Longtime Detroit sports columnist and radio personality Pat Caputo died Thursday at the age of 67 following a battle with stage 4 pancreatic cancer, ending a decades-long career that made him one of the most recognizable voices in Michigan sports media.
Caputoâs family confirmed the news in a statement posted to his X account on May 7.
âToday May 7th we lost Pat to cancer,â the post read. âPat was surrounded by his family. Thank you for all your support.â
For Detroit sports fans, Caputoâs voice was impossible to mistake. Gruff, blunt and endlessly informed, he became a staple of the cityâs sports scene through newspaper columns, radio shows and television appearances. While he covered every major team in town, Caputoâs connection to the Detroit Tigers remained one of the defining threads of his career.
Caputo Earned Respect Covering the Tigers Through Multiple Eras
A Southeast Michigan native and graduate of Michigan State University, Caputo spent 37 years at The Oakland Pressafter beginning his career covering high school sports. Over time, he evolved into one of Detroitâs most prominent columnists.
Caputo covered the Tigers during the 1980s, a decade that included the franchiseâs iconic 1984 World Series championship season. His reputation grew because of his willingness to challenge players, managers and front office executives directly while still maintaining credibility inside clubhouses across baseball. It made him polarizing at times, but it also earned him respect from readers and listeners who trusted he was saying exactly what he believed.
Caputoâs deep baseball knowledge eventually earned him a coveted vote for the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum, further solidifying his standing within the sport.
“The Detroit Tigers, Detroit Red Wings and Ilitch Sports + Entertainment join the Detroit sports community in mourning the passing of longtime media personality, Pat Caputo,” a statement read.
“Pat’s illustrious career covering sports at all levels throughout Michigan spanned over four decades. Whether it was writing columns in the Oakland Press, making local TV appearances or hosting shows on 97.1 The Ticket, Pat’s passion for sports and his love for our sports community always shined through. Our thoughts are with Pat’s family, friends and co-workers.”
âThe Bookâ Became a Detroit Sports Institution
Caputoâs encyclopedic recall of sports history became legendary in Detroit media circles, earning him the nickname âThe Book.â Listeners across multiple generations came to know him through stops at 1130 WDFN and later 97.1 The Ticket, where he hosted numerous programs and remained a consistent on-air presence.
Even as his radio career expanded into hockey, football and basketball coverage, baseball remained one of his great passions. Caputo frequently discussed the Tigers on podcasts including âTigerTalkâ and âBustinâ Balls with Pat Caputo,â often diving into organizational philosophy, player development and the state of the franchise with the same intensity he brought decades earlier as a beat writer.
“Nobody knew more about them [Tigers franchise] that’s for damn sure,” Mike Valenti, host of The Valenti Show with Rico, said.
His personality became just as memorable as his analysis. Caputo mixed sharp criticism with self-deprecating humor, delivering lines that longtime listeners could recite from memory. According to  M Live, he often joked, âIâve got a body like Michael Phelps and a face like Brad Pitt,â while also reminding audiences it was âa beautiful day in Lake Orion where every day is a vacation.â
Detroit Sports Media Pays Tribute to Caputo
Following news of his death, tributes poured in from fellow reporters, broadcasters and fans throughout the Detroit sports community.
FOX 2 Sports Director Dan Miller reflected on Caputoâs decades-long role on Sports Works, calling him âone of one.â
âHe was opinionated, he was never going to come up short in telling you how he felt,â Miller said. âPat would look right at the camera and talk to whoever he was going to talk about.â
Retired Tigers reporter Lynn Henning praised Caputoâs vast sports knowledge and distinctive personality in a social media tribute.
âAs knowledgeable on all sports levels as any person in Detroit sports media history,â Henning wrote. âA good and humorous cohort whose growling voice was a classic trait.â
Others remembered Caputoâs generosity and passion behind the scenes, including former colleagues from his radio and newspaper days who described him as fiercely loyal to both the profession and the city he covered.
In January, after publicly revealing his cancer diagnosis, Caputo thanked supporters for their prayers and encouragement.
âYour prayers, support and kind words truly have lifted my spirits during this difficult time,â he wrote. âI read each comment on X and Facebook and it warmed my heart and made me realize that I am blessed.â
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