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The
Raymond Berry
story is one of
determination,
dedication and desire.
Berry, who needed to
wear special shoes
because one leg was
shorter than the other,
didn’t become a starter
on his high school
football team until his
senior year – even
though his father was
the coach...Book
Raymond Berry for Your Event
As an end for Southern
Methodist, he caught all
of 33 passes in three
seasons. Why the
Baltimore Colts selected
him, even as a “future
choice” on the 20th
round of the 1954 draft,
is a mystery. A long
shot to make the Colts,
Berry was determined. He
practiced and practiced,
catching passes from
anyone willing to throw
to him. He concentrated
on making the difficult
catch and running
perfect patterns.
Although he had just
average speed, he
developed, by his own
count, 88 different
moves to get open. He
ran patterns within
inches of how they were
diagramed. In 1956,
Johnny Unitas became the
Colts’ quarterback and
Raymond was ready to put
all his hours of
practice to use.
Together the two gave
the Baltimore Colts one
of the greatest
pass-catch teams of all
time. Three straight
times Raymond led the
league in receptions and
caught a then-record 631
passes for 9,275 yards
and 68 touchdowns in his
13-year career.
A first- or second-team
All-Pro choice in 1957
through 1961 and again
in 1965, he was selected
to play in six Pro Bowl
games during his career.
A sure-handed receiver,
Raymond fumbled only
once in 13 years.
Perhaps his greatest
moment came in the
famous overtime 1958 NFL
Championship Game. He
set a then-record with
12 catches for 178 yards
and a touchdown. Several
of his grabs came in the
Colts’ life-or-death,
last minute drive to the
tying touchdown. In the
overtime period, two
receptions good for 33
yards were the major
gains in Baltimore’s
drive for the winning
score.
Retiring after the 1967
season, Berry was
elected to the Pro
Football Hall of Fame in
1973. |