August 22, 2011
Anthony Perry Hired as Rivier Baseball Coach and Sports Information Director
Cat Calsolaro
Boston Globe Correspondent
By his count, Anthony Perry has played 50-plus games this
summer, suiting up for two clubs, Kingston, N.H., in the North
Shore Baseball League, and Malden in the Yawkey League.
“Fifty games is A-OK with me,’’ he said.
“I’ve played pretty much every night this summer,
it’s fun.’’
Even at 26 years old.
The Andover High grad played 50-plus games per season as a
three-time all-conference performer at Fisher College in Boston,
followed by back-to-back 140-game seasons playing independent ball
for Butch Hobson in Maryland.
His bat still packs a punch - the 6-foot, 220-pound
catcher/outfielder is hitting .338 in the Yawkey League - and his
passion for the game has not waned.
“He is mature for his age and consumed with
baseball,’’ said Kingston manager Paul Sartori, whose
club was swept by Peabody in the best-of-five NSBL semifinals last
week.
“This is his first year playing in the North Shore
Baseball League and he has made a significant contribution to our
team,’’ Sartori said.
Perry will be making an even bigger impact on another team very
shortly.
He was recently hired as the head baseball coach, and sports
information director, at Rivier College, a struggling Division 3
program in Nashua.
So instead of purchasing a few suits and cutting back on his
time on the diamond, he will load up on sunflower seeds and take
his career to a college dugout.
Rivier finished 4-23 this past spring, with a 12-player roster,
and Joanne Merrill, the college’s athletic director, came
away impressed with Perry’s energy, as well as his playing
experience at amateur, college, and professional levels.
At Fisher, he departed in 2008 as the program’s all-time
leader in runs (169) while hitting .355. He was also the first
player from the program to sign a pro contract, playing two seasons
for Hobson with the Southern Maryland Blue Crabs in the Independent
Atlantic League.
“It had been a dream since I was a little kid, to see
myself in a pro game,’’ said Perry.
He will be one of the youngest head coaches in New England, yet
he is up for the challenge, saying he learned a great deal about
managing from Hobson, the former Boston Red Sox player and bench
boss.
“I experienced first-hand what a formal manager does on a
day-to-day basis that I can apply to potential high school
recruits,’’ he said. “I get to teach them the
professional side of the game.’’
Perry is wasting no time. He has already met some of his new
players (there are 11 returnees from a year ago) and dove into the
recruiting game head first, crisscrossing the nation to attend
showcases in Texas, California, and Maryland.
“You need to be hungry and motivated right from the start
as a coach,’’ said Merrill. “Recruiting is the
name of the game in Division 3 athletics; he has really hit the
ground running.’’
There are no scholarships, and student-athletes make their
choice primarily based on academics.“Rivier alumni are
excited that there’s a baseball guy in charge and I like it
so far,’’ Perry said. “The facilities we have at
Rivier are unreal, it’s nothing like what I had in college.
It’s a huge selling point; it really catches the eyes of the
recruits.’’
He is well acquainted with Rivier’s home field, Holman
Stadium. For seven summers, he caught bullpens for the Nashua Pride
(Can-Am League), who also called the complex home.
Perry said he thinks that his coaching style will be a
combination of Hobson (also a former manager of the Pride) and
Scott Dulin, his coach at Fisher College.
“They were the biggest influences for me,’’ he
said. “From Butch, I learned how to manage a big league game,
and Dulin took me from being an unknown kid and made me a pro
player. I would like to take high school seniors and work with them
for four years and have the effect my college coach had on
me.’’
Less than four years removed from his own college days, Perry
understands what his players will be going through, both on and off
the field. And he will still be an active player. (Malden will host
Game 1 of a quarterfinal series tomorrow night at Maplewood
Park.)
“Being close in age, I know how college academic work is
nowadays,’’ said Perry. “At the same time, I can
go out there and show them how I want a drill done, without
breaking a hip.’’
Merrill said that the college has found that its most successful
coaches have developed a strong bond with their respective
teams.
“Our athletes really want to learn and get
better,’’ she said. “His passion for the game
will translate to the students.’’
Cat Calsolaro can be reached at
catcalso@bu.edu.