St Sebastians School - Arrow Yearbook (Newton, MA)

 - Class of 1947

Page 105 of 212

 

St Sebastians School - Arrow Yearbook (Newton, MA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 105 of 212
Page 105 of 212



St Sebastians School - Arrow Yearbook (Newton, MA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 104
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Page 105 text:

was that joe's heroic effort went for naught. In the final stanza neither team was able to find the range and hostilities ended with Malden the victor and League Champion by a 3-0 verdict. Naturally, the Red and Black icemen were crestfallen to have gone so far and yet to have failed in the last battle. However, if the defeat was attributable to any weakness on our part, it was only a weakness in replacement material that pre- vented us from matching the fast-flying champions. Toward the end of the League season, the coaches met together to select the All- Star group that would compete against the G.B.I. Second All-Star team at the Arena on February 22nd. As a result of the ballot- ing, St. Sebastian's was well represented on the Catholic squad by Bob Murphy, Bob Egan and jack Boyle. Murphy and Boyle were picked by Coach Kenty of Malden, who handled the All-Stars, to start the hol- iday game and they gave a fine account of themselves. Egan saw service later in the day and helped to spark the Catholic League entry even though it was beaten rather de- cisively, 5-1. All during the Winter we were outlucked in the matter of playing outdoor Hockey on private school rinks. As in other years, games had been scheduled with teams like St. Mark's, Middlesex and Cranwell, but the lack of ice caused them to be postponed time and again, and then eventually can- celled. To close the ice campaign of 1946-47, the annual Red-Blue game was played at the Arena on Sunday, March 2nd. Bob Mur- phy was designated Red captain and Andy McAuliffe was given the leadership of the Blues. When the rival squads were an- nounced, it was discovered that the Reds possessed a terrific advantage on paper, be- cause they had in their ranks five of the six regulars who had held down starting posts on the Varsity sextet. This was offset, to some extent, by the fact that Bruce Harri- gan was the Blue net-keeper and by johnny Ellard and jack Slattery rallying to the Blue cause in an hour of need. When the Reds forged into an early lead, strangely enough it was not one of their powerhouses who turned on the red light, but Henry Lane who had started at the center ice spot. Hank's score was an unassisted venture that passed Bruce at 5:30 of the opening period. Not satisfied with this slender margin, Bob Murphy's sextet kept pressing constantly but their efforts went unrewarded until late in the game. In the meantime, the Blues chalked up a gift tally in the middle frame when Slats directed a pass from the boards in the enemy zone to Andy McAuliffe at the mouth of the cage. The feed was partly intercepted by Murph but in the process the rubber caromed off his stick and it took only a suggestion from Andy to have it find a resting place behind Harold Field in the Red net. At the opening of the final session, the count was still knotted 1-1, but it did not remain so for long. Immediately after the face off, john Ellard broke up a Red push and started on a solo jaunt for the op- posing goal. Stickhandling nicely, he car- ried to within 15 feet of the citadel and then blazed a shot which Field deflected, only to have Johnny pounce in, capture the puck and tuck it deftly into the left hand corner of the cage. Stung by this blow to their pride, the Reds poured one assault after the other on the unyielding Bruce, but the Var- sity net-minder was equal to every crisis. At 10:30 the Blues added another marker, just to make it safe. In a melee in front of the Red goal, Ed Quirk established possession of the disc and flipped back a timely pass to Captain Andy McAuliffe who found a loop- hole in the rival defense and rifled home his team's final goal. Within a minute, the Reds got this one back on Murphy's solo drive

Page 104 text:

UNDER PRESSURE Murph feeds one out in the second Malden fray. THEY SHALL NOT PASS A lone Malden attacker gives us an anxious mo- ment in the Champion- ship. face and weaved his way to take the first shot at an opposing net but his bid was denied. From that moment on, Malden seemed to dominate the play because their depth permitted frequent substitutions and gave them the advantage of an ever-fresh line to pour on the offense. At 4:30 of the first period, their second-liner Al Gubbins powered a shot which Gibby knocked down only to have Reboulet collect it and push it past Bruce. Less than a minute later, Mal- den's high-powered attack paid dividends again when Miller pounced upon Ford's re- bound and whizzed it into the strings to lengthen their lead to 2-0. In contrast to our opponents' technique, we seemed to be ineffective for, whenever a Red and Black skater took possession of the puck, two rivals descended upon him from either side TAKING IT DOWN The Catholic Lea ue's hi h 8 8 scorer threatens the Som- erville net. and harried him so that he lost the rubber by the time that he had reached their de- fense. This over aggressive type of play cost Malden's DeGirolamo three penalties! in the first period and eventually lost us the services of our spark-plug, Bob Murphy,! when he suffered a torn ligament in they second chapter. Meanwhile, the second-halfl winners chalked up a third goal at 3:00 ofg the middle session as the result of Smith's success with a Donahue pass. With Murphy out of action, Andy McAuliffe filled in at' center ice and did a magnificent job win- ning sow, of the face-offs and carrying the, battle to the enemy at all times. That it 1 was just not our night was demonstrated at! the close of the second period. A face-offl was called for outside the Malden cage andl joe Deignan raked in the disc and slammedi it into the net with one continuous motion.i The officials, however, ruled that the puck had not entered the cage before the buzzer 1 4 sounded to end the session and the result J



Page 106 text:

from the blue line, but this only cut down the Blue's margin to 3-2 and it ended the scoring for the fray. The standout performance of the night was given by Harrigan in the Blue net and in no game of the season was he under a stronger bombardment. Of course, his front men, Quirk and Joyce, did a nice piece of defending, while the line of Captain Mc- Auliffe, Slattery and Ellard carried the bat- tle to the foe most successfully. As reserves, Frank Hennessy, Bob Kelly, jim Cotter and Paul Gibbons contributed their share to enable the underdog to topple a formid- able foe. In the Red ledgers, the names of Captain Murphy, jack Boyle, Joe Deignan, BOYLE CLEARS jack takes the pressure off Bruce in the second Mal- den game. Bob Egan and Bill Gibbons deserve top bill- ing, not forgetting the intrepid Harold Field. To supplement their efforts, Henry Lane, Russ MacDonald, Jim Ryan and Dickie Mulhern did all they could to stem the tide, and the net result was the finest Red-Blue ice battle ever staged. With the color game recorded in School annals, St. Sebastian's could look back in retrospect upon as fine a year of Hockey competition as could possibly be desired. True enough, the championship wreath was not hung upon the Red and Black banners, but those same banners emerged from the campaign as highly respected by our rivals as in former years.

Suggestions in the St Sebastians School - Arrow Yearbook (Newton, MA) collection:

St Sebastians School - Arrow Yearbook (Newton, MA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

St Sebastians School - Arrow Yearbook (Newton, MA) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

St Sebastians School - Arrow Yearbook (Newton, MA) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

St Sebastians School - Arrow Yearbook (Newton, MA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

1949

St Sebastians School - Arrow Yearbook (Newton, MA) online collection, 1953 Edition, Page 1

1953

St Sebastians School - Arrow Yearbook (Newton, MA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 22

1947, pg 22


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