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Richard
Morrill
In the spring of 1959, Rich Morrill's life changed dramatically,
and in an instant. His father Watertown firefighter Charles
Morrill, was killed in action at a blaze at the East Junior
High School. Suddenly, the burden of raising three small boys
was on Rich's mother, Connie. She remembers it as a very difficult
time. Lots of people helped -the fire department, she recalls,
was "immense" -but the void remained.
Rich put a lot of his energies into athletics. Pop Warner
football, youth hockey - any sport he could find. His friend
Steve Tolman (now Watertown's state senatar) comments that
"whether it was a pickup game or an organized sport,
Rich combined extraordinary Godgiven ability with a truly
tenacious spirit. He practiced and competed according to the
ideal that success awaits those who will earnestly shoulder
a day's work."
Rich's performance at Watertown High showed that all that
work had very clearly paid off. Indeed, he was a man for all
seasons: football in the fall, hockey in the winter, and on
the track (as a high jumper and hurdler) come spring. He was
a two-sport captain, on the ice, where he led the squad in
scoring his senior season, and on the gridiron.
It is perhaps for football that Rich is best remembered. By
the fall of 1970 he had established himself as a key component
of the resurgent Raiders; in one "superb" game against
Wakefield the "junior speedster" gained press kudos
for "breaking up passes, making tackles" and adding
a tough interception for good measure. Rich,s senior season
was something special. He had become a true twoway threat
- consider that in a win over Woburn he intercepted a pass,
returned it twenty-two yards to the five, and on the next
play rushed into the end zone for a touchdown. Overall, he
helped lead the team to its first winning seasvn in eleven
years, clinched by a 2316 win over Stoneham where he carried
15 times to pick up 104 yards, and returned a kickoff 96 yards
for another score. That Thanksgiving, the Raiders cruised
over a strong Belmont squad, 28-6, piling up over three hundred
yards on the ground. Rich accounted for 107 af them, including
fifty yards in six carries to set up the Dom Lalli score that
put the game away. Not surprisingly, he won the McHugh Trophy
as the game's Most Valuable Player, to go along with A!1-League
and All-Scholastic honors.
Rich was recruited by Division I Wake Forest upon his graduation
in 1972. After a year, though, he returned to Boston, transferring
to Northeastern University. There, he played for coach Bo
Lyons - particularly enjoying the games against old teammate
and friend LaUi, now at BU. Mainly playing cornerback now,
Rich set the NU record for longest interceptivn in 1974 with
a 100-yard return from the edge of the end zone against C.W.
Post. The Globe called it "nothing short of spectacular"
- and Rich made a lot of plays like that, proving himself
the leader of the Huskies' defensive backfield. He was named
co-captain for his senior season, which was capped with a
53-31 romp overAIC.
After graduating from Northeastern, Rich coached with Pete
Hall at Weston High School, while working as a probation officer
for the Department of Youth Services. In 1987, he returned,
perhaps inevitably, to his roots, and became a member of the
Watertown Fire Department. Rich singles out Deputy Chief Bob
MacFarland as a special mentor throughout his life and in
the department as well. After all, in firefighting, you rely
on your teammates too.
Rich is now an executive at Arthur D. Little Consultants.
His intensity remains undimmed. But in thinking back, it is
not to his own accomplishments that he moves first. Rather
it is to thank all those who heiped him make it as far as
he has. MacFarland. Pop Warner Coach limmy 0'Reilly. Bernie
Bradley. At the top of the list, WHS coach John Barbati.
Still, one wonders if they might not, in turn, thank him.
Along the way Rich has always been a great man to have on
your team. And as Steve Tolman puts it, "Watertown athletics
were elevated to a higher stature because of Rich Morrill."
The Hall can only concur, with its own thanks.
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