Damon Berryhill, Millennium Hall of Fame
In baseball’s greatest showcase against the game’s winningest
pitcher of the 1980s, Damon Berryhill rocked Game 1 of the 1992 Fall
Classic for the Atlanta Braves and joined the unique pantheon of a common
player turning into a World Series hero.
A backup catcher who had become the Braves’ starter when Greg Olson
broke his ankle two weeks before the end of the regular season, the
switch-hitting Berryhill -- on the heels of Francisco Cabrera’s
unforgettable game-winning hit against Pittsburgh to clinch the National
League pennant -- launched a Jack Morris forkball into baseball
immortality.
Three days after Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium was jolted by a
little-known catcher from the Dominican Republic in the NL Championship
Series, it was shaken again by a surfer from Laguna Beach and Orange
Coast College, as Berryhill rode the wave of his life around the bases.
“I didn’t really feel myself hit the ground until I reached third
base,” Berryhill said at the time in a postgame press conference,
following his dramatic three-run home run in the sixth inning to give the
Braves a 3-1 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays in the opener of the ’92
World Series.
“When you see that ball leave the park -- for that one moment, you are
on top of the world,” added Berryhill, the second former OCC player to
compete in a World Series (following the late Dan Quisenberry in 1980 and
‘85).
Berryhill, whose batting average for the Braves that season was .228,
came to the plate with Morris working on a two-hitter and a 1-0 shutout.
There were two outs in the inning, and Morris, a savvy postseason veteran
with Detroit and Minnesota, had only allowed three guys to even hit the
ball out of the infield to that point.
Morris, who ran the count to 1-and-2 against Berryhill, had pitched a
10-inning complete-game shutout in Game 7 of the 1991 World Series, when
Minnesota edged Atlanta, 1-0, to capture the title.
Berryhill, merely Olson’s caddie in the minds of the league, had
struggled the previous two seasons to overcome a shoulder injury that
doctors said might end his career.
But Berryhill, who hadn’t homered in five weeks, snapped Morris’
streak of 18 consecutive scoreless World Series innings against the
Braves, delivering one of the biggest home runs in Atlanta history before
51,763 fans.
“It was your basic hanging 390-foot forkball,” Morris told reporters
afterward.
For Berryhill, whose shot landed in the right-field seats, it would be
a highlight in a professional baseball career spanning 14 1/2 seasons.
“There was so much excitement -- there was just nothing like it,”
Berryhill said recently, upon his induction into the Daily Pilot Sports
Hall of Fame, celebrating the millennium.
A former major leaguer with the Cubs, Braves, Red Sox, Reds and
Giants, Berryhill once walloped a walk-off-the-field home run for Orange
Coast in 1984 to beat Golden West and clinch the South Coast Conference
championship for Coach Mike Mayne’s Pirates. Another tough right-hander,
future Seattle closer Mike Schooler, was the Golden West pitcher.
One of three ex-OCC catchers under Mayne to reach the big leagues
(along with Jamie Nelson and Brent Mayne), Berryhill was selected in the
first round (and No. 4 overall) by the Chicago Cubs in the 1984 January
draft. Following an outstanding season for Orange Coast, he signed with
the Cubs and reported to Quad City in the Midwest League.
By 1987, Berryhill was at triple-A Iowa, where he batted .287 with 18
home runs and 67 RBIs, earning a trip to the American Association
All-Star game and, later, a promotion to Wrigley Field.
In 1988, he threw out 40% of would-be base stealers (44 of 110) and
was named to the Topps Major League Rookie All-Star team. But, in 1989,
when the Cubs won the National League East Division title and lost to San
Francisco in the NLCS, Berryhill tore his right rotator cuff in August
and underwent surgery in September.
In September 1991, Berryhill was acquired by the Braves from the Cubs
with Mike Bielecki in exchange for Turk Wendell and Yorkis Perez, and, a
year later, was a World Series hero.
“It was a good World Series (eventually won by Toronto in six games),”
Berryhill said. “Every game was exciting. It was kind of strange in that
the two games we won were off Jack (Morris). That was surprising, because
he’s such a big-game battler. But we got to him. Then we struggled
against (David) Cone and (Juan) Guzman (and Jimmy Key).”
Berryhill arrived in Boston in 1994, the strike-shortened season, then
moved to Cincinnati, where he was a member of Manager Davey Johnson’s
1995 NL West Division champions, the fourth time in his career in which
he was part of division-winning teams (following Chicago in 1989 and
Atlanta in 1992 and ‘93).
After missing the entire 1996 season with reconstructive elbow
surgery, Berryhill came back again, this time with the San Francisco
Giants. Not knowing that he could even come back, Berryhill worked hard
to get in shape and made Manager Dusty Baker’s ballclub.
“That was another big highlight,” Berryhill said of the 1997 season,
in which he enjoyed a fine season and helped the Giants capture the NL
West title -- the fifth division championship of his career.
“It’s weird,” he added. “After I left Chicago, with the exception of
the strike season, we won a division title everywhere I was, so I was
real fortunate to be on winning ballclubs.”
Berryhill caught 10 Cy Young Award winners in his career, including
Greg Maddox, Tom Glavine, John Smoltz, Roger Clemens and Lee Smith. “That
was a big thrill to be with those guys,” he said. “They can teach you a
lot about the game.”
Berryhill, who said Clemens and Cincinnati’s John Smiley were among
the most intense pitchers he ever caught, started the 1998 season at
triple-A Edmonton, but retired a month into the campaign because his
throwing arm, after three surgeries, simply did not work anymore.
“It was definitely a quiet (retirement),” he said. “My arm had been
bugging me for four years. It just got to the point where there was
nothing really anybody could do to repair it.”
These days, he’s an assistant baseball coach at Laguna Beach High, his
alma mater. Berryhill, 35, lives in Laguna Niguel with his wife, Anne,
and two sons, Joshua, 10, and Jacob, 6.
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