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Kara
Romanelli
Kara Romanelli was always a team player From her days on the
Browne School playground to those on the Brandeis University
basketball court she knew that individual effort was most
satisiying when the team thrived as a result, that gaudy numbers
meant little if they didn't help the team succeed. She loved
to play defense; to build up her teammates; to make the whole
more than the sum of its parts.
As a result it was no accident that Kara was on some pretty
good teams - and that her coaches always recognized her as
a key part, indeed. Her father Lou, himself a Hall of Famer,
recalls that she immersed herself in sports early on and proved
to be a natural athlete. By the time she got to Watertown
High School, Kara was ready to prove herself a star winding
up with nine varsity (etters across three sports.
On the basketball court, she played for Coach John Myers,
who always gave her the toughest defensive assignments - a
role she relished, and would keep throughout her playing days.
On the track, she scored nearly a hundred points for the WHS
harriers over her three years on the varsity, showing her
work ethic and athleticism by taking part in a half dozen
different events ranging from the long jump to the shot put
to the low hurdles. As a sophomore she was already a champ
at the last of these, blowing away the competition in an early
season meet with Wakefield by a full seven seconds. By her
senior season she was taking that success statewide, with
a gold medal in the shot put relay (in tandem with Hall of
Famer Zoey Zarkadas) and a bronze in the triple jump. She
finished in the top six in another four all-star events, including
the shot, hurdles, distance medley relay and the four by-one
hundred relay Not surprisingly she was awarded the Massachusetts
Track and Field Scholarship in 1987.
But it is perhaps in field hockey that Kara made her most
lasting contribution to WHS athletic history. The story of
the 1986 field hockey squad is oft-told, but no less memorable
for that: how first-year coach Eileen Donahue took a team
of hardworking overachievers all the way to the state championship.
Kara, as a junior had been instrumental in leading the 1985
squad to postseason play scoring eight goals and adding five
assists en route to an 11-3-5 record. Now, as a senior she
was ready for more.
More came in surprising quantities. The team jumped out to
a 4-0-2 start, then 7-0-4, then 12-1-5 (the only loss coming
against Division I Melrose), powered by a clutch offense backed
by tenacious defense. Kara's unselfish play was part of both;
she contributed key goals and assists on the year (second
on the team in the latter category with six) to the team's
balanced offensive attack. And as one local reporter noted,
was "all over the field" to lend a hand (or a stick)
wherever needed. She had a great team with which to work -
players like Hall of Famer Lisa Berardinelli, Cathy Guden,
Lauren Hegarty Kelly Khozozian, Jeannie Minelli, Heather Stuckey
to name just a few. She helped make all of them better.
Despite the stellar regular season Watertown was just the
eighth seed entering tournament play. But the Raiders soon
proved the oddsmakers wrong. In the first game, they beat
Ipswich 1- 0, then shut down top-seeded Amesbury by a 2-1
count. In the semifinals, Wilmington fell 1-0; in the North
finals it was Manchester s turn to be shut out. "A relentless
offensive attack and a defense that allowed only one shot
on goal" were the keys to victory press reports commented,
just as they had been all year Suddenly the state championship
was within the Raiders' reach -and after a triple overtime
game for the ages against Milton, it was within their grasp,
too.
As the Watertown Sun's Jim Woodworth put it "team effort
is an overused, trite expression, but [it's] one that fits
the 1986 field hockey team better than any other" The
defense, "led by Romanelli " he continued, was "a
virtually unsolvable puzzle": it never gave up more than
eight shots on goal in a game all year The spread-out, balanced
offense made it impossible for opponents to shut it down.
In short, it was Kara's kind of team.
Kara, always a stellar student went on to Brandeis University
after graduating from WHS in 1987. The school had no field
hockey program. But she continued to excel at basketball (at
the same time current WHS coach Steve Harrington was starring
for the men's team) and track. There she focused on the hurdles,
long jump, and triple jump, bringing home a bronze medal from
the University Athletic Association championships in St Louis
in 1988.
As far as athletic competition went, then, Brandeis was just
like home. But in other ways it was a culture shock, especially
in terms of the affluence of its student body. Yet Kara knew
she had something more important behind her; "other students
had a car" she recalls "but I had a family."
Indeed, one can't sum up Kara's career without mentioning
the importance of her tight-knit family - her ultimate team.
Her parents went to all her games without fail, supported
her in all her endeavors, provided a network of caring that
continues today. Even now, though daunted by the Watertown
housing prices that have forced so many recent graduates to
leave the community, she lives just a few doors down from
older sister Missy in Hooksett, New Hampshire. And a new generation
is on its way: Kara and her husband Allan are proud parents
to new son Reese, born just this month.
After stints as an administrator at Harvard and Lesley Colleges,
Kara recently switched gears to become "Team Leader"
of outdoor equipment giant Tmberland's customer service department.
But it suits. It seems an apt job title, somehow for the ultimate
team player.
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