Clayton Enno saw three pro seasons, high-A, amateur ball
Released after three seasons in the Dodgers system, Clayton Enno continued playing - and hoping for another pro shot in amateur ball, The Yankton Press & Dakotan wrote in July 1991.
Enno played that summer with the Yankton Old Milwaukee Brewers, dominating on the mound and having success at the plate, The Press & Dakotan wrote.
"You just have to love the game," Enno told The Press & Dakotan. "Whether you make it or not boils down to whether you've got it in your heart. That's why you have to love it."
Enno made high-A in his three seasons with the Dodgers before his turn in amateur ball. But he never did get back to the pros.
Enno's career began in 1988, taken by the Dodgers in the 31st round of the draft out of Des Moines Area Community College.
Enno started with the Dodgers in the rookie Gulf Coast League. He went 4-2 over 16 outings, three starts. He had a 1.77 ERA.
He then moved to short-season Salem for 1989. He saw 12 starts there and went 2-4, with a 2.70 ERA.
That July, he ran into some trouble, thanks of The Famous Chicken, according to The Spokane Spokesman-Review. Enno "broke up laughing and had to back off the mound" at The Chicken's antics. He'd soon be pulled from the game.
For 1990, Enno moved up to high-A Vero Beach. He saw 29 outings on the year, three starts. He ended with a 2.68 ERA, a 1-2 record and two saves to end his career.
He then moved to South Dakota amateur ball. He continued playing there through at least 1993. He threw a no-hitter in a 1992 game.
- Spokane Spokesman-Review, July 23, 1989: Tribe scrambles Salem 7-1
- Rapid City Journal, Yankton Press & Dakotan, July 12, 1991: North Dakotan has big numbers in S.D.
Made the Majors:1,446-31.6%
Never Made Majors:3,126-68.4%-X