The Detroit Tigers hired 36-year-old Kyle Hendricks as special assistant in the front office, the club announced this week. Hendricks retired after the 2024 season following 12 years in MLB, all with the Chicago Cubs. He never wore Detroit's uniform. He will now help Scott Harris's front office evaluate pitching talent and developmental pathways.
Hendricks posted a 3.68 career ERA across 270 starts, winning the National League ERA title in 2016 at 2.13. He earned $55.5 million in career salary, per Spotrac. The Tigers are his first employer outside baseball operations as a player. The title—special assistant—typically signals advisor work rather than day-to-day scouting or coaching assignments, though Detroit has not specified his portfolio. Harris, the team's president of baseball operations, has hired several recently-retired players into hybrid roles since taking over in September 2022.
The move reflects MLB's increasing preference for player intelligence over traditional scouting pipelines. Teams value the operational fluency former players bring: they know which metrics front offices prioritize, which coach-speak translates to actual adjustments, and which clubhouse dynamics correlate with second-half collapses. Hendricks also represents a specific archetype—low-velocity command pitcher who survived into his mid-30s by refining sequencing and location. That skill set maps directly onto Detroit's pitching development model, which has produced Tarik Skubal (2023 Cy Young winner) and Matt Manning through similar emphasis on pitch tunneling over raw stuff.
The hiring also positions Detroit in the quiet war for Cubs organizational knowledge. Hendricks spent his entire career under Theo Epstein and Jed Hoyer, absorbing the analytical infrastructure Chicago built in the 2010s. Harris worked in the Cubs' front office from 2012 to 2020 before moving to San Francisco, then Detroit. The Tigers are now importing both the personnel and the processes that won Chicago a World Series in 2016. Hendricks knows which parts of that system aged well and which didn't.
Watch for Hendricks's involvement in Detroit's April 2025 pre-draft meetings, when front offices finalize pitching prospect boards. The Tigers hold the third overall pick after finishing 78-84 in 2024. Watch also for his role in Detroit's pitching coordinator hire—the team has an opening after promoting Chris Fetter to vice president of pitching last fall. If Hendricks appears in Lakeland during spring training, his scope extends beyond advisory. If he stays in Detroit's Comerica Park offices, the role is purely analytical.
The Tigers open 2025 payroll flexibility at roughly $30 million below the luxury tax threshold, per Cot's Baseball Contracts. They need rotation depth behind Skubal. Hendricks will help Harris decide whether to pay for established innings or develop cheaper in-house options. His opinion carries weight because he was both.