For the Detroit Tigers, who ended their decade-long playoff drought last season, making the postseason has now become the standard. But after getting eliminated in Game 5 of the ALDS for the second consecutive year, ace Tarik Skubal wants that standard to change.
"I think the World Series should be the standard from everyone in this organization," Skubal said after Friday's elimination game, per Evan Petzold of the Detroit Free Press.
It's worth noting, of course, that Skubal is set to become a free agent after the 2026 season. He declined to answer any questions on Friday about his future with the Tigers, saying that his job is, simply, "to play."
Given the lack of any real progress on extension talks between Skubal and the Tigers, there has been plenty of speculation that he will depart in free agency. But the southpaw's comments after Friday's loss may actually mean one of two things.
Tarik Skubal's post-elimination comments may be more nuanced than meets the eye
Skubal is still under team control through 2026, and players that close to free agency often start shaping their public narrative. By saying the World Series should be the standard, he may be calling out organizational complacency more than announcing a departure.
He could effectively be saying, “I’m doing my part. The front office and ownership need to do theirs.”
If that's what Skubal meant by his postgame comments, it's not a trade request or a guarantee that he will depart in free agency; it’s a demand for seriousness. Skubal wants the Tigers to act like contenders, spend like contenders, and stop settling for incremental improvement.
Skubal's comments serve two purposes – they motivate the team, and they signal to the front office that he expects championship-level commitment and compensation. If the Tigers want Skubal in Detroit beyond 2026, they need to prove that they are serious about winning and pay him like an ace.
Skubal is putting pressure on the Tigers, but it's constructive pressure. His competitive edge is obvious, and his comment reads like a leader setting a higher bar rather than burning bridges. Players of his caliber want accountability – especially when they just threw 13 strikeouts in an elimination game and got two runs of support.
Skubal’s statement isn’t a farewell, but it may very well be a warning shot. He’s challenging the Tigers to build a roster worthy of his talent and to act like a World Series organization. If they rise to that standard, he’ll happily be the face of the franchise. If not, he’ll have laid the groundwork for walking away – without ever needing to say the words.
