The Los Angeles Dodgers have added Steve Cishek, the 38-year-old reliever who retired after the 2023 season, to an undisclosed baseball operations position. The club announced the hire without specifying title or reporting line. Cishek pitched in 713 MLB games across 13 seasons, earning 132 saves and a World Series ring with the 2019 Washington Nationals.
The hire follows the Dodgers' established playbook: identify recently retired players with organizational intelligence, offer competitive front-office compensation before agent transition costs sink in, and slot them into roles that blend advance scouting, player development coordination, and peer-level clubhouse access. Cishek joins a baseball operations structure already employing former players in parallel tracks—some carry "special assistant" titles with vague mandates, others work embedded analyst roles reporting into R&D. The Dodgers rarely clarify which is which.
What matters is timing and access. Cishek faced 267 different hitters in his final three seasons, across seven teams, accumulating recent scouting reports that don't yet exist in TrackMan archives. He knows which breaking balls middle relievers trust in leverage spots, which catchers call their own game, and which front offices leaked trade interest during August waiver discussions. That institutional knowledge depreciates fast—most clubs wait until a player finishes a broadcasting stint or coaching trial before recruiting him, by which point the intelligence is stale and the salary expectations have doubled.
The hire also extends the Dodgers' championship-player pipeline advantage. Since 2020, L.A. has added former players from four different World Series winners into baseball operations or player development, creating a network that spans clubhouses, agencies, and broadcast booths. When a rival GM considers trading a reliever to the Dodgers, there's now a non-zero chance that team's former closer is already sitting in a Chavez Ravine conference room, modeling the acquisition.
Cishek's specific responsibilities remain unannounced, which is itself the signal. The Dodgers structure front-office roles around problems, not org charts. If Cishek's mandate were conventional—advance scout, minor-league pitching coordinator—they'd say so. The silence suggests either a hybrid analytical role requiring NDA-level discretion or a placeholder title while the front office evaluates his instincts across multiple functions. Worth noting: the Dodgers' last "unspecified" baseball operations hire, announced in May 2022, was reassigned to pro scouting director seven months later after proving useful in trade-deadline video sessions.
The move arrives during the Dodgers' quietest transaction month since November. No bullpen additions since mid-January. No outfield depth signings. The front office is either finished or waiting on a specific domino—likely the latter, given that $18M in luxury-tax space remains uncommitted and spring training rosters aren't finalized until late February. Cishek's hire doesn't signal immediate roster activity, but it does confirm the Dodgers are still adding infrastructure while competitors cut.
Watch for Cishek's first public appearance at Camelback Ranch. If he's standing near Andrew Friedman during batting practice, the role is strategic. If he's charting bullpen sessions with minor-league coordinators, it's developmental. If he's sitting alone with an iPad in the press box, the role is exactly what the Dodgers wanted: invisible until it matters.
The takeaway
L.A. converts recent championship intel into front-office depth before the scouting knowledge depreciates or salary expectations double.
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