Spencer Torkelson’s pepperoni celebration has taken over the Tiger’s in game celebrations

By Jason BeckTuesday, April 02
NEW YORK — Home-run celebrations were all the rage last season, and the Tigers’ hockey-themed celebration in tribute to the Red Wings was near the top on originality. So what could Detroit do for an encore?  That was Spencer Torkelson’s task heading into the season. He came up with last year’s celebration, a tribute close to his heart as a former youth hockey player. He also had more of those home-run celebrations than anyone, having led the Tigers with 31 homers last year.  “He’s the home-run king,” Parker Meadows said.  “That’s a lot of responsibility,” Riley Greene added.  Torkelson didn’t want to run back the same dugout scene. He also didn’t want to copy any other team’s trick.  “Just had to mix it up,” Torkelson explained last weekend. “We loved the Red Wings’ celly last year. It’s not dead; it could still come back. But our owner [chairman and CEO Christopher Ilitch] owns Little Caesars Pizza, so we’re going to give them some love, too.”  The Little Caesars logo features a character in a toga eating a slice of pizza in one hand, while the other hand holds a spear that has the rest of the pizza on the end of it.   They weren’t going to recreate the toga, but they could do something with the spear and the pizza. So Torkelson asked Ben Fidelman, director of communications and broadcasting, what he could find. It was Fidelman, through Ilitch Sports + Entertainment, who had helped equip last year’s celebration by providing a hockey stick and helmet from the Ilitch-owned Red Wings, eventually adding a mini-goal and net to fire a puck into at the end of the dugout.   “I was like, ‘Hey, is there any chance we can get the Pizza Pizza guy’s stick with the pizzas on it?’ And [Fidelman] didn’t disappoint,” Torkelson explained Monday during a studio appearance on MLB Network’s MLB Central program.They got a prop spear — rubber-tipped, thankfully, so no risk of accidental injury — and three foam pizzas.  “I heard somebody murmur that was in a commercial shoot,” Torkelson added on MLB Network.  The Tigers didn’t get to unveil it on Opening Day, while Ilitch was in attendance. But they homered twice Saturday in their second game of the season, providing a chance to get out the props.  Still, there was some question what to do with the spear and pizza. They paraded it through the dugout, which was fine. But when they tried pounding it on the floor of the dugout, the pizzas tended to flop a bit.  “Maybe we should take a bite out of it,” Meadows suggested over the weekend.  “I think it’s just going to be a little tap on the ground,” Greene said.  Still, don’t be surprised if the hockey celebration returns, especially if the Red Wings earn their first Stanley Cup playoff berth since 2016. They’re in the thick of the race for one of the final Eastern Conference playoff spots, and they helped their cause Monday with a win at Tampa Bay. The Tigers are also slated to celebrate a cross-promotion with the Red Wings on Saturday, giving away Tigers hockey jerseys to the first 15,000 fans through the gates at Comerica Park for the 1:10 p.m. ET game against the A’s. 
By Jason Beck
Tuesday, April 02

NEW YORK — Home-run celebrations were all the rage last season, and the Tigers’ hockey-themed celebration in tribute to the Red Wings was near the top on originality. So what could Detroit do for an encore? 
 
That was Spencer Torkelson’s task heading into the season. He came up with last year’s celebration, a tribute close to his heart as a former youth hockey player. He also had more of those home-run celebrations than anyone, having led the Tigers with 31 homers last year. 
 
“He’s the home-run king,” Parker Meadows said. 
 
“That’s a lot of responsibility,” Riley Greene added. 
 
Torkelson didn’t want to run back the same dugout scene. He also didn’t want to copy any other team’s trick. 
 
“Just had to mix it up,” Torkelson explained last weekend. “We loved the Red Wings’ celly last year. It’s not dead; it could still come back. But our owner [chairman and CEO Christopher Ilitch] owns Little Caesars Pizza, so we’re going to give them some love, too.” 
 
The Little Caesars logo features a character in a toga eating a slice of pizza in one hand, while the other hand holds a spear that has the rest of the pizza on the end of it.  
 
They weren’t going to recreate the toga, but they could do something with the spear and the pizza. So Torkelson asked Ben Fidelman, director of communications and broadcasting, what he could find. It was Fidelman, through Ilitch Sports + Entertainment, who had helped equip last year’s celebration by providing a hockey stick and helmet from the Ilitch-owned Red Wings, eventually adding a mini-goal and net to fire a puck into at the end of the dugout.  
 
“I was like, ‘Hey, is there any chance we can get the Pizza Pizza guy’s stick with the pizzas on it?’ And [Fidelman] didn’t disappoint,” Torkelson explained Monday during a studio appearance on MLB Network’s MLB Central program.


