His performance on Friday was reminiscent of his gem one day short of a year ago when he pitched a shutout against the A's in another Game 5.
"It felt good out there," Verlander said. "It's the first time in a while my changeup's been really good. This lineup with a bunch of left-handed hitters; that was a big pitch for me."
Miguel Cabrera hit a two-run homer in the fourth inning for his first home run in three weeks and just his third extra-base hit in 99 at-bats. That ended a 20-inning scoreless streak by the Tigers at the Coliseum.
Oakland's rookie starter Sonny Gray danced with danger from the start with stuff not nearly as crisp as just five nights before when he matched zeros with Verlander in Game 2.
A's manager Bob Melvin went with Gray over 18-game winner and 40-year-old Bartolo Colon, who yielded three first-inning runs to lose Game 1.
Verlander didn't allow a baserunner until issuing a one-out walk in the sixth but the no-hit bid remained until Cespedes' single the next inning.
Verlander had 21 strikeouts over his two starts of the series. He has 43 strikeouts in his four playoff outings against Oakland over the past two years.
The A's saw their season end at the hands of Detroit for the third time in as many postseasons, including in a four-game sweep in the 2006 ALCS.
Oakland has lost its past six winner-take-all Game 5s and fell to 1-12 in potential clinchers since 2000. The A's struck out 57 times; the most ever in a best-of-five playoff series.
The Tigers are determined to take the next step and win a championship after being swept in four games of the 2012 World Series by the San Francisco Giants.
"That's the motivation that we've been looking for, that we've had all year," Verlander said. "Guys like Torii (Hunter) who wasn't a part of our team last year, he comes in and he's got that urge. He wants to win that championship before he retires. Everybody else that was here that had a taste of that last year how much it hurts, it's that extra driving factor."