The Detroit Tigers have hired Kyle Hendricks, who announced his retirement from pitching seventeen days ago, as a special assistant in the front office. The 36-year-old spent his entire 12-year career with the Cubs, posting a 3.68 ERA across 270 starts before walking away in January. He reports to president of baseball operations Scott Harris, who has now added four former players to his front office since taking the job in September 2022.
Hendricks is not joining the coaching staff. He is not working with pitchers in spring training. The title "special assistant" typically means hybrid work: advance scouting, pro personnel evaluation, and quantitative analysis crosschecked against playing experience. Harris has used the structure before—former Tigers catcher James McCann joined as a special assistant in March 2024, nine months after his playing contract expired, and now splits time between video breakdown and free-agent targeting. Hendricks' hire follows the same template, though his analytical reputation runs deeper. He finished his degree in economics at Dartmouth, carried a laptop on road trips, and spent off-days studying his own TrackMan data before front offices made that standard. The Cubs' pitching development staff told rival teams Hendricks knew his swing-and-miss models better than some of their coordinators.
The timing is efficient. Detroit's rotation returned three of five starters from last season's 86-76 finish, but the depth chart thins fast after Tarik Skubal. Hendricks will evaluate Triple-A arms for September call-ups, advise on bullpen construction, and likely participate in trade discussions at the July deadline. Harris has centralized decision-making around a small group of former players who understand contract structures and aging curves—the front office now includes Hendricks, McCann, special assistant Sam Moll (retired 2023), and vice president of player development Gary Sheffield Jr. (retired 2018). The structure gives Harris a sounding board that can distinguish between mechanical adjustments and effort-based excuses, a distinction analytics departments often miss.
What to watch: Hendricks' first test arrives in six weeks when Detroit's front office meets to finalize its 40-man roster ahead of the May waiver deadline. The team has eight pitchers on minor-league deals with opt-out clauses, and Hendricks will file reports on all of them. Watch for his name on internal memos that circulate to Harris, general manager Jeff Greenberg, and assistant GM Jose Macias. If he moves faster than McCann did, he will present a free-agent pitching target at the July strategy session, complete with biomechanical comps and salary-slot recommendations.
By September, rival front offices will be calling to ask if Hendricks is a candidate for their vacant pitching coordinator roles. Harris will say no, Hendricks will stay through 2025, and the real question becomes whether he wants a GM track or prefers the lower-visibility advisory lane.