The Metro: Tigers’ 89-year history in Lakeland, Florida
Jack Filbrandt, The Metro March 20, 2025Florida history professor James Michael Denham joined the show to share more about the team’s long standing connection to the city.

Photo of The Tigers playing at Ed Smith Stadium, the Baltimore Orioles Spring Training home in Sarasota, Fla.
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The Detroit Tigers Opening Day is Friday April 4, but the team has been getting ready at their spring training home in Lakeland, Florida.
The Tigers have an 89-year history with the Florida city, the longest of any team in Major League Baseball.
To find out more about this long standing connection, Metro Producer Jack Filbrandt talked to James Michael Denham, history professor at Florida Southern College and Director of the Lawton M. Chiles Jr. Center for Florida History. Denham is also a Tigers Spring Training Season Ticket Holder.
Before it was Joker Marchant Stadium, it was the location of the Lodwick School of Aeronautics. The flight school opened in 1940 and trained 8,000 American and 1,200 British pilots for World War II. Joker Marchant Stadium opened in 1966, and you can still see barracks and other remnants of the school.
The Lakeland Flying Tigers, Detroit’s Single A team, plays at Joker Marchant Stadium and carries on the site’s flight history.
MLB Spring Training ends on Saturday. The Tigers start the season March 27 on the West Coast. They’ll be back in Detroit for Opening Day, facing off against the Chicago White Sox.
Use the media player above to hear the full conversation.
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Jack Filbrandt is an assistant producer on WDET's daily news, arts and culture program, The Metro. He grew up on Lake Michigan and has called Detroit home for seven years. He's also a Detroit Documenter, covering local government meetings in the city. He previously worked for Wayne State's student newspaper, The South End, and The Battering Ram.
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