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Beau Brieske dazzles, but Gregory Soto implodes in Detroit Tigers' 3-1 loss to Rangers

In A.J. Hinch's words, on Thursday, the Detroit Tigers found another way to lose, falling 3-1 to the Texas Rangers.

Detroit's bullpen had been used so frequently earlier in the week, Hinch needed to use three position players to pitch on Wednesday. On Thursday, Beau Brieske tried to do the heavy lifting himself.

The rookie turned in the best performance of his career, with seven shutout innings on three hits and two walks with six strikeouts.

The 24-year-old threw 94 pitches — 63 for strikes — and generated 13 swings and misses, six of which came on his slider in 17 pitches.

Detroit Tigers' Eric Haase (13) is tagged out at home plate by Texas Rangers catcher Jonah Heim (28) in the third inning at Comerica Park in Detroit on Thursday, June 16, 2022.
Detroit Tigers' Eric Haase (13) is tagged out at home plate by Texas Rangers catcher Jonah Heim (28) in the third inning at Comerica Park in Detroit on Thursday, June 16, 2022.

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That gave the offense time to get him a lead; Robbie Grossman hit a sacrifice fly in the sixth inning to put the Tigers up, 1-0.

It looked like that would be enough until the ninth inning. Gregory Soto walked leadoff hitter Corey Seager, hit Kole Calhoun with a pitch and walked Nathaniel Lowe to bring up Ezequiel Duran with two outs and the bases loaded.

On a 1-1 pitch, Duran ripped a triple down the right-field line, plating three and propelling the Rangers to a 3-1 victory. The loss drops the Tigers to 24-39.

"Every lefty until (Brad) Miller, he didn't locate pitches," Hinch said of Soto's night. "Obviously he lives on the edge sometimes and tonight was too much, it was a little bend until you break, and then you break. I think that's (Duran's) first extra-base hit against a lefty.

"It's a gut punch."

In between the first walk and hit batter, Soto took an Adolis Garcia ground ball off the leg, before flipping it to first base to get the out. Hinch went out to check on Soto, who stayed in the game.

Hinch said he did not believe that played any role in his inability to throw strikes, but Soto was not made available postgame. Eric Haase said it appeared as if it was just an off night.

"I just don't know if he was ever really comfortable out there," Haase said. "It was just kind of tough. Obviously we love Greg and anytime there's a matchup we can get him out there. Hopefully it's just a little bump in the road, and he will bounce back.

"He's an All-Star closer for a reason, so we're not worried about him."

Beau Brieske of the Detroit Tigers pitches against the Texas Rangers during the second inning at Comerica Park in Detroit on Thursday, June 16, 2022.
Beau Brieske of the Detroit Tigers pitches against the Texas Rangers during the second inning at Comerica Park in Detroit on Thursday, June 16, 2022.

Brilliant Brieske

Brieske was in control from the beginning, opening the game with a 10-pitch first inning, getting three ground ball outs.

After a bloop single with two outs in the second, he retired  nine straight, getting through the fourth inning at an economical 50 pitches.

That brought him to the fifth and his first adversity of the night.

The Tigers employed a shift against catcher Jonah Heim, who countered by laying a bunt down the third base line for a single. On the next pitch, Lowe laced a single to center, putting runners on first and second with no outs.

Next, Duran appeared to ground into a 5-4 double play, but the ball was ruled foul. Two pitches later, Brieske appeared to have thrown a third strike , but home plate umpire Jose Navas ruled it a ball.

Brieske didn't flinch.

After a six-pitch battle, he got Duran to hit a soft line drive to Javier Báez, who then flipped it to Schoop at second to double up Heim.

Brieske followed by striking out Miller on three pitches — fastball, fastball, slider.

Hinch was impressed by Brieske's performance.

"He was really good at attacking the strike zone, got into a lot of good counts," Hinch said. "He was able to spin enough, landed good changeups; his fastball location was the best it's been since he's been a big-leaguer."

Then, the defense came alive in the sixth inning. Brieske issued a one-out walk to Marcus Semien and started Seager at 2-0.

