Daily Democrat (Woodland)

A’s landscaper awaits team’s field of dreams

- By Jim Harrington

Clay Wood grew up playing ball and dreaming of a career on the baseball diamond. That dream came true — not with a baseball in hand, but as head groundskee­per for the Oakland As in the mid 1990s. He’s still there, maintainin­g the immaculate field and playing areas at the Oakland Coliseum, not just for the A’s, but for a quarter century, the Raiders, as well, changing a single playing field from baseball to football to concert venue and back, over and over again.

“Concerts, football, soccer, you name it,” the Danville resident says. “If it came in here, we were responsibl­e for overseeing the setup and then, obviously, returning the field back to the best possible shape for baseball.”

Q: Were you always interested in landscapin­g?

A: (Growing up) we lived in a neighborho­od that had a bunch of fairly small yards. A lot of elderly folks lived in that neighborho­od, so I grabbed my dad’s mower one day and started walking around knocking on doors. The first way I earned any money as a kid was mowing yards.

In high school, I was a catcher and was assigned to take care of home plate — the batter’s box and catcher’s area. I took it pretty seriously, because I didn’t want to sit in a dustbowl all the time.

Q: Your original dream was to make it to the “bigs” as a player, right?

A: I had some early injuries to my knees from skiing. As a catcher, they weren’t great for my baseball career. Really, after that first year (playing) at Scottsdale Community College, I kind of knew I was done. I was studying business — and wanted to transfer to Arizona State — and I wanted to get into the front office on the baseball operations side.

Q: How did you get involved with the A’s?

A: One of our duties (in Scottsdale) was to catch minor league spring training bullpens, which was really cool. I got to know (former Oakland A’s pitching coach) Wes Stock — at the time, he was the minor league pitching coordinato­r — and some people in the A’s organizati­on. I needed a job and that was really the one thing that was available: working on the grounds crew.

(Later) I tried to balance my school at Arizona State and still put in a lot of time during spring training around Phoenix Municipal. I think a lot of people saw that — carrying a full load of classes and working 40 to 60 hours a week during spring training.

When the position opened up for the Arizona head groundskee­per, (A’s then-assistant general manager) Walt Jocketty approached me. I felt like it was the right stepping stone to get where I wanted to go, major league groundskee­per.

Q: You achieved that goal soon after, when the A’s brought you up

to Oakland. How did that happen?

A: About a year and a half later, my boss in Oakland was leaving to go to the Colorado Rockies to oversee the constructi­on of Coors Field and be the head groundskee­per. I was only 24. There were a lot of qualified people, and they went through a long interview process. I flew to Oakland on my own dime and met with Sandy Alderson and just tried to explain that I was ready.

Q: Your first full season with the A’s in Oakland was 1995, the same year the Raiders moved back to the Coliseum. What was your reaction when you heard your job had just gotten a whole lot more complicate­d?

A: Probably “(expletive).” But seriously, it was a wow moment. Here I am, a 24-year-old kid, all my time groundskee­ping has been spent in baseball. It’s my first year in the major leagues, which is challengin­g and difficult enough. Then to throw this bombshell on top of that. It was definitely: “OK, I just have to do what I have to do to figure it out.”

I will say this: I have always had great help and great crews. They deserve as much credit as anyone for what we do here. One thing about groundskee­ping at this level — really at any level — you can’t do it alone.

Q: How difficult was it to transform a field from baseball to football? A lot of fans probably just took it for granted.

A: It’s easy to do if you’re a fan. You just show up one day, and there is a baseball game. And then you come the next day, and there’s a football field.

But the reality is that the process to do that was in a lot of ways miraculous. It’s an old stadium. It’s antiquated. It’s not set up well for baseball or football. There are thousands and thousands of moving parts — the backstop, the on-field seating, the foul poles, the netting, the outfield wall. Basically, everything in this stadium, except the out-oftown scoreboard­s in the outfield, is removable.

Q: And then there’s the pitching mound.

A: It was a major concern. Not only did we have to move the mound, we had to move the bullpens because they’re in the end zone.

Basically, we — myself, an architect and an engineer — sat down in a constructi­on trailer, had a 10hour meeting and came up with a design for a movable mound: three mounds on steel plates with a gigantic trailer to lift them up and move them. It’s been an absolute lifesaver.

Q: You put so much care into the field. It would be so beautiful for the spring and through much of the summer. Then football season came, and the field would get chewed up. Was that hard for you to watch?

A: It always was. You think maybe after 25 years, it would get easier, but it never did. We’d usually re-sod the field in late February or March. Then we’d play, let’s say, 65 A’s home games. And the field was just immaculate from April until mid-August — and, most years, really hitting its stride in late July or early August when the weather starts to warm.

All it took was one football conversion, and that beautiful pristine field was never the same. It never was easy to accept or to handle.

It wasn’t the Raiders fault. It wasn’t the A’s fault. It’s not a good stadium for multipurpo­se.

Q: What was your reaction when you heard the Raiders were leaving again?

A: (Laughs) Well, we heard it a few times. I never got my hopes up.

Again, it wasn’t the Raiders. It wasn’t the football. It was August, September and October, when they were playing both sports together. It was just super demanding and stressful, physically and mentally, for myself and my crew and really for everyone who works in the stadium.

There is just this sigh of relief to see them kick off in Las Vegas. Not necessaril­y joyful that the Raiders are gone, but very joyful that we don’t have to go through what we went through for so long. You look back on it, and it’s almost comical what my crew and the other crews at this stadium were able to do to make those two sports happen.

 ?? COURTESY OF THE OAKLAND A’S ?? The A’s groundskee­per Clay Wood works on the field at the Oakland Coliseum in Oakland with his dog Reba.
COURTESY OF THE OAKLAND A’S The A’s groundskee­per Clay Wood works on the field at the Oakland Coliseum in Oakland with his dog Reba.

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