The Detroit Tigers hired Kyle Hendricks as a special assistant, the club announced Wednesday. Hendricks retired in March after 13 seasons, all but the final few months with the Chicago Cubs. He never pitched for Detroit.
Hendricks, 36, posted a 3.68 ERA across 270 starts and earned an All-Star nod in 2016, the year he led the National League with a 2.13 ERA. He won 97 games and logged 1,680.2 innings. The right-hander's profile—command over velocity, college pedigree from Dartmouth, a 2.02 K/BB ratio—suggests he will support pitching development or analytics functions. The Tigers did not specify his responsibilities.
The hire extends a pattern under president of baseball operations Scott Harris, who arrived in September 2022 and has steadily added former players with recent on-field experience to the front office. Harris brought in Ryan Garko (director of player development), Ramon Santiago (player development staff), and Rob Brantly (catching coordinator) in his first 18 months. Each spent time in Detroit's system or clubhouse. Hendricks did not, which makes this different: Harris is now recruiting voices from outside the organization's alumni network.
That shift matters because the Tigers are emerging from a five-year rebuild with a 79-83 record in 2025 and a farm system ranked 12th by Baseball America entering this season. The front office is still being built. Harris has 21 months remaining before arbitration cases for Tarik Skubal, Riley Greene, and Kerry Carpenter force difficult payroll decisions. The Tigers' ownership, the Ilitch family, has not yet signaled a willingness to exceed a $150 million payroll, the rough midpoint where the club sat from 2017 to 2020. Hendricks joins as someone who can translate recent big-league experience—he last pitched in September 2025—into player evaluations, contract discussions, or coaching assessments. He knows what a contending clubhouse looks like: the Cubs won 103 games in 2016.
The special assistant title carries no fixed duties. Some clubs use it for advance scouting, others for internal education or amateur talent evaluation. Hendricks' résumé suggests pitching development, but his Ivy League background could place him in analytics crossover work, evaluating pitch-design programs or biomechanics vendors the Tigers might engage. The club has invested in pitch tracking and Rapsodo units at its spring facility in Lakeland but lags behind Cleveland, Tampa Bay, and the Dodgers in publicly known infrastructure.
What to watch: Harris typically announces coordinator hires in May, after the draft and international signing period close. If Hendricks appears in those announcements—particularly tied to minor-league pitching—it clarifies his lane. Also, the Tigers' $18 million in expiring contracts this winter includes Jack Flaherty and Alex Lange, both pitchers Hendricks would have faced or studied. Whether he participates in those extension talks will signal how quickly Harris wants him influencing major-league decisions.
The hire arrives the same week the Tigers opened a four-game series in Chicago, where Hendricks spent all but 11 starts of his career. Scott Harris was in the Cubs' front office from 2012 to 2020, overlapping with Hendricks' best seasons. The call was not cold.
The takeaway
Harris is importing talent evaluation from contenders, not just former Tigers, as Detroit's front office infrastructure catches up to its roster timeline.
detroit tigerskyle hendricksfront officescott harrisplayer developmentmlb
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