Arguably the top teams to date (details from about.com):
1. 1984: Blazing start, blazing finish
The Tigers had a record 35-5 start to what became a magical season. Jack Morris threw a no-hitter, and Willie Hernandez won the MVP and Cy Young as closer. A deep lineup and solid rotation and the team's fourth championship.
Manager: Sparky Anderson
Regular season: 104-58, won AL East by 15 games over the Toronto Blue Jays.
Playoffs: Beat Kansas City Royals in ALCS (3-0); beat San Diego Padres in World Series (4-1)
Hitting leaders: C Lance Parrish (.237, 33 HR, 98 RBI), RF Kirk Gibson (.282, 27 HR, 91 RBI), SS Alan Trammell (.314, 14 HR, 69 RBI)
Pitching: RHP Jack Morris (19-11, 3.60 ERA), RHP Dan Petry (18-8, 3.24 ERA), LHP Willie Hernandez (9-3, 1.92 ERA, 32 saves)
2. 1968: McLain stars in year of pitcher
Denny McLain had one of the greatest years a pitcher ever had, become the majors' last 30-game winner, winning the MVP and Cy Young. Mickey Lolich won three games in a classic World Series win over the Cardinals.
Manager: Mayo Smith
Regular season: 103-59, won American League by 12 games over the Baltimore Orioles.
Playoffs: Beat St. Louis Cardinals in World Series (4-3)
Hitting leaders: LF Willie Horton (.285, 36 HR, 85 RBI), C Bill Freehan (.263, 25 HR, 84 RBI), RF Jim Northrup (.264, 21 HR, 90 RBI)
Pitching: RHP Denny McLain (31-6, 1.96 ERA), LHP Mickey Lolich (17-9, 3.19 ERA), RHP Earl Wilson (13-12, 2.85 ERA)
3. 1935: Hank Greenberg leads comeback
The Tigers scored six runs per game with four Hall of Famers in the lineup in MVP Hank Greenberg, Charlie Gehringer, Goose Goslin and player-manager Mickey Cochrane. They started 2-9, but rebounded from losing the previous World Series to beat the Cubs.
Manager: Mickey Cochrane
Regular season: 93-58, won American League by three games over the New York Yankees.
Playoffs: Beat Chicago Cubs in World Series (4-2)
Hitting leaders: 1B Hank Greenberg (.328, 36 HR, 170 RBI), 2B Charlie Gehringer (.330, 19 HR, 108 RBI), OF Goose Goslin (.292, 9 HR, 109 RBI)
Pitching: RHP Tommy Bridges (21-10, 3.51 ERA), Schoolboy Rowe (19-13, 3.69 ERA), RHP Elden Auker (18-7, 3.83 ERA)
4. 1909: Ty Cobb wins Triple Crown
Ty Cobb never won a World Series, but he came closest in one of his best seasons. He led the league in average (.377), home runs (9) and RBI (107), but the Tigers lost in a seven-game World Series to a dominant Pirates team that won 110 games.
Manager: Hughie Jennings
Regular season: 98-54, won American League by 3.5 games over the Philadelphia A's.
Playoffs: Lost World Series to the Pittsburgh Pirates (4-3)
Hitting leaders: OF Ty Cobb (.377, 9 HR, 107 RBI, 76 SB), OF Sam Crawford (.314, 6 HR, 97 RBI, 30 SB), SS Donie Bush (.273, 0 HR, 33 RBI, 53 SB)
Pitching: RHP George Mullin (29-8, 2.22 ERA), RHP Ed Willett (21-10, 2.34 ERA), RHP Ed Summers (19-9, 2.24 ERA)
5. 1945: Newhouser back-to-back MVP
In the last season during World War II, the Tigers emerged as the best team in a season with a lot of parity. They had a solid ace in Hal Newhouser, who was the MVP and won 25 games with a 1.81 ERA. Hank Greenberg came back from the war to hit 13 homers in 78 games.
Manager: Steve O'Neill
Regular season: 88-65, won American League by 1.5 games over the Washington Senators.
Playoffs: Beat Chicago Cubs in World Series (4-3)
Hitting leaders: OF Roy Cullenbine (.277, 18 HR, 93 RBI), 1B Rudy York (.264, 18 HR, 87 RBI), OF Hank Greenberg (.311, 13 HR, 60 RBI in 78 games)
Pitching: LHP Hal Newhouser (25-9, 1.81 ERA), RHP Dizzy Trout (18-15, 3.14 ERA), RHP Al Benton (13-8, 2.02 ERA)
6. 1934: 101-53, no title
These Tigers were great, yet didn't win the ultimate prize. They won a pennant, though, at the same time as another great team, the St. Louis "Gashouse Gang," who beat the Tigers in a classic seven-game World Series.
Manager: Mickey Cochrane
Regular season: 101-53, won American League by seven games over the New York Yankees
Playoffs: Lost to St. Louis Cardinals in World Series (4-3)
Hitting leaders: 1B Hank Greenberg (.339, 26 HR, 139 RBI), 2B Charlie Gehringer (.356, 11 HR, 127 RBI), OF Goose Goslin (.305, 13 HR, 100 RBI)
Pitching: RHP Schoolboy Rowe (24-8, 3.45 ERA), RHP Tommy Bridges (22-11, 3.67 ERA), RHP Elden Auker (15-7, 3.42 ERA)
7. 1961: 101 wins, no pennant
One of the greatest teams to never make the playoffs in baseball history. The Tigers had a great offense and enough pitching, but the Yankees had perhaps their most dominant team ever at the same time.
Manager: Bob Scheffing
Regular season: 101-61, second in American League, eight games behind New York Yankees
Hitting leaders: 1B Norm Cash (.361, 41 HR, 132 RBI), LF Rocky Colavito (.290, 45 HR, 140 RBI), RF Al Kaline (.324, 19 HR, 82 RBI)
Pitching: RHP Frank Lary (23-9, 3.24 ERA), RHP Jim Bunning (17-11, 3.19), LHP Don Mossi (15-7, 2.96 ERA)
8. 2006: A surprise pennant
The Tigers had 13 consecutive losing seasons until 2006, when they came out of nowhere to win the AL wild card. Then they got hot in the postseason before losing in the World Series to St. Louis.
Manager: Jim Leyland
Regular season: 95-67, second in AL Central by one game over Minnesota Twins, won AL wild card by five games over Chicago White Sox.
Playoffs: Beat New York Yankees in ALDS (3-1), beat Oakland A's in ALCS (4-0), lost to St. Louis Cardinals in World Series (4-1)
Hitting leaders: SS Carlos Guillen (.320, 19 HR, 85 RBI), RF Magglio Ordonez (.298, 24 HR, 104 RBI), C Ivan Rodriguez (.300, 13 HR, 69 RBI)
Pitching: LHP Kenny Rogers (17-8, 3.84 ERA), RHP Justin Verlander (17-9, 3.63 ERA), RHP Todd Jones (2-6, 3.94 ERA, 37 saves)