Background
Schott was born to a Roman Catholic family in Santa Clara, California in 1939. His father was a part-time professor at the Santa Clara University and then worked as an engineer in the public works department for the city of Santa Clara. As a youth, Schott worked in the local fruit orchards and sold prunes from the trees on his father"s property.
Education
He attended the Bellarmine College Preparatory School and then, after qualifying on a partial baseball scholarship, graduated in 1961 from Santa Clara University with a degree in business and management. After school, he joined the Army, and then when he completed his service, he took an accounting job with Ford Motor Company in Milpitas, California.
Career
At the age of 16, he began working on road survey crews. Both schools now bear buildings in his name (see Stephen Schott Stadium). After one year, he took a job with a home builder.
Despite employing fewer than 25 people, Citation is now one of the largest homebuilders in the state of California, and has been responsible for the construction of over 50,000 individual residences.
Ownership of the Oakland Athletics
Under their patronage, general manager Billy Beane"s novel management and player-procurement strategies allowed the A"s to place highly in post-season playoffs on unimaginably small budgets. Beane"s approach to obtaining success within Schott"s constraints was documented in Michael Lewis"s book Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game.
Schott and Hofmann sold the A"s to their current owners, a group of Los Angeles real estate developers headed by Lewis Wolff, in 2005. Life and career after Major League Baseball
In 2003, Santa Clara University began to develop plans to build a new baseball field, allowing their nationally-recognized soccer team unrestricted access to pre-existing Buck Shaw Stadium.
The project floundered under lack of funds until Schott donated United States dollar $4 million, over half the stadium"s total cost.
The resulting facility—the Stephen Schott Stadium — opened April 30, 2005, with a game against Gonzaga University.