Alex Wood announced his retirement in a social media post on Friday afternoon. The 34-year-old southpaw steps away after an MLB career that spanned parts of 12 seasons and included an All-Star nod and a World Series title.
“For over half my life, every decision I’ve made has centered around how it would impact my baseball career. I’ve given every ounce of myself in pursuit of my lifelong dream of becoming a big leaguer. Playing 12 years in the show, reaching seven postseasons, winning a World Series, and earning an All-Star selection — I never could’ve imagined it would turn out this way,” Wood wrote.
“Baseball was my first love. Outside of God and my family, nothing else has shaped me the way this game has. Even writing this, I can’t help but smile thinking about how much I still love the game after all this time.” Wood goes on to thank his teammates, coaches, former teams, family and agents in a statement that readers can see in the post.
Wood attended the University of Georgia and was a second-round pick by the Braves in 2012. He was in the big leagues less than a year later. Wood turned in a 3.13 ERA in 77 2/3 innings in a swing role during the ’13 season. He helped the Braves to a 96-win season and an NL East title, making his first two playoff appearances in a Division Series loss to the Dodgers. He posted a 2.78 ERA across 171 2/3 innings a year later, seemingly establishing himself as a long-term rotation piece in Atlanta.
That’s not how things played out. Wood was carrying a 3.54 ERA over 20 starts the following year when the Braves made the regrettable decision to send him to the Dodgers in a 13-player, three-team trade to get then-prospect Hector Olivera. (Olivera went on to bat .245 in 30 major league games before a suspension for violating the league’s domestic violence policy ended his career.) Wood dealt with a few injuries but had a strong run in Los Angeles, highlighted by a career year in 2017.
That season, the southpaw won a career-high 16 games while posting a 2.72 earned run average in 27 regular season appearances. Wood earned his lone All-Star nod and finished ninth in NL Cy Young voting. He added 12 1/3 frames of four-run ball with 13 strikeouts in the postseason. It was the first of consecutive seasons in which he played a big role in the Dodgers winning the pennant. They returned to the Fall Classic in 2018, a season in which Wood recorded a 3.68 ERA over 151 2/3 innings.
Wood’s first stint in Dodger blue ended after their second straight World Series defeat. Los Angeles packaged him alongside Yasiel Puig, Matt Kemp and Kyle Farmer to the Reds for prospects Josiah Gray and Jeter Downs (whom they’d later include in respective trades for Max Scherzer/Trea Turner and Mookie Betts). Wood was a rental, and his only season in Cincinnati was marred by back problems.
He returned to L.A. the following winter on a buy-low $4MM free agent pact. Shoulder trouble combined with the shortened schedule limited him to 12 2/3 regular season innings, but Wood contributed 6 2/3 frames of one-run ball in October as the Dodgers went on to win the World Series. He signed with the Giants on a $3MM contract that winter. That proved an adept pickup, as Wood was able to make 26 starts while working to a 3.83 ERA for San Francisco’s shocking 107-win team. He worked 4 2/3 scoreless against the Dodgers in his lone playoff start, though the Giants came up just short in a five-game Division Series.
Wood re-signed with San Francisco on a two-year, $25MM free agent deal that didn’t pan out. He had an ERA north of 5.00 in 2022 and struggled with injuries the following season. He gave it another go on an $8.5MM contract with the A’s last year. His body again couldn’t hold up, as he only made nine starts before suffering a rotator cuff injury that required season-ending surgery. It’s an unfortunate ending but hardly diminishes Wood’s overall body of work.
He tallied more than 1200 innings with a 3.78 ERA between five teams. Wood won 77 games and recorded more than 1100 strikeouts. He was a solid playoff performer as well, posting a 3.11 mark in 37 2/3 innings divided across seven seasons. Injuries limited the volume, especially later in his career, but Wood was a quality mid-rotation starter when healthy throughout his 20s. He has a World Series ring and collected over $60MM in earnings, according to Baseball Reference. MLBTR congratulates Wood on an impressive career and wishes him the best in retirement.
