
Shawn
Real
Shawn Real grew up dreaming of the heights, or rather of the
Heights a fan of Boston College sports since he was
ten or so, he imagined himself one day sprawled on the ice
in Chestnut Hill, making clutch saves in tournament games.
In goal... number one... Shawn Real... said the
voice in his head. Save! What a save! The best
part is that the dream came true.
Shawn showed his hockey talent early, playing on Watertown
Youth Hockey traveling teams as early as age six. He made
the WHS varsity squad as a sophomore, and in 1982 was named
team MVP and a Middlesex League All-Star. That 82 squad
reached the .500 mark, but the team wanted more. And in 1983,
with Shawn in the nets and Hall of Famer Chris Vlachos providing
the scoring punch, the team ran off a six-game unbeaten streak
mid-season en route to a 12-4-2 mark. The last game of the
season was, ironically, the highlight of my high school
career, remembers Shawn ironic, because the game
ended in a tie but a tie that lifted the Raiders into
the state hockey tourney for the first time since 1948. Shawn
was again a Middlesex League All-Star, team MVP (shared with
Vlachos); he was a Boston Globe All-Scholastic and named a
first star at Hockey Night in Boston.
But the team wasnt done yet. The Raiders won their first
game of the tournament against favored Gloucester rather handily.
In the second round, Watertown took a 3-1 lead in the second
period against perennial power St. Johns. The lead would
slip away, despite Shawns astonishing 44 saves, but
the Raiders had made their mark. Coach Dick Umile, who built
the Raiders (and has now built UNH into perennial final four
contenders), noted that Shawn was one of the real keys
in the resurrection of WHS hockey. He was a gifted goalie
who had it all.
Boston College took notice, giving Shawn a scholarship and
the chance to play with such future NHL players as Kevin Stevens,
Brian Leach, Craig Janney, Ken Hodge, and Tim Sweeney. He
was a four year varsity player with the Eagles, winning his
first collegiate start against British Columbia in the Great
Alaska Shootout in Anchorage. Spelling Scott Gordon, Shawn
racked up a 10-5 record through his junior year, winning key
conference games against New Hampshire and Wisconsin and starting
the NCAA Final Four third-place game against Minnesota-Duluth
as a sophomore. He was invited to play on a US Select Team
against the Russian Spartek team in Troy, New York, in late
1986. As a senior, Shawn was the squads co-captain and
won his first ten starts, racking up consecutive forty-save
performances against arch-rival Boston University and winding
up with a 16-3 won-lost mark, the best in Hockey East. The
Eagles, ranked first in the nation much of the season, won
the 1986-87 regular season and playoff Hockey East title as
Shawn beat Maine 4-2 in the championship game. Shawn won the
John Snooks Kelly Award that year as the player
who most typifies BC hockey.
Dreams count. But so do talent and, especially, years of hard
work. It is in recognition of Shawns personification
of all those things that the Hall welcomes him to its ranks
this year.
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