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The
1947-48 Hockey Team
The story of the 1948 hockey team is the story of the little
engine that could. It was a team that was small in numbers,
but big in heart.
Entering a tough Bay State League race the Raiders had lost
most of their experienced players, including two veterans
in the opening weeks of the new season. But then, as goalie
Henri Kasbarian recalls, "Coach Murphy began to spin
his magic."
After the season a Boston paper summed up Murphy's thoughts:
"I didn't figure we had much of a chance!" Only
classy center Arthur Shannon was a known factor. Murphy added,
` `our goalie was a sub last year . . . our first line wings
were completely new. Our reserves were absolute newcomers
- and not enough of them."
In the end Murphy used an ` `Iron Six" starting line:
center Shannon, forwards Ted Tocci and Fred LoChiatto, Jack
Carey and Pete Hullihen on defense, and Kasbarian in goal.
Dick White was the crucial seventh man, stepping in where
needed to give the starters a rest. The first line logged
around twenty-eight minutes out of a possible thirty every
game; and all of Watertown's goals during the regular season
were scored by the iron six.
Hard work was part of the Murphy magic: practices were at
5:30 a.m., and Dick White vividly remembers catching the trolley
to Brighton in those wee hours. Part was Murphy himself: Kasbarian
remembers the skill with which Murphy made the needed personnel
adjustments early in the season and remembers, too, that he
was ` `a great guy, a great guy, somewhere between a father-figure
and a big brother." Team solidarity, and team spirit,
were immense and intense.
The season opened with a solid shutout over Norwood; the latter,
a local reporter noted, ' `might have done better with five
defensemen and a goalie, so rare was it that the puck got
over the Watertown line." And the Raiders jumped into
first place with a sharp win over defending champion Wellesley,
with two goals from Shannon and a standout performance from
Kasbarian, who "again showed he is one of the best schoolboy
goalies of the year." A follow-up whitewashing of Framingham
had the papers calling, ` ` `Shut-out' " Kasbarian only
slightly less than spectacular."
And the season, too, followed that description. Only Waltham
and WalpolE were to mar the Raider record as the tight-fought
Bay State League schedule continued. The starting six continued
to excel. Kasbarian established himself as the best goalie
in the league (allowing just nine goals in the first eight
games), Shannon as a great stick-handler and the league's
top scorer for much of the year - as one local reporter noted,
he "has stood out like snow on the campus grounds."
Hard efforts by "Flashy Freddy" LoChiatto, Hullihen
(with "the hardest shot in the loop"), Carey ("capable
of handling all comers" on defense), and Tocci ("fast-skating
and heady") rounded out a starting squad that combined
a very able defense with constant scoring threats.
"We were a small team with almost no depth," Shannon
remembers. ` `There were six of us on the ice almost constantly."
But entering the Bay State League playoffs, the Raiders were
in the hunt with Framingham and Walpole. In the opening game
WHS got off to the right start, beating Boston College High
School by a 5-1 tally, Shannon and Tocci scoring two apiece.
Framingham was next - for the title. The ` `Columbia Street
brand of hockey" was poised for greatness, and it did
not disappoint. LoChiatto scored twice and assisted a Tocci
goal in the second period for a 3-0 lead. And appropriately
enough, it was Art Shannon, playing hurt, who put the icing
on the cake with a goal in the third, frosting a strong performance
by Kasbarian. It was a 4-1 win and Watertown High School's
first hockey championship ever.
In the state tourney, the Raiders drew perennial Catholic
League champions Malden Catholic, a squad regarded by many
as the best team in the country. Through two periods WHS battled
fiercely and earned a 2-2 tie; but in the end, MC's depth
was too much and the onslaught wore down the Raider defense.
M~lden Catholic went on to win the state and regional championships;
the Raiders went home vanquished but not defeated.
For it had been a wonderful and historic season. Amazingly,
all six of the WHS starters were named to the Bay State League
All-Star team, a first in Massachusetts high school history.
Shannon tied for the league scoring crown; Kasbarian, a junior,
was named the league's best goaltender (a feat he would repeat
his senior season.)
The 1948 squad had served notice that a surplus of heart and
effort could overcome a lack of numbers; they had surprised
everyone - except perhaps themselves - by grasping greatness.
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