Veteran right-hander Kyle Hendricks is calling it a career. The longtime Cubs hurler, who spent the 2025 season with the Angels, is retiring, per Maddie Lee of the Chicago Sun-Times.
Hendricks, now 35, will be forever associated with the curse-breaking Cubs but was originally drafted by the Rangers. Texas grabbed him with an eighth-round pick back in 2011. A year later, while in High-A, he was flipped to the Cubs as part of the July 2012 trade which sent Ryan Dempster to Texas.
He continued to climb the minor league ladder and debuted with the Cubs in 2014. He made 13 starts that year, logging 80 1/3 innings, allowing 2.46 earned runs per nine. His velocity was barely above 90 miles per hour but he showed strong command of a five-pitch mix, relying more on disrupting hitters’ timing than missing bats. He would eventually earn the nickname “The Professor” on account of both his cerebral approach to pitching and the fact that he went to Dartmouth College, an Ivy League school.
At that time of his debut, the Cubs were still looking for their first World Series since 1908 and were also rebuilding. Despite a strong debut from Hendricks in 2014, the Cubs finished fifth in the National League Central for a fifth straight year.
But the light at the end of the tunnel was getting brighter. Guys like Hendricks, Anthony Rizzo, Jake Arrieta and Javier Báez were already on the roster. Kris Bryant hadn’t yet debuted but was the top prospect in baseball going into 2015. The Cubs made a big splash to signal a new era by signing Jon Lester to a six-year, $155MM deal.
In 2015, Hendricks got to pitch his first full big league season. He logged 180 innings over 32 starts with a 3.95 ERA, 22.6% strikeout rate, 5.8% walk rate and 51.3% ground ball rate. The Cubs emerged from their rebuild, winning 97 games and nabbing a playoff spot. At that time, the Wild Card round was just a one-game playoff between two clubs. The Cubs got by the Pirates and then beat the Cardinals in the NLDS, felling two division rivals, but were swept out of the NLCS by the Mets.
The Cubs and Hendricks found another gear the following year. Hendricks led the majors in ERA with a 2.13 figure over 190 innings. He finished third in Cy Young voting behind Max Scherzer and Lester. The Cubs won 103 games and finished atop the Central. They beat the Giants in the NLDS and the Dodgers in the NLCS. The latter series was clinched by Hendricks throwing 7 1/3 shutout innings in Game Six. That set up a matchup against Cleveland in the World Series, which would eventually go to seven games. Hendricks got the ball in the final game and went 4 2/3 innings, allowing one earned run. The Cubs would eventually win the game 8-7 in ten innings. Hendricks had a 1.42 ERA over five starts in that postseason.
That ultimately proved to be a peak for the franchise and for Hendricks himself, though the team had a few more winning seasons and Hendricks continued to be a solid piece of the rotation. In March of 2019, he and the Cubs agreed to a four-year, $55.5MM extension. That deal was set to keep him at Wrigley through 2023, though the Cubs would eventually pick up a club option for 2024 as well.
By that time, Hendricks had seen his results slip. As mentioned, he was never a huge velocity or strikeout guy but those attributes had fallen further from par as he aged. That led to him posting a 5.92 ERA in 2024. After that season, he and the Cubs finally parted ways. Early in the 2024-25 offseason, he signed a one-year, $2.5MM deal with the Angels. He grew up in Southern California, so this allowed him to pitch for a team close to his roots for the first time. He made 31 starts for the Halos with a 4.76 ERA.
Overall, Hendricks pitched in 307 games and logged 1,745 innings with a 3.79 ERA, 105 wins and 91 losses. He made 146 quality starts, including six complete games and four shutouts. He struck out 1,373 opponents. Baseball Reference estimates he earned just over $86MM in his career. We at MLB Trade Rumors congratulate The Professor on a fine career and wish him the best on whatever comes next.
Photo courtesy of Jeff Curry, Katie Stratman, Imagn Images


Absolutely rock-solid career. Enjoy your retirement, Kyle.
Thanks for 2016 Kyle. Joe never should have pulled you when he did in Game 7 you were cruising. But in the end you got all us fans our greatest thrill so thank you so much! You were a quiet assassin out there and were a joy to watch.
Enjoy a well earned retirement!!
Well said and my sentiments exactly.
That was a fun post season.
It was a joy to watch that man pitch when he was on point. A master craftsman. Enjoy your retirement, and thank you for being who you are, Kyle Hendricks.
Signed,
A Cubs Fan
Such an important piece to the most fun era of Cubs baseball in my life. Summer/Fall of 2016, are memories that I will carry with me forever, and Kyle was a major part of our success. Cheers to a wonderful career, and many thanks from all of Cubs Nation!
Congrats to the Professor on a great MLB career. Truly appreciate his contribution to getting the trophy in 2016 so thanks for the awesome memories!
There is only one Professor — his name is Greg Maddux.
Amen
Former long time Braves announcer Pete Van Wieren was also nicknamed “The Professor.” So was the actor Russell Johnson on Gilligan’s Island.
As was the villain in the Felix the cat cartoons.
Let’s all party with Mary Ann from Gilligan’s Island
That might be a little gross right now.
I feel you, but I always thought Maddux looked my dad’s accountant
True, but Kyle was the closest we’ve gotten to a Maddux-like pitcher.
But you had Maddux. Twice.
I should specify, closest to another Maddux in general, not just Cubs or Braves.
How about “Associate-Professor” instead?
Playing for Arte Moreno will make anyone quit.
Awesome career.
We’ll never forget his performance in 2016 and helping lead the Cubs to the end of their drought.
