BRIDGEVIEW, Ill – Austin Berry was just happy to get on the field when Louisville coach Ken Lolla moved him from the midfield to central defense midway through his freshman year of college.
Though Lolla smiles as he jokes that the Chicago Fire center back still sees himself as a midfielder, the Cardinals head coach knew early on that the 6-foot-2 defender’s career belonged on the backline.
“He’s so dominating in the air,” Lolla told MLSsoccer.com after his team’s 1-0 exhibition loss to the Fire on Saturday, which Berry started alongside Arne Friedrich at center back. “As a center back, that’s a wonderful quality. His ability to destroy the game, win balls and start the attack, it allowed him to be a very good center back.”
Berry was never a player that would jump off the page — that’s why Louisville only had to compete with Xavier and Wright State for his services. But Lolla saw early in Berry’s career that he had the work ethic necessary to become a high-level center back.
“We put him in some games, and we weren’t sure how he was going to deal with it,” Lolla said. “Although tactically and technically he was not necessarily prepared, his mentality, grit and determination were signs that he was going to be pretty good given time.”
Given that time, Berry flourished at the position. He was named second and third-team All-American during his junior and senior years, and the Fire drafted him with the ninth overall pick in January’s SuperDraft.
Austin Berry selected 9th in SuperDraft
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