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Nick
Papas Jr.
Basketball was my worst sport, but my first love, says Nick
Papas, Jr. We might quibble with the first part, but not the
last. I knew very early on I wanted to be a basketball coach,he
adds; and in following that dream over twenty-five years and
more, Nick has shared his love of the game with literally
thousands of young people. And they have taken away something
special. He has taught them not only how succeed on the court,
but in the rest of their lives. And for that - for his work
with youth, for his impact not just on Watertown but on his
chosen sport as a whole, the Hall is happy to take special
recognition of Nick's career this year. Nick grew up on Marshall
Street, when he wasn't next door atVictory Field in the town's
recreational programs, WHS great Bob Norton was his park instructor
and Nick was waterboy on Norton's Hall of Fame 1960 team.
Nick's father legendary teacher Nick Sr., coached him at the
Phillips School. Another mentor was Dave Hughes, a longtime
coach and teacher at WHS, now at Hopkinton High as head football
coach.
Nick was a three sport athlete at WHS, earning nine varsity
letters and winning an array of awards, including the Hoyt
Thurber trophy as his year s most outstanding athlete and
runner-up status in a statewide Elks scholarship for Massachusetts
student-athlete. He was a small forward on the basketball
court, but as his comment suggests, in high school his greatest
successes came elsewhere. He was an All-Middlesex League middle
infielder and solid Legion player for example. And in football,
he was named by both the Globe and the Herald as "a player
to watch" playing both ways at end, cited three times
in the 1968 season as the Raiders' player of the week. He
went on to start at defensive end for Division II Springfield
College's freshmen football squad, which went undefeated for
the first time ever. And he was a key defensive cog for the
nationally-ranked Springfield varsity eleven the next season.
In an intriguing twist of fate, when Springfield played Northeastern,
Nick lined up againstVictor Palladino, Jr., who centered the
Huskies' offensive line.
All the while, even in high school, Nick was involved in youth
sports, convinced of the key role they could play in the wider
community. He was a park instructor in the Watertown recreation
department, a basketball referee for the elementary league,
a baseball coach for the Town League. In 1971 and 1 972 he
was head coach of a Longmeadow Pop Warner team. And by 1972
he had already become JV coach of Winchester High School's
basketball squad.
After graduating from Springfield with his B.S. in physical
education in 1973 (he added an M.Ed. from Fitchburg State
in 1978), Nick spent a year coaching high school basketball
in Montreal, creating a team for a school that had none. In
1975 he came back to Massachusetts to coach at Minuteman Regional
High School in Lexington, once more initiating an entire program.
And here his success as a teacher came to the fore: after
a 6-14 record during Minuteman's first year of varsity competition
in 1976-77, Nick's charges went 14-7 the next year en route
to the divisional quarterfinals in the state tourney. They
would return to the tournament five of the next six years.
Nick was named coach of the year by the Massachusetts Coaches
Association in 1981 .
In 1984 Nick went to Melrose High School and continued his
winning ways. In 1986-87 Melrose qualified for the Division
I tournament for the first time in fourteen years. Just two
years later they were regionally ranked by USA Today, going
18-0 in Middlesex League play, rolling all the way to the
state division finals before falling to Cambridge Rindge and
Latin and finishing at 21-2 overall. Nick was the Globe's
"coach of the year" in Division I, earning like
honors from the Middlesex League and Massachusetts Coaches'
Association too. Space does not allow a full listing of Nick's
coaching honors, but the accolades piled up - because so did
the wins. Melrose returned to the tournament eleven years
in a row through 1997 - marking 20 straight years over .500
for teams Nick coached - peaking at a #15 statewide rank after
its run to the sectional finals in 1996. His record stands
at 340-172 (a .664 winning percentage) across a quarter-century
of varsity coaching. He's the winningest all-time coach at
Minuteman and Melrose, and is hoping to repeat history in
his current post at Burlington.
High school coaching, though, was only a part of Nick's commitment
to basketball and the young people who played it. He's long
been active in the Massachusetts Basketball Coaches Association,
the National Association of Basketball Coaches, the Bay State
Games, and the MIAA tournament committee. Since the 1970s
he's been teaching at a wide variety of camps and schools,
from the New England Basketball School in North Easton to
Dave Cowens school in Weston. He's run the Fast Break Basketball
School at Melrose High since 1984 and the Minuteman Mustangs
School in Lexington for twenty-five years. In fact, he remains
head of the physical education and health department at Minuteman.
Nick has been active locally (he's still president of the
famed 0-9 team's alumni club). He's been a national figure
(for seven years has been volunteer assistant at Nike's All-American
Basketball Camp in the Hoosier Dome). And he's even been an
international ambassador of sorts (he taught basketball clinics
in Belgium in the late 1970s and worked at the 1987 Pan American
Games in Indianapolis).
All this adds up to an outstanding record of service to many
communities. The best player on Nick's old Springfield squads
was quarterback Gene DiFellipo who now serves as now athletic
director at Boston College and helped turned around the Eagles
program. Nick Papas is an outstanding person, a person who
is committed to the benefit of our youth, notes DiFellipo.
"Many youngsters have had the good fortune to be taught
or coached by Nick. They are better people for this."
The Hall can only concur.
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