Complete History of the Medford/Malden Thanksgiving Football Rivalry
|This record was prepared by former Malden Evening News Sports Editor Paul Leahy Through 1991 and by Malden Evening News/Medford Daily Mercury editor Steve Freker from 1992 through 2015
A Capsule Summary of Every Game, 1 to 128, 1889-2015
They’ve played 128 times before in a series that began in 1889. The series turns 127 years old this week and this is the seventh game of the 2010 decade. Following is a capsule look of each game that’s been played in the time-honored series between Malden and Medford:
1889: Medford won the first game, 34-0, in a game played on Friday, October 15, 1889. Malden players protested that Medford used players from Tufts College and MIT. A second game was scheduled and Medford won,4-0, on the Saturday after Thanksgiving.
1890: No scored available, therefore, no verification is a game was indeed played.
1891: Medford won, 22-0
1892: Medford won, 34-0
1893: Its first victory in the series clinches the Suburban League title for Malden, 18-0, according to Malden records. Malden won a second game that year by a score of 12-10.
1894: Touchdowns by Tom Flanders and Bill Nash gave Malden its second straight Suburban League crown, 10-0. Medford shared first place with the Golden Tornado going into the game.
1895: Medford succeeds Malden as Suburban League champs, 16-11, at Tufts Oval. The two teams were tied for first place entering the game.
1896: Medford’s 18-0 victory costs Malden the Suburban League title.
1897: Malden holds twice inside its own four-yard line and battles to a scoreless tie at a Tufts Oval in the first game played on
Thanksgiving Day.
1898: Mike Howe scores twice as Malden wins Suburban League pennant, 20-12.
1899: Jack Williams’ three touchdowns pace Medford to a 23-6 victory before the largest crowd to date to watch the series, 1,500 people. From this game on, all the games were played on Thanksgiving.
1900: Malden’s Elmer Rice scored the deciding touchdown in a 11-5 victory that earns Suburban League championship before a record crowd date of 2,500 people.
1901: Malden storms back in the second half and rallied to a 23-6 victory.
1902: Dennis Papkee scores the deciding conversion after Paul Volpe’s touchdown to give Medford a 6-5 victory and the Suburban League crown before another record breaking crowd of 5,000 people.
1903: Jack Mather’s two touchdown’s pace Medford, 17-5, before another record-breaking attendance of 6,000 people.
1904: Jack Mather scores three times and extends Medford’s domination, 18-11.
1905: Malden installs ex-Dartmouth and Everett end Matt Bullock as coach specifically for the Medford game and upsets the Mustangs, 27-0, in the first game at Bryant Street Park in Malden.
1906: Paul Pray’s conversion after Midget Cotting’s touchdown pulls Medford out, 6-5, with a record crowd of 8,000 fans on hand.
1907: Charlie Miner scores three touchdowns and Malden captures Suburban League title, 44-0, with the highest score to date in the series.
1908: Fights and threats of protests mar Malden’s 6-0 victory. Medford had a touchdown called back and a 40-yard slugging penalty against a Mustang, who was ejected and had to be brought to the sideline by a policeman. The penalty sets up a winning, 15-yard TD catch by Malden’s Dennis Letherman.
1909: Malden’s Arthur Miner scores three touchdowns in a 23-3 victory.
1910: Six different players score as Malden clinches State and Suburban League titles with 13th straight victory, 35-0. Malden has its only undefeated, untied (13-0-0) season and went on to beat Providence (R.I.) Tech, 29-8, in a post-season game at Bryant Street Park.
1911: Medford wins Suburban League title on two field goals by 14-year-old Art Donellan.
1912: Malden rolls behind the passing of quarterback Herb Kempton, 27-0, and wins State and Suburban League crowns with an undefeated record.
1913: Eric Christianson’s fourth quarter touchdown helps Medford upset Malden, 6-3.
1914: Medford captain Art Donellan throws for one touchdown and returns an intercepted pass for another in a 21-0 shutout win.
1915: Bob Foley sprints for 80 yards with a blocked field goal and boosts Medford to a 7-0 victory.
1916: Two offsides penalties against Malden set up both Medford scores as Mustangs rally for 13-13 tie, but lose Suburban League championship to Somerville with the deadlock.
1917: Quarterback Charlie Donellan’s third-quarter field goal gives Medford an unbeaten record (9-0-0) and Suburban League title, 3-0. Medford, which had allowed only seven points al season heading into the game, won the Suburban League and Eastern Mass. titles and defeated Manchester (N.H.)in a post-season game at Braves Field in Boston.
1918: Quarterback Chet Sanford comes back from a three-week layoff and directed Medford to a second straight Suburban League title with a touchdown pass and field goal, 9-0. Boston Commerce nipped Medford, 3-0, at Braves Field for the Eastern Mass. title. That lone field goal were the only points Medford had allowed all season.
