|
The
1950 Baseball Team
Suburban league champions, coach Jim Ryan
It probably has to be conceded that the 1939 baseball team
was the best in Watertown High's diamond history. But to finish
a close second to greatness is to achieve it yourself, and
the 1950 team can claim ~ust that. Consider the team's overall
record of 16-3, its Suburban League championship and playoff
run. Consider that of the nine starters on the 50 squad, three
went on to sign major league contracts. And then indeed, consider
the call of the roll: Shannon, Renzi, Stackpole (indeed, two
Stackpoles), Barry, Charhoodian, Lopez, Fitzpatrick, Godefroy
Burns, Goggin, McElroy Sabino, Horan, Zona.
Coming into Coach Jim Ryan's second season, the team had a
fine nucleus around which to build. The Raiders were the team
to beat in the Suburban League and not many beat them. Reflecting
the popularity and success of the program, the stands at Victory
Field had been expanded that year to hold 6000, changing the
configuration of right field and helping the home outfielders.
Starting with a 9-8 win over Woburn, the Raiders ran off six
straight to open the season. They lost only twice in the regular
season, both times to Newton, tight games of 5-4 and 3-0.
And as the season wound down they found themselves tied with
those same Newton neighbors in a dead heat for the top of
the league standings. A playoff game at Boston College followed,
and the hungry Raiders got their revenge when it counted,
dispatching Newton 9-3 behind excellent pitching from Joe
Barry and a three-run homer from Don Sabino. It was Watertown's
first playoff berth since 1939.
The team had a solid pitching staff, with Barry the go-to
guy, ably backed by McElroy, Burns, Lopez, Godefroy and Horan.
But the team was also strong up the middle defensively. And,
as one Boston reporter understated, the Raiders were a "strong
hitting club." Shannon came off a .400+ junior year to
hit .528 in 1950, with 22 RBI in 8 league games despite breaking
his ankle a week before the season ended. Phil Renzi added
power in the outfield and Phil Stackpole was the best backstop
in the league. All three would later sign major league contracts.
In the playoffs, the Raiders first faced Weymouth. After spotting
their opponents three runs in the second, Watertown bounced
back with six in the third. Singles by Charhoodian Renzi,
Fitzpatrick, and Horan were followed by walks to Zona and
McElroy then, as the paper noted rather breathlessly, "a
smacking double by Phil Stackpole ruined Weymouth's afternoon."
At least Weymouth was in good company. While the Raiders would
fall in their next game to powerhouse Somerville, they had
already proved they belonged with the best. They were strong
in all aspects of the game; and they had one of the best coaches
in the game in Jim Ryan, ably assisted by yet another Hall
of Famer then-JV coach George Yankowski. Indeed, this May
the first base dugout at Victory Field will be dedicated in
honor of Ryan and Joe Dwyer another longtime WHS baseball
fixture. The Hall is happy to add Ryan's greatest team to
the facade of Victory Field, to the "Wall of Fame,"
in happy tribute across fifty summers and more to what his
boys of summer achieved in 1950.
|
|