DETROIT >> Gleyber Torres’ baseball intelligence has been on display in various forms all season, none more than in the sixth inning Friday night.

“Smart player,” manager AJ Hinch said with appreciation after the Tigers’ 2-1 win over the Rangers.

It was a play that was not recorded because it technically happened after the third out of the inning was made. But Torres wasn’t completely sure of that and, especially in a one-run game, he wasn’t taking any chances. He stayed with the play.

Here’s the set up. The Rangers had spoiled Tarik Skubal’s bid for perfection with a run on a couple of two-strike singles and a hit-batsman.

With two outs, Skubal got Jonah Heim to hit a grounder to short. Trey Sweeney got the ball on a couple of hops and had to hurry his throw to Torres covering second base.

The umpire signaled the runner, Sam Haggerty, out, but it was a bang-bang play and Torres didn’t want to leave it up to a challenge. He alertly fired to third base and the Tigers trapped runner Ezequiel Duran in a run down.

“We talk about those plays that end innings; just keep playing the play,” Hinch said. “Whether you are a base runner or a fielder like Gleyber was. He had the best view for feeling the bag and he threw the ball to third base.

“Just a really smart play.”

That play effectively negated any reason for the Rangers to challenge the play at second.

“He would have been out at home,” Hinch said, “or we would have seen my first ejection.”

Torres is only 28 but he is in his eighth season. He and Javier Baez are easily the most-seasoned players in the clubhouse.

“Just being a pro, and I think that’s what he’s come into our clubhouse and done,” Skubal said. “You can feel the veteran that he is, who he is in the box and defensively, too.”

The Tigers preach strike zone control on both sides of the ball and Torres is a model for that. He has a higher walk rate (8.6%) than strikeout rate (7.8%) and his 131 OPS-plus is third best on the team.

On top of that, his calm, steady presence both on the infield and in the clubhouse has been stabilizing.

“He’s in tune with every aspect of the game and continues to impress me,” Hinch said.

Torres made another veteran play in the seventh, another one that won’t go into the books but was big at the time.

In the seventh inning, Skubal was up over 90 pitches. He was laboring after he struck out Marcus Semien for the second out so Torres strolled up to Skubal on the mound.

“That was the most important mound visit I ever had,” Skubal said. “He came up and said, ‘Just giving you a breather.’ I said, ‘Put your hand on my chest, feel my heart.’ It was beating pretty fast.

“I don’t really like calling guys out to the mound, but I was going to have to call out Ding or Fett (pitching coach Chris Fetter). But Gleyber did it and I Iove that. He’s a pro’s pro.”