*** Welcome to the Andrew Warde High School tribute website ... There are 46 issues of the Crimson Crier school newspaper from 1967 through 1976 available for download on this website ... Please visit the companion blog in the "Library" in the left-hand margin to access and download the Crimson Crier newspapers ... Please credit this website for any content, photos, or videos you share with others ... Paul Piorek is editor and publisher of the Andrew Warde High School tribute website and a proud member of the AWHS Class of 1976 ... Contact Paul at paulpiorek@gmail.com ...

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Reflections Magazine Mirrored Creativity at Andrew Warde High School in the 1970s

Reflections, the annual magazine published by Andrew Warde High School over three decades ago, contained writing, artwork, and photography authored exclusively by Warde students. Mrs. Holtzman assumed the role of adviser to the magazine in the Autumn of 1974.

"We can take the magazine in whatever direction we want it to go in," she was quoted as saying in a December, 1974, issue of the Crimson Crier. The students involved were seriously interested in publishing a magazine which featured their creativity. The final decisions as to what the magazine featured and looked like rested with the students.

Various members of the staff visited English and Art classes, encouraging students to submit their work and invite any interested students to join magazine meetings. The magazine was a vehicle in which students had an opportunity to express themselves.

According to the Crimson Crier article, "After a year or so at Warde, many students find themselves undergoing a slow but sure loss of identity and being dragged into that terrifying and mysterious creature known as The System. Yet still, amid all of the dissolving of personalities, there exists ways for a student to assert her or his individual talents. Reflections is one of these ways.

"It is small and personal enough for one to leave one's own mark on. So come and express yourself. It may open new doors."

Paul



Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Second Annual Christmas Sing-Along in Bridgeport a Great Success Thanks to AWHS Alum

The following was written by Tony Procaccini, music director at St. Patrick's Parish in Bridgeport and a 1976 graduate of Andrew Warde High School.

Residents of the Greater Bridgeport area recently enjoyed an afternoon of outdoor holiday music and friendship at Saint Margaret’s Shrine in Bridgeport.

A crowd of roughly 225 local citizens young and old gathered at the picturesque North End venue on Sunday, December 14 for the second annual Community Christmas Carol Sing-Along. The event was sponsored by B.A.C.I.O., Inc., Circolo Sportivo and Saint Margaret’s Parish. An indoor reception followed across the street from the shrine.

Children also participated, joining the singers and adding their voices to the popular songs. About half-way through the afternoon, as if by miracle, a jolly visitor with a long white beard and a red and white suit arrived from the North Pole, much to the kids’ delight. Coincidentally (or maybe not), “Santa Claus Is Coming to Town” was being sung at the time!

B.A.C.I.O., an acronym for Bridgeport Area Cultural Italian Organization, is headed by the Park City’s former Mayor Leonard Paoletta, who greeted the crowd early on, followed by current Mayor Bill Finch, pictured below, and Trumbull First Selectman Ray Baldwin.

The entire Greater Bridgeport area was well-represented by volunteer singers from Bridgeport, Fairfield, Trumbull, Monroe, Stratford, Milford and Weston. Their conductor (also this writer pictured below) is a Fairfield native and UB Music graduate.

Musical selections ranged from “The Star-Spangled Banner” to seasonal carols like “O Come, All Ye Faithful” and popular songs such as “Frosty the Snowman.” The chorus was accompanied by a brass quintet consisting of top-notch juniors and seniors from Fairfield Ludlowe High School. Bridgeport’s legendary baritone Benny Rae, a soloist at the 2007 event, was in attendance, acknowledged and greeted with fervent applause.

The religious community was represented by two local Catholic clergymen. Reverend Alfonso Picone, pastor of Saint Margaret’s and Saint Raphael’s parishes, spoke of the ongoing work which will eventually transform the shrine into a major destination point. Reverend Norman Guilbert, a former musician and soon-to-be pastor of Bridgeport’s Saint Patrick’s Church, spoke on the importance of community activities and the need for all those of faith to join in this event and similar ones.

Mr. Paoletta is to be commended for his efforts in originating and sponsoring the afternoon. The Bridgeport Sing-Along will continue on an annual basis, and likely grow in size and stature, possibly rivaling the long-standing Mystic, CT Annual Sing-Along, which is scheduled for Sunday, December 21. (The respective organizers have agreed never to use the same date.)

Readers interested in participating in future sing-alongs (singers, instrumentalists, same-day help and sponsorships) should contact the undersigned or reach Len Paoletta via the BACIO website http://www.bacioinc.com/.

This writer thanks all those who contributed their time and efforts in making the holiday season a more joyous one.

Please sign the AWHS Guest Book.

Visit the Andrew Warde High School Gift Shop.

Watch the AWHS 1976 vintage "film".

Friday, December 05, 2008

Remembering Our First Jobs at Erstwhile Local Commercial Establishments While at Warde

If you were like most students at Andrew Warde High School over 30 years ago, your first job was probably at a local establishment which no longer exists.

The commercial landscape in Fairfield has changed tremendously over the last couple of years, and many of the stores we remember fondly from our high school days are long gone.

My first job was at the former Jimmie's Restaurant on Black Rock Turnpike. By my junior year at Warde, I was working at least 25 hours a week, primarily Friday through Sunday. Some of my responsibilties included cutting potatoes, making french fries, freezing crabs, cleaning the storage room, and taking out the trash. I can remember it like yesterday.

Black Rock Turnpike, a host to virtual gridlock each weekday afternoon and Saturday morning, has always been the commercial hub for the Eastern/Warde side of town. Some other establishments which no longer exist include Bonanza, Dairy Queen, Gail's Stationers, Connecticut Bank and Trust, Howland's, Wetson's, Kuhn's Corner, Finast, and Leopold's.

A December 1974 publication of the Crimson Crier offered a photo shoot showing some of the Warde students at work. Interestingly, five of the six locations illustrated in the feature have been gone for years. They include Fair Mart, Kentucky Fried Chicken, Fairway, Friendly's, and Grand Union. Steve Schempp, pictured to the right just above, is stationed in Afghanistan today. He gained valuable working experience at Friendly's when he attended Warde over 30 years ago.

Dante Gallucci, pictured to the left, is an attorney in Fairfield and the president of Fairfield National Little League today. However, he began his "professional" career as a bagger at Fairway Beef on Black Rock Turnpike. Fairway was located where CVS stands today.

One of the more obscure stores on Black Rock Turnpike from the late 60s through the early 70s was Grand Union. The grocery store was located adjacent to Howland's and right across the street from Fairfield Woods Road.

Grand Union, which suffered stiff competition from First National and Fairway, closed its doors for good well over 30 years ago, but Ed Bintz, pictured to the right below, spent many a day stocking shelves there when he attended AWHS.

Where did you work when you attended Andrew Warde High School? Is the store still in business? What were some of your experiences when you worked while attending high school? How many of you went to school, played sports, joined after-school clubs, and then went to work?

I know many of today's Warde students who are busy with schoolwork, athletics, and jobs just about every day of the week. I see them working at Doughnut Inn, Shaws, and Lupe's Drug Store. Will those businesses still be around 30-plus years from now?

Paul

Please sign the AWHS Guest Book.

Visit the Andrew Warde High School Gift Shop.

Watch the AWHS 1976 vintage "film".

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Ludlowe Nips Warde, 10-8, on Controversial Call & Game-Winning Field Goal in Closing Seconds Thanksgiving Morning at Tetreau-Davis Field

They came from all over and from every generation. Former coaches, players, and alumni of Andrew Warde High School returned "home" Thanksgiving Day and shared hugs, handshakes, smiles, laughter, and stories. But most of them left wondering whether the officials had stolen a football game from their team.

