Detroit Tigers Clinch AL Central Crown with Thrilling Sweep of Cleveland
As the sun rises over Detroit at 5:03 AM EDT on Wednesday, September 17, 2025, the city is alive with the roar of triumph. The Detroit Tigers have captured the AL Central title for the first time since 2014, sealing the deal with a dramatic three-game sweep of the Cleveland Guardians that ended Tuesday night at Comerica Park. With a final score of 6-3 in the series finale, the Tigers improved to 85-62, securing a playoff berth and ending an 11-year drought. The victory, powered by clutch hitting and a stout bullpen, has transformed a team once on the brink into division champions, igniting hope for a deep postseason run.
The series turned on Sunday, when the Tigers overcame a 4-2 deficit with a five-run eighth inning, capped by Riley Greene’s two-run homer. Monday’s 4-1 win showcased starter Tarik Skubal’s seven shutout innings, while Tuesday’s 6-3 clincher featured Javier Báez’s go-ahead RBI single in the seventh. Manager A.J. Hinch credited the team’s resilience. “This group never quit,” Hinch said postgame at 11:15 PM EDT. “We found a way when it mattered most.” The sweep dropped Cleveland to 82-65, leaving them 3.0 games back with 15 games to play, a gap that may prove insurmountable.
Skubal, the AL Cy Young favorite with a 17-5 record and 2.41 ERA, anchored the rotation, but the bullpen’s late-game heroics stole the spotlight. Reliever Jason Foley earned the save Tuesday, striking out two in a tense ninth. Offensively, Greene’s .298 average and 28 homers lead a balanced lineup that outscored Cleveland 14-8 over the series. Fans flooded X with excitement, posting “Tigers are back!” and “Skubal for MVP,” reflecting a city’s renewed pride. The win also avenged a 2024 season where Detroit finished 15 games out of first.
The road to this point was rocky. After a 10-18 start, the Tigers surged with a 75-44 record since May, fueled by young talent and veteran grit. Trades for outfielder Mark Canha and reliever Andrew Chafin at the deadline bolstered depth, but the sweep’s success hinged on execution. Cleveland’s ace Shane Bieber struggled, allowing five runs over 10 innings, a lapse that cost them dearly. “We just ran out of answers,” Guardians manager Stephen Vogt admitted.
The celebration at Comerica lasted past midnight, with players dousing each other in champagne and fans chanting “Sweet Caroline” into the night. The Tigers’ 85-62 mark gives them a magic number of one to clinch home-field advantage in the wild-card round, pending Wednesday’s 1:05 PM EDT game against the Kansas City Royals. Hinch tempered expectations, saying, “This is just the beginning.” For a franchise that hasn’t reached the World Series since 2012, the AL Central title is a stepping stone, with Skubal and Greene poised to lead a playoff charge.
Detroit’s resurgence has rewritten the AL Central narrative. As the city awakens, the question lingers: Can the Tigers parlay this momentum into a championship, or will the postseason expose lingering flaws?
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