How USA Softball Head Groundskeeper Chuck White Uses the ABI Force Every Day

Chuck White, USA Softball Head Groundskeeper, on why the ABI Force was his very first business investment.

Chuck White knows ball fields. As the Head Groundskeeper for USA Softball, he has prepared diamonds at every level of the game. When he launched his own turf installation and maintenance business, the [LINK: ABI Force Z-23] was the first piece of equipment he purchased. Not because it was the cheapest option, but because of how much it could do across every game day situation he knew he would face.

Why the Dirt Demands This Much Attention

The perspective behind this choice starts with a simple observation: on a baseball or softball field, six defensive players are on the dirt and only three are on the grass. Add in baserunners getting leads, players sliding, and the foot traffic concentrated at the cutouts and around home plate, and you quickly understand why an experienced groundskeeper spends roughly 85 percent of his time managing the infield skin. The dirt is where the game happens, and the quality of that surface directly affects how safely and consistently the game is played.

That level of focus on infield maintenance requires equipment capable of handling a wide range of conditions. A single-function drag or a rigid setup that works in one condition and struggles in another does not serve a professional operation. The Force was built for exactly that variability.

Managing Any Condition With One Machine

Different Attachments for Different Conditions

Over the course of a weekend series spanning Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, conditions change. Rain may arrive on one of those days and not the others. The surface that needs a dry-condition finish drag on Friday may need a completely different approach on Sunday after rain and heavy foot traffic. What makes the Force valuable in this situation is the attachment system. Mid-mount and rear attachments can be swapped to match whatever the field needs that day. The attachments used on Friday may be completely different from the ones running on Sunday, and that flexibility is the point.

Wet, Dry, Windy, Whatever

Professional groundskeeping does not get to wait for perfect conditions. Games are scheduled and fields need to be ready regardless of what happened overnight or during the previous game. The Force’s combination of mid-mount and rear attachment options gives the operator a toolkit to respond to any situation: aggressive material management when the surface needs it, light finish work when it does not, and everything in between. The machine does not dictate what approach you can take. The conditions do, and the Force gives you the tools to respond.

What It Does Beyond Basic Grooming

One of the things that consistently surprises people who see the Force at work is the range of tasks it handles beyond dragging the infield. Tasks that typically require separate equipment or extra crew members can be handled by the Force with the right attachment configuration:

  • Edging: the nimble zero-turn platform gets into the cuts and right up to the grass edge precisely
  • Spreading turf conditioner or fertilizer in small targeted areas of the field
  • Handling both mid-infield grooming and finishing in a single pass sequence
  • Working tight radius turns at the base cutouts and around home plate without leaving ungroomed strips

Time and Personnel Efficiency

The operational argument for the Force is not just about surface quality. It is about how many people and how much time a well-equipped groundskeeping operation actually requires. A task that previously took two people now takes one. The person freed up from that task moves to something else that needs attention. Over a game day with multiple preparation windows before and after play, those savings compound into a meaningfully different operation.

For a groundskeeper running his own company, that efficiency translates directly to profitability and service quality. Getting more done with fewer people on the same timeframe is the difference between a sustainable operation and one that is constantly stretched thin.

Who Benefits From the Force

The versatility and efficiency argument for the Force applies across every level of ball field maintenance. The same machine that serves a professional operation handles the demands of:

  • High school and collegiate programs managing fields with limited staff and tight budgets
  • City parks and recreation departments maintaining multiple diamonds across a facility
  • Commercial groundskeeping companies running multiple field accounts
  • Facilities hosting tournaments where turnaround time between games is tight

The ABI Force Z-23 is the machine professional groundskeepers reach for when versatility, efficiency, and surface quality all matter on the same day. Explore configurations and packages at ABI Attachments, or speak with a Sports Turf Specialist at (877) 788-7253.

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FAQs

Because it is the most versatile piece of equipment available for infield maintenance. Rather than buying multiple single-function tools, the Force with its full attachment system covers grooming, leveling, edging, spreading, and renovation work from one machine. For someone starting a company where every dollar needs to work hard, investing in the most capable multi-function machine first is the efficient choice.

The mid-mount and rear attachment system allows the operator to configure the machine for whatever the field needs that day. Dry conditions, wet conditions, wind, post-rain recovery, these all call for different attachment combinations. The Force can be reconfigured between games or between days to match the specific situation rather than being locked into one approach.

Yes, and it is one of the capabilities that surprises people who have not seen it in action. The zero-turn platform and the precision of the mid-mount system allow the Force to work right up to the grass edge and into the tight radius cutouts. For groundskeepers who previously needed a separate edging step or extra crew for edge work, the Force handles it as part of the regular grooming sequence.

Tasks that previously required two people often require only one when the Force is doing the work. The operator on the machine covers more ground and handles more task types per pass than traditional methods, which frees up a second crew member to work on something else simultaneously. Over the course of a full game day preparation cycle, those freed hours add up to a significantly leaner operation.

No. The same versatility and efficiency benefits apply at every level, from high school programs to city parks and recreation departments to commercial groundskeeping companies. Any facility where multiple fields need consistent care with limited staff and time benefits from the Force’s multi-function capability. The machine scales to the operation.

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