A capacity crowd of over 2,000 jammed Tetreau-Davis Field Thursday morning to watch the 14th renewal of the Thanksgiving Day football rivalry between Warde and Ludlowe high schools. It was only the fourth meeting of the modern-day series which began in 2005.

However, a questionable pass interference penalty against the Mustangs in the last minute eventually led to Ludlowe's game-winning field goal in the closing seconds as the Falcons posted a dramatic 10-8 victory, ending Warde's three-game winning streak.

"After five straight losses in its season, and two consecutive Thanksgiving Day losses to Fairfield Warde, the Fairfield Ludlowe football team was desperate for a win by any means necessary," wrote Pat Pickens of the Fairfield Citizen-News. "Even one that was laced with controversy."

Ludlowe's Sean Anderson drilled a 22-yard field goal with 20 seconds left to give the guests the two-point victory, only their second win in their last nine Thanksgiving Day games against Warde. Three Mustangs' penalties moved the ball to the Warde five yard line to set up the game-winning kick.

The Falcons' late drive was aided by the controversial pass interference call against Warde with under a minute to play. When the yellow flag appeared after the overthrown desperation pass by Ludlowe quarterback Rob Ferrara landed out of bounds, a Warde player was subsequently flagged for unsportsmanlike conduct. Then, Mustangs coach Tony Catapano was given an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty that placed the ball at the Warde five. The Warde faithful, shocked at the calls, was furious.

"It's too well-played of a game to be decided like that," Catapano said. "It doesn't have to happen if the officials have any common sense of what their job is today." After three running plays, Anderson stepped up and drilled his second game-winning kick of the season.

Despite the disappointing ending to the game, it was a chance for the alumni to get together again. Joe Geisken (AWHS '77), the former Crimson Eagles' quarterback whose 25 yard-counter run in the closing minutes helped Warde to an exciting 20-13 victory over Ludlowe in the 1976 Thanksgiving game, proudly wore his high school jacket.

Frank Galletti, the star of Warde's 16-13 Turkey Day triumph over Ludlowe in 1984, gave his high school jacket to his middle school daughter as they mingled with new friends and old just outside the Warde press box. But, Galletti, who played in the last-ever football game for the Crimson Eagles, found himself on the edge of his seat in the closing minutes.

Former Crimson Eagles' players and coaches Dave Abraham, Mike Abraham, and Tom Davis, and coaching legend Ed Bengermino gathered to reminisce by the press box, too. And even a few veterans from past decades still referred to Ludlowe as the Flying Tigers and Warde as the Crimson Eagles.

Ludlowe got on the board first when junior signal-caller Ferrara dodged a rush on third-and-14, and scrambled 64 yards to the end zone to put the Falcons ahead 7-0. Ludlowe had a good opportunity to go ahead by two touchdowns, but senior Matt Tierno fumbled at the Warde one yard line, and the Mustangs recovered.

Warde countered and took the ball 99 yards to paydirt in 16 plays, capped by a 14-yard touchdown run by junior fullback Tommy McNamara with just 6:20 remaining. Catapano decided to go for the two-point conversion, and McNamara, who rushed for 131 yards and was named Warde's MVP of the game, carried the ball in to make the game 8-7.

But Ferrara and team-MVP running back Phil Tsopanides, who led the team with 91 yards rushing, led the Falcons down the field and into field goal range in the closing minutes, making Anderson the hero, and returning the Gallagher-Baryas Trophy to Ludlowe for only the second time in the teams' last nine meetings, stretching back to 1980.

"They (Ludlowe) haven't really won that (trophy) ever," Falcons' coach Matt McCloskey said. "It's huge for us to get our hands on that trophy."

Even if the officials helped carry it over to them.

Paul

Please sign the AWHS Guest Book.

Visit the Andrew Warde High School Gift Shop.

Watch the AWHS 1976 vintage "film".

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Warde Crimson Eagles/Mustangs Hope to Continue Domination of Ludlowe Flying Tigers/Falcons in Longtime Thanksgiving Day Football Series

The Warde football team is bidding for its eighth victory in the last nine Thanksgiving Day contests against arch-rival Ludlowe when the teams face each other this Thursday morning at Tetreau-Davis Field. Kickoff is slated for 10:30 in the fourth renewal of the modern-day series.

The Mustangs have won the last two Thanksgiving Day games, including a 28-0 romp one year ago at Ludlowe. Two years ago, Warde celebrated the 50th anniversary of the school's opening and its field dedication ceremony with a come-from-behind 21-12 win in nearly two inches of rain and strong winds. It was Warde's first home football game since 1984.

Ludlowe won the initial Thanksgiving matchup between the two schools in over two decades by posting a 20-14 win at Taft Field in 2005. The Falcons jumped out to a 20-0 lead at halftime, but hung on after the Mustangs mounted a strong second-half comeback bid. Warde leads the modern-day series, two games to one.

The Andrew Warde Crimson Eagles won the last five games of the original Thanksgiving Day series, which took place between 1975 and 1984. Roger Ludlowe High School posted a three-game winning streak from 1977 through 1979, marking the only times the Flying Tigers won against the Eagles on Thanksgiving Day. Warde won seven of the ten games in the original series.

Warde won all seven of its Thanksgiving Day games against Kolbe from 1968 through 1974. The Eagles posted impressive back-to-back shutouts against the Friars in 1971 (34-0) and 1972 (40-0). In fact, Warde outscored its Bridgeport neighbors, 166-20, over the course of the first five games of the series.

Here is a look at Warde High School's Thanksgiving Day football history. Special thanks to the Fairfield Citizen-News for allowing me to research the games from their historical archives:

Andrew Warde Crimson Eagles vs. Kolbe Friars
1968 to 1974
(Series: Warde 7 Wins, Kolbe 0 Wins)
1968: Warde Eagles 32, Kolbe Friars 8
1969: Warde Eagles 40, Kolbe Friars 6
1970: Warde Eagles 20, Kolbe Friars 6
1971: Warde Eagles 34, Kolbe Friars 0
1972: Warde Eagles 40, Kolbe Friars 0
1973: Warde Eagles 28, Kolbe Friars 18
1974: Warde Eagles 20, Kolbe Friars 6

Andrew Warde Crimson Eagles vs. Roger Ludlowe Flying Tigers
1975 to 1984
(Series: Warde 7 Wins, Ludlowe 3 Wins)
1975: Warde Eagles 28, Ludlowe Tigers 6
1976: Warde Eagles 20, Ludlowe Tigers 13
1977: Ludlowe Tigers 20, Warde Eagles 13
1978: Ludlowe Tigers 35, Warde Eagles 6
1979: Ludlowe Tigers 41, Warde Eagles 25
1980: Warde Eagles 17, Ludlowe Tigers 14
1981: Warde Eagles 14, Ludlowe Tigers 8
1982: Warde Eagles 23, Ludlowe Tigers 0
1983: Warde Eagles 26, Ludlowe Tigers 6
1984: Warde Eagles 16, Ludlowe Tigers 13

Fairfield Warde Mustangs vs. Fairfield Ludlowe Falcons
2005 to 2008
(Series: Warde 2 Wins, Ludlowe 1 Win)
2005: Ludlowe Falcons 20, Warde Mustangs 14
2006: Warde Mustangs 21, Ludlowe Falcons 12
2007: Warde Mustangs 28, Ludlowe Falcons 0

Warde's overall record in Thanksgiving Day football games is 16-4, good for an .800 winning percentage. In addition, Warde has outscored Ludlowe, 63-32, in the three games since the rivalry was resurrected in 2005.

Paul

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Capacity Crowd Watches Injured Warde Quarterback Lead Crimson Eagles to 26-6 Thanksgiving Day Romp at Ludlowe in 1983

This is the seventh installment of my special series recalling Andrew Warde High School's football rivalry with Roger Ludlowe. If you have any photos, film, or programs, please contact me at pppiorek@news12.com. Thank you.

