Great event last Friday night. This from the Boston Globe –
Medfield celebrates 50th anniversary of unbeaten team
By Brandan Blom
Aram Boghosian/For the Globe
Members of the 1964 Medfield football team are honored during a halftime ceremony Saturday.
Medfield remembers its perfect past.
It’s been 50 years since Bob Curry, Kraig Magnussen, Don Clive, and the rest of the 1964 Medfield football team last took the field together.
During halftime of Medfield’s home game against Holliston on Friday, the 1964 team took the field once again, this time to be honored as the only unbeaten and untied football team in school history.
In the early 1960s, the Medfield football program was no powerhouse. The decade before, the team went on a 32-game losing streak that ended in 1961 when coach Ed Keyes arrived. Keyes, along with assistant coaches Burt Able and Harry Kreshpane, led Medfield to consecutive five-win seasons in 1962 and 1963 before they put everything together, going 9-0 in 1964.
“Everybody was friendly. We played together forever,” said John Roskilly, a senior tackle and defensive lineman on the 1964 team. “Since playing dodge ball in elementary school to football and basketball in high school, we had a lot of team camaraderie.”
Curry, one of the team captains in 1964, remembers the toughest game the Warriors had that season. It was against a good Millis team that finished 8-1.
Aram Boghosian for The Boston Globe
Co-captains Bob Curry (left) and Kraig Magnussen led Medfield to a 9-0 record in 1964.
“We were tied at halftime,” Curry said. “Coach Keyes had put in a stunting defense just for that week. We started blitzing and they didn’t know what gaps we were going to come through.”
Medfield won 20-12, the only blemish on Millis’ record. The closest game that fall, though, came against Leicester in a 13-12 win.
“Leicester is a tough place to play,” Curry said. “We were losing at halftime and we were all a little bit in shock, but we were able to get a close win. That game taught us not to take things for granted.”
Friday’s ceremony came together when Lee DeSorgher remembered in the spring that this would mark the 50th anniversary of the 1964 season. DeSorgher called Curry and teammate Harry Pitroni, and they got a hold of a few more teammates to put the celebration together.
“The town was wonderful,” DeSorgher said. “It was very surreal. Where else but a small town would you have three police cars and two fire trucks escorting us?
“It was like we won the championship again.”
Follow Brandan Blom on Twitter @brandan_blom.



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