The Detroit Tigers aren’t done trying to extend their star players.

Max Scherzer rejected the team’s offer of a six-year, $144 million extension, but major-league sources told FOX Sports 1 the team has opened contract talks with two-time reigning American League Most Valuable Player Miguel Cabrera.

Talks with Cabrera are at a preliminary stage, sources say, and he won’t be eligible for free agency until after the 2015 season. However, the Tigers have a history of extending superstars when they have two years left on their contracts; that was the case for Cabrera’s first long-term deal, as well as both of Justin Verlander’s extensions. The same agency — Relativity Baseball — represents both Cabrera and Verlander.

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Scherzer had set an Opening Day deadline for extension talks, and the Tigers released a statement Sunday morning when it became clear a deal wouldn’t be reached. The negotiations with Cabrera don’t appear to have an Opening Day deadline.

Cabrera, 30, would start his next contract at age 32 — the same age as Albert Pujols when he began his 10-year, $240 million deal with the Los Angeles Angels. The Pujols contract could become a benchmark in the Cabrera negotiations, because the two have similar statistical profiles and play the same position (first base).

Cabrera’s representatives may contend that he deserves a larger contract than Pujols, because of the upward trend in overall player salaries since Pujols signed his contract in December 2011.