Detroit, MI
2025 Detroit Tigers prospect reports #34: RHP RJ Petit
The next Detroit Tigers’ prospect on the list stands out for several reasons. Six-foot-eight reliever RJ Petit is a truly large man, and while he has the usual work to do to refine his command, the ironically named right-hander isn’t too far from being in a position to help the Tigers sometime this summer.
The Tigers drafted Petit out of Charleston Southern back in 2021 with their 14th round pick. The South Carolina product was always going to be a longer-term project. Outsized players, particularly pitchers, typically take a long time to get their long limbs synced up. While his power sinker, steep angle, and strike throwing made him an effective reliever from the start, he struggled to refine his secondary stuff early on and was prone to hanging some breaking balls. Still, when he didn’t make the big mistake A-ball hitters had a tough time against him in his full season debut in 2022, and the strikeouts piled up rapidly.
The jump to Double-A Erie in 2023 was much more of a struggle. A better class of hitter struggled less with his sinker, and while they still couldn’t do much damage against it, Petit’s strikeout rate dropped off a good deal. Top hitters could battle him into making big mistakes up in the zone with his breaking ball. He was pounding the strike zone well, and still not surrendering too much hard contact in the air, but hitters sprayed a lot more line drives than they did in A-ball. Hopes for a little more velocity didn’t really come to pass, and he slipped off the radar somewhat by the end of the season.
Finally in 2024, Petit’s age 24 season, things started to come together. His massive, 300 pound build was even more solid after his offseason work, and the velocity gains the Tigers hoped for started to show as the year progressed. He was also getting much more consistent movement and location from his slider. That was the biggest development for him as it really became a major league quality weapon on a pretty consistent basis. He had a few bouts during the season in which he gave out more free passes than normal, but his strikeout rate spiked from 20.4 percent at Double-A in 2023, to 31.1 percent last year, and the home runs disappeared almost entirely.
Petit gave up just two long balls all season over 58 2⁄3 innings while pitching in a fairly hitter friendly run environment in the Eastern League. He struck out 76 hitters to 27 walks, and he also got back to racking up a 50 percent ground ball rate. He seemed to run out of gas in September, which hurt his numbers a bit, but so far Petit has been a workhorse as a reliever over three years in the minor leagues. Work remains to turn him into a major league reliever, but the progress was really encouraging. Now we’ll see if he can take the next step and pull it together at the Triple-A level this season.
RJ Petit 2023-2024
| Season | IP | ERA | K% | BB% | HR/9 | FIP |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Season | IP | ERA | K% | BB% | HR/9 | FIP |
| 2023 (AA) | 51.2 | 3.83 | 20.4 | 7.2 | 1.05 | 4.20 |
| 2024 (AA) | 58.2 | 3.68 | 31.1 | 11.1 | 0.31 | 2.87 |
Despite his size, Petit has a balanced, clean delivery and rarely gets too out of sync. Despite his size, he has a pretty compact arm path, releasing the ball from a high three-quarters angle, and his smooth delivery and easy armspeed give him a little deception.
Petit’s average fastball has ticked up closer to 94 mph over the past year, but he’s always had the ability to reach back for more. The difference was that as the 2024 season progressed, Petit more often reached back for 95-97 mph heaters and mixed in some better high fastballs as a change of pace. He looks like he has that upper range whenever he wants it, but the sinker is perhaps less effective when he starts forcing it.
Petit’s towering frame and arm slot give him a tough angle to the bottom of the zone with his sinker, and while that’s not the hotness, things may be trending back the other way somewhat. The game has come to emphasize riding fastballs and hot tailing twoseamers over the last decade, and that isn’t going to change. The pitchers with super high spin, high IVB stuff get snatched up early in the draft, but there are still plenty of other ways to get guys out. Petit can add and subtract some run, but it’s a true bowling ball style sinker with late tail and few minor league hitters have been able to do much with it when he’s locating it well.
