Tigers making habit of pinching pennies with latest minor-league addition

This isn't "savvy depth management." It's a fear of commitment.
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Detroit Tigers fans are starting to recognize a pattern this winter — and not the reassuring kind.

Once again, the Tigers have re-signed a pitcher they just DFA’d, this time bringing back Tyler Mattison on a minor-league deal. He joins Sean Guenther, Jack Little and Tanner Rainey — four pitchers, all designated for assignment (or non-tendered) by the Tigers, all now back in the organization on cheap, low-risk contracts.

At some point, this stops looking like “savvy depth management” and starts looking like a full-blown organizational habit.

The DFA-to-waivers-to-minor-league-deal cycle has become the Tigers’ bullpen version of Groundhog Day. The front office cycles arms through the roster, sheds them when a 40-man crunch hits, then quietly welcomes them back once the pressure is gone — all without ever committing real resources to actually upgrading the pitching staff.

This isn’t about one signing. It’s about the pattern. When the Tigers re-sign Guenther, Little, Rainey and now Mattison, they’re telling fans exactly how they view bullpen construction: churn it, stash it, hope something sticks.

Every front office loves to preach “depth," and depth is important. But depth without investment is just recycling. These are not high-upside reclamation projects plucked from other organizations. These are pitchers the Tigers themselves already evaluated, already moved on from, and already decided weren’t worth protecting on the 40-man roster.

Bringing these pitcher back on minor-league deals isn’t a bold bet — it’s a hedge. A way to say, “We’ve got arms,” without actually spending money or acquiring certainty. And for a team that keeps saying it’s ready to take the next step, that should worry people.

Tigers' latest minor league bullpen signings look like penny-pinching disguised as depth

The Tigers’ bullpen issues haven’t been a secret. Fans watched games unravel late. They watched leads evaporate. They watched the same questions resurface night after night. While Detroit did sign Kenley Jansen and bring back Kyle Finnegan, the depth beyond that duo and Will Vest remains questionable.

It feels less like confidence in development and more like fear of commitment. When every move is a minimum deal, a waiver claim, or a reunion with someone you just DFA’d, it sends a message — especially when paired with constant talk about flexibility and patience. At some point, flexibility becomes an excuse. At some point, patience wears thin.

Re-signing Mattison isn’t a crisis. Neither were Guenther, Little, or Rainey on their own. But together? They paint a picture. And right now, that picture looks a lot like a franchise still pinching pennies while asking fans to believe contention is right around the corner. That could change with another addition or two, but the stagnant offseason is offering little hope.

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