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Chuck
Laurie
Going into the 1974 Thanksgiving game at Belmont, the host
Marauders had not been beaten by Watertown at home since 1960.
The crowd of 8,000 partisans smelled victory; Belmont was
8-1 and still in the hunt for a Superbowl bid. "Many
Belmont fans feel that this team has yet to play its best
game," crowed the local paper.
But Watertown had some advantages as well. One was their quarterback.
His name was Chuck Laurie, and even the Belmont paper had
to admit he was "superlative."
Chuck had become the starting quarterback his sophomore year
when he leapt from third string to instant hero in a game
against league champion Winchester, leading the Raiders to
a shutout win with his pinpoint passing. The next year Watertown
tied for the Middlesex League title, the school's first. And
entering the Belmont game in 1974, WHS had a 6-3 record, which
guaranteed a winning year for the fourth straight season.
The prior week Chuck had passed for three touchdowns against
Wakefield as the Raider offense racked up 430 yards. The team
was ready.
And, as a breathless Wizterto7vn Press later reported, "from
the moment they won the coin toss the Raiders played like
there was no tomorrow." Belmont had allowed just seven
points a game; the Raiders scored four times that en route
to a 28-14 win, "one of the biggest upsets in the 54
year history of the football rivalry." Many stars shone
for Watertown; but Chuck's offense owned the field, moving
with ease through the previously impermeable Belmont backfield.
With no hint of exaggeration, Kip Beach - a 1973 grad who
had been on the receiving end of many Laurie passes - could
report that it was the most exciting game he had ever witnessed.
Chuck graduated in 1975 as the team's most valuable player.
He had started twenty-one winning games, the most of any quarterback
in WHS history. He had six varsity letters, three in football
and three in basketball, where he also shone. He was on the
Harry Agganis All-State All-Star team. He had offers from
a host of collegiate football programs eager for his skills.
He chose to go to Bates to play under coach Vic Gatto, where
he earned four varsity letters in football. Upon his graduation
in 1979, he was the holder of five Bates passing records and
was the captain and team MVP his senior year That year he
also won the Gold Helmet Award of the New England College
Football Writers as the Division III New England football
player of the year. All in all, not a bad career.
Chuck has stayed in the Boston area; he now works for the
Ryerson Steel and Aluminum Company. Those who saw him play
and those who knew him off the field remember him with equal
regard. "What can you say about Chuck Laurie? He's what
every father would want in a son," notes longtime WHS
faculty member Fred Parshley. And Chuck's old coach, John
Barbati, recalls him as "my quarterback and my leader,
one of the best throwers who ever played for me." But
most of all? Well, says Barbati, "Ijust hope he's the
same as I remember him: ' He is.
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