|
Richard
Berardino
Anyone who has followed the fortunes of the Red Sox over the
last several years well knows the sight of Dick Berardino
standing behind third base, waving a runner home. And Dick's
career started just a few miles west of Fenway Park, here
in Watertown.
A 1955 honors graduate of Watertown High, Dick excelled in
four sports: baseball, football, basketball, and track. His
senior year, in fact, he was named to the All-Scholastic Team
in both baseball and football. His football coach was none
other than Vic Palladino, just beginning his distinguished
coaching career. He notes that Dick was ` `an outstanding,
versatile athlete who possessed fine speed, super hands, and
a determination to succeed that was beyond belief. It was
a pleasure to coach such a fine young man: '
Dick went on to Holy Cross. While he certainly hadn't lost
his football skills - he led the East in pass receptions his
junior year - his baseball star continued to rise. He was
named to the All-New England baseball team in 1957, and played
in the 1958 College World Series in Omaha. In 1958 he signed
a contract to play with the New York Yankees.
Dick played at the Yanks' spring training with the likes of
Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris, even earning a mention in Jim
Bouton's BaLL Fo2cr. He became manager of the Yankees' Sarasota
farm club, where he earned Manager of the Year accolades in
1966. That year he returned to Watertown High and became a
teacher and the varsity baseball coach; he coached for nearly
fifteen years, and taught for more than twenty. In the meantime
he was still managing during the school's offseason, now in
the Red Sox system. He was named Manager of the Year again,
this time at Elmira, in 1976. In 1987 he retired from Watertown
High and went to manage the Lynchburg Red Sox; in 1988 he
was named Manager of the Year not only for the league but
as the nation s Class A Manager of the Year by Baseball America.
The Red Sox front office sat up and took notice, and in 1989
Dickjoined the parent club as bullpen coach, helping Roger
Clemens and the other Sox pitchers lead the way to the 1990
American League East title. In 1991 he became third base coach.
He now serves as the Red Sox' minor league spring training
coordinator and as a roving special instructor throughout
the Sox system.
Dick has been much and deservedly honored as a teacher, coach,
and athlete: he s already a member of the Holy Cross Hall
of Fame, the Elmira Hall of Fame, and the Massachusetts Baseball
Coaches Hall of Fame. It seems only right that we should bring
him back tonight to where it all started.
|
|