Berry (nicknamed "Chuck") was born in
Liverpool, He joined
Aldershot on loan in March 1984 and moved to
First Division Sunderland on a free transfer in July 1984. Aged 21, he made his Sunderland debut on 25 August 1984 in a 3–1 win at home to
Southampton. He made 45 league and cup appearances including the
League Cup final at
Wembley that season. Sunderland were relegated at the end of the 1984–85 season and he found himself out of favour after the arrival of
Lawrie McMenemy as manager. He played just one game early the following season, and was transferred to
Newport County for £20,000 in December 1985. a future teammate at
Northampton Town. That club paid a £45,000 fee to sign Berry on a three-year contract. He played well over a hundred games for the Northamptonshire club before playing seven games for
Darmstadt in the 1992–93 season in the
German second division. He then played in Hong Kong for
Instant-Dict for three seasons. Returning to England, he joined
Stevenage Borough, whom he captained to the
Conference National title in 1995–96. He moved to
Kettering Town, where he scored six goals from 89 appearances in all competitions, was club captain and then
player-manager, following the dismissal of Gary Johnson. Steve guided Kettering to respectable mid table positions for two seasons on severely restricted budgets. Following the decision by the Board to once again reduce the playing budget, Berry announced his resignation before rejoining Stevenage as a player for the following season. He spent time working for Brian Talbot at
Rushden & Diamonds, as both player and coach, and, coming out of retirement following two operations on his Achilles tendon, at
Bedford Town. In August 2005, at the age of 42, Berry joined
Cogenhoe United as a player and helped them in their historic
FA Cup run, in which they narrowly failed to reach the fourth qualifying round. In 2006, having already started a new career in corporate head-hunting and executive coaching, Berry moved to Paris and was Global Director of Talent for Ipsos Mori, a leading market research agency headquartered in Paris. Following this role Steve decided to set up his own Executive Search business in partnership with some ex colleagues. Tillerman Executive Search, based in the 16e Paris. Nowadays, Steve is focused on coaching the development of Talent for Liqueo, a global Management Consultancy. He also supports ex sports people transition their lives and careers after retiring from professional sport. ==References==