Former Athletics slugger Khris Davis hasn’t played any pro baseball since 2022, and Davis confirmed in an interview with USA Today’s Bob Nightengale that he has retired from playing at age 36. Davis does have some interest in returning to the game as a coach, but for now is focusing on his new pursuit as an auto mechanic.
The Brewers drafted Davis in the seventh round of the 2009 draft, and after making his MLB debut in 2013, hit .250/.315/.494 with 60 homers over 1142 plate appearances for Milwaukee during the 2013-15 seasons as their regular left fielder. Despite these solid numbers, the Brewers’ lack of success in 2015 led newly-hired GM David Stearns to trade Davis as part of a roster retooling, even though Davis was just entering his arbitration-eligible years. Davis was dealt to Oakland for Jacob Nottingham and Bubba Derby, which kicked off a very memorable run for Davis in the green and gold.
No player in baseball hit more home runs than Davis from 2016-18, as the slugger went yard 133 times. All told, Davis hit .247/.323/.534 in 1916 PA in those three seasons, which included a Major League-leading 48 homers in 2018. Jimmie Foxx and Mark McGwire are the only players in Athletics franchise history to hit more than 48 home runs in a single season, and Davis’ career year helped lead the A’s to a wild berth, and brought the slugger an eighth-place finish in AL MVP voting.
Davis became such a beloved player in Oakland that the A’s signed him to a two-year, $33.5MM contract extension in April 2019, preventing him from hitting free agency following that season. Remarkably, this is the only extension the Athletics have given to any player within the last decade, and this rare investment by the organization unfortunately didn’t pay off. Davis struggled through an injury-plagued 2019 campaign and was never the same at the plate, batting .216/.291/.376 in 746 PA during the 2019-21 seasons.
The A’s moved Davis to the Rangers as part of a very memorable five-player trade in February 2021, with Davis’ inclusion in the deal seen as something of a salary offset for Oakland to absorb Elvis Andrus’ larger contract. In hindsight, that transaction has gone from being “the Elvis Andrus trade” to now being known as “the Jonah Heim trade,” as the Rangers acquired the catcher who has become an All-Star and a key part of their 2023 championship roster. Davis ended up appearing in only 22 games with Texas before being released, and he rejoined the A’s on a minor league contract and played his final 20 Major League games in an Oakland uniform. In 2022, Davis continued his playing endeavors by suiting up in the Mexican League and with the Kentucky Wild Health Genomes of the independent Atlantic League.
No mention of Davis is complete without noting his steady .247 batting average across the 2015-18 seasons, as he hit that exact number in all four consecutive seasons. While it would’ve been fitting if Davis had finished his career as a .247 hitter, he didn’t quite hit the mark, as his career slash line ended up at .242/.314/.491. Davis hit 221 home runs and 590 RBI over his 3804 PA and 980 games with the Brewers, Athletics, and Rangers.
In regards to his new career, Davis told Nightengale that he spent the last year attending the Arizona Automotive Institute to learn the ins and outs of being a mechanic, as a logical extension of his longtime love of cars. The owner of five vehicles himself, Davis said “I’m going to get a job after the summer and family vacations are over. I’ll be an entry-level tech doing tires, oils and lubes, everything. I’d love one day to do tune-ups on street racing cars, customization, restoration, just to be part of a club and go to car shows and just enjoy that scene.”
We at MLB Trade Rumors congratulate Davis on a fine career in baseball, and we wish him all the best in his new endeavors.