The Los Angeles Dodgers announced Clayton Kershaw as a special assistant to president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman on Tuesday, formalizing the left-hander's transition from the mound to the Chavez Ravine executive suite. Kershaw retired in January after 17 seasons, all in Dodger blue. He joins a front office that just closed $1.08 billion in player commitments over the winter and is absorbing the operational complexity of defending consecutive World Series titles.
Kershaw's contract terms remain undisclosed, but comparable MLB player-to-front-office hires in recent years — David Ross in Chicago, Raul Ibanez in Kansas City — have commanded annual salaries between $500,000 and $750,000. His portfolio will span player development, pitching strategy, and organizational culture work, according to the club. Translation: he sits in on draft rooms, walks minor-league complexes in Glendale and Tulsa, and fields calls from agents who know Friedman listens when Kershaw speaks. The hire also gives ownership a public-facing ambassador with $251 million in career earnings and the kind of credibility that smooths sponsorship renewals and luxury-suite sales pitches.
The timing matters. Friedman, 47, has run the Dodgers' baseball operations since late 2014, and the organization has quietly begun mapping succession scenarios. Kershaw will not manage the big-league club — he has said so plainly — but the role positions him inside the decision pipeline at a franchise that prizes institutional continuity. His presence also insulates Friedman from critiques that the front office has grown too analytical, too detached from the clubhouse pulse. Kershaw won three Cy Young Awards, posted a career 2.48 ERA, and mentored two generations of Dodger pitchers. When he suggests a mechanical tweak or questions a workload plan, it carries weight that no spreadsheet can replicate.
The Dodgers are also managing a delicate handoff in their player-development apparatus. Mark Prior, the organization's pitching guru, has drawn interest from rival front offices, and farm director Brandon Gomes fields calls each offseason. Kershaw's arrival gives the club a credible internal voice on pitching development if Prior departs or if Gomes ascends to a different role. It also signals to premium free agents and their representatives that the Dodgers remain serious about blending modern infrastructure with baseball literacy — a message that matters when you are trying to sign the next Shohei Ohtani or Yoshinobu Yamamoto.
Beyond the organizational chart, Kershaw's hire helps the Dodgers control the narrative around their $374 million payroll and the inevitable roster churn that follows back-to-back titles. He will almost certainly appear in spring-training marketing materials, sponsor activations, and community events, reinforcing the franchise's identity as a place where legends stay. That continuity has tangible commercial value: Dodgers season-ticket revenue exceeded $200 million in 2024, and corporate partnerships — including naming rights, kit deals, and regional media — generated an estimated $450 million. Kershaw on a suite tour or a broadcast booth drop-in is a closing tool.
Watch for Kershaw's first visible involvement in the draft process, likely in mid-July when the Dodgers hold the No. 28 pick. Also track whether he joins the club on select road trips or remains Chavez Ravine-based; his travel footprint will signal how hands-on Friedman intends the role to be. Prior's contract status becomes relevant again in October, when front-office staffs typically reset. If Kershaw begins appearing in pitching-coordinator meetings or instructs at the Arizona Fall League, the role is more than ceremonial.
The Dodgers now employ the greatest pitcher in franchise history as a salaried front-office voice, three months after he threw his last pitch. Friedman has his succession insurance, and Kershaw has his next act.