No sooner was he back from the WBC, Denzel Clarke was greeting me in the dugout with a secret handshake only he knew about, grinning at my confusion and then plopping down onto the bench for an interview. Clarke was fresh off of playing for team Canada with cousins Josh and Bo Naylor and was about to turn his attention to being the captain of the A’s outfield…
Nico: I’m kind of doing this chronologically, so I want to go back to your youth, where I understand that you started baseball relatively late. And I’m curious why and how you got into it, and then how you feel that affected your development arc coming to the present day.
Denzel: Yeah so my cousins, Bo and Josh, introduced me to baseball. I was a soccer player at first, I just needed a different sport and they recommended it so I gave it a shot and things kind of kept rolling from there. And coming from Canada we have a closed window amount of time to get some work done with all the cold snow and everything. So yeah, regardless, I’m happy with my development, and I’m just going to keep chipping away.
Nico: So how do you feel like it affected your development as you played with guys who were maybe your age but more experienced coming up? Did you pay a cost for that?
Denzel: Yeah, I think just a little bit behind starting later, not as much rest. But I mean, everything evens out at the end. And yeah, I’m just excited to keep on working and keep getting better.
Nico: So obviously your defense is your calling card and you play with that reckless abandon. I don’t know if you know the expression, ”The best ability is availability.“ {Clarke nods yes} And now if there’s anything standing between you and success, sometimes it’s just staying on the field. So I’m just wondering how you manage that — you know, a fly ball to the wall, you’re going to want to get to it. And at the same time to help the team, you want to be on the field. So how do you do that?
Denzel: Yeah, for sure. It’s just picking my spots. I think we were playing the Orioles in SAC. I mean, like, that was a big play. Can change the flow of the game. It was a close game, there was runners on, baseball in the gap that would have put them up by, I think, a couple of runs. So it’s just trying to pick my spots when to make plays. And I trust my teammates to get the jobs done the following inning. So, yeah, just being smart, again, picking my spots.
Nico: I just know that in the heat of the moment, it’s so hard for a player to ease up. Maybe it’s 11 to 1, but there’s a ball that you’re used to going all out for. How capable are athletes of actually holding back when they need to?
Denzel: Yeah, I mean I think, again, going back to playing Baltimore, I think I had the awareness of just, like, I can let it (go) if I want to. But again, I was thinking about the situation, thinking about the game, and just, like, this could be a game-changing play. So I ended up going for it. But, I mean, mid-route, I’m going for the ball. I’m just, like, I can do this or I can’t. So I made the decision to do it, and we ended up winning that game, which was huge.
Nico: Right. Going to your hitting and coming up to the big leagues for the first time. So, you know, there’s the way it started, and there’s the way that it was going when you got hurt. I always like to do the more personal angle, so I’m really asking you more as a human being, not so much as an athlete. Those first 20 plate appearances, you struck out 16 times, and we know what it was like as fans, pulling for you, watching and so on. Can you give us an idea of what it was like for the person going through those first 20 PAs and what was going through your mind?
Denzel: Yeah, for sure. Just learned to make adjustments, I think. You know, you always hear, “OK, the big leap (to MLB) is a huge step,” and then those first 20 events proved it for me. At least proved the adjustments I had to make and how much better I needed to get. So yeah, there’s nothing like experience, and failure is the best teacher. So I was really happy with, obviously not happy to fail, but happy with what I learned from that process and how I was able to start pick it up towards the end before I got hurt.
Nico: What were you telling yourself? You know, you walk back from the dugout, okay, now you know maybe I’ve struck out 13 of 16 or 15 of 18, it doesn’t feel good, and yet you know, “Failure’s the best teacher”. But what are you telling yourself at that point?
Denzel: I just, you gotta, I mean, no one is going to go up there and take your bats for you, you gotta go out there and just keep going, keep doing your best, and you’re gonna learn along the way. So it’s good.
Nico: So what changed? What was that adjustment?
Denzel: Experience. Experience and keeping things simple. That’s all it was and all it’s going to be.
Nico: Statistically, when you get in trouble, you’re hitting a lot of balls on the ground. When the ball starts getting in the air, suddenly all the numbers are rising. Do you know what the root cause is? Like what’s going on there mechanically or in terms of approach?
