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1979-80
GIRLS' BASKETBALL TEAM
They called themselves the "Hoop Pack," and as Coach
Kevin McLaughlin recalls, "we certainly added credence
to the adage'never Tunderestimate your opponent."'
The team was Watertown Nigh's 1980 girls' basketball squad,
which reached goals that year that, before the season, would
have been iaughed off by cooler heads. But cool heads don't
scrape and edge and elbow for every minute of every game.
Cool heads don't dive and run and sweat. Cool heads don't
believe. And this squad believed in itself and its dream.
One local reporter summed it up: this squad proved "that
hustle and heart have a lot to do with winning."
The dream begins with players, of course, and the Raiders
were hardly running on empty in this regard. The team was
led by no fewer than three Hall of Famers in senior Lisa Yankowski
and juniors Paula Pomponi and Mary Duffy. And they had plenty
of backup, from seniors Sheila Quinn (the co-captain) and
Denise Nugent, to junior standouts Eileen Coffin, Lesley Horne,
Anne Donnelly, Judy Kalashian, and Lynne Clancy to sophomores
Josephine Hanlon, Nancy McNicholas, Jeanine Haggerty, and
Pam Clancy. In a typical game, everyone played and ten people
scored. There were individual honors to be highlighted, to
be sure. Yankowski was the team's high scorer with nearly
15 points a game, second in the Middlesex League (she averaged
22 points a game over the first half of the season), a league
All-Star who in addition to her scoring contributed ten rebounds
and four steais per game. In one contest versus Reading, she
notched a triple-double with 23 points, 19 boards, and 11
steals. Duffy chipped in 10 points per game; Lesley Horne
was in double figures both in points and rebounds. Pomponi
was a gutsy defensive sparkplug at the point. Overall, though,
it was about the team as a unit. The team had character and
never went into a matchup willing to accept defeat. "Our
banners read'a little bit of heart,"' Coach McLaughlin
recalls. "Fact is, no team ever had more heart - and
that is what made us special."
Special they were. The team posted a strong 13-5 regular season
against a tough league schedule, getting strong efforts and
wins when most they needed them Still, they entered the state
tournament as decided underdogs, seeded thirteenth. Piaying
with nothing to losethey didn't.
In the first round came and went Methuen High, dispatched
45-38 behind a dozen points from Yankowski and fourteen from
Coffin. Next up was with Concord-Carlisle, seeded fifth. Here,
too, in a tremendous defensive struggle, the Raiders prevailed.
The Watertown zone held the Patriots to thirty-two points,
with Pomponi and Pam Clancy shutting down the guard spots
and Horne battling inside. All year the team had proved they
could play with the best; now they were proving they could
beat them.
And in a magical third round matchup, that is exactly what
transpired. Peabody High was 20-0, Greater Boston League champs
and the second-ranked team in Massachusetts. But the gymnasium
was packed to the rafters, a special reserve bleacher section
opened to accommodate the hordes of faithful Raider fans.
And the squad did not disappoint. Down by nine points in the
second quarter the team chipped away until finally Watertown
had the lead after critical baskets by Duffy and Yankowski
(who poured in twenty points overall). Peabody crawled back
to tie the score with five minutes to go. But the Raiders
stepped up. Key defensive stops were made -key free throws
were iced - and at the final buzzer Watertown had won by six.
The fans stormed the court in wild celebration. One reporter
found the whole affair so emotional as to be "a bit reminiscent
of Lake Placid." The Raiders found themselves at the
pinnacle, in the Division I north finals against undefeated
and top-ranked Salem.
Going into the championship game, the Boston Globe commented
wryly that "Watertown has left all opponents wondering
what rotk they forgot to (ook under." Trailing by just
five at the half, gutsy Watertown never gave up - but in the
end, Salem was simply too strong. Nonetheless, it had been
a great season for the team and for the community.
As Coach McLaughlin said in a classic understatement, the
team had "certainly surprised some peeple." Salem
coach Tm Shea gave due credit to the Raiders' amazing effort
and to their special ingredient - "something inside."
While the Raiders received the Division I runner-up award,
there seemed clear consensus that in terms of spirit and heart
the team had won the championship.
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