Dodgers Hire Jason Heyward as Front Office Assistant After 19 Seasons
The 2016 World Series champion joins LA's baseball operations group in an advisory capacity, signaling the Dodgers' familiar player-to-executive pipeline continues.
Published May 19, 2026Source MLB InsiderFrom the chopped neck
Subject on the desk
Los Angeles Dodgers
SILVER · May 19, 2026
LOUIS XIII· May 19, 2026
Dodgers Hire Jason Heyward as Front Office Assistant After 19 Seasons
The 2016 World Series champion joins LA's baseball operations group in an advisory capacity, signaling the Dodgers' familiar player-to-executive pipeline continues.
Jason Heyward, who retired last October after 19 major league seasons, joined the Los Angeles Dodgers front office Monday as a special assistant. The role puts Heyward inside the baseball operations department, reporting to president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman. The Dodgers announced the hire without a contract term or compensation figure.
Heyward played 2,135 games across four organizations — Atlanta, St. Louis, Chicago, and two stints with the Dodgers in 2023. He earned $197.5 million in career salary, per Spotrac, the bulk of it from an eight-year, $184 million deal with the Cubs signed in December 2015. That contract delivered one championship — Chicago's drought-breaking 2016 title — but a .245/.323/.377 slash line across the life of the deal. He hit .269/.340/.473 through his first seven seasons in Atlanta and St. Louis, then never replicated that production. The Cubs ate $22 million to release him in 2022. The Dodgers signed him twice on minor-league deals.
The hire follows a pattern Friedman installed when he arrived from Tampa Bay in 2014. Former players with organizational familiarity and postseason credentials move into advisory roles before some transition into full-time scouting, player development, or front-office positions. Raul Ibañez joined as a special assistant in 2016 and now runs amateur scouting. Tim Federowicz caught 46 games for LA between 2011 and 2015, then returned as a catching coordinator. Logan White, who drafted Clayton Kershaw, left and came back twice. The model screens for cultural fit before handing someone a six-figure title.
Heyward's value to the Dodgers is less about his declining bat — he posted a 74 OPS+ in 2023 — and more about what he saw across four playoff teams in three cities. He was in the room when the Cubs broke their curse. He watched how the Cardinals handle pitching development pipelines. He played under Friedman's first Dodgers clubs and saw the infrastructure that now mints $700 million contracts. That range gives Friedman a sounding board who understands both old-school player development and modern financial engineering. The Dodgers have $1.2 billion committed through 2033, per Cot's Baseball Contracts. Managing those relationships while maintaining a development culture that produced Gavin Lux, Bobby Miller, and Ryan Pepiot requires staffers who've lived both sides.
The timing matters because the Dodgers face roster churn this winter. Clayton Kershaw, Walker Buehler, and Teoscar Hernández all reach free agency after the World Series. The team already has $260 million in luxury tax payroll commitments for 2025, before arbitration cases. Every decision involves both big-league chemistry and minor-league depth. Heyward's job will likely include liaison work between the front office and players, plus input on free-agent targets who fit LA's system. Former players in these roles often handle the calls Friedman doesn't want on his calendar — telling a veteran his option isn't getting picked up, or explaining why a teammate got non-tendered.
Watch for Heyward at Camelback Ranch during spring training, where these special assistants typically spend February and March observing minor leaguers. If he takes on a larger public role — speaking at FanFest or doing interviews during the regular season — that signals the Dodgers view him as a future external face of the front office, not just internal support. The next assistant general manager opening will draw 20 internal candidates. Heyward now has 18 months to show he can read a scouting report as fluently as he once read a pitcher's grip.
The Dodgers open spring training February 12 in Glendale. Friedman's next payroll decision — whether to extend Buehler or let him test free agency — is due by November 4.
The takeaway
LA adds another ex-player to its front-office pipeline, betting Heyward's **19** years and four organizations translate to roster-management insight before the team faces **$260M** in 2025 commitments.
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