There are plenty of good pitchers around that are better down in the zone, and the Tigers seem more interested and equipped to get the best out of a pitcher like Petit. Their emphasis on catcher framing at the bottom of the zone has been notable the past few years. The Tigers helped Jake Rogers and Carson Kelly to produce more strike calls down, and the organizational move to catching with one knee down is part of that effort. Petit fits right in, and while he’s unlikely to be a real strikeout artist at the major league level, he’s got the stuff already to take advantage of a major league caliber defense.
The big development for Petit last season was far greater consistency with his 83 mph slider. The pitch functions like a true power curveball with a lot of depth and 12-6 break. AT his best he can throw it a little harder and really snap it off in the mid-80’s, when it becomes a legitimate plus pitch. He’ll get more tilt on it to his gloveside, and can back foot lefties with it, but it’s the consistent depth and consistent command he showed last season that made it such a tough pitch for hitters last year.
Petit not only gets a good amount of whiffs on the slider, he can also lean into throwing sliders for strikes to both sides of the plate and pitch backwards with good effectiveness. In multiple outings where he couldn’t quite nail the edges with his sinker, he was able to spam the slider with good command and remain pretty effective. That new dimension to his game, along with the modest velocity increase, brought renewed interest after Petit slipped off the back of most prospect lists in 2023-2024.
The pitch that hasn’t really come along that much is Petit’s changeup. It remains a little inconsistent. He can mix it in to lefties and get some whiffs down and away, and his smooth delivery combined with good armspeed sells it well. It feels like it needs some tweaking to be so useful against the best hitters in the game.
Based on Petit’s stuff, you’d kind of like to see him try a cutter. The slider is a north-south pitch with a lot of depth that it doesn’t really function like a traditional power slider. A harder breaking ball that moved horizontally in opposition to the sinker would be a nice addition to his game. The Tigers are teaching everyone and their brother a split-change these days, and a solid one would play really well off the sinker. Still, the fastball and slider are good enough for him to pitch high leverage innings if he can sharpen his fastball command a little more.
2025 Outlook
When he’s on, Petit’s stuff is enough to get him to the big leagues already. It’s just a question of him refining his command a little more. He would also benefit from letting it loose and throwing his max stuff more consistently. He’s shown the ability to ramp it up, and he has the size, the easy delivery, and the durability to think he might make that happen this season.
You can squint and see a future version of RJ Petit who commands 95-97 mph with a nasty power sinker and a firmer mid-80’s slider with the shape of a straight knuckle curve. That gives him the potential to be a fairly dangerous high leverage reliever.
The more realistic hope is that he just spots his fastball more consistently and is an effective middle reliever of a type that fits the Tigers preferences. Petit has pretty even splits, he’s been durable and can go more than an inning at a time, and he generally puts his defense to work without giving up too much damage. The Tigers seem stacked with pitching right now, but if Petit is at his best a little more consistently this year, he might get a chance to show what he can do.
Detroit, MI
Bruno Mars shines in Detroit – Detroit Metro Times
There’s a moment toward the end of the night where Bruno Mars is using that raspy tenor of voice of his to sing his 2012 hit “Locked Out of Heaven” as if he was launched out of a rocket. The crowd is hanging and swinging on every note, confetti is pouring down, Mars is over two hours into his set with barely any breaks, but his swagger feels so effortless. It was as if you could throw him a cup of ice water and he could go for another two hours.
For Mars, this is just another day at the office.
Saturday was the first of two nights in which Mars’s The Romantic Tour set up shop in the Detroit Lions’ Ford Field. The night started off with a 30-minute energetic DJ set from Anderson .Paak’s alter ego, “DJ Pee .Wee.” That was followed by another 30-minute set from singer Leon Thomas, who is fresh off Grammy Award wins for Best R&B Album (MUTT) and Best Traditional R&B Performance (“Vibes Don’t Lie”).
