Ken Berry (baseball)


Allen Kent Berry is a former Major League Baseball center fielder. He was signed by the Chicago White Sox as an amateur free agent before the 1961 season. He played for the White Sox from 1962 until he was traded in 1970 to the California Angels. He also played for the Milwaukee Brewers and finished his career with the Cleveland Indians. Ken won two Gold Glove Awards for his play in the outfield in 1970 and 1972. He played his final Major League Baseball game on May 31, 1975.

Career

Berry is a 1959 graduate of Washburn Rural High School where he starred in football, basketball and track and field. He continued to play football and basketball as a freshman while attending Wichita State University. Berry also played one year in a work/play program for the McPherson BJs in the Ban Johnson League. That year McPherson went to the National Ban Johnson League tournament finals played in Wichita.
Berry was named to the American League All-Star team in 1967, when his White Sox battled the Boston Red Sox, Detroit Tigers, and Minnesota Twins for the pennant all the way down to the last few days of the season.
He led league outfielders in putouts once and in fielding percentage three times. He tied for the league lead once each in assists and double plays, both in 1972. Berry was traded along with Syd O'Brien and Billy Wynne by the White Sox to the Angels for Jay Johnstone, Tom Egan and Tom Bradley on November 30, 1970.
Career batting totals for 1,383 games played include 1,053 hits, 58 home runs, 343 RBI, and a lifetime batting average of.255. Defensively, Berry posted a.989 fielding percentage at all three outfield positions.
Career highlights include:
In 1988, he played the baseball coach in the film Eight Men Out.
In 2012, Berry---now a grandfather---published two children's books, Artie the Awesome Apple and Clyde the Clumsy Camel. He told he began writing the books in December 2011 and kept on after his wife told him they were "not bad." The newspaper said Berry often entertained his children on long drives to spring training by making up stories about three friendly ghosts.
Berry was inducted into the Kansas Sports Hall of Fame in 2015.