By Jeff White (jwhite@virginia.edu)
VirginiaSports.com
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — He tries to stay as even-keeled as possible, but University of Virginia left-hander Jake Berry could not contain his emotions last weekend during the NCAA baseball regional at Disharoon Park.
At 6-foot-10, 235 pounds, Berry is an imposing sight on the mound, and he retired all six batters he faced Saturday night in the eighth and ninth innings of Virginia’s 2-1 victory over East Carolina. Twenty-hours later, he retired the Pirates in order in the ninth to close out an 8-3 win that sent UVA to an NCAA super regional the second time in three seasons.
Nine up, nine down.
“He was incredibly efficient,” Virginia head coach Brian O’Connor said.
Both games drew capacity crowds, and the volume level increased with every batter Berry sent back to the dugout.
“It’s something that I don’t really think I ever expected to experience,” he said. “My whole life, I never really saw myself as a closer and this year it kind of just happened that way. It was unbelievable. It was the most fun I’ve had throwing a baseball in my life. I was just grateful to be put in that position.”
Jake Berry is one of the last dudes I played with at UVA that is still standing, and let me tell ya watching him develop from the goofy 6’10 18 year old into an absolute dude on the mound has been so fun to watch. Seeing him close out a 2-1 regional victory made my whole year! pic.twitter.com/VSu0NpnA69
— Stephen Schoch (@bigdonkey47) June 4, 2023
After the final out of each game, UVA catcher Kyle Teel ran out from behind the plate to congratulate Berry. After the Cavaliers clinched the regional Sunday night, Teel leaped into the arms of Berry, who engulfed his smaller teammate.
“It was awesome,” Berry said. “Kyle and I have been together here all three years and Kyle is one of the best players in the country, and it was cool to share that moment with him. When it’s that big of a moment and when you care as much as our team cares, it’s really hard not to show emotion when you do something that deserves emotion.”
Berry, a graduate of Bishop O’Connell High School in Arlington, hopes to experience more such moments this weekend. Starting Friday at noon, UVA (48-12) is hosting ACC rival Duke (38-22) in a best-of-three NCAA super regional whose winner will advance to the College World Series in Omaha, Neb.
“It’s special to be playing in Charlottesville in June,” Berry said.
The Cavaliers, who won the NCAA title in 2015, made their fifth CWS appearance in 2021. Berry was a freshman that season, and he appeared in six games, all out of the bullpen.
In 2022, when the Hoos’ season ended at the NCAA regional in Greenville, N.C., he made 20 appearances, and eight of his nine starts came in ACC games. But the Wahoos’ weekend starters this season have been Nick Parker, Brian Edgington, Jack O’Connor (another Bishop O’Connell graduate) and Connelly Early.
After starring for the Hyannis (Mass.) Harbor Hawks in the storied Cape Cod Baseball League last summer, Berry returned to Grounds and competed in the fall and the preseason for a spot in the starting rotation.
“He did a solid job,” UVA pitching coach Drew Dickinson said, “but we just felt like that other guys at that time, I’m not going to say they were better, but they did a better job with more consistency. And when you think about what Jake can do, striking out guys, he would come out of the bullpen and be more effective than, say, Parker or Edgington, who haven’t really done it, and they’re not going to blow you away with their stuff.
“Did I think that it would have stayed that way the whole year? You never know. I thought maybe it would have worked itself out where Jake would have ended up being in the rotation, but those guys did such a good job, and then he did such a good job in his job as well, and you know how it is: If it ain’t broke, you don’t fix it.”
Like most pitchers, Berry would prefer to start, but “I’m so proud of him,” Dickinson said, “because he’s never let out anything emotionally or with his body language that led you to believe he was upset about his role. He’s always taken the ball and gone and competed as hard as he could for us and given his best effort, and he’s being rewarded for it at the end of the year. I think karma is a real thing.”
Against East Carolina last weekend, Dickinson said, “I thought Jake looked the best he’s looked, just in utter control of every pitch he threw in those two outings, in the biggest moments he’s ever pitched in.”
Of Berry’s 22 appearances this season, 21 have been in relief. (He pitched the first 4.2 innings of UVA’s 11-6 win over visiting VCU on May 2.)
“I definitely wasn’t expecting to be a bullpen arm this year,” Berry said. “I think that when they told me I was going to be out of the pen, the way I approached it was, all I can do is go help the team win and pitch the best that I can and [take advantage of] the opportunities that I get. If you look at it that way, you end up being rewarded for it.
“I think that a lot of pitchers, when they find out they’re not starting, can take it the wrong way. You can let it affect your body language on the mound, let it affect how you go about your daily business. And I think the biggest thing is just making sure that every time you go out, the job’s always the same: Go get outs.”