Despite separating the shoulder on his throwing arm a week before the Thanksgiving Day football clash with arch-rival Roger Ludlowe High School in 1983, Andrew Warde High School quarterback Jack McFarland had a game he'll never forget.

McFarland led the Crimson Eagles to a 26-6 victory over the Flying Tigers during his senior year. Warde, which won four of its last five games that season, improved to 4-6 overall. It was also the Eagles' fourth straight Thanksgiving Day triumph over the Tigers.

"I remember having a separated throwing shoulder from the New Canaan game the Saturday before," recalled McFarland, who completed 11-of-23 passes for 114 yards and a pair of scoring aerials. "The Thanksgiving game always had a 'bowl' atmosphere. It meant everything to me, my teammates, the coaching staff, and the school," he admitted.

"The thing that stands out to me was the game was at Ludlowe, (and) the crowd was huge, (about) five to seven thousand," added McFarland, who lives in Monroe with his wife and four children.

What does he remember most about the game itself? "I threw two touchdown passes, one to Jeff Baker (the split end), and another to Glen Cantwell (the running back). Ludlowe had a pretty good linebacker named Charlie Nagy." Nagy, of course, would go on to pitch major league baseball for the Cleveland Indians. Cantwell, who had two interceptions, rushed for 52 yards.

The quarterback said his coach deserved a lot of credit for getting the team ready to play. "Our coach, Jack Coughlin, was a master motivator," he acknowledged. "He made sure we knew the season and our pride was on the line when we played Ludlowe."

Coughlin was Warde's third football coach, having succeeded the legendary Fern Tetreau (1956-1969), who came over from Ludlowe and started the program at Warde, and the late Bill Davis (1970-1979), who coached the first five Thanksgiving Day tussles with Ludlowe.

"Jack (McFarland) carried the team while we were losing," Coughlin was quoted as saying after the game. "He always played hard. He's a tough kid."

At the time, McFarland and his teammates didn't realize the 29-year history of Andrew Warde football was drawing to a close. "We knew the series was winding down, (but we) had no idea it was coming to an end at that time," McFarland stated about the penultimate game of the original series. The Crimson Eagles played their last-ever football game the following Thanksgiving Day against Ludlowe.

Three years later, in 1987, Andrew Warde High School graduated its final class, and both Warde and Ludlowe consolidated into Fairfield High School at the Warde site. The Fairfield Mustangs were born in 1988. When the Board of Education decided to reopen a second high school at the Ludlowe site several years ago, the modern-day version of the rivalry was resurrected three years ago.

The Fairfield Warde Mustangs hope to extend a two-game modern-day Thanksgiving winning streak against their cross-town rivals this Thursday morning at Tetreau-Davis Field. The teams enter the game with identical 3-7 records. Ludlowe won the first game of the current series at Taft Field to capture the Gallagher/Baryas trophy in 2005, but the Mustangs won the last two games by scores 21-12 of and 28-0.

"I have not been back to the Thanksgiving game, but I have been up to the school to visit former coach Ed Bengermino," said McFarland, now a baseball coach at Staples High School in Westport. "I have been an assistant coach in football for 13 years and the head baseball coach for five (years) at Staples."

As for this year? "I am predicting a Warde win, 23-6," he admitted. "I am a homer." Once an Eagle, always an Eagle ... er ... Mustang.

Paul



Monday, November 24, 2008

1969 Gridiron Showdown Between Warde & Ludlowe Featured Many Intriguing Storylines

This is the sixth installment of my special series recalling Andrew Warde High School's football rivalry with Roger Ludlowe. If you have any photos, film, or programs, please contact me at pppiorek@news12.com. Thank you.

The 1969 gridiron showdown between Andrew Warde and Roger Ludlowe high schools was, without question, one of the most highly-anticipated in the long and storied rivalry between the two teams. There were many intriguing storylines to capture the interest of even the most casual fan.

The pivotal Fairfield County Interscholastic Athletic Conference clash was tabbed as "The Game" in Fairfield. The stakes were high since both the Crimson Eagles and Flying Tigers entered the game with identical 3-0 overall records, tied with New Canaan atop the league's Eastern Divison. A longtime coaching friendship, a father-and-son confrontation, and a sentimental homecoming added even more excitement prior to Ludlowe's game at Warde on Saturday, October 11, 1969.

The two starting quarterbacks in that contest 39 years ago --- Warde's Roberto "Chico" Rodriguez and Ludlowe's Mike Tetreau --- will be the featured guest speakers at the pre-game dinner for both of this year's squads at Warde Tuesday night. Both former signal callers will be reminiscing about that much-anticipated game, no doubt.

Warde's longtime coach, Fern Tetreau, was hoping to end Ludlowe's prolonged supremacy in the series, which included three straight one-sided triumphs. In addition, Tetreau, the former head coach at Ludlowe, was facing his good friend, Tigers' Coach Emil Taft, in one of the most congenial and sportsmanlike rivalries anywhere. Adding even more intrigue to the contest, Tetreau faced another unusual challenge as his son, Mike, was the quarterback for the rival Tigers.

"We always managed to have fun with the idea that Dad and I were on opposing teams," Mike Tetreau, now a coach with Fairfield Pop Warner football, told me via email. "We talked a lot of football every day all year long, except the week before the game. Then we still talked, but somehow we stayed away from football as a topic," he added.

According to an article in the Bridgeport Post dated October 9, 1969, "Town loyalties will be divided between both camps Saturday, with the exception of Mrs. Tetreau, who must remain neutral for obvious reasons. The choice of this writer is the Flying Tigers, but one thing is certain, there will be a winner in the Tetreau household."

The stage was set prior to the big battle. After building Ludlowe into a football powerhouse in the 1950s, Fern Tetreau's previous few seasons at Warde prior to 1969 were on the lean side with only a handful of victories each season. However, the Eagles boasted their best team in quite some time heading into the showdown with their cross-town rivals.

Taft continued the winning tradition at Ludlowe. His 1968 squad posted an impressive 8-2 record. The 1969 squad, second-ranked in the state by early October, had already demolished three opponents by a combined score of 158 to 19. Warde, on the other hand, was impressive as well, outscoring its opponents by a combined 95 to 56 before meeting the Tigers.

The Tigers' attack was led by top-flight signal-caller Tetreau, powerful runners, first-class receivers, and tough linemen. Fullback Kevin Prendergast and halfbacks Chris Brown and Ben Jacobellis led the strong Ludlowe ground game. The veteran senior backfield carried the Tigers to a crushing 42-6 victory over the Eagles in 1968.

Mike Tetreau was impressed with the talent on the 1969 Ludlowe squad. "We were a team of mostly seniors. We had mostly two-year and some three-year starters," pointed out the former Ludlowe signal caller about the experienced-laden Ludlowe squad of nearly 40 years ago. "We were averaging close to 50 points per game," he recalled.

"Prendergast and Brown were our co-captains," Mike Tetreau continued. "Kevin was just a great football player, a 230-pound fullback and linebacker that could run, back in the day when being 200 pounds made you a lineman. He had a huge junior year, so he was the one everyone was keying on.

"One game as a junior, he ran off tackle, and it took all eleven defensive players to bring him down," Tetreau continued. "Needless to say, we re-ran that film a lot and ran that play a lot during games."

As for Brown, he was a 190-pound halfback and linebacker with very good speed, remembered Tetreau. "He also had good hands and made his share of receptions. He really came into his own on offense as a senior. He and Kevin were the linebackers over the middle that no one got by in our 6-2 defense."