Mars, a 40-year-old native of Hawaii, has sold over 20 million albums and won 16 Grammy Awards. He’s always been a wild mix of James Brown and Justin Bieber — this generation’s impresario of funk with a mutant-like ability to create over-the-top pop hits. The Romanic, released on Feb. 27, is his fourth solo album and first project in four years.
Mars hit the stage right at 8:45 p.m. dressed in a casual crimson lounge suit and headband while accompanied by his band the Hooligans. From the jump the energy was magnetic. Mars dove right into songs “Risk It All,” “Treasure,” and “On My Soul” (he performed all nine songs from The Romantic). His stage presence and synchrony with the Hooligans was subtle and effective. They routinely swaggered into a choreographed doo-wop dance steps that were evenly spread out through out the night. At times there were multiple members playing trumpet and other times they were all on guitars. Mars himself jumped on the conga drums on “Cha Cha Cha,” played the guitar on “Something Serious,” and played the piano on “It Will Rain,” “Talking to the Moon,” and “When I was Your Man.”
Visually, there was cinematic camera work being displayed on two large LED screens positioned on both sides of the stage. This allowed all 48,000 attendees (no matter where their seats were) to take in the visual experience that was aided with laser beans, pulsating lights, cold sparks, and pyrotechnics.
Anderson .Paak joined Mars back on stage for the second hour of the show where they performed “Fly as Me” and “Smoking out the Window” along with most of the songs from their joint album An Evening with Silk Sonic. Toward the end of their hit, “Leave the Door Open” the duo went back and forth singing the line “come on over baby” as if it was a ballad duel. The moment highlighted both singers’ chemistry and showmanship.
But the night was all about Mars. He ended the show singing his mega hit “Uptown Funk” but also did an encore performance of “Dance With Me,” singing just as strong and effortlessly near the end of the night as he did at the beginning. His 150-minute set was polished without feeling robotic. Even though he’s stepped foot behind a microphone thousands of times, he never sounded like he was going through the motions. He was charismatic, engaging, and made Detroit feel like it was this tour’s only stop, not his ninth.
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Detroit, MI
A chilly start to the week gives way to warmer weather in Metro Detroit
4Warn Weather – Cooler temperatures remain across Southeast Michigan for the start of the workweek, however, we’ll turn much warmer into the weekend.
Skies turn mainly clear Sunday night with a light northwest wind. Temperatures will fall to the low 30s to near 40°.
You’ll want to cover your plants or bring them indoors as frost will be possible. A Frost Advisory will be in effect for most of Southeast Michigan from midnight tonight until 7 a.m. Monday.
Monday will look beautiful with mostly sunny skies. It’ll still be chilly though – afternoon temperatures will only reach the mid to upper 50s.
Winds Monday will be out of the north at 5-10 mph.
Temperatures will once again be in the 30s Monday night, so it will be another night to protect your plants.
We then recover nicely with most reaching the low 60s Tuesday and Wednesday afternoons. Although we’re a bit warmer, the next chance for rain will arrive Tuesday afternoon and linger into Wednesday.
Thursday brings back the sunshine and warmer weather. Highs will be in the mid 60s before we reach the low 70s Friday.
The upcoming weekend looks even warmer with highs near 80°, but we also see the next chances for rain.
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Detroit, MI
Detroit shines red for ALS kickoff & lighting ceremony
DETROIT, MICH (WXYZ) — In partnership with The ALS Association, downtown Detroit parks will shine red May 10–16 in recognition of ALS (Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease) Awareness month.
A special kickoff event will take place from 7:30 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. on Sunday, May 10, in Campus Martius Park. The event will allow families impacted by ALS to connect, learn about upcoming initiatives, and take part in a meaningful “END ALS” photo moment under the illuminated park lights.
You can reserve you spot by visiting:
https://forms.office.com/Pages/ResponsePage.aspx?id=JlhGrOr9-kWQmmR_rZc61S9MfqDjPeBKvKV5YBqkMypUQThNMEs5TVpLRUY5R1FLV0o1WFExN1U4Uy4u
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