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Michael Santoian
Mike Santoian grew up playing Kill Donnie, which
sounds rather nasty until you discover that the intended victim
was Don Chiofaro, then-captain of the Harvard football team,
and well able to withstand the assaults of a small gang of
ten year old boys. He threw us around like rag dolls,
Mike remembers. If nothing else, it made him want to be a
football player.
And a little later, he was. At Victory Field, Mike would soon
give the rag doll treatment to a wide range of opposing players.
Under coaches Tony Flecca and Billy McCarthy, he tried out
for the freshman football team in 1968. The next year John
Barbati came to Watertown High and the restoration of the
varsity squad began; by fall 1971, the team won two-thirds
of its games, its first winning season in a decade or more.
Mike was a key part of that on the line, a Middlesex League
All-Star and Boston Herald All-Scholastic. In one game against
Reading he blocked three punts, a Middlesex League record.
In the 50th playing of the Thanksgiving game versus Belmont,
Mike helped put Belmonts running game to shame
as Watertowns front four turned in its best game
of the season, as one local scribe noted. Later in the
game Mike deflected a pass to Bob Poirier, who made it all
the way to the Belmont seven yard line, setting up a key score
in a 28-6 victory.
He was equally successful on other fields as well, especially
where the javelin and discus were concerned. Mentored by Bill
Flecca and by seniors John Mooshigian and Hall of Famer Jay
Luck, Mike learned the techniques of the field events from
the best. His scores showed it: from discus throws of 120
feet to 130 feet and then one dizzying day past 140, earning
an invitation to the state meet, where he placed fourth. In
1972 he won every discus event in which he competed except
one when teammate and fellow Hall of Famer Dom Lalli
beat him out.
After graduation from Watertown High in 1972, Mike went on
to the Winchendon School on a full scholarship. There he studied
hard and played hard too, earning the schools MVP in
football and most-improved award in swimming. He was recruited
by a number of colleges and wound up at Northeastern, eventually
earning a full scholarship and playing alongside friends like
Manny Bougoulas, Rich Morrill, and Eddie Kasabian. After a
strong minicamp in the spring of 1975 he wound up as the starting
left defensive tackle, a job he never let go. He was game
captain for a key matchup with Springfield and in 1975 won
the teams unsung hero award for his work
in the trenches.
Since 1979, Mike has worked for the Massachusetts Department
of Correction, currently as a Lieutenant and the training
officer for MCI-Concord. Hes involved in the community
as a Pop Warner coach, a church trustee, and a family man,
thanks to his wife Kathy and children Michael and Lauren
themselves promising athletes.
Dom Lalli, who knows something about athleticism, once said
of Mike Santoian that he possessed a unique quality
that was some magic combination of strength, speed, agility,
and intelligence. I have been fortunate to have had him as
a teammate and friend. This year, the Hall is fortunate
to have him as a member.
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