St Sebastians School - Arrow Yearbook (Newton, MA)

 - Class of 1947

Page 97 of 212

 

St Sebastians School - Arrow Yearbook (Newton, MA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 97 of 212
Page 97 of 212



St Sebastians School - Arrow Yearbook (Newton, MA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 96
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St Sebastians School - Arrow Yearbook (Newton, MA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 98
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Page 97 text:

side was able to find an opening, although both goalies were called upon to make des- perate saves. Finally, at 7:34 of the middle period Malden's center iceman, Smith, reg- istered on a solo that deadlocked the count. As both defenses were functioning bril- liantly, the stalemate threatened to be permanent until a second goal by Murph unleashed the winds of fury. Playing back on defense temporarily, Bob took the rub- ber away from a rival carrier and took it down to the opposing blue line where he blazed away with a shot that passed Sulli- van and hung up a 2-1 lead for the Red and Black. That lead was short-lived, however, for, a minute later, with Boyle in durance vile for a board check, Smith took a pass from Donahue and turned on the red light to even the count once again. Forty six sec- onds later, Bob Egan, crouched against the sideboards near the Malden blue line, stole the disc from an enemy defenseman who had circled the cage and was in process of heading for our net. With deft stick- handling, Bob evaded the one defender be- tween himself and the net-minder and sent the puck into the upper right hand corner of the goal. While pandemonium still reigned, Malden won the ensuing face-off and bore down on our citadel. A furious melee developed in which Bill Gibbons Fnnnrl if nn:-ocean-1- fn full A.. .Ln ....LL-.. AW net with five men and, in less time than it takes to describe it, Malden's Ford lashed home a Miller feed to make it 3-3 with only a half-minute to go. When the buzzer end- ed hostilities, it came as a welcome relief of the tension created by four goals in three minutes. While we had led all during the contest, Malden was opportunist enough to capitalize on our weakened defense and to emerge with even honors. The third week of League competition brought us to grips with St. Patrick's of Stoneham and, in view of the fact that they had played to a deadlock with Malden in their opening contest, we looked for a bit- ter struggle that could be decided either way. The Red and Black was not at full strength for the engagement, because an in- jury sidelined Jack Slattery and gave joe Deignan a wing starting post. As the first period developed, it was evident that our premonitions of a stiff battle had been jus- tified. Eight times during that first chap- ter penalties were called yet neither side was able to take advantage of the undermanned plight of the other to register until, with four seconds remaining, Bob Murphy found the range with a scorching lift that in- augurated our scoring. Halfway through CAhlT Stone IN Herze- S i 1 PENAQQQQ .,-re 1 SECOND LINE Cotter, McAuliffe, Hennessey X. DIAPER LINE Regan, Paul Gibbons, Mulhern

Page 96 text:

Doherty stepped between the gaspipes and did a creditable piece of work. The Catholic League season opened on December 7th at the Skating Club and the schedule paired us olf against St. Mary's of Waltham, a team that had the Indian sign on us the year before, defeating us once and holding us to a tie in our second meet- ing. During the first period and halfway through the second stanza of the encounter, it looked as if the tie of the preceding year might be duplicated, because while we dominated the play and pressed the action from the start, our efforts did not pay off with scores. Even when the opposition was undermanned via the penalty route, our shots were either off the beam or were de- flected by the hard-working Trudeau. It was not until 8:20 of the second chapter that we succeeded in turning on the red light. At that moment, Joe Deignan, who fairly Hew along the ice, intercepted a Wal- tham pass and, on a quick break-away, car- ried to within 25 feet of the net and then, without lifting the disc, pushed it past the guardian. Not content with this slim mar- gin, we kept the pressure on St. Mary's when the third period opened and our offensive tactics were rewarded within two minutes by a second goal. This was Bob Murphy's contribution and it came during a melee in front of the Waltham goal with Bob back- handing a pass from Slats and winging it past Trudeau. The same Co-Captain com- bination was responsible for the final tally with just about a minute of play remain- ing. At that time Young was in the penal- ty box and Murph carried it deep beyond lone defenseman Sullivan. As the latter was challenging his possession of the rubber, Bob slipped out a feed to Slats who whizzed it squarely at the goalie. In unpredictable fashion, the puck hit his protector, rolled up his arm and dropped behind him to give us a 3-0 decision. With seconds left, the Waltham coach removed his net-minder to give his sextet six skaters, but Bruce was equal to their surge and preserved his shut- out to the end. That he did whitewash the opposition in his League debut was due in no small part to his experienced defense- men, jack Boyle and Bill Gibbons, who DEFENSE STAR johnny on the Spot gave him plenty of protection in front of the cage. The following Saturday we crossed sticks with our arch rivals, Malden Catholic, and, in anticipation of a titanic battle, every nook and cranny of the Speedway rink over- flowed with spectators. The fact that for the past two years the two teams had waged a nip and tuck battle for the championship added a tang to the engagement and many fans saw in it an opportunity to predict the outcome of the 1946-47 race. From the opening whistle, the tide of battle resumed where it had left off in our 2-1 win last year and the aggressive play produced six penalties in the first ten minutes. We drew first blood in the opening chapter when Bob Murphy powered home a set-up from Egan at a time when both sextets had a man off the ice. For the next 13 minutes, neither



Page 98 text:

Delgnan, Murphy, Egan FIRST LINE the second frame, Dubber Doyle equalled Murph's effort with a solo score that tied the count. That state of affairs did not pre- vail long, however, for Eagie felt the solo urge shortly thereafter and went all the way to register unaided. For the rest of the night we refused to relinquish the leadg in fact, we surged on to three more tallies. The two Bobs, Murphy and Egan, were respon- sible for these three final markers, the cen- ter getting two and the wing, one. Murph's scores came within a half-minute of each other, the first unassisted and the second with the other Bob's help. Late in the final period we were able to substitute freely and every man on the squad saw service. Har- old Field relieved Bruce in the cage and incurred the misfortune of having Doyle register on him with only four seconds to go. In the frontier, Frank Hennessey, jim Ryan, Jim Cotter, Bob Kelly and Murray Regan pinch-hit for the regulars, while Tom Hartnett and Bob Joyce were inserted on defense. The first three weeks of our League com- petition had resulted in a tie for first place with St. Clement's of Somerville, but we STELLAR DEFENSE Gibbons, Harrigan, Boyle took over undisputed possession of the loop leadership on Saturday, january 4th, when we victimized St. Mary's of Lynn 6-0, while Malden was bowling over Somerville, 4-0. That Saturday also inaugurated a change in League policy to the effect that only two games would be played each Saturday, and the third at 6 o'clock the following Mon- day. In decreeing this departure from tra- dition, the League officials were motivated by a desire to cut down the capacity atrend- ance on Saturday and distribute it more comfortably between the two nights. Lynn was not expected to offer us too much in the way of real competition, since the North Shore lads had yet to win a Skating Club contest, yet, strangely enough, it was not the Red and Black line that sent us off to a flying start. On the contrary, our first two counters came from the blade of Jack Boyle, capable defenseman. The game had been underway little more than a minute and we were putting pressure on the Lynn cage when joe Deignan, in deep to the left of the cage, fed out a pass to Boyle that the Belmont Bullet hammered home. Having found the range once, there could be no

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

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

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

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

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St Sebastians School - Arrow Yearbook (Newton, MA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 184

1947, pg 184


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