June 20, 1984: Tigers 9 – Yankees 6 (13)
W: Doug Bair (4-0) – L: José Rijo (1-7) | Boxscore
Record: 49-17 — 7.5 up on Toronto

Highlights
- Howard Johnson‘s three-run homer, his fifth of the year, with two out in the bottom of the 13th won it for Detroit. Alan Trammell, Lance Parrish and Chet Lemon all homered.
- Chet went 4 for 5.
- Willie Hernández pitched four innings of relief. Wait, what?
Miscellany
- Venue: Tiger Stadium
- Umpires: HP – Dave Phillips, 1B – Jerry Neudecker, 2B – John Hirschbeck, 3B – Steve Palermo
- Time of Game: 3:51
- Attendance: 43,972
Jim Morrison – IF #9 and #17

The Tigers picked up Jim Morrison from the Pirates on Aug. 7, 1987 for a player to be named later* and Darnell Coles.
*Five days later, they sent Morris Madden to Pittsburgh to complete the trade.
Morrison was expected to be another veteran presence for a Tigers team that was, after a dreadful start, in the thick of the American League East race.
On Aug. 7 against the Yankees**, he made his Tigers debut (a game I attended) at third based and batting sixth. He led off the bottom of the sixth with a homer off New York starter Rick Rhoden.
**The Tigers won 8-0 and sat in third place, just a game behind second-place New York and a game and half behind Toronto.
When the Tigers got him, he was hitting .264 with the Pirates with nine home runs and a .726 OPS. Although Morrison became Sparky’s everyday third baseman for the rest of the year, that performance didn’t carry over to Detroit. He hit just .205 — which was still 20+ points higher than what Coles was hitting at the time of the trade.
After 24 games in 1988, the Tigers released him on June 6. In his final game with Detroit, on June 3, he pinch hit for Pat Sheridan and singled off future-Tiger Jeff Kaiser, driving in a run.
His final line with the Tigers: .209, 4 HR, 25 RBI and a .534 OPS.
Birthdays
Bobby Seay, Paul Bako, the late Charlie Grover, Jim Delahanty and Win Mercer
See you tomorrow.
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