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Lisa
Berardinelli
There are many ways to tell the story of Watertown field hockey.
But all of them must devote a fair amount of ink to the 1986
state championship squad. And therefore, ail of them must
discuss Lisa Berardinelli - halfback anchor of Eileen Donahue's
defense, which allowed just seven goals in twenty-three games
en route to glory.
That isn't all there is to Lisa's story of course. She was
a three-sport standout at Watertown High. On the track, she
was a stellar miler and a force in the two-miie run, the discus,
and the 4x440 relay, captaining the squad her senior season
and earning mention as a Middlesex League All-Star. On the
basketball court she started at guard, leading the 1986-87
squad to a 1 S-3 regular season record. She scored 23 points
in the season finale against Belmont, tlinching a tournament
slot; the Raiders made it to the Division II North Sectional
quarterfinals before being knocked off in a second-round nailbiter.
Still, without field hockey the town would have missed a great
performance by a great player for a great team. Lisa had been
captain of the freshman team and a star in the Bay State Games
(her squad won two gold medals and a silver in statewide competition
from 1984 to '86). Her junior year WHS made it into the state
tourney, only to be knocked out in the first round. But then
Coach Donahue came to town. "They didn't know how good
they were," Donahue recalled; but under her team-oriented
system, soon they - and the league, and the town - began to
realize just that. With tri-captain and All-Scholastic Berardineili
at halfback, providing leadership, chipping in six goals and,
most crucially, shutting down opponents' offensive sets, the
Raiders turned in a 12-1-5 regular season. The only loss was
to Division I powerhouse Melrose.
In the first game of the state tournament, Lisa scored the
only goal in a 1-0 win over Ipswich. The Watertown Sun positively
gushed as it recalled the contest: "she excelled at both
ends of the field throughout the day....When Ipswich tried
to mount an attack, Berardinelli was there. When Ipswich got
close to the Watertown net, Berardinelli was there. When Watertown
needed to keep the ball in the Ipswich zone, Berardinelli
was there. She always seemed to happen upon the scene at precisely
the right moment."
In the next round, the Raiders bumped off top seed Amesbury
2-1, and the march was on. In the semifinals, Wilmington fell
1-0; Lisa, along with Nancy Burke, was the "anchor of
a stingy defense" - ditto the next time out, with a 2-0
blanking of Manchester that was not as close as its final
score.
The state title game against Milton (which entered the contest
20-1-2) was one for the highlight reels. After a scoreless
first half, Milton broke through late for a 1-0 lead. But
with the defense holding firm, the offense kept the ball alive
in the Milton zone- and with just four seconds to play, Jeannie
Minelli redirected a Cathy Guden shot into history. Then,
in the third overtime, Julie Mandile scored, andWatertown
rejoiced. As the Watertown Press' Bob Ford put it, the team
had "an impossible dream, that by intensity and drive
became the possible and realized dream."
After graduating from WHS in 1987, Lisa went on to join the
University of Massachusetts' perennial top-ten field hockey
program. The results were a little predictable, which is to
say they were outstanding: in her four years, one as co-captain,
UMass made it to four NCAA tournaments, gaining the Final
Four in 1987 and finishing third in the nation. Lisa was named
the team's MVP to the All-Atlantic 10 tournament team, and
as a regional All-American. She participated in the Olympic
festival in Oklahoma City and was thrice invited to the national
team selection camp.
These days Lisa is still heavify involved in field hockey,
though from the bench. She served as head coach of the Northeast
squad in 1997 Bay State games; and is currently coaching in
the U.S. Field Nockey Association's Futures Program. Further
from 1994 to present she has rejoined Coach Donahue as an
assistant coach to the Watertown fieid hockey program - which
means she has been a part of two more state championships
over those four years.
Lisa's dedication to sport is to a common purpose; even today
she wil! only say "I was just a team player; on Eileen's
teams there were no stars." But that's the way the best
stories come about. That's how you end up with, as one local
scribe described that memorable season, "bloody knees,
dirty faces - and smiles."
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