Tetreau admitted that Jacobellis was the team's best athlete. He was a star in basketball and in track as a pole vaulter. "Ben played left halfback. He was our 'go to' back and scored over 100 points that season, which is just about two touchdowns per game. He had excellent speed and good size at 175 pounds. He was a very good receiver, too."

Seres was Ludlowe's split end and typically the fastest player on the field, Tetreau pointed out. "One game he caught four touchdown passes. He could get open deep. His patterns were superb, so if someone played off, we threw to him on short posts and 'outs' all game long. Dave and I spent a lot of off season time together working on our timing. We saw it all pay off senior year," he stated.

"We also had Harold Stone as a junior at tight end. He was All-FCIAC the next year. So with this kind of talent at the skill positions, defenses were not sure who to stop or focus on. Everyone scored a lot. That is why we averaged 43 points per game over the season. Each week it was someone else stepping up," he added.

The younger Tetreau relayed a story from the previous week which served to inspire the Tigers even more. "We played Darien the week prior to the Warde game. We started off slow, not really having a good first half by our standards," he mentioned.

"Warde had played the day before, so a number of their players came to watch our game. There was some good natured 'trash talking' from behind our bench. Fortunately for us, that trash talking made sure that our team was 'up' for the Warde game. (There was no) no getting caught offguard or looking past Warde."

The Eagles also boasted a solid quarterback in Rodgriguez, a junior, who had already tossed eight scoring passes, and three top runners in Alan Cassidy, Tim Carthens, and Bob Orciuch. The Eagles' Dave Abraham was a top receiver in the FCIAC, while Doug Forstrom and Joe Skalski bolstered the Eagles' line, with Bob Mattice and Rene Chennell doing likewise for the Tigers.

So, what was the atmosphere like at Warde the day of the game? "It was fun," the Tigers' former quarterback admitted. "There was plenty of talk in the schools. Everyone was 'pumped' for the game, players and students alike. I just came across a headline that said 8,000 attended the game. That is a big event in Fairfield. Everyone was there!"

The game, though, didn't quite live up to the hype preceding it. The Tigers quickly disspelled any upset notions the Eagles may have entertained. Ludlowe scored early and often in a crushing 40-8 victory at the Warde field.

Jacobellis, who notched a pair of touchdowns, Prendergast, Brown, and the younger Tetreau tore the Eagles' defensive corps apart with their slanting, twisting, bruising, and scrambling ground maneuvers to drop Warde from the unbeaten hierarchy.

"We had a very experienced offensive group," explained the Tigers' Tetreau, who later returned as an assistant coach under Taft in 1979 when Ludlowe played Warde twice. "We expected to score. Our defense was very good, also. Warde had a couple of turnovers early. One of our trademarks was starting fast. I believe we scored 27 or so in the first half. Once we had a lead, Benny, Kevin, and Chris gave us a ground game that could really keep the clock moving in our favor.

"Our take on the game after was that it was closer than the score," he continued. "We took advantage of the turnovers. Warde didn't quite get untracked offensively. And because they didn't quit, we knew we had played a good football team when the game was over."

Ludlowe, which moved to 4-0 overall, remained tied atop the FCIAC East with New Canaan as both clubs sported 3-0 league marks. Warde fell to 2-1 in the conference and 3-1 overall.

"We were used to winning," added the younger Tetreau. "Our JV year we went 9-0, and our junior season we went 8-2. (After the Warde game) as seniors we were 3-0. We were used to scoring a lot of points: 60, 50, and 48. That's 53 points per game."

That was more than enough to beat Warde and to be ranked second in the state.

Paul

Please sign the AWHS Guest Book.

Visit the Andrew Warde High School Gift Shop.

Watch the AWHS 1976 vintage "film".

Saturday, November 22, 2008

'The Coach' Recalls the Very First Game of the Original Gridiron Series Between the Crimson Eagles & Flying Tigers at Ludlowe in 1956

This is the fifth installment of my special series recalling Andrew Warde High School's football rivalry with Roger Ludlowe. If you have any photos, film, or programs, please contact me at pppiorek@news12.com. Thank you.

When the Fairfield Warde Mustangs football team hosts the Fairfield Ludlowe Falcons this coming Thanksgiving Day, at least one person will be in attendance who was at the very first meeting between the two teams 52 years ago. Fern Tetreau, Warde's original football coach, led the Eagles onto Ludlowe's field for the first time on November 15, 1956.

Although the first Thanksgiving Day game between Warde and Ludlowe didn't take place until 1975, the two teams clashed for the very first time just two-and-a-half months after Andrew Warde High School opened in September of 1956.

Tetreau and his Crimson Eagles' squad completed their inaugural season against the established Roger Ludlowe Flying Tigers by dropping a 27-6 decision. However, it was apparent even then that Coach Tetreau, the former Ludlowe skipper, was building a solid program which would ultimately win a state championship just three years later.

While at Ludlowe, Tetreau's 1954 team was ranked number three in the state. Tetreau always preferred the unexpected on the football field. He liked to run the Statue of Liberty play, where the quarterback fades back to pass and the running back grabs the ball. He ran draw plays and screen passes. And, he taught his players to think on the field.

"When I elected to go to Warde after three years at Ludlowe, I was asked about Emil Taft," recalled Tetreau via email about his successor at Ludlowe. "I recommended him very highly to Dr. Walter Hellman, who was assistant superintendent at that time. I was very pleased when they selected him to replace me at Ludlowe," he admitted. "My three sons (Mike, Bill, and Jack) played for Emil (at Ludlowe) and did very well."

While at Ludlowe, Bob Seirup was Tetreau's assistant coach in football, while Tetreau was an assistant to Seirup in basketball. "We won the New England basketball championship, and six of the first starters were football players," Tetreau remembered. "Bob Gillette, a former teacher at Warde, was a starter (at Ludlowe) in both football and basketball."

Tetreau helped open the new high school and began a new football program with just a few of his players from Ludlowe. "Only two players with a lot of playing time followed me to Warde," added Tetreau. "(They were) Dick Dakai and Bob Kasvinski. Ben Slesinki was the starting quarterback and Al Greco also played that position. Joe Renaud also played in that game. Most of the team was made up of new faces who eventually went through an undefeated season (a few years later)."

Coach Taft's Flying Tigers used a potent running attack to erase an early 6-0 deficit and cruise to victory over their new cross-town rivals in the 1956 series lidlifter. Ludlowe improved to 4-2-1 on the campaign prior to closing out the season with its traditional Thanksgiving Day game against Bassick of Bridgeport. The Eagles closed their inaugural campaign winless in eight games.

Ludlowe co-captain Pat Thomas scored three of his team's four touchdowns on breakaway runs measuring 69, 35, and 15 yards in addition to helping to set up the first score with a nifty 32-yard scamper. The stellar fullback carried the ball 12 times for 288 yards for a 19-yard average per carry. The winners gained 355 total yards on the ground.

Warde actually scored the game's first touchdown on its second play from scrimmage to give the visitors the early advantage. "The big play against Ludlowe called for Dakai, who was a lineman with a strong arm, to turn around and get the ball from the quarterback and throw a long pass to Rick Solari for about 50 yards," explained Tetreau. Solari caught the long aerial and scampered the remaining 10 yards to paydirt for a touchdown.

"That's as much as I remember. I did spread Rick Solari wide to have a one-on-one situation." It was the first time that the six-foot-three Dakai, Warde's punter, threw a forward pass during the regular season.

The Tigers, however, responded with a 70-yard drive of their own, climaxed by co-captain George Toth's one yard end run into the end zone. The methodical march downfield included one pass from quarterback Dick Bonney to end Bob Power, good for 10 yards, a 32-yard jaunt by Thomas, and an 11-yard carry by Bonney. Thomas also swept around end to convert the extra point and give Ludlowe a 7-6 lead.

