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Joseph
Murphy
Tn the fall of 1940, the Boston Herald was pondering the future
of WHS football. "A few years ago," its reporter
noted, ` `it used to be a real chore to do a serious story
on Watertown High, which was so far in the football doldrums
that even the mildest compliment sounded hypocritical. Last
year brought a real change, and this year it is a positive
pleasure to dissect the Watertown squad."
It didn't hurt that the 1940 team fielded such luminaries
as Bill Boyce and Vic Palladino. But a large part of that
"real change" was the recent arrival of Coach Joe
Murphy. Under his direction, the "Murphymen" climbed
back not only to respectability but excellence. They won thirty-one
games in the six seasons he coached, and beat Belmont four
out of five games.
Of course, Joe had experience in beating Belmont. In 1926,
he scored the winning touchdown in the Thanksgiving game after
an interception and fifty-five yard return, handing Belmont
its only loss of the season. He also played basketball and
baseball at Watertown High and later, at Huntington Prep,
was captain of the track team. At Bates College, he lettered
in three sports: football, baseball, and hockey. He captained
the latter sport for two years and won All-Maine honors for
his play at center He was All-Maine in football as well; in
1932 he was the star of the game as Bates - "advertised
as the only easy mark on the Eli schedule" - held powerhouse
Yale to a stunning 0-0 tie.
After graduation, Joe coached at Bates for two years, then
moved on to the high school in Franklin, New Hampshire, as
teacher-coach for two more. The Franklin football team, which
had been winless the year previous, lostjust one game his
first season. And he led the Franklin basketball squad, again
withjust one loss, to the state tourney.
Having warmed up, so to speak, Joe returned home to Watertown,
where he coached and taught - with some interruption for Naval
service - until 1953. During those years the football team
returned to prominence, and the 1948 hockey team won the prized
Bay State League championship. Six members of that team won
AllStar honors, and Joe was chosen coach of the league's All-Star
team.
Hank Ka,sbarian and Art Shannon of the '48 squad spoke with
one voice when they recalled that season and Joe's fatherly
influence on the team. "He wasn't a chalkboard kind of
coach," says Ka,sbarian. "He was a motivator - he
got the best out of everyone." And Shannon adds: ` `He
could get a great performance out of a player because he was
so well liked, so deeply respected. You wanted him to be proud
of you."
In 1953 Joe became principal of the Parker Marshall Spring
School District. But Joe stayed in contact with his players
- his friends - and followed their lives and careers with
unfeigned interest.
For whether it was exhorting from the sidelines, or hosting
the annual WHS Sports Night talent show (complete with tumbling
clowns and the Joe Giglio Orchestra), or directing Watertown's
March of Dimes charity drive, Joe was a man who believed in
fostering community. He believed in family. He believed in
one team, pulling together.
When Joe left coaching, he left behind a legion of dedicated
high school athletes who were better players, and people,
for having had his guidance. But he never forgot them. And
they, for their part, would never want to forget him.
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