|
Jim
Pierrakos
In 1986 Craig Stockmal became coach of the Watertown High
varsity basketball team. He had a simple motto, emblazoned
on a Tshirt: "Hard Work." At the time, though, he
probably didn't realize that he had on the junior varsity
roster someone who would internalize that motto and parlay
it into a professional basketball career.
Jim Pierrakos is the first to admit he didn't have great natural
athletic talent. He was an awkward youth. But he always had
the desire; and he was always willing to work for his dreams.
His family which came to the United States just four years
before Jim's birth, had its roots in Sparta, Greece; perhaps
some of the legendary work ethic of his warrior ancestors
rubbed off! Or perhaps it was closer to hand, in the unstinting
support his parents gave him as he began to get involved in
athletics. Or perhaps it was the coaching he received from
many of Watertown's talented mentors: Steve Pacifico, Phil
Costello, Bob Dupuis, Jeff Corrigan, Peter Centola. In any
case, Jim played basketball from the age of eight, first on
the Lowell School playground and then in a series of organized
teams at the Lowell, the West Marshall, and in the Greek Orthodox
Youth Association league.
By his sophomore year at WHS he was dressing for the varsity
but had never checked into a game. That next summer though,
he recalls, "I grew about four inches and lost a lot
of excess weight" Indeed, over the course of his high
school years he sprouted from 5'8" to 6'4". And
he learned from Coach Stockmal, to whom he quickly became
close.
The next year the Raiders were newly competitive. Though their
record was disappointing (just 4-16), they (ost the majority
of their games by five or fewer points. Jim, sensing something
big redoubled his efforts. He played on the Bay State Games
squad and attended several basketball camps, including that
run by Rick Pitino at Providence College. And that work paid
off again. In 1987-88, the Raiders posted an astonishing turnaround.
Breaking on top of the Middlesex League, they never looked
back, cruising into the state tourney for the first time in
fifteen years, and winding up the season with a sparkling
18-4 record. Jim was proudest for the team, and even now rattles
off his teammates - people like Ray Davidian, Mike Timperio
Mark McGrath, Rick Grant, Barry Fanara, Derek Tucker But his
individual statistics bear witness to his leadership. He scored
852 points in just two high school seasons, an average of
20.3 points per game. To that add fourteen rebounds, six assists,
and three blocked shots a game, and you have the makings of
stardom: Jim was in short order a Middlesex League All-Star
a Boston Globe All-Scholastic, and a member of the Eastern
Massachusetts "Top 40" All-Star roster
Recruited by Babson College, Jim continued his winning ways.
He led his squad in scoring and rebounding all four years.
His senior season was very special, both for him and for the
team. Babson went to the NCAA tournament for the first time
in school history that year. The squad was ranked first in
New England, and fifth nationally in Division III at the end
of a regular season highlighted by their defeat of Division
I's Harvard Crimson by twenty points. Jim himself was named
league most valuable player-the New England Division III Player
of the Year by both the NABC and the ECAC and a first-team
All-American to boot. (Not surprisingly he was inducted into
the Babson Hall of Fame in 1997.)
Steve Harrington, WHS' basketball coach (and architect of
the school's latest tourney team), played against Jim both
in high school and college (at Wakefield and Brandeis, respectively).
"He was the leader in turning both programs around. He
had great post-up skills - long arms, and great positioning;
he was always in the right place. And he was an outstanding
passer for a big man."
Outstanding enough, in fact, that after graduating from Babson
in 1992, Jim played six seasons in the hardnosed Professional
Greek Basketball League. The crowds were large and passionate,
with basketball second only to soccer in the national athletic
ethos. Teams like Jim's Athens Marussi squad attracted huge
fan support-and a dangerous tradition of coins hurled onto
the court like missiles. Jim, again team captain and MVP played
against past and future NBA stars like Dominique Wilkins and
Dino Radja. It was all a dream come true. "What I loved
most was now my job," he recalls; "my job was my
passion. It was a wonderful experience."
Still when he thinks back to how it all came about, it.is
to Craig Stockmal. "I owe him my work ethic," Jim
remembers. And that's saying something, for Jim's career could
perhaps be characterized as one of overachievement- of building
stardom less on natural talent than on a foundation of hard
work shaped by complete dedication to his sport.
Stockmal, though, goes one better and sums up why Jim Pierrakos
will join the ranks of Watertown's greatest this spring. "Jim
was the best player I ever had," Stockmal notes. "And
one of the best people I've ever known."
|
|