Denzel: Yeah, the biggest thing, I mean, when things get crazy, my body’s got long arms, long legs, and again I just gotta keep things simple. And it’s gonna be something that I’ll work on my whole career. Just keeping things tight, keeping things simple, and looking to get as much success as I can.
Nico: You mentioned the Naylors and fans know both Bo and Josh, as well as Myles a little bit. How young were you when you first saw them play and got to know them as players?
Denzel: I think the first time we played together with Bo was maybe like 15, 14, 15 years old, which is really cool. And then from there, we played against each other, junior national and everything. WBC was my first time playing with Josh. And then I played with Myles last year. I think it was last year of the year before our spring breakout. So I got to play with all of them. It’s been a real treat, real blessing.
Nico: Yeah, can you give a little bit of a snapshot of the WBC experience?
Denzel: Yeah, it was awesome. You know, I hear about Josh play, or see Josh play, but being able to be in the same clubhouse with him was really, really awesome. Me and Bo go way back, so that was really cool, but just to be able to get dinner a couple times and all, you know, just connect, sit down. It was really awesome just being in a clubhouse with him and with all the other guys. Team Canada is a really tight circle, so it’s fun being around a big squad of family.
Nico: Well, and I think you guys did better than expected. You got off to a great start.
Denzel: Yeah, we expected a lot of ourselves. We wish we could have gone farther. But yeah, we can chalk it up as the best we’ve ever done as a country and I look forward to the next times.
Nico: Can you give an idea of how you see yourself just as a person, as a personality, maybe how it affects you as a baseball player, but also just maybe giving people an idea of who you are?
Denzel: Yeah, I think just for myself, I think for the most part I’m an introvert. I think just being a baseball player comes with a lot of stuff. You’re forced to be around people, which is kind of against my nature. But you’ve got to learn to love, you got to learn to enjoy. And, you know, cameras in my face all the time, getting interviews and stuff. You learn to love, you learn to connect and really, yeah, just be around people in a different sense. So I love just making sure I’m just feeling joyful. You don’t get to be a pro baseball player often, so I’m trying to enjoy it while I can and be joyful for myself and be joyful for others, too.
Nico: As a fellow introvert, I feel your pain. How does that impact you? I know introverts tend to like small groups of people they know and yet on a baseball team, it is kind of that way, and yet guys are coming and going all the time. So I’m just wondering what that is like for you.
Denzel: Yeah, it’s an interesting vibe, but it’s just like, again, my job is just to go out there and play baseball, but just show everyone around me, I’m around to show everyone that’s around me love. I think people are gonna be cool if people remember some baseball stuff, but all I hear is people only remember how you treated them and the person you are, so that’s the biggest thing. That’s the biggest thing is for me, I just try to show people love.
Nico: I think that maybe the most common thread for you throughout your professional career has probably been Lawrence Butler, right? I mean, you guys have been together a fair amount. And I don’t know if that makes a difference that you guys are side by side in the outfield and how that affects the outfield play.
Denzel: Yeah, for sure. Law’s a great personality. Law’s one of my good friends, so it’s just great just being in the big leagues, having someone you know. But even with a lot of the guys I’ve played with, a lot of them throughout the minors at some point or another. So it’s like we have a young team, and it’s really exciting just to be up here connecting with the guys. So it’s pretty special.
Nico: So I try not to ask the questions that everybody asks, but I’m going to ask one because I am curious. What are your more specific goals for the 2026 season? And where you think you can get to or where you want to try to get to?
Denzel: Yeah, no, for sure. I think for me, I made a splash defensively last year, I want to keep improving on that, keep providing consistency. The goal is to be on the field and make sure I can support the team throughout the entire season, including the playoffs. And then the other goal is just improve with base running. Just improve with everything. I want to take steps with hitting, take steps with base running. That’s how I decided to get at this level, just keep taking the steps to get better each and every year. So I’m pretty excited for that.
Hopefully the majestic Denzelope can stay healthy throughout 2026, and hopefully you can stay healthy long enough to enjoy my final interview with A’s OF prospect Henry Bolte on Wednesday…