The Detroit Tigers hired Kyle Hendricks as a special assistant, moving the 35-year-old right-hander from the mound to the front office six months after his final major-league appearance. The club announced the hire Monday without disclosing compensation structure or reporting lines, though special assistant roles in baseball operations typically carry $150,000 to $300,000 annual salaries depending on scope.
Hendricks threw 2,894.2 innings across 11 seasons with the Chicago Cubs, posting a 3.68 ERA and winning a World Series ring in 2016. He started 358 games, the third-most among active pitchers at his retirement behind Max Scherzer and Clayton Kershaw. His fastball averaged 86.7 mph last season, making him the slowest starting pitcher in baseball, but his command profile kept him effective into his mid-thirties. He finished his career with a 1.13 WHIP, ranking in the 82nd percentile among starting pitchers since 2014.
The hire signals Detroit's continued build under president of baseball operations Scott Harris, who arrived from the San Francisco Giants in September 2022 and has steadily added analytical capacity. The Tigers finished 86-76 last season, their first winning record since 2016, and missed the playoffs by one game after a September collapse. Harris has emphasized pitcher development infrastructure, hiring 11 new analysts since taking over and expanding the club's biomechanics lab at the Lakeland spring training facility. Hendricks becomes the second former player Harris has hired in an off-field role, following outfielder Austin Jackson's appointment as a minor-league roving instructor last March.
Special assistant roles typically involve advance scouting, opponent preparation, and developmental consultation, though clubs structure them differently. Hendricks' command mechanics and pitch sequencing background make him a natural fit for Detroit's pitching infrastructure, which ranked 12th in MLB in starter ERA last season at 3.92 but struggled with reliever consistency. The Tigers' bullpen posted a 4.18 ERA, 19th in baseball, and allowed 23 inherited runners to score in high-leverage September situations.
The timing matters. Detroit enters the offseason with $63 million committed to 2025 payroll, roughly $100 million below the competitive balance tax threshold, and needs rotation depth behind Tarik Skubal, who won the AL Cy Young Award. Hendricks' institutional knowledge from a Cubs organization that developed seven All-Star pitchers between 2015 and 2021 gives Detroit a direct line into Chicago's developmental methodology. He spent parts of six seasons working with Cubs pitching coach Tommy Hottovy, who rebuilt the club's strike-zone management systems.
Harris worked in San Francisco's analytics group from 2010 to 2019 before becoming Giants general manager, and he has imported that organization's preference for hiring recently retired players who can translate modern metrics into field-applicable language. The Giants employed four former players in front-office roles during Harris' tenure, including pitcher Matt Cain and catcher Buster Posey, who now serves as the club's president of baseball operations. Hendricks joins a Tigers front office that includes former infielder Ramon Santiago as a special assistant and ex-pitcher Ryan Raburn in player development.
Detroit's pitching coordinator, Juan Nieves, is 61 and eligible for retirement within three years, creating a succession question Harris will need to address. Hendricks' hire provides optionality if the club decides to promote from within rather than pursue an external candidate. The Tigers have 12 pitchers on their 40-man roster with fewer than three years of service time, giving Hendricks a deep pool of developing arms to influence.
Harris declined to specify Hendricks' initial assignment but told reporters the hire strengthens the club's ability to translate biomechanical data into actionable coaching. Detroit's front office now includes nine special assistants, up from three when Harris arrived, and the club has added 22 total baseball operations employees in that span. Payroll flexibility and organizational depth were Harris' stated priorities when owner Christopher Ilitch hired him at $2.5 million annually on a five-year deal.
The Tigers open spring training February 12 in Lakeland. Hendricks will work from the club's facility there and at Comerica Park during the season, with periodic scouting assignments. Detroit has six rotation spots to fill behind Skubal, and Harris told local media he expects to add at least two veteran starters before Opening Day.
The takeaway
Detroit adds analytical capacity and institutional Cubs knowledge as Harris builds post-season infrastructure with payroll room to spend.
detroit tigerskyle hendricksfront officescott harrispitcher developmentbaseball operations
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