The hosts took control of the game at that point, although Warde, using a newly-adopted spread offense for Dakai's passing, completed five-of-15 aerial attempts for 96 yards. Ben Slesensky and Al Greco also did some pitching for the Eagles.

Thomas made his first two touchdown runs in the second period as Ludlowe boosted its lead to 21-6 just before halftime. Norman Stickney's interception of a pass thrown by Dakai preceded the 69-yard scoring romp by Thomas to expand the Tigers' cushion. The winners used their bruising ground game to gain good yardage, eat up the valuable time off the clock, and take command of the contest.

"Ludlowe (players) had friends at Warde and Warde (players) had friends at Ludlowe," emphasized Tetreau about that initial meeting on the gridiron. The players on both teams attended the same school the year before, so they knew each other very well. "Ludlowe was favored, and they won."

Tetreau, after whom the Warde football field was named and dedicated two years ago, was inducted into the Fairfield County Interscholastic Athletic Conference Hall of Fame on June 10 of this year. He was recognized for his excellence in coaching and the leadership he provided in organizing the FCIAC. The annual awards program took place at Testo's Banquet Hall in Bridgeport.

Just three years after that first winless season, Tetreau's Crimson Eagles posted an undefeated 9-0 record and captured a state championship. Fifteen players went on to play college football from his 1959 championship squad. The following year, in 1960, his charges went 8-1 for a two-year cumulative record of 17-1.

"I still send emails to some of my players and to one of my managers from Ludlowe who became the president of Central Connecticut State University," wrote Tetreau. "(This) Tuesday night is a big night as both teams gather for a joint dinner at Warde. Mike, Chico, and I will be there."

Paul

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Friday, November 21, 2008

Dramatic Finish to Warde's 1976 Thanksgiving Day Victory Over Ludlowe Caps Most Memorable Game

This is the fourth installment of my special series recalling Andrew Warde High School's football rivalry with Roger Ludlowe. If you have any photos, film, or programs, please contact me at pppiorek@news12.com. Thank you.

The 1976 Thanksgiving Day football game between Andrew Warde and Roger Ludlowe high schools was arguably the most dramatic and most memorable in the long and storied history of the Fairfield rivalry. If you were one of the 7,000+ fans who packed the Ludlowe field to witness the game, you no doubt were sitting on the edge of your seat. If you were one of the players, it's a game you'll never forget.

The Warde Crimson Eagles were bidding for their ninth straight Thanksgiving Day game victory after sweeping a seven-game series with Kolbe from 1968 through 1974 and capturing the inaugural Turkey Day contest with the Flying Tigers in 1975. Although both teams combined for only five victories heading into the game, the season records, as usual, were meaningless when the Eagles and Tigers met for the third time in two seasons.

The Crimson Eagles were clinging to a precarious seven-point lead, 20-13, when Ludlowe drove to the Warde two yard line with only 11 seconds left in the game. However, an illegal motion penalty against the hosts negated quarterback Brian Curry's clutch pass to Dan French, and the football was spotted back at the 27-yard line.

An incomplete pass and Dan Capodicci's sack of Curry ended the game. The victory extended Warde's perfect Thanksgiving Day record to 9-0 and gave the Eagles their third straight win in two years over their bitter rivals. Both Warde, which was celebrating its 20th anniversary, and Ludlowe finished the campaign with identical 3-7 records.

Bill Davis, the late Crimson Eagles' coach, stood at midfield following the game, trying to convince fans, players, and the media that he wasn't concerned when the Tigers apparently had moved close to the Warde goal line. "I saw the flag on the play," he was quoted as saying. "I prayed that it was with us." His prayers were answered, improving his unblemished Thanksgiving Day record as coach to 7-0 since taking over for Fern Tetreau in 1970.

Ludlowe, which trailed 13-0 after three quarters, finally came alive in the final stanza, thanks to the receiving of French, Jack Tetreau, and Dave Williams. Williams opened the fourth quarter by grabbing an 18-yard aerial from Curry, only the fourth completion in 13 attempts by the Tigers' signal caller. Nine players later, Curry threw a strike to Williams, who split two defenders on a post pattern, for a 15-yard touchdown to cap a 78-yard drive. Curry's point after kick cut the Eagles' lead to 13-7.

The hosts played solid defense on Warde's next possession, and the Tigers got the ball back at the Eagles' 46-yard line with just 7:37 left in the game. Tetreau, the son of former Warde coaching legend Fern Tetreau, made a sensational one-handed grab of a deflected pass for an eight yard gain, and French made a diving stab of a Russ Gordon option pass for a 25-yard pickup and a first-and-goal at the Eagles' seven yard line.

After Ludlowe was pushed back to the ten-yard line, French made another diving catch on third down, this time on a post pattern in the end zone, for the tying touchdown with 5:39 remaining in the game. However, a poor snap from center foiled the conversion attempt, and left the score deadlocked at 13 apiece heading into the final minutes.

Two key plays on Warde's ensuing drive helped stop Ludlowe's momentum and led to the winning score. First, quarterback Joe Giesken came up with huge gain of 25 yards on a counter run up the left sideline. A personal foul on the play advanced the pigskin to the Ludlowe 37 yard line. Then, four plays later on a fourth-and-three from the 30 yard line, Jim Babian bulled off right tackle for a five yard gain and an Eagles' first down at the Ludlowe 25.

Two plays later, sophomore halfback Joe Ciccia threw a perfect option pass to Duane Meier for the winning touchdown with just 1:25 left in the game. The play was used six times by the Eagles. Ludlowe answered with its last-ditch effort before the Warde defense rose to the occasion and thwarted the Tigers' potential game-tying score.

The guests jumped out to an early lead. On Ludlowe's first play from scrimmage, Ed Kish, who intercepted three passes in the game and was voted Warde's Most Valuable Player, picked off an errant Curry aerial and returned it 22 yards to paydirt as Warde drew first blood. The winners added to their lead when Ciccia threw a perfect 77-yard halfback option to Meier.

Now, 22 years later, the modern version of the rivalry continues next Thursday morning at Warde. The host Mustangs will attempt to win their third straight game against the Falcons when the teams meet at 10:30. Ludlowe captured the first matchup when the rivalry was resurrected in 2005, but Warde won the last two games. Overall, the Crimson Eagles/Mustangs lead the series, nine games to four.

Paul

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Thursday, November 20, 2008

Harry 'The Toe' Caston Still Treasures Thanksgiving Memories, Talented Crimson Eagles' Teammates, & a Dedicated Coach Nearly 40 Years Later

This is the third installment of my special series recalling Andrew Warde High School's football rivalries. If you have any photos, film, or programs, please contact me at pppiorek@news12.com. Thank you.

Thirty-six years have passed since he played his last football game at Andrew Warde High School, but Harry Caston still cherishes his memories of the Thanksgiving Day rivalry with Kolbe, the athletes with whom he played, and the coach who never gave up on him.

The man affectionately known as "The Toe" was the Crimson Eagles' placekicker during his junior and senior years. "I probably gave myself the nickname, having tired of being called 'Hey, you,'" joked Caston, who waxed nostalgic with Thanksgiving just one week away.

"For me, it was wonderful playing on Thanksgiving day," wrote Caston, now a lawyer living in Salt Lake City. "We had great weather in both my junior and senior years. I can only speak about the games that were played in 1971, my junior year, and 1972, my senior year. Both of those teams had extremely talented athletes, and we were coached by an enthusiastic and dedicated coach (Bill Davis)."

It was Davis who inspired and encouraged Caston and taught him about teamwork and commitment. Caston shared his story about his desire to be a placekicker for the Eagles. "When I announced my intention to Coach Davis that I was going to become the team's placekicker, he could have and maybe should have reminded me of the important role and service that the members of the audio visual club provide to the school, and perhaps that organization might be more suitable to me," wrote Caston.

