‘You just want to win’: Kyle Finnegan hungry to finish the job with Tigers
DETROIT — The back end of the Tigers’ bullpen next season will feature the game’s No. 1 and No. 13 active saves leaders, as well as their saves leader from 2025.
According to Elias, it’s the first time a team will start a season with three relievers who posted at least 20 saves the previous season.
Not too shabby.“It just feeds into the mindset of our bullpen,” said Kyle Finnegan, who spoke Monday for the first time after returning to the Tigers on a two-year, $19 million deal with a mutual option for 2028. “We have a lot of different guys who can do a lot of different things. Anytime you can get more options to throw in leverage, it’s a huge advantage.”
Finnegan ranks 13th on the active saves list with 112. Kenley Jansen, who signed last week, tops the list and ranks fourth all-time with 476 saves. They join Will Vest, who posted 23 saves last season.
“You look at a lot of the teams in the postseason last year,” Finnegan said. “Those teams, their bullpens are built with multiple guys you can throw out there in the eighth or ninth innings and have confidence they can get it done.
“The more ‘closers’ you have on your team, the better.”
Finnegan, who was only a Tiger for two-plus months last season, knew enough to supply air quotes around the word closer. Manager AJ Hinch may have a bullpen loaded with potential and capable closers, but that doesn’t mean he is going anoint any of them with that specific label or role.
And all three are OK with that.
“You just want to win,” said Finnegan, echoing what Jansen said last week. “You do whatever it takes to win. If you need me to pitch the sixth, great. If you need me to pitch the ninth, great. We want to be there for whatever matchup they think is best and have no ego in terms of when we pitch.”
Finnegan agreed to his contract before the Tigers agreed to terms with Jansen (one year, $11 million). But he was pumped at the news.
“To add a guy like Kenley Jansen is insane,” he said. “The guy is a Hall of Famer. I’m excited to see how he goes about his work and watch him do his thing. We’ll just be able to complement each other and pick each other up when a guy is down or needs a rest that day.
“It’s just a huge advantage to have those options.”
Bolstering the bullpen, both in back-end quality and overall depth, was Mission One this offseason for the Tigers’ front office.
“We were targeting impact arms that could help the team win games in different situations,” general manager Jeff Greenberg said Monday. “We got two guys with real track records of finishing off games. And we have a manager in AJ who is so good at finding ways to get the most out of these guys, putting these pieces together and using our guys in the right situations to get these wins.”
The Finnegan reunion seemed like a fait accompli. Both sides expressed a desire to run it back after the season. But when no deal was struck during the club’s exclusive negotiation window in November, Finnegan tested the free-agent waters.
“I did have a fair amount of interest,” Finnegan said. “I just tried to navigate those teams and those offers. But I knew the Tigers were going to be there all the way and it finally came together. I was super happy to be back.”
Finnegan, 34, will earn a base salary of $8.75 million next season and $8 million in 2027, with up to $500,000 in performance bonuses (for games finished) in each year. The club option for 2028 is for $10 million with a $2.25 million buyout.
“It became an exercise in trying to find alignment on something that made sense from the club’s side and from the player’s side,” Greenberg said. “He earned the right and the opportunity to see what his market was. That’s just part of the process. But throughout that process, we stayed very engaged with his representation and we had healthy conversations and we found an agreement.”
Finnegan had one of the most dominant stretches of any reliever last season when he came over from the Nationals at the trade deadline. The Tigers encouraged him to use his splitter more and four-seam fastball less and the results were immediate.
He didn’t give up a run in his first 12 appearances from Aug. 2 through Aug. 31. He barely gave up any base runners (three hits, three walks) and he struck out 19 in 14⅓ innings, earning three wins and four saves.
But he missed 19 days in September with a right adductor strain and ended up allowing six runs over his final 11 innings, including the postseason.
“Physically, I felt great,” he said. “I think the challenge was just, when you are on a roll like that, you just don’t want to stop and break that momentum. I felt like I was throwing the ball well, just the results weren’t quite as good. I am confident that if we had played another couple of weeks, I could find a way to get right back in that groove.”
Reflecting on the end of the season, Finnegan is convinced the heavier splitter usage is the right way to go. The offseason refinements will come on his fastball and slider.
“I had a huge amount of success when I made that initial change and I think there’s more meat on that bone,” he said. “With the fastball, I’ve been working the last couple of years to increase the vertical movement (ride) and make it more true so I can use it at the top and also snipe at the bottom of the zone.
“When I throw my splitter, I need to be aware of using my fastball at the bottom of the zone so it doesn’t become, like, if the ball is down, it’s a split and if it’s up it’s a fastball. It’s just finding ways to keep hitters guessing and off balance. That’s the name of the game.”
Finnegan said he feels “hungrier than ever” this offseason and part of that is leaving last season with some unfinished business.
“Absolutely,” he said. “We accomplished so much last year. But at the end of the day, there’s only one team that’s happy at the end of the year and unfortunately, it wasn’t us. The mission every year starts with winning the division, then trying to make the playoffs and trying to win the World Series.
“There were some of those things we didn’t accomplish and that’s what going to drive us through this offseason and into spring training.”














