Johnny Werhas


John Charles Werhas is a former Major League Baseball third baseman who is now a pastor for The Rock Community Church in Anaheim Hills, California. He retired from this position on August 23, 2015 and moved to Oregon to spend time with his wife of many years.
Werhas was an All-American third baseman for the University of Southern California Trojans baseball team. He also played forward for the Trojans basketball team, earning All-PCC honors and honorable-mention All-American recognition in 1959. He was inducted into the school's Hall of Fame in.
Werhas was drafted by the NBA's Los Angeles Lakers in, however, chose to sign with the Los Angeles Dodgers instead. He batted.248 with 26 home runs and 127 runs batted in through three seasons in the minors before having a breakthrough season with the Spokane Indians. He edged out Ken McMullen for the Dodgers' starting third base job out of spring training. After batting just.169 with eight RBIs through the first 33 games of the season, however, he was displaced by Jim Gilliam, who started the season playing second base. Werhas enjoyed a career game shortly after losing his starting job on May 28, going three-for-four with a walk and run scored in a seventeen-inning marathon with the Cincinnati Reds that ended in a 2-2 tie, but was soon returned to Spokane, regardless. He batted.309 with nine home runs and 51 RBIs for Spokane.
He returned to the Dodgers when rosters expanded in September, going hitless with one walk and a run scored in three pinch hit plate appearances. The only time Werhas took the field was at first base in the final game of the season.
He earned a back-up job in, but was dealt to the California Angels on May 10 for outfielder Len Gabrielson. On June 4, he hit his first major league home run off the Minnesota Twins' Jim Merritt. His only other major league home run came later that month against the Cleveland Indians' Sam McDowell.
Werhas' final major league at bat came with the Angels that season. He remained with the organization through before heading to Japan in to play for the Taiyo Whales. In the first trade between a Japanese and an American team, he was dealt to the San Diego Padres' Pacific Coast League affiliate, the Hawaii Islanders, for longtime major leaguer Clete Boyer. He retired following the season.
Werhas and his wife, Kay, have two children. His daughter is married to former Minnesota Twins and New York Yankees pitcher Dan Naulty.