Pages
Online Seats
Meta
Featured Article
Archives
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
- December 2008
- November 2008
- October 2008
- September 2008
- August 2008
- July 2008
- June 2008
- May 2008
- April 2008
- March 2008
- February 2008
Tags
Berrios Continues To Work Magic
August 31, 2008 · Patrick Hickey, Jr. · Jump to comments
With the Cyclones hitting just .246 as a team this season, many fans have had a hard time figuring out exactly how the team is still in the playoff hunt this late in the season.
That reason however is an easy one- pitching coach Hector Berrios.
Entering his tenth season as a pitching coach and his fifth with the Cyclones, Berrios has consistently taken young pitchers to the top in Brooklyn. This season is no different.
Coming into the season, everyone in the organization knew that supplemental pick Brad Holt was going to be the bee’s knees, but no one could have possibly pondered how successful relative unknowns Jimmy Johnson, Chris Schwinden, Erik Turgeon and Roy Merritt were going to be. All picked in the 22nd round or later in the 2007 and 2008 drafts, many believed these youngsters were simply needed to fill out the roster.
Instead, they’ve been stalwarts on the mound and have played an integral part in the team’s success, thanks in part to the hard work of Berrios behind the scenes.
“It’s been a real pleasant experience with these guys this season,” he said. “Once these guys got their feet wet this season, they all really took off. You’re seeing it right now.”
In his five years in Brooklyn, Berrios has kept the Cyclones in the top three in team ERA every season and has consistently made heroes out of the most unlikely. Take the 2008 22nd round pick Schwinden for instance, who came into the season coming out of the bullpen sparingly, to only find himself one of the team’s dominant starters by the All-Star break.
For players like Schwinden, Berrios is an angel that makes their first year in professional baseball a dream come true, rather than a nightmare.
“Hector is an amazing pitching coach,” said Schwinden, who made the NY-Penn League All-Star team this season under Berrios’ tutelage. “He’s always there for us and you know he’d take our side in a fight if he had to. He’s gives us so much information and he always leaves it up to us to take it. He prepares you for so many things on the mound and by doing that, he makes you a better pitcher than you were before.”
A ninth round pick of the San Francisco Giants in 1983, who played parts of two seasons at the Triple-A level, Berrios knows how tough life in the minors can be.
That alone has played a huge part in his success as a pitching coach.
“Your the first guy that they learn from and that experience lasts a lifetime,” said Berrios. “I don’t like to do this just so they get to the big leagues. I always try and make sure that they know I care about them and I’m very passionate about their success. That creates a real bond and I don’t think any of them ever forget Brooklyn and what they learned here.”
Becoming a father figure to the players he coaches, Berrios has put together quite a resume for himself over the past half decade in Brooklyn, as Florida Marlins reliever Matt Lindstrom, Royals starer Brian Bannister and current Mets relievers Eddie Kunz and Joe Smith have all passed through his bullpen in Coney Island.
That, Berrios said, is something he’ll never forget.
“It’s been an awesome ride and it’s great that I get calls back from guys that feel that comfort and they know they can talk to me when things are going bad or even when they are going good.”
The way the team has pitched this season, it’s fair to say that he’ll be getting plenty of phone calls this winter.
“I don’t even want to think about where I’d be without him this year,” said Turgeon. “I was so lucky that I got the chance to come here and work with him.”
Link-
Box Score to last night’s 5-4 Cyclones Win.
Photos by Patrick Hickey Jr. and Ron Hatcher.
Pro Baseball Central
Thursday at 9 p.m.







It’s great to see Hector getting some long overdue credit. The way he has consistently coached his pitchers to deliver often dominating seasons on the mound is amazing. That the Cyclones could be playing nearly .600 ball with such little team hitting, power or speed is testimony to how important his success with the pitching staff is! I called down to him in the bullpen the week after the Mets let Rick Peterson go and told him he should have been called up to handle the Mets’s staff! I still believe the guy is too damned good for this league, and deserves to move up the organizational ladder along with the pitchers he’s tutored. As much as I’d hate to see him leave Brooklyn, Hector should be a major league pitching coach someday, and soon!