They got a prop spear — rubber-tipped, thankfully, so no risk of accidental injury — and three foam pizzas. 
 
“I heard somebody murmur that was in a commercial shoot,” Torkelson added on MLB Network. 
 
The Tigers didn’t get to unveil it on Opening Day, while Ilitch was in attendance. But they homered twice Saturday in their second game of the season, providing a chance to get out the props. 
 
Still, there was some question what to do with the spear and pizza. They paraded it through the dugout, which was fine. But when they tried pounding it on the floor of the dugout, the pizzas tended to flop a bit. 
 
“Maybe we should take a bite out of it,” Meadows suggested over the weekend. 
 
“I think it’s just going to be a little tap on the ground,” Greene said. 
 
Still, don’t be surprised if the hockey celebration returns, especially if the Red Wings earn their first Stanley Cup playoff berth since 2016. They’re in the thick of the race for one of the final Eastern Conference playoff spots, and they helped their cause Monday with a win at Tampa Bay. The Tigers are also slated to celebrate a cross-promotion with the Red Wings on Saturday, giving away Tigers hockey jerseys to the first 15,000 fans through the gates at Comerica Park for the 1:10 p.m. ET game against the A’s. 

WHAT’S IN A NUMBER

One of the cooler stories of Spring Training in Tigers camp was Jack Flaherty wearing No. 45, partly as a tribute to Hall of Famer Bob Gibson. But another reason Flaherty picked the number was that the digits added up to nine, the number he wore for years growing up. 
 
“I wore nine growing up from the time I was 6, 7 years old through high school,” Flaherty said. “It just happened to be one of the first numbers I was given during Little League. And at the time, it was kind of my size. I was [No.] 9 and my best friend was [No.] 7, and we stuck with it.” 
 
So if Flaherty had No. 9 on his mind, why didn’t he wear it before? Part of the reason was that the number wasn’t available until right before Spring Training, when the Tigers designated infielder Nick Maton for assignment and eventually traded him to the O’s. It was too late for Flaherty to make a change in time for Spring Training, but it became an option for him in the regular season. 
 
“Once it became available, I took the chance to wear it,” Flaherty said. “It’s something I’ve always wanted. Everybody has a favorite number, something that they’ve always worn, and we don’t all get a chance to wear it. Pretty simple.” 
 
With that, Flaherty became the third Tigers pitcher with a single-digit number, joining relievers Shelby Miller (No. 7) and Beau Brieske (4), though the latter is currently at Triple-A Toledo. By contrast, Matt Vierling (8) is the only Tigers position player currently with a single-digit number. 
 
It also meant that Reese Olson, who wore 45 last year but gave it to Flaherty on request last offseason, has it back. He didn’t have an emotional attachment to it, but with family members having jerseys with that number on it, there was a ton of sense in taking it back if he had the chance. 

 
WHAT’S IN A NUMBER
One of the cooler stories of Spring Training in Tigers camp was Jack Flaherty wearing No. 45, partly as a tribute to Hall of Famer Bob Gibson. But another reason Flaherty picked the number was that the digits added up to nine, the number he wore for years growing up.  “I wore nine growing up from the time I was 6, 7 years old through high school,” Flaherty said. “It just happened to be one of the first numbers I was given during Little League. And at the time, it was kind of my size. I was [No.] 9 and my best friend was [No.] 7, and we stuck with it.”  So if Flaherty had No. 9 on his mind, why didn’t he wear it before? Part of the reason was that the number wasn’t available until right before Spring Training, when the Tigers designated infielder Nick Maton for assignment and eventually traded him to the O’s. It was too late for Flaherty to make a change in time for Spring Training, but it became an option for him in the regular season.  “Once it became available, I took the chance to wear it,” Flaherty said. “It’s something I’ve always wanted. Everybody has a favorite number, something that they’ve always worn, and we don’t all get a chance to wear it. Pretty simple.”  With that, Flaherty became the third Tigers pitcher with a single-digit number, joining relievers Shelby Miller (No. 7) and Beau Brieske (4), though the latter is currently at Triple-A Toledo. By contrast, Matt Vierling (8) is the only Tigers position player currently with a single-digit number.  It also meant that Reese Olson, who wore 45 last year but gave it to Flaherty on request last offseason, has it back. He didn’t have an emotional attachment to it, but with family members having jerseys with that number on it, there was a ton of sense in taking it back if he had the chance. 
TRIVIA ANSWERC. Verlander missed the first two months of that season with a strained right triceps. 

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