1919: Medford holds twice on its own goal line and battles Malden to a 0-0 tie before a new. record breaking crowd of 8,500.
1920: Medford recovers from Malden fumble with less then four minutes in the gamer, and four plays later Capt. BoB Blair scores the winning touchdown in a 7-0 Mustang victory.
1921: Honey Lewin’s field goal in the snow in the closing minutes salvages Malden, 10-7, before new record breaking crowd of 10,000.
1922: Captain Bob Sandberg’s third quarter touchdown overhauls Medford for Malden and allowed the Golden Tornados to share the Suburban League crown with Rindge Tech, 7-3. It was Malden’s first piece of a league title in 10 seasons, since 1912.
1923: Captain Joe Murphy, a tackle, rambles 62 yards for a first quarter touchdown as Medford wins Suburban League championship, 7-0, and drops Malden from the unbeaten ranks.
1924: Crowd of 15,000, the largest crowd to date by far, watches quarterback “Sheep” Jackson direct Malden to four second-half touchdowns and a 27-6 win.
1925: First-half touchdowns by Jack Mangan and Morris Spector propel Malden to an unbeaten season with a 13-0 win, in front of another huge crowd of 15,000 plus. Malden tied for the Eastern Mass. title.
1926: Three quick touchdowns give Medford 20-0 first quarter lead and Mustangs hold on for a 20-6 upset.
1927: John Baxter scores twice, once on a 90-yard sprint, earning Malden a 13-13 tie.
1928: Medford finishes the season unbeaten with a 7-0-3 record and gains a share of the Eastern Mass. championship with Newell Wilder leading the way to a 14-0 victory.
1929: With both teams coming into the game undefeated, an all-time series record crowd of 18,500 inside the fence and an estimated 2,000 to 3,000 outside saw Malden Captain, Sam Fishman, lead the Golden Tornado to an unbeaten season (9-0-1) and a share of the Eastern Mass. title by returning a punt 55-yards for the only score of the game as Medford (7-1-0) fell by a 6-0 score.
1930: Malden’s Warren Mulrey scores a third-quarter touchdown as the Golden Tornado upsets Medford 7-2.
1931: Malden finishes with an unbeaten (9-0-1) record and claims a share of the Eastern Mass. championship on touchdowns by Sam Pashoian and Lloyd Tupper in a 12-2 victory over Medford (2-4-3).
1932: Lefty quarterback Joe Kelly passes Malden to 20-0 victory.
1933: Joe Kelly clinches nine-win season for Malden, 21-0 by setting up two second-quarter TDs with his passing, and running, for a third score in the game’s closing minutes.
1934: Malden’s defense and the punting of Medford’s Torby Macdonald are the keys in a scoreless tie.
1935: The punting of Malden’s “Chuckin” Charlie O’Rourke and Medford Capt. Art Wareham dominate in a battle of lines in a scoreless tie, the second straight in the series that enables Malden to win the Eastern Mass. Class A title.
1936: Dexter Shaffner scores twice, but “Chuckin” Charlie O’Rourke steals the show for Malden in a 13-0 victory.
1937: Charlie Hanifan’s fourth quarter touchdown decides it for Malden, 6-0.
1938: Medford turns to defense and the punting of Bob Margarita to battle Malden to another scoreless tie, 0-0.
1939: Norm Brown returns an interception 90 yards in the second quarter and Patsy Darone kicks winning conversion as Malden knocks Medford from the unbeaten ranks, 7-6. Al Zarella’s touchdown on a pass gave Medford its first offensive point against Malden in 10 years.
1940: Sal Cannava and Bud Mahoney score fourth-quarter touchdowns to rally Medford to a 14-6, come-from-behind upset in the first Mustang win over the Tornadoes in 11 years.
1941: Paul O’Brien returns interception 65 yards to set up second-quarter touchdown in a 6-0 Medford victory.
1942: Hank Corrado’s two second-half touchdowns pace Medford to Eastern Mass. Class A championship and unbeaten season, 13-0.
1943: Capt. John Giannelli and Joe Corbisiero do all Medford’s scoring in a 21-0 victory, four in a row for the Mustangs.
1944: Underdog Medford stalls at the Malden six-inch line as close of first half and fights Tornadoes to a scoreless tie.
1945: Wet weather and soggy grounds hold Medford to 36 yards in total offense and Malden to just 14 yards in second straight scoreless tie.
1946: Capt. Warren McFague and Jackie Feltch score as Medford upsets Malden, 14-6. Mustangs unbeaten in seven straight Thanksgiving games.
