Wednesday September 20, 2006 sports.michigandaily.com sports@michigandaily.com She P R TichSan aili 11A Forget their recent slide: Tigers to play in October The Detroit Tigers are leading their division. In September. Late September. Seriously, even when I try punching myself thinking that I've just fallen into a deep slumber all summer and had this really long and crazy dream, all I get are bruises, no answers. So I gladly concede: This summer has been a reality, and it's really going to happen. In two weeks, Detroit will begin playing playoff baseball. Read that again if you must, but then move on, because it's the truth. The Tigers will be playing playoff baseball, and it won't be on a video game. To say it's been a long time coming is an understatement. I don't care if Detroit is officially Hockeytown. I don't care if thex Pistons have spent the past three years as Detroit's sweethearts. And SCC I certainly don't care that most of the baseball world still thinks we're BE a joke and will get swept in the first Too S round of the playoffs (or not even make it, as some moronic analysts still contest). The fact is, Michiganders still love their Detroit Tigers, and it's been a struggle for us the past two decades. How bad of a struggle, you ask? Let's put a little context to this. No division titles in 18 years. In that span, the Braves won 14, the Yankees won 10 and hell, even the Cubs won two. The Tigers have lost 90 or more games in seven of their past eight seasons. Getting the point yet? If not, how about this: In 2003, the Pistons won 11 more games (54) than the Tigers (43). On the surface, it's not that weird - the Pistons were good, the Tigers were not. But when you consider that the Tigers play 80 more games than the Pis- tons, then you get that whole context thing I was shooting for. The Tigers were bad. Like George W. Bush-in-a-spelling-bee bad. But things have changed. Much like the Pistons of a few years back, the front office did things right. When new president Dave Dombrowski came over to the Tigers from the Marlins in 2001, he said it would be a process, but we'd eventually reap the rewards. El Sr There were definitely struggles (see 119 losses in 2003), but hey, what do you know, the guy actually knew what he was talking about. Dombrowski slowly weeded out the cancers of the organization (how's that early retirement going, Bobby Higginson?), wasn't afraid to pull off a big trade for promising prospects (thanks for Franklyn German and Jeremy Bonderman, Oakland) and did an amazing job drafting and developing good young talent (I hear this Verlander kid is pretty good). And once the core was intact, Dombrowski wasn't afraid to spend a little dough on a free agent or two. He slowly added important pieces like Carlos Guillen, Ivan Rodriguez and Kenny Rogers while the rest of the team came together. )TT The final piece of the puzzle came this offseason, when managerial LL legend Jim Leyland joined the fold. oon? Now, I love Tigers histoly. I remember watching Lou Whitaker and Alan Tram- mel playing together when I was a kid. But even I have to admit: The step up from former manager Trammel to Leyland is astronomical. Leyland's been there before, and with a young team like Detroit, his experience and motivation- al tactics have been a perfect fit. Am I jumping the gun here? Detroit hasn't even qualified for the playoffs yet. Yeah, I understand that, but I also have confidence in this team. Apparently, so do about 120,000 Tigers fans - tickets for Detroit's theoretical three playoff games went on sale yesterday and lasted for a whole 51 minutes before selling out. Now that I've covered that base and tried mak- ing excuses for why I can't be called a jinx, let's attack the real pressing issue: Can this team con- tend for a world title? Unfortunately, not even a genius columnist like myself can answer that for you. I don't want to be "that guy" who is just happy to be in the playoffs, but I understand that it will be an uphill battle for the Tigers to make the World Series. The Yankees are absolutely stacked and are playing great baseball. The Twins have been very hot in the past few months, too, and can make some noise even though they're Liriano-less. And the A's See BELL, page 13A Cornerback Morgan Trent led the Wolverines with six tackles in their blowout win over Notre Dame last Saturday. Trent came to Michigan as a wide receiver before making the move to comerback after his redshirt freshman year. A season after switchig lpositions, Trent t s off By Kevin Wright Daily Sports Editor When Notre Dame quar- terback Brady Quinn lined up under center for the first offen- sive play of Saturday's game, Michigan cornerback Morgan Trent figured the ball was com- ing his way. And, just as the junior pre- dicted, Quinn lofted a deep bomb intended for wide receiv- er Jeff Samardzija down the sideline. What the Irish quarterback didn't anticipate was Trent running step for step with Samardzija. Quinn ended up overthrowing his well-covered receiver. "I knew coming in, especially in the last game (against Notre Dame) that they were going to pick on me," Trent said. "The first play of the game, I knew they were going deep to Samardzija. They tried to set the tone. You got to be funda- mentally sound, playing across from a guy like Leon (Hall)." When Trent came to Michi- gan three years ago, he didn't anticipate that he would make a name for himself defending passes. The Brighton native was recruited as a wide receiv- er before ultimately making the switch the cornerback. It started in the spring prac- tice before Trent's redshirt freshman season. Coming off his redshirt year, which he said was the toughest part of his time at Michigan, Trent eagerly awaited his chance to contribute to a team he had been forced to watch from the sidelines. Then Michigan coach Lloyd Carr approached Trent with the JOIN DAILY SPORTS. STOP BY 43 E. HURON ST. AT NOON ON SUNDAY TO FIND OUT MORE. idea of switching to cornerback. With the speed Trent brought to the table, Carr wanted to get him on the field and thought cornerback would be a perfect fit. But Trent had his doubts. "Me being a receiver guy, I wasn't sure being out there on defense and hitting these big running backs," said Trent, whose father played cornerback at Nebraska. The ori'inal plan had been for Trent to split time at corner- back and wide receiver. That is, until a freshman class that included Mario Manningham arrived in Ann Arbor. "We kept getting good recruits that are getting on the field earlier and playing," Trent said. "If I can be out there and focus on what I need to on defense, there's no need for me on offense when you got guys playing like that." After learning the ropes of the defense last season, Trent entered spring practice and training camp this year in a fierce competition with Charles Stewart for the starting corner- back spot, vacated by the grad- uated Grant Mason. Trent didn't start in the sea- son opener against Vanderbilt. Instead, Stewart got the nod to line up on the opposite side of Hall. But that didn't stop Trent from continuing to work on his technique and comfort level in the defensive backfield. "You really got no time to be down because your number is going to be called, especially with the defense we play," Trent said. "Our corners are going to be on the field, so if you're over there pouting about this and that, then when you come to the field, it's going to show. You got to be ready to play." Against Central Michigan the following week, Stewart didn't trot out there on the Chippe- was' first offensive possession. Trent had finally moved into the starting role. He shined even brighter against rival Notre Dame, enjoying arguably his best game as a Wolverine. Trent recorded six tackles and had several pass break-ups. Even though Trent's newfound comfort showed through in his solid play on the field, he point- ed to the Fighting Irish's Rhema McKnight's fourth-quarter touch- down as his best play of the game. Quinn-had lofted the ball into the end zone, and Trent appeared to catch the ball until McKnight grabbed it out of his hands. "I was in the right position, but I could have played it a little bit better," Trent said. "I could have turned better. I think it's going to help me a lot; it's something to learn from." Trent lists his inability to showcase his speed as one of the few downsides to his move to the secondary. Speedy wide receivers Manningham and Steve Breaston are hogging the spotlight, and Trent said he feels a little left out when conversa- tions about which player has the best backburner pop up. But he's still confident in his ability to outrun anyone on the team. "It depends on who you ask (about the fastest person on the team)," said Trent, who runs a 4.4 40-yard dash. "I'll stick to that until the day I die. I think we should orchestrate a little race, and we could find out." 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