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Jane
Ford
One day in 1976, Jane Ford was on a school bus, en route to
hockey practice with her team. Blue lights flashed: the bus
pulled over. It was boarded by a Watertown police officer
who asked Jane to remove herself from the bus. He told her
that she could not practice with the team. For Jane, you'll
have noted, was a girl; the team was the West Junior High
School ice hockey squad; and the Massachusetts Association
of Junior High School Principals had decided that girls couldn't
play contact sports. The patrolman had the unhappy task of
enforcing that ruling.
But that day had a happy ending. In the short run, Jane was
taken to school, where principal Jack Burns made sure her
parents picked her up and got her to practice. In the long
run, that truncated bus ride changed the face of Watertown
sports. Determined to test newly enacted federal and state
laws mandating gender equality in athletics, 13-year-old Jane
went before the Watertown School Committee. The Committee
voted to allow her to play and, further went on the next year
to form a girls' hockey team at Watertown High, the first
such schoolsponsored team in Massachusetts.
It should be noted that Jane was hardly a charity case for
the West. From an early age, she was a noted athlete. She
had even played the role of pioneer before, becoming in 1974
the first girl to play in Watertown Little League and blossoming
into an All-Star first baseman. She later became a standout
catcher for the WHS softball squad.
In hockey she had been a star on the Watertown Red Devils
youth hockey team; at the same time she was establishing herself
in extracurricular play with the all-girls Assabet Valley
club. AssabetValley won the Boston Arena Tournament in March
1976 and then, in April of that year won the girls' hockey
national championship in the teen division. Jane was chosen
for the national All-Star team. Similarly, the 1977 club ran
up a record of 30-9-10 before entering that year s national
tourney, en route to the national runners' up position.
So when Jane tried out for the West's goalie slot, she won
it fair and square; her first game in the nets was a 14-1
drubbing of Rindge Tech. It was not an easy road - several
towns threatened not to play Watertown if she were playing,
and derogatory remarks came her way with some frequency. Her
teammates, though, were unreservedly supportive. She also
has fond memories of the efforts of West principal Burns,
and of Coaches Devaney, Vlachos, and Tremarche. "They
taught me a lot about goaltending," she remembers, "and
a lot about teamwork."
Those lessons were put to good use as Jane moved to Watertown
High. The varsity girls' ice hockey squad, coached by Peter
Pomponi, posted a 3-0 shutout of Concord in its very first
home game. The team tied for first in the league that first
season, with Hall member Susan Duffy and Jane leading the
way.
After Jane graduated from WHS in 1979, she rejoined Duffy
at Providence College - and the Friar hockey squad, not surprisingly,
made some noise. As a freshman, Jane was deemed "unbeatable
in the nets," leading PC into the EAIAW championship
game with 34 saves "many of them spectacular" raved
the Providence Journal - in a 5-3 victory over Cornell. Providence
posted three straight 20-win seasons for a four season tally
of 79-17 during Jane's career there. In the Friar nets she
posted a sparkling career goals-against average of 2.46 to
go with seven shutouts and a save percentage pushing .900.
After graduating from PC in 1983, Jane went on to work as
a goalie coach for the French Hockey Federation. The team
won a silver medal at the World Championships held in Grenoble,
France, and went to the 1984 Olympics. Since then, Jane has
kept busy nurturing the next generations of Olympic athletes.
She's served as head of women's hockey for Massachusetts and
New England, organizing state and national tourneys. She served
on the selection committee for the U.S. women's national team
and worked to organize the first team of U.S. women to play
internationally -laying the groundwork for women's hockey
gold at Nagano this year.
Long ago, Jane recalls, teacher Eleanor Donato urged her forward,
saying "you have the courage to do it." Jane did
indeed -and thus was born a Hall of Fame career. She made
breaking new ground seem old hat; Watertown's athletes, and
athletic programs, have been only one of many beneficiaries.
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