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Henri
Kasbarian
In the sport of hockey in the 1940s, it sometimes seemed as
if there were the Canadiens, and then everyone else trying
to catch up.Yet Henri Kasbarian, son ofArmenian immigrants,
did indeed catch up, and more. From the frozen Charles River
to the American Hockey League, Henri epitomized toughness
and the fierce spirit of competition.
Perhaps this was in his upbringing. After all, in those days
there were no "soccer moms," no municipally-organized
recreation leagues. Instead, the teams were the neighborhoods,
the motivation one's own initiative. Sandlot football on the
Coolidge School playground and makeshift nets on Fresh Pond
were Henri's training grounds.
And, he must have learned well. At Watertown High School,
Henri stepped into the spotlight as he stepped into the net,
earning the Boston Globe's nod as the best scholastic goaltender
in Massachusetts. As early as his sophomore year he had played
for the Marvin Foundry championship entry in the Boston Amateur
Hockey League. Soon assuming the starting slot for the Raiders,
Henri was named the Bay State League's best goaltender two
years running. In 1947-48, he was simply outstanding, earning
the nickname "Shutout" while Watertown earned its
first ever league title in hockey behind his netminding and
Art Shannon's scoring touch. The Raiders got off to a fast
start as Henri notched two shutouts in four games, and would
lose just one league matchup. Even in defeat his play was
noted; in a postseason all-star contest, for example, a local
reporter commented that "his brilliant saves . . . would
have broken the hearts of a less courageous team." And,
the next season he continued to shine, serving as the squad's
co-captain and earning first team All-Star mention.
After graduating from Watertown High in 1949, Henri went on
to Huntington Prep School and then to American International
College in Springfield. He also took his hockey game to a
new level, joining first the Lynn Pics of the Atlantic Hockey
League and then, in 1950-51, Eddie Shore's Springfield Flyers
in the American Hockey League. In one early matchup against
the AHL-leading New York Mets, he tallied "a top notch
performance" with one "brilliant split-save"
after another. He also became AIC's starting goalie as a sophomore,
beating out All-New England netminder Lou Astorino. By 1956-57,
Henri was the standby goaltender for the professional Eastern
Hockey League's New Haven Blades, and he would also play for
the Springfield Indians and Buffalo Bisons.
Before concluding, it is important to note two things. First,
that goalies in this era did not normally wear masks, and
Henri never did. This bred toughness; but Henri already had
it. As a result of his fearlessness on the ice, he played
with injuries ranging from concussions to a fractured jaw
and a torn ear. Second, that the Kasbarian sports biography
is not complete with a discussion of hockey, for his toughness
was not limited to the rink.
Indeed, Henri notes that "even though hockey was my best
sport, my first love was football." And on the gridiron,
too, he became an All-Scholastic contributor, a ferocious
blocker and tenacious tackler. Hall member Ben Akillian, a
teammate, recalls that even though Henri didn't have great
physical size, "he more than compensated with a fierce
determination, desire, and love of the game." legendary
WHS Coach !oe Murphy called him one of the best he ever had.
His college coach, Nick Rodis, echoed the sentiment, noting
that "what he lacked in size, he made up in courage.
Pound for pound, there was no one tougher."
Now living in Wellesley, Henri has had a successful career
in the insurance industry. The athlete he was is still in
the man he was, defined by that fearlessness, that toughness.
Those are character traits the Hall is happy to honor by honoring
him with induction this year.
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