- Published in Top 50 Detroit Tigers
32. John Hiller
John Hiller carved out a unique place in Detroit history as a left-handed reliever whose career defined the very concept of resilience. While he first established himself as a versatile arm for the 1968 championship squad, his path to becoming a franchise icon was nearly derailed by a massive physical setback. For fifteen seasons, he anchored the Tigers' bullpen, proving that a player could become a premier pillar of the organization by mastering the specialized role of the late-inning stopper long before the modern closer was a standard fixture of the game.
During the 1968 season, he provided the dependable production required of a young arm on a pennant-winning team. However, his journey faced a life-threatening plateau in 1971 when he suffered a major heart attack at the age of 28. Most assumed his playing days were over, but he showed a focused intensity in his recovery that signaled a transition from a sidelined veteran to a premier American League force. He returned to the mound in 1972, setting the stage for a statistical explosion that would redefine the value of a relief pitcher in the Motor City.
The core of his time in Detroit was defined by elite efficiency during the historic 1973 campaign. That summer, Hiller reached a career peak for all-around value, recording 38 saves, a staggering high-frequency mark for an era when relievers often pitched multiple innings per appearance. He finished the season with a 1.44 ERA over 125 innings, earning fourth-place finishes in both the Cy Young and MVP voting. He showed the organization that a reliever could be a primary engine for winning, following that performance with an All-Star selection in 1974. He remained a model of resilience throughout the seventies, eventually recording 125 saves and over 1,000 strikeouts in a Detroit uniform.