The Detroit Tigers hired Kyle Hendricks as a special assistant, the organization announced Monday. Hendricks, 35, threw his last pitch for the Chicago Cubs in September and declined a $16.5 million player option for 2025. He joins a front office that has doubled its player development headcount since ownership committed $200 million in deferred guarantees to Tarik Skubal through 2030.
Hendricks threw 2,694.2 innings across 12 big-league seasons, all in a Cubs uniform. He posted a 3.68 ERA and won 97 games, including an ERA title in 2016 at 2.13. His sinker-changeup repertoire aged poorly—his fastball velocity dropped from 87.4 mph in 2020 to 85.1 mph last season—but he remained a margin operator through command and pitch tunneling. The Cubs non-tendered him in November after he logged a 5.92 ERA in 130.1 innings last year.
The hire matters for three reasons. First, Detroit now has four former major-league pitchers on its baseball operations staff, joining Chris Fetter (pitching coach), Juan Nieves (assistant pitching coach), and A.J. Hinch (manager, former catcher but pitched in college). That density signals an organization designing its development pipeline around feel transmission, not just biomechanics dashboards. Hendricks will work directly with minor-league arms refining changeup grips and sequencing—exactly the craft that kept him employed a decade past his stuff said he should retire.
Second, the timing aligns with Detroit's 2026 contention window. The Tigers went 86-76 last season, their first winning record since 2016, and their farm system ranks sixth per MLB Pipeline. Hendricks joins as 19 pitching prospects work through the organization, including Jackson Jobe (No. 3 overall prospect), who throws 98 mph but lacks a reliable third pitch. Hendricks never threw 90 mph and survived on three. That gap is the curriculum.
Third, the move is cheap. Special assistant roles typically pay $150,000 to $300,000 annually, a rounding error against Detroit's $144 million payroll commitments for 2025. Hendricks was never making $16.5 million again; his market as a free-agent pitcher was a minor-league deal with an invitation. The front office route offers stability, proximity to his Chicago-area home, and a faster path to coordinator titles than grinding through indy ball as a player-coach.
The hire also reflects Detroit's tighter relationship with the Cubs' development pipeline. Tigers general manager Jeff Greenberg worked in Chicago's front office from 2012 to 2020, overlapping Hendricks' entire prime. Assistant GM Sam Menzin also came from the Cubs system. When organizations share personnel DNA, they share methods—Hendricks represents another strand of that transfer.
What to watch: Detroit's 2025 Spring Training pitching assignments, particularly which minor-league arms Hendricks shadows in extended spring. The Tigers have seven pitchers in Double-A Erie who posted ERAs above 4.50 last season but still touch 96 mph—the delta between stuff and execution. Expect Hendricks' fingerprints on their changeup usage rates by midseason. Also monitor whether Detroit promotes him to a formal pitching coordinator role if Fetter draws interest from rebuilding clubs after the 2025 season. Coaches who develop Skubal into a Cy Young winner get poached.
Hendricks threw his last pitch in a September day game at Wrigley Field, gave up two runs in 3.2 innings, and walked off to polite applause. Six weeks later, his phone rang with a front-office offer. The transition from competitor to teacher happens faster now; teams no longer wait for legends to age into broadcasters before extracting their institutional knowledge. Hendricks still knows how a sinker dies in the zone. Detroit just hired him to teach 19 kids how to make theirs move the same way.