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Manny
Bougoulas
Thanksgiving Day, 1975, dawned wet and cold. It ended the
same way. But for a beautiful stretch in midmorning there
was "Rain: Then Mud . . . Mud . . . Mud . . . and Manny!"
So read the headlines in the Watertown Sun, alluding to Red
Raiders co-Captain Manny Bougoulas' astounding 203-yard rushing
performance in Watertown's 18-0 victory over Belmont, which
had been a pre-season pick for the Middlesex League title.
Instead, Bougoulas scored all three Raider touchdowns in the
victory, capping an impressive 8-2 season for John Barbati's
troops.
For the year, Manny had gained over 1,400 yards - 140 yards
per game - and scored seventeen rushing touchdowns. Besides
the 200-plus yards gained against Belmont his yardage was
an impressive as it was consistent: he scampered for 183 against
Reading, 159 against Wakefield, 137 against Burlington, 128
against Winchester - and this is far from a complete list
of Manny's many 100-yard games. "He's our workhorse,"
crowed Coach Barbati; "He's sensational." The Boston
sports community agreed: Manny was named an All-Scholastic
and to the Middlesex League All-Star team, as well as to the
Harry Agganis All-Star game at the Manning Bowl (where, ironically,
he caught his first pass!)
This triumphant season was a fitting end to an outstanding
high school career. During his junior year, he had teamed
with Hall of Fame quarterback Chuck Laurie to upset a heavily-favored
Belmont squad to top off a 7-3 year; in that game Manny gained
112 yards and was awarded the McHugh Memorial 'Irophy as the
game's Outstanding Player, an award usually given to a senior
- and one which as a senior he would win again, along with
the trophy as team MVP. His sophomore year he won the Kelly
Award as ` `most valuable sophomore player"; as a freshman
he had run track on an undefeated harrier squad; indeed, as
an eighth grader he had played on the Raiders' freshman team.
It's no wonder that Hall of Famer Orazio Lattanzi, the key
to Manny's offensive line, recalls that "when his number
was called, I always got an emotional lift."
Lattanzi continues, "As a lineman, the only way I knew
how successfully the play was developing was to listen to
the crowd reaction. With the ball in Manny's hands, time after
time the place would go wild." After watching one of
Manny's masterful performances his senior year, the Sun concurred:
"Bougoulas . . . has come through time and again. He
runs low to the ground . . . and mucks his way forward with
brute strength and determination. He is a competitor."
And the paper lauded an aspect of Manny's game that is often
overlooked: his consistently excellent defensive play. As
Manny himself remembers, "there is nothing like making
an unassisted open field tackle."
From his days playing tag football on Hillside Road, through
Pop Warner and Little League, Manny Bougoulas is truly a product
of Watertown's athletic community and of the community as
a whole. He still recalls fondly the mentoring of all his
coaches, from the age of ten onwards. And at his current job
as Controller at a Waltham biotechnology company he is quick
to list the accrued benefits of the sporting life: a commitment
to leadership melded with teamwork, discipline, hard work,
and pride. But the Hall is willing to give a pretty good share
of the credit for Manny's impressive achievements - at Watertown
High, at Northeastern University, and in life - to his character,
to his determination and to his skills.
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