"He didn't say that. Instead he encouraged me, and gave me the five footballs that I asked for to practice with during the summer. Four months after that conversation I found myself lining up on an extremely muggy Saturday morning to kick an extra point in the first game of my junior year. It's my recollection that with my teamates and schoolmates looking on, my foot failed to make contact with the football. My second attempt didn't garner more success than the first.

"While none too pleased with my performance, Coach Davis didn't give up on me. In fact, he took me aside, told me that he wanted me to kick in the junior varsity games, and that he would put me back in the varsity games when I was ready. I did get back into the varsity games by the end of the year."

Caston was impressed with the Eagles gridders of that era. "We did not have a record that was indicative of the talent and the coaching that we had. It's my recollection that we were not blown out or embarrassed in any of the games that we did not win in my junior and senior years, and with a little luck, a few breaks, or whatever, we would have and should have had a better record," admitted the proud father of two competitive skiers.

Warde easily won the Thanksgiving Day contests with Kolbe in 1971 and 1972, extending its perfect mark to 5-0 against the Friars in a series which first began in 1968. Warde would eventually sweep all seven games in the short-lived Thanksgiving "tradition" which ended in 1974. In fact, the Eagles outscored Kolbe, 214-44, overall.

"My hypothesis is that the reason why the team dominated Kolbe in my junior and senior years was due in part to the frustrations that we had that were taken out on them, and the team was able to play up to its potential," theorized Caston, who returned to Fairfield for Warde's field dedication ceremony, 50th anniversary celebration, and Thanksgiving Day victory over Ludlowe in 2006.

The Eagles posted their first of back-to-back Thanksgiving Day shutouts against the Friars in 1971 with a 34-0 win at Hedges Stadium in Bridgeport. Quarterback Glen Hlavaty, who tossed four touchdowns in the game, connected with wide receiver John Curry 13 times for 200 yards and a pair of scores.

Warde, which controlled the ball 75% of the time in the first half, finally got on the board with 1:04 left when Hlavaty fired a 22-yard touchdown pass to Curry. Caston, however, missed the extra point. The Eagles added to their lead early in the third quarter when Hlavaty hit flanker back Rick Seres in the corner of the end zone for a 12-0 lead. The Eagles faked the point-after conversion and Hlavaty, the holder, rolled right and passed to Curry for two points and a 14-0 cushion.

Hlavaty found Curry for a 37-yard third quarter scoring strike on a deep slant across the middle, and Jim DelVecchio, pictured below in a 1972 game against Wilton, picked off an errant Kolbe aerial and raced 35 yards, shedding a couple of would-be tacklers on the way to the end zone. A few minutes later, he took a flip from Hlavaty for a four-yard scamper to paydirt. The last touchdown followed the second interception of the quarter by Mark Magyar, a reserve defensive back.

What does Caston most remember about that game? "Following a kickoff I was trying to sneak off the field so as not to get injured, and I inadvertently tackled the guy who was returning my kickoff and thereby prevented a touchdown," Caston admitted. "One of the students who was not on the football team came running down the stands and congratulated me for my tackle.

"I felt pretty good about that," he continued. "I later learned that the source of this guy's joy was that he had a large amount of money on the game, and if the other team had scored he would have lost his wager."

The following year, 1972, the Crimson Eagles blanked Kolbe, 40-0, for their fifth straight series triumph. Caston will never forget the ending of that game. He wrote, "In the final moments of the last game in my senior year played on Thanksgiving Day with our defense on the field and the lead firmly in hand, the Coach called over to me and told me to go in the game as a defensive player as he was putting all of the seniors in.

"I figured that if I stalled long enough I wouldn't have to venture into a situation that could have potentially been dangerous, especially considering that I didn't have a clue about what to do or where to go," he continued. "He would have none of it. He directed me to stand behind my friend, Mark, who was playing defensive tackle, and to try my best to not get hurt."

His high school career ended with three memorable plays. Caston admitted that on the first play, he ran back-and-forth, unsure as to what to do. The next play, though, he was involved in a tackle. Finally, during his last-ever play, he recovered a fumble. "The Toe" was asked after the game why he didn't run after recovering the pigskin.

"I had the knowledge that in high school football, at least at that time, you couldn't advance a fumble. The real reason, of course was that if I picked up the ball, and started running, it was extremely likely that I would have gotten tackled from behind, and subjected myself to even greater embarrassment. In the locker room after the game, Coach commented that I started the game out as a kicker, but went out as a football player."

With Thanksgiving just a week away, Caston can't help but reminisce about what once was. "For me personally, the Thanksgiving Day game was part of a wonderful weekend," Caston admitted. "First the game, then dinner at a family friend's house, and the next day was the start of the ski season, and the first trip of the year to Vermont. Thanksgiving remains my favorite holiday.

"Even 36 years after the crowd dispersed on Thanksgiving Day in my senior year, and as we teammates --- teammates who had literally lived together in the weight room during summer practice --- went our separate ways, the joy that we felt as a team that day comes to me like an arrow, straight and true, shooting through the years. (Coach) Bill's recent tragic passing makes those memories all the more sweeter, meaningful, and poignant."

Paul

If you have any old photos, film, stories, or anecdotes from your days at Andrew Warde High School, I'd love to hear from you. Please contact me at pppiorek@news12.com.

Join the Andrew Warde Class of 1976 Facebook page.

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Visit the Andrew Warde High School Gift Shop.

Watch the AWHS 1976 vintage "film".

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Andrew Warde High School's Opening in 1956 Attracted Students from Both Sides of Town

Andrew Warde High School's students have traditionally come from the Eastern side of Fairfield. Over the last few decades, children who attended Stratfield, North Stratfield, McKinley, and Jennings schools eventually moved into Warde as freshmen. However, that wasn't always the case.

When Andrew Warde High School opened in the Fall of 1956, it was the crown jewel of Fairfield's public school system. The new secondary school on Melville Avenue dwarfed the established Roger Ludlowe High School, which was then located in what is now Tomlinson Middle School. So, when the new high school opened over a half-century ago, it even attracted many students from the Western side of town who had previously attended Ludlowe.

Fairfield's superintendent of schools at the time, Dr. Carlyle G. Hoyt, recommended to the board of education in January of 1956 that all Ludlowe pupils transported by bus, except those in the Pequot and Mill Hill school districts, be redistricted to the new Andrew Warde High School, according to the new district lines.

Ludlowe's student body was reduced to walkers, plus those students who were transported by bus from the Pequot and Mill Hill sections of town. Transportation was provided to the students who lived at least one-and-a-half miles away from school.

Under the plan, Andrew Warde High School opened with an enrollment of 1,174 students, while Ludlowe, which was operating on double-sessions of more than 1,500 students at the time, saw its enrollment dwindle to 674 students.

Dr. Hoyt said it was impossible to divide the town in East and West sections for the district lines without continuing double sessions at Ludlowe. He warned that by 1958, unless steps were taken to expand Roger Ludlowe High School facilities, double sessions would again be required.

The enrollment in the 1,500-student Andrew Warde High School in the 1957-58 school year was estimated at 1,404, while Roger Ludlowe's was at 744. In the 1958-59 school year, Dr. Hoyt estimated the Warde enrollment at 1,625, compared to 805 at Ludlowe. Warde expected 1,776 students enrolled by 1960-61, while Ludlowe targeted 906 students.

Over a half-century ago, Andrew Warde High School was Fairfield's sparkling new secondary school. It was home to most of Fairfield's high school students, and from both sides of town.

