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1989
Field Hockey
State Champions, coach Eileen Donahue
And having arrived, they didn't leave. The 1989 squad picked
up where it had left off. "You can't expect anything
to happen every year" Donahue told the press, but her
team expected great things of itself. They had lost Kelly
Khozozian, true, and Mastroianni, and lannetta, and the other
seniors. But they still had the best player in the state in
Guden, who would win her third straight league MVP award and
be named Division II player of the year. They had the other
tri-captains, Joanna Rudalevige and Kim Boyden, leading a
steilar defensive-minded squad with four returning starters.
And they had a host of contributors to the '88 championship
who were ready to use that experience to step up to leadership
roles. The '89 squad had both a dream and an eagerness to
work for it. It was a combination the rest of Division II
would find impossible to overcome.
Early on it became clear that opponents couldn't focus only
on Guden. Lauren Khozozian continued her superlative play
finishing third in the league in scoring, and a host of others
made key contributions. Midfielder Amy Guggina had an all-star
season, supported by juniors Meaghan Reilly and Laurel Manzelli.
Heidi Holmberg, Karen Jigarjian, Patty Grady, Val Ford, and
many others made offensive contributions. And underlying it
all, perhaps, was the defense. As one reporter noted after
the Raiders beat undefeated Lexington, "again the defense
was spectacular with Rudalevige and sophomore goalie Kim Boyd
leading the pack." Indeed, in one drizzly game against
Belmont. the defense did not ailow a single shot on net, leading
another scribe to comment wryly that "the biggest challenge
facing Boyd was keeping dry..." The Raiders gave up a
grand totaf of four goals during the regular season - while
scoring fifty-one themselves (22 by Guden and 16 by Khozozian)
and shutting out their opponents an astonishing fourteen times.
They never trailed in a game. They were, quite simply, dominant.
The Raiders even beat the non-Watertown Middlesex League All-Star
team - shutting them out, naturally by a score of 3-0. In
the end, to list individual names is to miss the point - this
was, above all, a team. "It takes all of us together
out there," said Donahue, "and this group understood
that: they always put the team's needs above individual needs."
The regular season over at 17-0-1, the Raiders awaited the
state tournament. But besides the venues, little else changed.
Overwhelming first-round opponent Lexington Christian by a
4-0 count, and Ipswich 2-0, the Raiders seemed poised to cruise
to glory. But Tyngsboro, led by all-scholastic Danielle Luongo,
had other ideas. On soggy turf, the two teams battled for
every loose ball. Strength met strength on both ends of the
field. Then Guden took a pass from Boyden midway through the
first half and snapped the ball past the Tyngsboro goalie
- only to see the game tied a minute later by Luongo's deflection
past Boyd. Guden scored again, assisted by Khozozian - but
with ten minutes to go, so did Luongo. It was on to overtime.
And there, as the clock wound down to the two-minute mark,
Patty Grady centered the ball and Khozozian hammered it home.
"I was just there at the right time," she would
later explain. And with a berth in the state finals, the Raiders
were in the right place once more.
They would make the most of it. The Raiders had beaten Sandwich
the prior year in the state semifinals, and the Knights wanted
payback. But instead a charged-up Watertown squad collectively
dominated the game from the opening whistle. "A fabulous
group effort," raved one reporter. But perhaps the greatest
tribute came from Sandwich coach Suzanne Ericson. "They're
a machine," she reflected; "We had a head-on collision
with a machine. I have never seen a better high school - or
college - team in my life." With the Raiders pushing
the ball relentlessly Reilly opened the scoring less than
two minutes into the game, with Grady adding a second just
before halftime. But the 2-0 score reflected more the heroic
efforts of the Sandwich goalkeeper than the game's dynamics.
And in the second half there would be no let-up: Kim Boyden
got the Raiders' third goal, Lauren Khozozian their fourth.
Karen Jigarjian had two assists while the defense stifled
Sandwich's increasingly desperate press. And, appropriately,
with eight minutes left, Guden would cap the season with the
80th goal of her high school career Watertown 5, Sandwich
0.
Even in an age of superlatives, then, the 1988 and 1989 squads
stand out. 22-0-1 . 21-0-1 . Back to back state titles. Hyperbole
is justified when the numbers speak for themselves so clearly.
But it is important to remember they sprang from the women
who worked so hard, and played with such joy. "They were
very tough, talented, and competitive," Donahue remembers.
"And they had a lot of fun." It's the fusion of
the two - of statistics, and soul - that makes these teams
such a wekome addition to the Hall.
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