The Detroit Tigers hired Kyle Hendricks as a special assistant three weeks after the right-hander retired from a 13-season career spent entirely with the Chicago Cubs. The announcement came Wednesday without a formal salary disclosure, standard practice for advisory roles that typically pay $150,000–$300,000 annually in MLB front offices.
Hendricks never pitched for Detroit. He logged 1,696.2 innings with Chicago, posting a 3.68 ERA across stints that included an NL ERA title in 2016 at 2.13. The hire signals Detroit's continued investment in player-development infrastructure after finishing 86–76 in 2024 and missing the playoffs by four games. President of Baseball Operations Scott Harris has added seven former players to advisory or coaching capacities since taking the role in September 2022, including A.J. Hinch's staff additions and analytics liaisons.
The move matters because Detroit's rotation remains unsettled despite Tarik Skubal's Cy Young season. The Tigers ranked 12th in AL starter ERA at 4.21 and have $23 million committed to rotation spots for 2025, leaving room for either free-agent additions or internal development bets. Hendricks specialized in command-first sequencing, an approach Detroit's analytics group has prioritized in draft selections since 2022. His hire suggests the front office is preparing to translate that philosophy into coaching language, likely for Triple-A pitchers and rehab assignments rather than active-roster work.
Hendricks joins a player-development structure that already includes pitching coordinator Juan Nieves and director of pitching Chris Fetter, both retained after 2024. His role will likely involve video breakdowns, pre-draft evaluations, and informal mentorship during spring training. The timing—January hire rather than October—indicates Detroit waited to see Hendricks's interest level after his December retirement decision rather than planning the role in advance.
Watch for Hendricks's attendance at Detroit's February minicamp in Lakeland, where the Tigers will finalize their 40-man roster before pitchers and catchers report February 12. Harris typically announces coordinator-level hires in waves, and two hitting-staff vacancies remain open after November departures. Detroit's $148 million payroll leaves flexibility for a veteran starter signing before spring training, which would clarify whether Hendricks's role skews toward big-league consultation or minor-league development.
The Cubs declined Hendricks's $16.5 million option in November, paying a $1 million buyout. He started 24 games in 2024 with a 5.92 ERA, the worst mark of his career. Detroit didn't need to outbid anyone. They needed someone who understood how to survive with 88-mph fastballs in a league that now averages 93.9 mph, and Hendricks spent a decade doing exactly that.