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Stephen
Lyle
They called him "Sparky," and not just because he
had a namesake in the Yankees' pitching star. More to the
point, Steve Lyle was the spark of every team he played on
at Watertown High. His statistics, though impressive in their
own right, only go part of the way towards summing up the
outstanding ability of this great athlete.
His football coach, John Barbati, hails Sparky as "our
go-to guy - a great, gutsy runner." Pat Barry, who played
football and baseball with him, recalls Sparky as "a
blue-collar type of player with his nose tight to the grindstone;
one of the hardest workers I've ever seen, and one whose example
brought the team to life." And Warren Tolman, Sparky's
football teammate who now serves as Watertown's State Representative,
praises him as "a real team leader, a fine natural athlete
with an amazing work ethic, who set a fire under his teammates
and made us play that much better."
Of course, Sparky's record is pretty impressive in its own
right. A hardnosed shortstop, he was a three-year starter
on the baseball team - he captained the squad his senior year,
leading the way to a .600 winning percentage. On the gridiron,
he played on the 1976 and 1977 Middlesex League Champions;
the 1977 squad, of course, ran up a perfect 10-0 record and
was inducted into the Hall last year Sparky was a tri-captain
on that team the third-leading scorer in the state in Division
I and the team's Most Valuable Player on offense. He was named
to the Middlesex League All-Star team and received honorable
mention notice as an All-Scholastic. He was named the high
school's best senior athlete by his classmates as well as
by an alumni group.
After graduating from Watertown High in 1978, Sparky travelled
to the University of Maine, where he played football under
future Boston College coach Jack Bicknell.
Sparky had always been interested in working with his hands;
he had even won second place in a statewide woodworking competition
during his high school days. So from Maine Sparky went to
Alaska, where he was able to combine his talents as a craftsman
with his athletic ability. Diving into the wilderness, he
lived in a tent in deep woods and canoed nearly four hundred
miles of the Yukon River, from White Horse to Dawson City.
TYading the frontier for the foreign, his travels continued
across Hawaii, Asia, and Europe, ending up in Haiti, where
he lived for some time making desks for the schoolchildren
of a poverty-stricken village.
At last returning to the U. S., Steve settled down and formed
his own contracting partnership, Tucci & Lyle, where he
has worked for the last eleven years. He now lives in Waltham,
and is teaching Steve Jr to throw.
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