Paul

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Monday, October 27, 2008

Web Site to Honor 50th Anniversary of Crimson Eagles Undefeated State Football Champions

Next year marks the 50th anniversary of Andrew Warde High School's 1959 undefeated state championship football season. The Crimson Eagles' gridders, coached by Fern Tetreau, cruised to a 9-0 record in just their fourth season of play. The high school opened three years earlier in 1956.

Offensively, the 1959 Eagles were led by quarterback Howie Ratner, left halfback Larry Gill, and fullback Jack Flanagan. Defensively, co-captain Walter Beck led a bruising unit which posted shutouts in six of the nine contests that year.

This Web site will acknowledge the perfect season next year with a series of weekly articles and newspaper clippings recalling each game. There will be a souvenir sweatshirt available in the AWHS gift shop commemorating the football team's state title and perfect record. And, I'll have exclusive interviews with head coach Tetreau and some of his players as they recall that magical season.

The late Bob Anderson, a former housemaster at Warde who played at Ludlowe and then at Warde, once wrote about Tetreau's 1959 team. "Many Fairfield citizens recall the success of that team, with its tricky single wing T formation, using an unbalanced line, and a side-saddle blocking quarterback," he recalled. "The tailback had to be able to do everything. That threw off the defense through Fern's effective use of the draw, screen, and third down-11 quick kick."

The accompanying newspaper clippings from The Bridgeport Telegram include game reports from Andrew Warde High School's victories over Stratford and Bassick in 1959. According to the Saturday, September 19, 1959 article, Warde defeated Bassick, 22-0. The Tuesday, November 10, 1959 story describes the Eagles' 22-10 win over the North Paraders for their eighth consecutive victory.

Stay tuned as we approach the 50th anniversary of that memorable football season.

Paul

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Watch the AWHS 1976 vintage "film".

Monday, October 20, 2008

"We Don't Print the News --- We Make It!" Crimson Crier Center of Controversy Over 40 Years Ago

Andrew Warde High School's student newspaper, the Crimson Crier, made regional headlines over 40 years ago for its controversial subject matter.

According to a story in the Sunday, December 17, 1967, edition of The Junior Post in The Bridgeport Sunday Post, the Crier "has begun a year of controversial articles and unique reporting."

The 1967-68 Crimson Crier, which was published six times, was headed by editor-in-chief Gene Massafra "who has vowed to produce a fine newspaper that will arouse student interest." The staff included assistant editor Sharon Raichelson, business manager Philip Shopick, sports editor Michael Shapiro, feature writer Craig McPherson, make-up editor Dennis Drozdak, and head writer, Gary Rosch.

"The Crier will print anything that will arouse controversy and agitate student interest," said Massafra. "Although many articles have a negative viewpoint, they bring attention to the issues in the school. Both teachers and students know there are things wrong in the school. However, no one wants to say or do anything about it. The Crier offers them the opportunity to express themselves."

In the first issue, a rather one-sided view against the Vietnam War was published. The article caused quite a bit of controversy among both teachers and students. It was termed "communist propaganda" and a "waste of space" by some. A rebuttal showing a completely different aspect in favor of the war was published later.

Massafra said, "The Crier will print anything that has a valid argument, and I feel that both these articles have valid arguments for and against a very controversial issue."

The first issue also included an article by McPherson satirizing the use of computers in creating students' schedules. The computer had given some students rather curious schedules. In addition, the sports page was headed: "Warde 14, Ludlowe 12 at the half," giving the score to a game which Warde unfortunately lost, 48-22.

According to the Post story, "The articles which comprise each issue of the Crier come from a variety of sources: some are assigned to staff members, some are suggested by members of the student body, and some are contributed by Warde students. The articles are reviewed by the head writers and the editors."

Mrs. Pamela Hurley, a member of the English department, was the adviser to the Crier. The staff felt that "without her help, the newspaper would not be as improved as it has been over the past two years."

The Bridgeport Sunday Post article states, "Mrs. Hurley is very proud of her outspoken staff, and she says that the Crier has been a powerful force in the crushing of student apathy. She firmly believes in one of the Crier's mottos which advocates 'Truth, Justice, and the Andrew Warde Way.'"

Paul

Friday, October 17, 2008

Mike Abraham Recalls Magical Season for Andrew Warde High School's FCIAC Eastern Division Championship Boys' Basketball Team 35 Years Ago

Even though 35 years have passed since the Andrew Warde High School boys' basketball team won the 1972-73 FCIAC Eastern Division championship, the memories haven't faded for Mike Abraham, a key member of the team.

Abraham was one of several illustrious alumni from the AWHS Class of 1973 who played on that unforgettable team. What does he remember most about that magical season? "Playing in front of a full house," he told me earlier this week. "I remember seven out of the 10 home games were sold out. The fire marshall had to shut the doors. The sound was so loud and fantastic. There were times we could not hear in the timeouts."

Abraham, currently the the coordinator of Adapted Physical Education in the special education program for the Fairfield public schools, still has fond memories about the camaraderie of the 1972-73 squad. The team, which was coached by Ed Bengermino, included Abraham, Fairfield Ludlowe High School athletic director Dave Schulz, and Roger Ludlowe Middle School principal Glenn Mackno (left-to-right in the photo below).

"After the games on Friday nights we all had lots of fun hanging out at McDonald's (and) the beach," he admitted. "We had a lot of pride with Ludlowe, Prep, and Notre Dame players and fans around."

The game which Abraham recalls vividly was the dramatic victory over Staples, Friday evening, February 2, 1973. The win improved Warde's division record to a perfect 11-0 and 13-3 overall. According to the Bridgeport Telegram, "The perfect passing of Ron DelBianco and Dave Schulz enabled the Eagles of Warde to defeat Staples High School, 78-72, in a key FCIAC Eastern Division basketball game last night."

"The game was on radio," Abraham recalled. "(We were) playing in front of a full house. It was so loud we couldn't even hear ourselves on the court. The game was back and forth all night, then they (Staples) pulled away at the end of the third quarter. We fought back and with just a minute or so left we tied the game. After a timeout called by Staples, Coach Bengermino took off our press.

"When we went back on the court, Glenn Mackno and I looked at each other and still trapped their guard coming up the floor," he continued. "I was able to tap the ball away, and Glenn scooped it up and went in for the leading layup. It was the first lead we had in the second half. The sound was so deafening. I will always have that image of Glenn dropping the ball over the rim and the sound that accompanied it."

According to the Bridgeport Telegram, "Mackno finished the game with 16 points and 14 assists, while DelBianco and Phil Ness benefited from the senior's wizardry by scoring 24 and 15 points, respectively. The Warde defense shut off (Staples) early in the fourth period and ran off 12 straight points to put the game away."

That team will always hold a special place in the hearts of those who attended Andrew Warde High School in the early 1970s. Schulz, Mackno, Bengermino, and Abraham (seen above left-to-right) are still very much involved in the Fairfield public school system. Bengermino also coached the Warde baseball team to the state championship in 1981 and the state finals the following year. He also coached the successful volleyball team for many years.

Abraham later went on to coach the Andrew Warde boys' basketball team from 1981 through 1986 and created even more memories. What does he especially remember? "Just being with the guys and coaching on the same floor I played on," he said. "We did make the state and FCIAC tournament each year. I cannot begin to tell you how many funny stories and experiences (we had).

"My players and mangers will always be special to me. We had great teams with the talent we had. Records of 16-5 and 20-5 are a tribute to the hard work these teams put in. The 20-5 team made to the semi finals and with (one more win) we would have been playing Harding for the state championship."

For the last 31 years, Abraham has been enjoying his unique position with the Fairfield public school system. "I work very closely with special education children, their teachers, therapists, and all staff," he said. "I work very closely with occupational and physical therapists assisting children with fine and gross motor problems as well as sensory integration dysfunction that may impact their classroom participation within the curriculum." His office is located at Fairfield Warde High School.