Semien tried to steal on the next pitch, but was picked off by Brieske, who threw to Spencer Torkelson at first, who relayed it to Báez waiting at second.

Haase, Brieske said, was the one who called for the pickoff.

"I think Haase called a really great game, we were on the same page pretty much all night," Brieske said. "He called that and we were varying holds because we knew they were an aggressive base-running team. We wanted to negate the running game. ... It worked definitely. That was a big out"

Seager then worked a walk, bringing up Garcia.

On a 1-1 count, Garcia popped up a foul ball that looked as if it would land in the Rangers bullpen. But Torkelson sprinted in, lunged over the guardrail to snare it for the final out.

Brieske worked a 1-2-3 seventh inning with strikeouts of Calhoun and Heim to end his night, making him just the second Tiger this season (Tarik Skubal is the other) to last seven innings.

"Really I feel like I'm starting to feel a little bit more comfortable up there and more consistent in my mechanics," Brieske said. "You can make adjustments better when you're repeating your mechanics more and more, and we can attribute a lot of that to the work I've been doing with (pitching coach Chris Fetter) in between my starts.

"It's just one of those night where I did put the position in a team to win but it didn't work out, so you just have to focus on tomorrow and keep working."

Eric Haase of the Detroit Tigers doubles against the Texas Rangers during the fifth inning at Comerica Park in Detroit on Thursday, June 16, 2022.
Eric Haase of the Detroit Tigers doubles against the Texas Rangers during the fifth inning at Comerica Park in Detroit on Thursday, June 16, 2022.

Offense can't get the big hit

The Tigers had a few chances, out-hitting the Rangers 8-4 on the night, but frequently failed to cash in.

Haase singled to open the third and advanced to second on a groundout.

Miguel Cabrera, who'd already singled in the first, followed by lacing a 107 mph single to right with two outs. Tigers third base coach Ramon Santiago sent Haase home, but Garcia's throw easily nabbed him.

"We're trying to give ourselves any opportunity we can, it's no secret we haven't scored a lot of runs," Hinch said. "That's being very aggressive, Garcia's got a great arm, but clearly we're trying to score one run as often as possible."

In the fifth, Haase hit a two-out double to left, but Victor Reyes followed with a groundout to shortstop.

Finally, in the sixth inning, Willi Castro led off with a sharp single to center and two batters later Báez launched an elevated changeup 413 feet to center.

It landed just beyond Leody Tavares' outstretched arm, bouncing into the shrubs for a ground-rule double.

Up came Grossman, who got into an 0-2 hole before hitting a flyball to right. This time, Castro beat Garcia's throw to go up 1-0.

Detroit got runners on in the seventh and eighth, but failed to score.

Torkelson worked a one-out walk in the ninth — Detroit had at least one runner in every inning except the fourth — before Harold Castro hit a deep fly ball to left that was caught at the warning track.

Haase, who was 2-for-3 entering his final at-bat, struck out looking to end the game.

The offense, which continues to struggle, has scored just two runs in its past three games, with one home run since June 3.

Bullpen blues

For all of the team's struggles this season, the bullpen has been a bright spot.

Michael Fulmer entered in the eighth and worked around a one-out walk to get a strikeout of pinch hitter Sam Huff and a weak flyout from Semien to get out of the inning.

It's the ninth consecutive appearance for Fulmer without allowing an earned run, dating back to May 18.

Soto had also been on a heater. Since May 13, he'd allowed just one earned run in 14 outings

But Thursday, Soto issued a leadoff walk to Seager, before the grounds crew came in to clean up the mound. He took a one-hopper from Garcia off his leg in the next at-bat, before getting the force at first.

He hit Calhoun in the next at-bat, bringing Heim to the plate. Heim then struck out looking on a ball just below his knees before Lowe walked on five pitches to load the bases.

Duran, who entered the at-bat hitting .304, got his first extra-base hit off a left-handed pitcher all season to stun the Tigers.

Contact Tony Garcia at apgarcia@freepress.com. Follow him on twitter at @realtonygarcia.

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Detroit Tigers collapse in 9th inning, lose to Texas Rangers, 3-1