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Larry
Cafarella
A man who knows Larry Cafarella very well perhaps put it best.
"Larry had an imposing physical stature," notes
Tommy Russo, a classmate and lifelong friend. "But he
was the gentlest of giants." Indeed, in Larry the athlete
and artist happily coexist.
One could, of course, fill a book with a listing of his athletic
accomplishments. Larry played football and basketball for
three years at Watertown High - Hall of Fame Coach Joe Zeno
called him "a great defensive tackle" as in his
senior season he led an underrated Raider eleven to an upset
of powerhouse Brockton and a drubbing of archrival Belmont.
He was the starting center on the 1949 state champion junior
high basketball squad. Still, it was for his exploits under
another legendary coach, Bob Gleason, that larry will be best
remembered. On the field, he followed in the large footsteps
of such shotputters as Ronnie Guitar, Gene Renzi, Dave Foley,
and Nick DeNitto - and left some oversized shoes of his own
behind him.
Consider this: as a shotputter Larry was undefeated in dual
meet competition. He was the Metropolitan League Shot Put
Champion in 1952 and, in fact, set a new (eague record every
single week that season. He capped that dream season by winning
the Massachusetts state title in the shot both indoors and
out, setting new state records at each event, 53', 10.5"
outdoors and 52', 10.5" under the lights - keep in mind
that only a handful of athletes in state history have hit
the 50' mark indoors, and that outdoors, as one Boston paper
noted, he was "the first schoolboy shotputter to clear
53 feet in a decade." At the New England championships,
Larry took second place, and his season wasn't done yet: at
the Indoor National Interscholastic Championship Meet at New
York City's Madison Square Garden, he placed third in the
country.
Not surprisingly, All-Everything Larry (he was named "most
popular" in his class, as well!) was awarded the Hoyt
Thurber Trophy as WHS' best athlete upon his graduation in
1952. After a stint in the service at Fort Benning (where
he placed first in the Third Army hammer throw contest), he
went on to Boston University, and his field performance would
only grow more impressive. He was the Greater Boston intercollegiate
shot put champion in 1957, 1958, and 1959; the Knights of
Columbus Games champ in '57 and '58; the B.A.A. Games first
place finisher from '57 through '59; and a participant in
the national Penn relays in '58 and '59. Once again, Larry
was undefeated in dual meet competition during his three varsity
years, setting meet, field, and cage records at colleges across
the eastern seaboard. BU won the New England Track Championship
meets in 1957 and 1958, and Larry was New England champion
in the shot - and second in the discus - both years. He set
the Terrier record in '58 at just a quarter inch short of
fifty-five feet, a record that stood well into the next decade.
After graduating from BU, Larry continued his involvement
in track and field as a coach, at Tufts and then back on Commonwealth
Ave. (where he coached the athlete who broke his shot record!)
Still, as a BU press release once trumpeted, "despite
his 6'3", 220 pound build, Larry has the artist's touch
- although few would believe it to see him toss the shotput,
discus, and hammer." Indeed, he did. Larry was not just
a regular in WHS' weight room, but in its art room, as well,
a calling he continued to pursue in his college years. Art
has always been a part of his life, coming from within like
all real talents, and something he had to express; fittingly,
then, in the 1960s, he began a career as a teacher of art.
He was in the Watertown schoo) system - at the East and then
at WHS - from 1961 to 1968, and then in Buena Park, California,
until his retirement in 1992.
Larry is now a full-time, award-winning painter and sculptor.
He exhibits and sells his work in galleries in California
and Nevada; his paintings hang in private collections worldwide.
Elaine Grey, president of the Watertown Art Association, no
mean judge of skill and style, calls Larry's paintings "a
breath of fresh air," expressed "in a moving and
individualist style."
It seems, then, that talent will show, whether it be on the
easel or the track. larry is a gentle giant, perhaps - but
in whatever field he has pursued, he has indeed been a giant.
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