Devereaux was acquired by the Orioles from the Dodgers for
Mike Morgan on March 11, 1989. The peak of his career was from 1989 to 1993, with his best season coming in 1992 with the Orioles, when he played in 159 games, with 24
home runs, 107 RBIs and a .276
batting average. Devereaux won the
1995 NLCS MVP award with the
Atlanta Braves by driving in the game-winning RBI in the 11th inning of Game One and hitting a three-run home run in Game Four against
Cincinnati. The Braves went on to defeat the
Cleveland Indians in the World Series. On July 15, 1989, Devereaux hit a
walk-off home run in an 11-9 win against the
California Angels. The call was controversial, as the home run ball came extremely close to the
foul pole. Angels manager
Doug Rader argued the call with umpire
Ken Kaiser the following day and was ejected prior to the start of the next game. Devereaux played his final MLB game with his original team, the Dodgers, on April 17, 1998. In 12 seasons, he had a .254 batting average, and hit 105 home runs with 480
RBIs, three
grand slams, 635
strikeouts, 85
stolen bases, and 29
errors. He is second in career home runs by a player born in Wyoming (only
John Buck has more). In March 2021, the Baltimore Orioles announced that Devereaux had been elected to the Orioles Hall of Fame. He was one of four inductees honored with an on-field ceremony prior to the Orioles game on August 7, 2021. ==Post-playing career==