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Dom
Lalli
These days, Dom Lalli often finds himself talking to groups
of all kinds at seminars and retreats. He likes to tell them
about three telephone calls that had a huge impact on his
life - each placed by the same man, Hall of Fame WHS coach
John Barbati.
The first came as he entered his sophomore year at Watertown
High, when Barbati asked h!m to join the football squad. Three
years later, word came that Dom was to receive an athletic
scholarship from Boston University. And four years after that,
Barbati helped him into a coaching and teaching position at
Xaverian Brothers High School, which kicked off a twenty-year
career (so far) at that institution. Small wonder that when
Dom returned to Watertown High in the mid-1980s to serve as
line coach under Barbati, he did so with a real sense of giving
back to the community that had already given him so much.
He still pays tribute to "the spirit that Coach brought
to each contest . . . . I continue to use the gifts he shared
with me."
Dom grew up in the East End of Watertown. He recalls that
he started as a high jumper at the East Junior High, and was
excited to clear the bar at 5'3"only to "retire"
abruptly when Hall of Famer Billy Hatten easily jumped 5'10"!
By the time he went to high school, Dom had moved to the discus
and shotput, where his strength and focus made him a standout.
His top shotput throw was over 47 feet, topping off on the
discus at a stellar 144 feet. Coach Bill Flecca remembers
Dom as a "wonderful and dedicated athlete. Our outdoor
team was led by the field unit and our championship discus
squad - Dom, Greg Ohanian, and Mo Santoian, ail of whom consistently
reached 140 feet and gold-medaled at the state coaches' relay
meet."
The repeated use of words like "dedication" and
"focus" is no accident, for they arise again and
again when people discuss Dom's career - and his life. Even
now, he displays total determination as he works toward his
goals; not, perhaps, the most naturally-gifted athlete, he
turned himself into a star through sheer force of wiil and
effort. His skills were developed by trials and time, heart
and hunger ardor and intensity.
At Watertown High, for example, he served as team MVP, as
both an All-Scholastic defensive end (the starter in the 1972
Harry Agganis All-Star Game at that position) and as a dogged
offensive machine. Dom was the blocking back who opened up
space for some of the best running backs to have graced Victory
Field, including Sylvio DiRico, Richard Morrill, and Ed Kasabian
- and performed that role as well as anyone ever had. Kasabian,
now a veteran Watertown police sergeant, recalls that "as
the lead block, Dom would blast holes in the defense with
his sheer physical talents and his heart. He was the leader,
the guy who made things happen on the field"
A capstone moment to Dom's high school years came in the 1971
Thanksgiving Game, when the Raiders buried Belmont, 28-6.
The Watertown Press noted that "the senior blocking back
. . . turned in his finest effort at the high school. A solid
performer on defense he was the offensive workhorse who enabled
[WHS runnersj to pick up considerable yardage with his crunching
blocks, clearing the way into the endzone . . . our nominee
for the outstanding player of the game." For not only
did he lead others to touchdowns, and add a variety of tackles
and a sack, he also scored his first rushing touchdown - fittingly,
on the last offensive possession of his high school career
From the Marauder nine, Dom took the ball for a first down
at the six . . . carried again to the three . . . then plunged
in for the score. "There was no way they were going to
stop me!" Dom notes. As teammate Joe Antonellis recalls,
"the whole team was so happy for him. Dom was so excited
he wouldn't let the ball go. We had to pry it from him - we
were afraid we were going to get a penalty!"
At Watertown High, Dom's nickname was "Buftalo,"
a moniker given to him by Leo Harrington in reference to his
fierce charges, head down, during drills. That hard-hitting
style continued as Dom - Now called "Rhino"! - went
on to Boston University. And his success continued as well.
He became a starter midway through his sophomore year and
was consistently among team leaders in tackles. After being
named to the All Yankee Conference second-team - part of a
defensive wall that allowed just 12 points a game that season
- he was named the BU squad's co-captain his senior yeac Dom
credits BU line coach Jim Lee Hunt, himself a former Patriots
great, with bringing his game to a new level. Certainly the
opposition agreed. Bob Norton, then assistant coach at UNH,
remembers that "every offensive game plan against BU
always started with a question: how are we going to contain
Dom Lalli? We never did quite accomplish that. He was a force."
Dom was leading the team in tackles his senior year, a projected
first-team all-scholastic, when in the season's fourth game
he severely injured his knee. It was the end of his football
career But it was the beginning of much else. During his high
school years, Dom had begun to train in weightlifting under
the direction of coach and mentor David Hughes, and that interest
continued on in a variety of different competitive forums.
At WHS he could already bench press 250 pounds; as a BU senior
he benched over 400 pounds. In 1982 he won the Massachusetts
State Bench-Press Championship, and was third in the New England
competition; he won the state championship again in 1990.
He also developed an interest in body-buiiding, and won or
placed in nine All-Natural Body-Building Conference championship
in the late 1980s and early 1990s - including multiple turns
as Mr Massachusetts, Mr. Southern New Engiand, and even, in
1990, Mr USA in the tall meri s division. "It's a question
of discip!ine, and dedication to one's goals," Dom notes,
and those are traits he has in spades.
Indeed, in his career as an educator at Xaverian - he now
serves as its first tay Principal - Dom has brought those
skills to new generations of students and athletes. The weight
program he began there has contributed to the football squad's
multiple Super Bowl Championships in recent years. And, as
importantly, his commitment to drug-free athleticism and a
disciplined life has made him a mentor and role model for
many young people. Dom speaks to a wide variety of groups;
has been involved in Watertown youth sports, from Pop Warner
football to Little League; and served for a decade as a youth
minister at St. Jerome's Church in Arlington, organizing activities
and counselling. Ouite appropriately he refers to his teaching
as a "ministry" in its own right.
Dom likes to say that he still has a lot to learn; in fact
he hopes to pursue a doctorate in education. But he has a
lot to teach us, as well - about skiil and will, about determination
and faith. They are lessons the Hall is happy to take to heart.
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