Detroit Tigers veteran Javier Báez was carted off the field Tuesday night in Atlanta after an awkward first-base slide left him unable to bear weight on his right ankle, adding to a rough evening that saw Detroit lose 5-2 to the Braves and absorb two injury exits in the same game.
The incident occurred in the fifth inning at Truist Park. A ground ball produced a wide throw that Braves first baseman Matt Olson corralled on a stretch. Báez moved to evade the tag and slid feet-first into the bag with his right leg pinned beneath him. He could not rise under his own power. Detroit’s medical staff brought out a cart and drove the 33-year-old off the field.
Manager A.J. Hinch confirmed the right ankle as the injury site and called the play scary. Imaging was set for Wednesday. Báez told trainers he was able to put weight on the ankle again once the initial pain eased, offering cautious optimism about severity.
Starter Casey Mize, a 2025 All-Star with a 2.90 ERA, also exited — in the third inning with right groin tightness after covering first base on a chopper. The Tigers pulled him after 2⅓ innings, three strikeouts, and 34 pitches. He too faced imaging Wednesday. Detroit’s pitching staff entered the night already carrying seven players on the injured list.
Despite it all, the Tigers held the AL Central lead at 15-14 entering Wednesday. Báez, in his fifth Detroit season, batted .263 with two home runs and six RBI across 23 games. His versatility across center field, shortstop, and other positions makes the absence costly until imaging clarifies his return timeline.
For Spartanburg baseball fans, Tuesday’s events underlined how quickly rosters shift at every level. The Hub City Spartanburgers — South Atlantic League High-A affiliate of the Texas Rangers, playing since April 2025 at Fifth Third Park in downtown Spartanburg — gave the Hub City its first professional baseball in three decades. Every time a veteran goes down in the majors, the cascade of IL placements, call-ups, and prospect reassignments that follows ripples through the entire affiliated system, reminding fans in every MiLB market how tightly connected the sport’s pipeline really is.