Abraham, who has two sons currently attending college, is involved in other activities, too, such as directing the swimming program, the early childhood testing program, and training teachers how to manage physical and psychological episodes children may have. "I love this job, mainly because I love children, especially those with special needs," he emphasized. "Hopefully, I have been a 'voice' for these children all these years."

Paul

Join the Andrew Warde Class of 1976 Facebook page.

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Visit the Andrew Warde High School Gift Shop.

Watch the AWHS 1976 vintage "film".

Monday, October 13, 2008

Like Father, Like Daughter: Crimson Eagles' Blood Runs Through New Generation of Fairfield Warde Mustangs and Fairfield Ludlowe Falcons

Davis. Mackno. Bengermino. The names are synonymous with athletic success at Andrew Warde High School.

Tom Davis was an outstanding football player for the Crimson Eagles in the early 1970s. He was coached by his late brother, Bill, who also started the wrestling program at Warde. Glenn Mackno starred on the Warde's 1972-73 FCIAC Eastern Division basketball championship team and later coached volleyball and basketball at his alma mater. Ed Bengermino coached the 1981 AWHS baseball team to the state championship and perennially guided his volleyball and baseball teams to post-season success.

Today, however, their daughters are making names for themselves as outstanding high school athletes in Fairfield. Seniors Allie Davis and Emily Bengermino are teammates on the defending state champion Mustangs' girls soccer team, while Brooke Mackno is a sophomore three-sport athlete at Ludlowe. All three were on center stage last week when the Warde and Ludlowe girls' soccer teams battled to a dramatic scoreless tie before a capacity crowd at the Falcons' field.

"I am very proud of Allie playing at Warde and being a Mustang," said Tom Davis about his daughter. "By putting on that jersey, she represents her school and the Davis family. Playing Ludlowe is always special as there are great memories from my playing days and the games Allie played over the last four years. When Allie graduates in June 2009, there will no longer be a direct connection between me and Warde athletics."

Davis, who created a scholarship award in his brother's honor, has enjoyed watching his daughter play at his alma mater. "Tradition is really what it is," he told me. "Allie and Emily Bengermino have been playing soccer together before they even got to high school. They are also really good friends. Brooke Mackno is younger and has played against Allie and Emily only in high school. There is a friendly rivalry between the fathers, for and against each other. "

Allie Davis will be one of nine seniors honored next Monday, October 20, before the team's final home game against Westhill. She is thrilled to have played her home games on the field which was dedicated in honor of her uncle during the school's 50th anniversary celebration two years ago. "When I play on our home field named after my Uncle Bill and Coach Tetreau, I feel honored and special," she told me.

"I am honored because Uncle Bill was such an influential person to Fairfield and Andrew Warde High School, and he was greatly recognized. I feel special because I am making him proud. I know he is watching me when I play," admitted Allie, who is considering Siena, UMass, Stonehill, Merrimack, and Eastern Connecticut as possible college destinations next year.

Glenn Mackno, the principal of Roger Ludlowe Middle School, is extremely proud of his daughter, Brooke, who lettered in three sports --- soccer, skiing, and tennis --- last year. "I really enjoy watching my daughter play for Ludlowe," he admitted. "I do so with a sense of pride, especially knowing that she is playing out her career in the great Fairfield traditions that I was fortunate to have experienced as an athlete."

Brooke Mackno, ironically, was a member of the Warde ski team as a freshman and helped lead the squad to a second place finish in the state championships. She earned All-State honors and won the state championship in the slalom. She was the #2 skier representing the ten-member Team Connecticut at the New England High School ski championships in New Hampshire.

The younger Mackno was also a starter on the soccer team for half the games a year ago and scored the winning goal against Westhill. In addition, in tennis, she finished with an impressive 7-2 record at the #3 singles position and 1-0 at the #2 singles position for Ludlowe, which advanced to the state semi-finals.

As for rooting for the school which was his arch-rival back in the day, Glenn Mackno isn't bothered in the least. "Initially, I thought it would be difficult to root for Ludlowe. But, to be honest with you, if you have been a team player during your life, your loyalties carry over to the current team you or your children represent. Plus it makes it fun to add to these rivalries by watching your daughter compete against former teammates' children on the athletic fields."

His elder daughter, Kelly, attended Fairfield High School at the Warde site. She was a four-year all-state skier and was captain for her junior and senior years. The ski team won the state skiing championship her senior year. She also was on the volleyball and cross-country squads.

Glenn Mackno said his daughters are aware of his athletic accomplishments at Warde. "My daughters are very familiar with the 1972-1973 (FCIAC) Eastern Divison basketball championship and the banner that used to hang in the Warde gymnasium, as well as the trophy and team picture in the showcase," he admitted. "Both of them informed me they were also going to win banners and get their names on banners and win trophies for their schools, which they have both already accomplished.

"I guess it served as a motivation for them to succeed," he continued. "Last winter, I went to Warde to pick up my daughter, and when I walked in she was at the trophy case showing some of her teammates my picture when I was in high school," he said.

Later, Glenn Mackno started the freshman girls' volleyball program at Warde and coached all three levels of girls' volleyball --- freshman, junior varsity, and varsity. He also coached boys' junior varsity basketball and freshman girls' basketball for the Crimson Eagles.

Ed Bengermino, a coaching legend at Andrew Warde High School who was inducted into the Connecticut Women’s Volleyball Hall of Fame, is proud of his daughter's accomplishments. Emily played a big part in helping the Warde girls' soccer team to the class L state crown last year in a 1-0 shutout victory over Farmington. She scored both goals in the Mustangs' 2-0 victory over Berlin in the semi-finals, including one 4:34 into the first half.

"The only word is pride," Bengermino answered when asked about his daughter's involvement in soccer, basketball, and track at the school he called home for so many years. "It's a connection to contributing to Warde's success. She's a big part of all of those three programs. Her Mom and I are very proud of all her athletics. She gives everything in all three sports."

He said Emily is looking forward to Senior Night next Monday, and then it's time to focus on the next sport. "She's a tenacious defender (on the basketball court)," he pointed out. "She plays great defense in basketball. She's also a top-notch runner. She broke 60 seconds in the 400 meters."

Ed Bengermino, who came within one win of coaching back-to-back baseball state championships at Warde in the early 1980s, said Emily is still undecided as to where she'll be next year. "She's got a list of schools," he said. "It'll be her call all the way, and she's doing all the work right now. She's looking at the size of the school and the location of the school."

The elder Bengermino watched the scoreless game against Ludlowe last Friday night and admitted he was on edge throughout the entire match. "I get just as nervous watching her play against Ludlowe as when I was coaching against Ludlowe," he laughed. Then, with tongue planted firmly in cheek, he added, "I would rather be sitting in the gym watching her play volleyball."

Tom Davis, who was part of the illustrious AWHS Class of 1973 which includes Mackno, former Warde boys' basketball coach Mike Abraham, and Fairfield Ludlowe High School athletic director Dave Schulz, says he'll miss the direct connection between the Davis family name and Warde athletics next year after his daughter graduates.

"On the funny side, one of (the Mom's of) Allie's teammates wanted to know if I would adopt her daughter so that I would stay involved with the program," he joked. "But as you know my heart will always be with the 'Crimson Eagles' and the 'Mustangs.' Old athletes and coaches never die, they just fade into the sunset."

"My Dad has always been proud to have graduated from Warde, and being an athlete there along with his three brothers," stated Allie. "I am proud of carrying on the Davis athletic name at Warde, playing soccer and lacrosse. I know my accomplishments have made my Dad proud to have another Davis attend his school."

Davis. Mackno. Bengermino. From the Andrew Warde Crimson Eagles to the Fairfield Warde Mustangs and Fairfield Ludlowe Falcons. The tradition continues.

Paul

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