Scott Harris' latest comment on Tigers offseason is exactly where he loses fans

All we're hearing are excuses.
MLB and the Dominican Baseball Federation announcement at the 2025 Winter Meetings
MLB and the Dominican Baseball Federation announcement at the 2025 Winter Meetings | Mary Holt/GettyImages

Detroit Tigers fans are continuing to lose a bit of trust in Scott Harris, and his latest comments explain why.

After the Tigers' offensive collapse in the second half of 2025, fans came into this offseason desperate for action, not patience. But Detroit's president of baseball operations immediately began preaching the latter.

When pressed about fixing the offense this week, Harris talked about “making space for natural change” and unnamed young players who “aren’t top of mind yet" — once again making excuses to explain why Detroit didn’t seriously chase impact offense this winter. And Tigers fans are exhausted by that explanation.

Every offseason since Harris arrived has come with the same underlying message: wait just a little longer. The prospects are coming. The roster is evolving. The plan is working. And every year, the offense still ranks near the bottom of the league while fans are told to trust that the next wave will fix it.

This winter felt different — or at least it should have felt different. The Tigers finally took a real step forward in the last two seasons. Tarik Skubal is a superstar. The bullpen got a proven closer in Kenley Jansen. The window isn’t theoretical anymore.

So when fans heard Harris talk, they weren’t hearing optimism. They were hearing another justification for standing pat.

Tigers fans' patience is wearing thin as Scott Harris preaches reliance on internal improvements

Saying the names “aren’t top of mind yet” might sound visionary in a front office meeting, but to fans, it translates to something much simpler: we didn’t add the bats you wanted because we don’t want to block players who may or may not be ready. That’s not inspiring. That’s risky.

This isn’t about hating prospects. Tigers fans love prospects. We’ve memorized the farm system for a decade because that’s all we’ve had. But the idea that you can’t add legitimate, proven offense because you’re worried about “making space” is exactly how teams get stuck in the middle — good enough to tease, not good enough to win.

Real contenders don’t avoid upgrades because of hypothetical breakouts. They force young players to earn jobs. They create competition. They raise the floor. The Tigers, instead, keep protecting the possibility that maybe someone becomes ready.

Fans believed this offseason would be the moment Harris pushed his chips in a little further — not all-in, but forward. Instead, his comments reinforce the feeling that Detroit is still operating like a rebuilding team while asking fans to emotionally invest like a contender. You can’t keep selling patience while charging Major League expectations.

When Harris says “this team is changing,” fans look at the lineup and wonder how. When he says the names are similar but the team is different, fans see the same offensive questions, the same reliance on internal improvement, the same gamble that this year will finally be the leap. Eventually, “trust the process” stops working if the process never materially changes.

Tigers fans aren’t asking for reckless spending or panic trades. They’re asking for tangible proof that the front office understands how fragile this moment is. That windows don’t wait. That pitching cores don’t last forever. That you can’t keep telling people the future is coming when the present is begging for help.

Harris may believe this team is changing. But right now, a lot of Tigers fans are starting to believe he isn’t.

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