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1955-1956
Cross Country and Track Teams
Watertown residents, no doubt, remember the Truman and Eisenhower
years for many things. The Korean War heated up and the Cold
War n iced down; America dominated world trade as Elvis would
soon dominate the airwaves. But those who follow Watertown
High athletics might immediately bring another sort of dominance
to mind. For 1948 to 1960 marked Watertown's ownership of
schoolboy track and field. And the 1955-1956 team served as
the apex of that very special era.
Under the direction of Hall of Fame Coach Bob Gleason, the
indoor track, outdoor track, and cross country squads of 1955-56
accomplished something few others have equaled in the history
of Massachusetts track and field. Every member of the 1955-56
teams who participated for all of their three years at WHS
won nine state track titles. For the seniors this season wrapped
up three years' worth of championship effort. But this was
only the tip of the iceberg; two more years of title sweeps
would be forthtoming. After all, the talent kept on coming.
To call even a partial roll is impressive enough: witness
Dick Bartley Joe Basile, Sal Boccodoro, Nick DeNitto, Jim
Gleeson, Jim Kelly, Paul Kelly, Paul Landry David McGown,
Peter Mercer Walter "Sonny" Robak, Lou Romanelli,
Don Tomasetti, David White, Jack Williams, Ed Wingfield, Paul
Woodland, Mike Yelland and Ron Young. The team was a mile
deep, a classic mix of balance and power stirred perfectly
by Gleason's coaching genius.
The 1955 cross country team, with Jim Kelly and Sonny Robak
as captains, went undefeated in the Pioneer Division of the
Middlesex League, against powerful squads like Arlington,
Beverly and Belmont. Next came the state cross country championships
at Franklin Park. Having won the Class B title the five previous
years, Watertown opted to move up to Class A to take on the
larger schools. Led by Woodland, Robak, and Kelly, the move
paid off: the Raiders were Class A champs, selected to represent
Massachusetts in the New England championships. A search of
the records indicates, in fact, that this was the only Class
A title ever won by a Watertown team. But there was more to
come.
The indoor team continued to show their supremacy, easily
breezing through the dual meet portion of the season. Kelly,
Robak, Woodland, and Williams dominated their running events
and DeNitto the shot put. Jim Kelly and DeNitto were undefeated
in league competition; Paul Kelly and Williams won four out
of fiive meets in the hurdles and 300, respectively. Sophomores
Boccodoro and Basile likewise owned the dash, winning four
of their five dua( meet races. The relay team showed the depth
of the squad overall, winning all five meets while utilizing
nine different athletes. The 1956 state meet was, again, an
all-Watertown show. Having won the last two indoor titles
- and four of the last six - the Raider harriers were back
for more, and they got it, scoring in every event on the program
but one. So dominant was Watertown that if any other team
had managed to win every event, they still would have lost
the meet to the Raiders by two points.
Again, it was the seniors who led the way. Jim Kelly won the
600. Woodland won the 1000. Robak took the mile. Paul Kelly,
Pete Mercer and Ed Wingfield took three of the top five hurdle
spots. Jack Williams was second in the 300-yard run, just
ahead of junior Nick DeNitto, who also won the shotput. Gleeson,
Boccodoro, Tomasetti, Bartley and Young also added points
- as did the relay team, which shattered the Meet record in
a photo finish loss to Arlington. Watertown's fifth state
title in seven years was in hand. "the victory added
to Watertown's reputation as a track and cross country power"
one reporter drily noted in a bit of understatement, "And
added to the luster of Coach Bob Gleason's record."
The outdoor team that spring was not to be outdone. With the
same cast of characters still working at peak performance,
the Raiders' combination of experience and youth proved unbeatable.
There were simply no weaknesses on the team - from the distance
events to the dash to the discus, where Romanelli extended
the school record past 127 feet. The team dominated the state
relays, the Class B meet-their eighth outdoor title in nine
years - and performed very well in the Penn Relays to boot.
That kind of national competition gave the team great exposure
- to athletes from all across the country and also in the
press and collegiate corps, given how well the Raider athietes
fared against their counterpart competitors. Great track guru
Ralph Colson said many times that Watertown had the most powerful
track teams he had seen in forty years of watching the sport.
Carl Seamen and Mel Wenner both of Belmont, were likewise
always gracious in their praise of the team's accomplishments.
Indeed, when coaching at Belmont many years later Dick Bartley
became friends with Wenner. "Try as we might," Wenner
would frequently recall, "we could never beat you guys."
He was right.
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