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The
1983-84 Ice Hockey Team
Some things are hard to describe: you know them, really, only
when you see them. And such a thing is greatness. When does
a team cross the boundaries between skilled, memorable - and
legendary?
The 1983-84 Watertown High ice hockey team passed that last
threshold as it took the ice for the third period of its second
round tournament game against Newton North. The Raiders were
down two goals to none, and in the locker room Hall of Fame
Coach Dick Umile was somewhat subdued. But when the squad
took the ice, it was if an inner fire had been kindled. Assistant
Coach Artie Venezia says that "I remember that moment
like none other before and none since. When I saw the players
come out, I sensed leadership on the ice, a championship caliber
I saw it in their eyes, in their body language. And when the
puck hit the ice, play was ferocious:'
Less than a minute later, forward Joe Maclnnis cut the lead
to one. With nine minutes left, junior center Tim Duffy tied
it. The game went into sudden-death overtime. Suddenly Newton
peppered the Watertown end with shots, all turned back by
goaltender John Leitner The Raiders got a bounce and rushed
out of their end, Mike McGrath to Tom Egan . . . to victory.
The Walter Brown Arena was pandemonium. A jubilant Umile said,
"All we did was never quit." For as Watertown Press
editor Bob Ford wrote in an article proclaiming the "Birth
of a Legend;' that "legend is not one tied to winning,
but tied to faith:' The hazy line demarcating greatness was
suddenly clear as day, and the team was on the other side.
The 1983-84 squad had a good pedigree. The year before, the
Raiders had qualified for the Division I state tournament
and won their first game, Watertown's first postseason play
since Art Shannon led the legendary 1948 squad deep into the
playofts. That squad's stellar seniors had raised the bar
for their successors; but their graduation left the team heavy
with juniors, a yet-to-be-tested mix of veterans and newcomers.
"We thought our players would compete well," Umi!e
recalled, "but we did not know how well our goaltending
and younger players would hold up:'
He needn't have worried on either count. In goal was the spunky
Leitner, whom Umile called later "a kid who has mastered
dealing with pressure and . . . takes a lot of pride in his
trade:' The Raiders allowed just 30 goals in the 18-game regular
season, a mere 1.67 per game. And with each line the Raiders
combined youth and experience to great effect. Senior co-captains
Maclnnis and Jack Hausw~irth attacked opposing nets early
and often as the squad !ed the Middlesex League in goals scored
with 90. Hall of Famer Maclnnis, a scoring machine, had 27
of them himself. He led the league in scoring with 46 points
- paced mainly by Hauswirth, with 42. Tim Duffy added 23 points
and a solid playmaking instinct. The credit doesn't stop there,
though. For everyone playad hard, and played as a team: from
the "Lovell Street gang" (John and Mark Khozozian,
Mike Venezia, Rich Kashian) to the forward play of Egan, Mark
Messina, Dan Sacco, Mark Francis, and Marcel Bogosian, to
the solid defense of Kevin McMahon, Charlie Jacoppo, John
CampbeN, Ed Veiking, and Dennis Murphy.
Opening league play with an 8-1 thumping of Winchester, the
Raiders would drop just 2 regular season games all season.
After losing to rival Reading a loss they would soon avenge
- the Raiders reeled off 12 straight !eague wins to end the
season, to close play at 16-2-0. In early February, from atop
a bunched Middlesex League, Umile remained cautious. "We
said these kids would make some noise, but their teamwork
has carried them to a possible championship," he noted.
"When I think about it, I shake!"
Well he might. Watertown had never won the Middlesex League,
and had not won any league crown since that 1948 squad. But
suddenly that all changed. The title-clinching victory over
Stoneham well illustrated the squad's greatness: a 4-1 win
sparked by stingy defense, strong goaltending from Leitner,
balanced scoring (two goals for Hauswirth to go with one apiece
for Maclnnis and Egan), and all-around team play. Two tune-up
wins over Melrose and Belmont followed, and it was on to the
postseason.
"I don't know how we'll do, but these kids will not back
down, ever;' said Umile, and he was right. In the first game
the Raiders coasted over Danvers 5-2. Leitner made eleven
saves in the second period alone, supported both on defense
and with a consistent and persistent offensive attack, with
Maclnnis scoring twice and Bogosian, Duffy, and Francis tallying
single goals.
Powerful Newton North, winner of its last twenty games, was
next. But there, as detailed above, the team's character came
to the fore. It was on to the state semi-finals and Watertown's
first ever "Garden Party;' on to the hallowed home of
Orr and Esposito. It was on to Matignon.
Matignon - dubbed "the Soviet Union of Eastern Mass.
hockey" - was seeking its fifth consecutive state title,
boasting a team that wouid send an astonishing eleven players
into Division I College programs and three into the pros.
The Warriors had breezed into the semis with 11-1 and 14-1
blowouts. But they would not breeze that night. As the Press
detailed, "Coach Umiie's boys were about to be recognized
for their character and composure. As Matignon settled down
to feast on their next victim, Watertown took a scary bite
out of them:' The Warriors jumped out on top 2-0, and prepared
to cruise, but the Raiders had other plans. First Hauswirth
and then Maclnnis scored to tie the game. Could an upset be
in store? Umile thought so: "we never intended to represent
our town at a sightseeing party!"
In the second period, the dream faded; Matignon scored four
unanswered goals. But while the Raiders gave way, they never
gave up. As Warrior Steve Leach told the Globe, "They
showed their character We got two goals and they came right
back." As the clock ran down, the Watertown fans gave
their team a long standing ovation while the players continued
to scrap to the finat buzzer "They weren't losers;' a
Watertown student aptly said later "It was simply the
end of a great party."
The hard-fought game surprised all comers - except fhose from
Watertown, who knew first-hand of the team's spirit and drive.
There were individual honors aplenty, from Maclnnis' selection
as Midd!esex League MVP to the eight Raiders named League
All-Stars to Umile's nod as both the Globe and Herald Division
I Coach of the Year But above all, it was a team, that rose
together as one to grasp the mantle, surpassing expectations
and making history. Something there is in greatness, that
makes its expression grand, the stuff of legend. The legend
of the 1984 hockey squad, the Hall is glad to note, lives
on this spring.
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