Clayton Kershaw might not have thrown his last pitch after all. Major League Baseball announced Thursday that Kershaw has committed to pitch for Team USA in the upcoming World Baseball Classic, the international tournament that will serve as a final send-off for an eventual Hall of Fame career. The WBC begins March 4.
Clayton Kershaw’s professional pitching days aren’t fully behind him, though the pitcher announced his retirement after helping the Dodgers win a second-straight World Series title. Kershaw has committed to pitch in the World Baseball Classic in March. AP Photo/Ashley Landis
Kershaw, who will be 38 in March, previously announced that he would retire at the end of the 2025 season, which ended in a second straight championship for his Los Angeles Dodgers. His final appearance came in Game 3 of the World Series, when he came out of the bullpen with two outs and the bases loaded in the 12th inning and kept the Toronto Blue Jays scoreless, helping his Dodgers win six innings later.
Kershaw pitched with severely limited stuff in 2025 but was nonetheless effective, going 11-2 with a 3.36 ERA. As the postseason evolved, he was essentially an emergency option if the Dodgers needed someone to absorb innings. That is also expected to be his role for Team USA, which has outfitted its roster with some of the game’s most dominant starting pitchers.
1 Related
Fellow starters Paul Skenes, Tarik Skubal, Logan Webb, Joe Ryan, Nolan McLean and Clay Holmes have also committed to pitch for Team USA during the World Baseball Classic, though all of them will be on strict pitch counts because the tournament takes place in the middle of spring training.
Kershaw was lined up to pitch in the 2023 World Baseball Classic but had to opt out because he could not find somebody to insure his contract, likely because of his lengthy injury history.

