One of the most heralded and respected baseball coaches in America, Scott Berry runs one of the most outstanding college baseball programs in the nation. A member of three Halls of Fame and an active participant in local, regional, and national baseball organizations, Berry has kept Mayville State on the collegiate baseball map for over two decades.
In 26 years since becoming the Comets head coach in 1982, Berry's teams have won 19 conference championships (17 consecutive), 17 conference playoff championships, and 19 appearances in the national playoffs (16 of the last 18 years). He personally earned NAIA District 12 or Region III Coach of the Year honors on ten different occasions and conference coach of the year 17 times, including both the 2005 NAIA Region III and DAC-10 Coach of the Year award. Berry's career record at Mayville State is 728-392. Currently, he is the seventh-winningest coach in NAIA baseball.
Berry has a tradition-rich background in the game of baseball. Growing up in LaMoure, N.D., Berry participated on American Legion teams in LaMoure that won one state championship and finished as runners-up in the state regional playoffs three times. After graduating high school, Berry went to Mayville State University to play for the Comets and their legendary coach, Al Meyer. He lettered four years and received all-conference honors his junior and senior seasons.
After graduating from Mayville State, Berry coached teams in Ellendale, Binford, Rolla and Casselton, N.D. He returned to his alma mater as an assistant baseball coach for Al Meyer in 1981 and became the head coach for the 1982 season. Scott also coached the summer amateur baseball team in Mayville when his “Red Caps” were in the state finals six out of seven years, coming away with championships in 1981 and 1984.
A very active participant in local, state, and national baseball organizations, Berry has served or is currently serving as an officer or committee chairperson in the North Dakota Baseball Coaches Association, North Dakota Amateur Baseball Coaches Association, North Dakota College Athletic Conference, USA Baseball, American Baseball Coaches Association, and National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA). In August 1992, Scott began an eight-year stint as an officer for the NAIA Baseball Coaches Association and served as President in 2000. Also in 1992, he represented USA Baseball as a Task Force Member responsible for administering the National Junior Baseball Championships in Boise, ID.
In 1996, Berry was honored by his alma mater with his induction into the Mayville State University Athletic Hall of Fame. In 1998, the North Dakota Associated Press Sportswriters and Sportscasters Association honored Berry with the “Special Achievement Award”. In 1999, Berry was recognized by his NAIA Great Plains Region coaching peers as being the Great Plains Region Coach of the Year. In 2001, Berry was named Region 3 Coach of the year. The NAIA awarded Berry with its highest honor by inducting him into the NAIA Hall of Fame for Baseball in 2002. In 2003, Berry was named to his third Hall of Fame by being inducted into the North Dakota Amateur Baseball Association Hall of Fame.