) Hits allowed: 346 George Mullin (1907) Strikeout to walk: 4.46 Justin Verlander (2016) Losses: 23 George Mullin (1904) Earned runs allowed: 142 Mickey ...
Holding the top spot is left-hander Mickey Lolich — another No. 29 — with 17 strikeouts in his first two starts of he 1968 World Series against the St. Louis Cardinals. The big lefty gave up ...