Image courtesy of USA Today Sports.
Dodger legend. Loved him there. Wish him the best
How about Kershaw tonight out-dueling Scherzer!
Beautiful! May be the last time we see 3000 vs 3000
Oh, see, you’re confused. ALEX WOOD announced his retirement, not Kershaw. Though Alex and Clayton are both lefties, so that’s probably where you got confused. Obviously, a top 100 commenter wouldn’t post something so completely irrelevant to the article under which the comment is posted. It’s cool, though. As I enter my mid-40’s, I too am starting to have some similar “senior moments”.
bg
“I too am starting to have some similar “senior moments”.”
Yes. People with dementia are often combative for no apparent reason
Good luck
Juan, what were we talking about?
Bg: you seem to be having one of those “senior moments,” with your posts today.
Can’t see his name without thinking of that terrible trade from ATL. They always seemed to question his long term health with that throwing motion. He had a bulldog mentality. I don’t know why that trade necessitated including Avilan either, as if it wasn’t already a terrible trade-why would it require giving up anyone else-even if Avilan’s value was down? Every time I saw him pitch I’d cringe at the memory of it all
As a Dodger fan, I loved that trade. Dodgers, Braves and Marlins.
Let’s see who I can remember
Dodgers get:
Wood
Johnson
Mat Latos
Avilan
Michael Moorse’s contract
Bronson Arroyo’s contract
Jose Peraza
Dodgers give:
Hector Olivera
Paco Rodriguez
Some minor league pitchers – Zack Bird?
Some other guys went between Atlanta and Miami, I guess.
Good times
Wood was definitely the get in that deal. Latos and Johnson didn’t do much. Don’t really remember Avilan’s performance. I think he stuck around a year or two. Peraza was traded later.
Nobody the Dodgers traded amounted to anything. They just took on money.
I don’t think ATL gave anything to MIA. But Avilan was good with LA for a couple of years. He didn’t pitch a ton though. I honestly hated throwing in Avilan. It was already such a bad trade I didn’t see why it was necessary to give up anyone else. He was coming off a down year but was young and had lots of control. He had one of the better seasons an ATL reliever has ever had. Seemed to me the Dodgers just swooped in and signed Olivera just because they had lots of money and the Braves wanted him so much. Because at the time ATL seemed to be the only team interested. Just felt like they totally played the Braves by signing him and ultimately making ATL give up even more than the $ to get him.
I don’t remember talking to a single person who thought that wasn’t a bad trade at the time. Even the fans seeking to defend it because it’s their team clearly were unimpressed.
Think he could have stuck around a bit longer if he moved to the pen for real.
Dude had a career that a fraction of a fraction of a percent of baseball players achieve.
Enjoyed him on the Dodgers and enjoyed defending him against THAT section of fans.
Congratulations Alex! Wonderful career that many dream, but few accomplish. Been a pleasure watching you muscle thru some incredible fights. Good luck!
Giants legend. Much love.
Atta boy woody
You won a lil itsy bitsy participation Pandemic Series Trophy, you mean! xD
Thst’s more than you ever won….
That’s more than 29 other MLB teams won, too! Interestingly, the other participating team in that series didn’t even get a trophy! Such a misleading name for the hardware. Manfred doing Manfred…
MM MMuted
Imagine being this guy
Winning it last year should disarm both sides of the claim. Dodgers are stacked. I hate it, but it’s true.
Good job, Alex. You were a competitor and always seemed to give your best. Enjoy retirement and good luck in your future endeavors.
Tigers, hurry!!
Offer him 7.5 mil. for less than 2 months.
It’s too bad Wood ended his career with a very poor A’s team, but at least he didn’t have to pitch regularly at Sutter Health Park this year. I say regularly because he did make at least one rehab start there for the Giants.
He came to the Dodgers with one of the most violent deliveries I’ve ever seen. They got him to clean it up some and the change probably helped him have the career he had.
In 30 MLB games played, Olivera ended up making more money than Wood.