Was at game 6 (pennant clincher v the Dodgers and watched him throw an absolute masterpiece)
And to think they got him for Ryan Dempster! Ha! Talk about win/win
Ah, for the good old days when pitching a masterpiece meant, at least, pitching a complete game. I know, I know, it’s different now. That’s what I don’t like about it.
14-4 with an ERA of 2.53 and 122 strikeouts in 29 appearances. Beautiful
Thanks for the good memories, Kyle!
Kudos to Kyle Hendricks on a great MLB career. Hendricks will be fondly remembered by Cubs’ fans for a long time.
As of the end of the 2025 MLB regular season, eight pitchers had over 300 starts in the twelve-year span from 2014 to 2025:
Kyle Hendricks
Max Scherzer
Gerrit Cole
Sonny Gray
Kevin Gausman
José Quintana
Charlie Morton
Patrick Corbin
(Greinke was 297 starts from 2014 through 2025, Verlander was 289 starts from 2014 to 2025, Clayton Kershaw was 247 starts during that time)
Now he can use his Dartmouth education for a real job
He’ll turn 36 in December and has already banked $86 million from baseball.
Great pitcher, great career and a favorite of mine. Enjoy your retirement.
Seems like a future FO exec if he wants with his Dartmouth background and good reputation as an overachieving starter.
cws….he’s far too smart for that!!
He’s got a two year old son. Will probably be content playing dad and being a little league coach that doesn’t yell at kids.
Did you know he never got an All Star? Bonkers. Ggs Hendo, thanks for 2016 and the memories.
Always nice to see when a mid-level player retires that they made real money in their career.
(To me ‘real money’ means they played at the major league level for like 10+ seasons and made $50M+ before taxes and agent fees)
So, $49 million isn’t “real money” to you? Damn
All the respect to him. Championship‘s live forever & he deserves free drinks in Chicago for the rest of his life after their drought-buster in 2016
Kudos to a great career.
Why retire when Scott Harris from the Tigers will gladly offer you a 1-year $15M contract not to pitch!
Alex Cobb has entered the chat.
The Texas Rangers lost that trade big time. Congrats on a great career!
Texas have lost a lot of trades through the years.
As an innings eater, I was hoping he would resign with the Angels.
Had the Angels defense not been the worst in baseball, by a wide margin, he would have had a much better year.
Congrats on your retirement, Kyle. Good luck in the next chapter.
Speaking of that 2016 season, friendly reminder that the 2014-2017 NL Cy Young races were just absolutely insane.
Some sort of ballot hall of something player. Enjoy your retirement!
Hall of Very Good I’d say!
hopefully signs a 1 day contract and retires a Cub.
His last game surely felt like a last game.
Really good career. Guy seems to be universally liked and respected.
Could probably make a great coach some day if he choosers.
Too bad he couldn’t have retired a one team player.
The Angels are his home town team. He wanted to play for the Angels. He talked about how he liked driving past the field were he played little league on his way to Angels Stadium for every home game.
Congrats on a really nice career. As a Cardinals fan, I always hated it when he pitched against them. He was very good overall, but nearly unbeatable against the Cards over his time with the Cubs.
Carl was so fun to watch. It was 2019 not sure of the exact day. He threw a complete game shutout against the Cardinals on 81 pitches. In MLB the show that’s 9 immaculate innings in a row for a perfect game. You just don’t see things like that anymore ..cheers to the Professor on an amazing career.
Kyle Hendricks: the absolute epitome of class and professionalism.
Wow! Congrats Kyle on a great career. You’ll forever be one of my favorite cubs of all time honestly! Now get back in the organization!!
This Cubs fan has nothing but amazing memories from Kyle’s long career on the North Side. I wish him well in his post playing career! Thanks for everything Kyle!
Wonder what cap he’ll wear when he enters the Hall
Mahalo Nui to Hendricks! What a joy to watch him all these years. I admit I wished he retired as a Cub. Such a class act and not about the spotlight on himself, rather the important of the whole team. Will miss him. Enjoy this next season of your life professor!
Kyle Hendricks, the cerebral craftsman of the mound, has officially retired after a 12-year MLB career—ending his journey where it all began: with his hometown Angels.
Veteran right-hander Kyle Hendricks is calling it a career, and what a career it was. Known as “The Professor” for his Ivy League pedigree and surgical precision on the mound, Hendricks leaves behind a legacy defined by poise, intellect, and postseason brilliance.
After 11 seasons with the Chicago Cubs, Hendricks spent his final year in 2025 with the Los Angeles Angels, the team he grew up rooting for. It was a full-circle moment for the Southern California native retiring in the same stadium where his childhood dreams took shape enjoy your new chapter in life happy retirement.
Loved betting on him when he pitched at wrigley earlier in his career. Almost an automatic quality start there. Congrats on a nice career
Thank you for all you did as a Cub, Professor. You will forever be remembered in Chicago for 2016. Best of luck in retirement!
Wouldn’t be surprised if down the road you come back as a front office advisor or a team ambassador like Rizzo
He started and won the game that won the pennant. He started and was effective in the game that won the World Series.
As such, he deserves an honored place in Cubs history, in some ways a uniquely honored place. The fans are right to revere him.
That said, I prefer my pitchers to have decent stuff. For the last few years of his career, Hendricks was dreadful.
And all this “Professor” stuff–well, the Indians called it maize. Why do my fellow Cubs fans so insistently gravitate toward smarmy sentimentality? Let’s leave that to Brett Taylor and the rest of the Cubs PR dept.
Dude was absolute money in 2016
I wish Kyle nothing but the best in his retirement. He’s earned it! I hope he comes back in some form in the Cubs organization, at least let the fanbase celebrate his retirement and give him the send off he do richly deserves.