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Ray CHamberlain
Back in the day when every graduate was given an epigram summing
up their high school career the 1936 Watertown High School
yearbook e summed up Ray Chamberlain thus: "none but
himself can be his parallel." That, in turn, neatly sums
up the reason that Chamberlain will enter the Hall of Fame
this year. His talents were hard to match. Indeed, he was
his own toughest critic and fiercest competitor driving himself
to excel in whatever contest he was engaged. Chamberlain was
a versatile athlete, starring in three sports during his high
school career. He was an All-Scholastic goalie for the soccer
squad and the high scoring captain of the basketball team,
well regarded for his grace in any athletic arena and for
his versatility.
But it is baseball for which he is best remembered. The Boston
Globe, summing up his stellar senior season on the mound,
predicted that of the 1936 crop of schoolboy hurlers, "Chamberlain
is probably destined to go the furthest." This built
on similar success his junior year when he was also a consensus
all-scholastic. The Globe noted that he pitched in fourteen
of Watertown's fifteen games in 1935, piling up eight wins,
"fall[ing] back upon splendid control for a goodly portion
of his effectiveness." He was a master at forcing the
weak pop fly and the topped grounder But he was a power pitcher
when he needed to be, using his dazzling stuff to average
ten strikeouts a game - and in one memorable start against
Wakefield, ringing up seventeen batters.
One game against Essex County champs Lynn Classical sums up
Ray's pitching career. He hurled a three hit shutout to blank
Classical for the first time all season. He walked just one
and fanned eleven. And he added two hits, driving in a pair
of Raider runs. It should be noted, in fact, that Chamberlain
was also an outstanding outfielder. In 1935 he had over a
hundred putouts without an error and batted .431 - some years
later Watertown Sun correspondent Ted Gibson put together
a 1930s All Star team and put Ray not on the mound but as
his starting center fielder. "Wow! " he added, with
evident glee: "And Chamberlain would work in relief...Could
you beat it? Why, no, you couldn't even tie it."
Chamberlain went on to a minor league pitching career-hurling
"a mean fastball," one scribe noted-before retiring
from professional sports in the early 1940s. He had lived
up to his yearbook's promise. And for that the Hall is proud
to honor him this year.
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