Tom Berry, 48 of High Point, NC, died last Sunday after battling a serious infection. Berry wrote for the High Point Enterprise for over 20 years as a beat writer and columnist.
The reason I bring this to attention is because I learned a few things here and there from Berry. He was the beat writer for High Point University sports. We bumped into each other here and there. Sometimes we were fighting over interviewing players after games, other times we were sharing a table as we ate in the hospitality room of a tournament.
I really never spent a lot of time talking to Berry. Sure I knew who he was. He always got first pick of players and coaches after games. By the time I got to the head coach, the gym had cleared out and Berry probably had written half of his copy.
When I learned of Berry’s death, I remember two instances of interaction with Tom, the reporter.
The first was after HPU played Winthrop at the Millis Center. This was the second time High Point had beaten Winthrop this year and second time in a row at home. The series record stands with HPU only winning four games.
Earlier in the week Gene Harris, active career points leader, was suspended from the team for the game. The whole school population knew why. Harris was mad he lost the starting job to a freshman. Still, a reporter had to ask head coach Bart Lundy for the reason.
After the game, Tom and the beat reporter for the Rock Hill, SC newspaper grabbed the star players from the game. I really lucked out because that left Lundy available. I got the first crack at asking the burning question, “You won without Harris, why?”
I started with the basic questions about how he felt about the game, what were his thoughts down the stretch, etc. Then when I got to the burning question, the other reporters all were done with the players. So there I was, conducting the impromptu press conference.
“Coach, what is your comment on Gene Harris? Why did he not dress?”
Tom stood on my left, the Rock Hill Herald reporter on my right. They quickly jot down the answer. When I was done, I stood nearby to hear if they asked any follow-ups that I missed. Tom didn’t. He had the answers he needed. It was like he gave me a pat on the back. A vet in the industry thought I did the job well. (Read my article here)
The second instance of Tom putting a mark on my journalism career came at the Big South Tournament Quarterfinals. HPU, the last seed, played at Radford, the first seed. It was a blow out. (Read my article here) I think Tom, me and a few fans could have put up that performance. While High Point fell 20 points behind, Tom started writing his column for the paper.
We struck up small talk about the season. We discussed the problems the team had. The Harris incident came up along with a few other player problems during the year. I would add a thing or two that Tom didn’t know. He asked, “What happened with [player x]?” I asked him, “You want the story the team says or what I heard through the grapevine?”
“The grapevine.”
I told him all the dirty secrets that weren’t supposed to get out. I just thought we were having general talk. I am a moron!
The next day I went to compare how Tom’s article was to mine. I noticed his column in this search. The “grapevine” suddenly extended to the High Point Enterprise readership. (Read Tom’s column here)
I learned something, “When you speak to a reporter, he is always a reporter. It never turns off.” I used that same logic when a sandwich maker made small talk with me about the Oak Hollow Mall being for sale. She told me insider information. I broke the story, a week before any daily had it. I sat on the story for two weeks before that too.
When I was writing it all I thought about was Tom and mine “grapevine” talk. It gave me the ok to write the article.
Thanks, Tom. May God give comfort to his wife and daughters along with the many professionals that remember Tom Berry, 48 of High Point, NC.