1947: Dick Lawrence sprints 51 yards with touchdown pass in fourth quarter and earns Class A Champion Mustangs a bid to the ‘Gator Bowl, 13-7.
1948: Dan Duggan scores twice and leads ‘Gator bowl-bound Malden to undefeated season and Class A title, 33-14, ending an eight-year unbeaten streak by Medford.
1949: Medford’s Joe Gnerre scores second-quarter touchdown and Mustangs hold Malden at own two-yard line later in frame for 6-0 victory.
1950: Steve O’Brien throws touchdown pass to Buddy O’Shea in second quarter after fake field goal in 7-0 Malden victory.
1951: Hank Lindberg races 60 yards win interception to set up seven-yard catch by Paul Hurton with two minutes left in the third quarter, breaking a scoreless tie and starting Malden on a 19-0 victory. This was only the second game in the series in which both teams came in unbeaten, Medford at (8-0-0) and Malden at (7-0-1). The Tornado win gave the Class A title to Weymouth.
1952: Five different player score as Medford rolls, 27-0.
1953: Phil Gagliardi sprints 47 yards for winning touchdown with little more than three minutes remaining in game to give Medford 6-0 victory.
1954: Malden gains only 49 yards on the ground but quarterback Billy Brown throws for 135 yards and two touchdowns to pace Malden, 27-9, as Malden shares the GBL title with Somerville.
1955: A second-quarter safety and a 20-yard interception return late in the frame by Bob Del Isola, son of Coach John Del Isola, lead Medford to an upset, 8-7 victory.
1956: Dom Fermano scores twice and Jason Manita once to lead Malden to a 20-6 win.
1957: Dom Fermano races 40 yards in fourth quarter and leads Malden to come-from-behind victory and GBL championship, 19-14.
1958: Sophomore Lou Lemmo scores twice as Malden romps, 26-0.
1959: John Keats, Ken Puleo and Mac Singleton score to give Malden the GBL title, 20-0.
1960: Co-capt. Vic Lemmo scores three touchdowns as Malden romps to second straight GBL title, 50-6, in highest scoring game of the series.
1961: Senior Steve Desimone scores four touchdowns and rushes for a conversion to set a series scoring record with 26 points while pacing Malden, 34-2.
1962: Bill Gouvalaris scores two touchdowns, including the tying once, as Malden rallies from a 20-0 deficit and fights to 20-20 tie. Medford stops what would have been the winning conversion with 2:30 left in the game.
1963: Bob Baker intercepts a Mustang pass and returns it 88 yards for the Tornado touchdown and Geroge Scrimone recovers a fumble in the end zone for the winning two-oint conversion in a Malden 8-6 comeback victory.
1964: Paul Finn and John Salmon score two touchdowns each to lead Malden, 24-0.
1965: Joe Fermano and Nick Esposito score as Malden rallies 14-6.
1966: Bill Croken and Ed Hichborn lead Malden’s 25-13 upset with two touchdowns each.
1967: Jim Reid scores twice as GBL champs Medford earns share of Class A championship with Weymouth, 22-0.
1968: Ken Rideout equals series record with four touchdowns while leading Medford, 32-14.
1969: Co-capt. Dave Moulton, sidelined with 60 stitches in his head after automobile accident the night before the game, comes off the bench in the second half and scores two touchdowns to lead Malden to share of GBL title with Quincy, 26-6.
1970: Mike Byrne passes for 207 yards and a 26-6 Malden win.
1971: Mustangs conclude best season in five years as All-Scholastic Kevin Cunniff runs 68 yards on the final play of the game. Mike Colonna’s one-yard run and Art Ventresco’s 37-yard field goal added the trimmings to the 16-0 win that meant an 8-2 season.
1972: All-Scholastic tailback Mike Colonna closed out his schoolboy career by running for a series record that still stands, five touchdowns ,as Medford walloped the winless Tornadoes, 38-19, at Macdonald Stadium in highest total point-scoring game in series history to date. It was the last Thanksgiving game for coaching legend Bill Tighe of Malden who began coaching Lexington the next season and is still there, 36 years later.
1973: One of the most dramatic second-half turn-arounds in series history gave Malden a 22-13 upset. Medford led at the half, 6-0, and then the Mustangs’ John Flynn returned the second-half kickoff 88 yards for a touchdown that put Malden in a 12-0 hole. But the steady ground game of the Tornadoes’ Tom Cuhna (101 yards), and the passing accuracy of sophomore quarterback John Stanasek sparked the win, the first for new head coach Paul Finn, who went on to coach 25 more Thanksgiving games.
1974: This was simply a rout as Malden went on to share the Greater Boston League title with Peabody after blasting the Mustangs, 42-15, in a contest that tied the record for total points in the Malden-Medford game. Tornado Co-Captain Jeff Sullivan rushed for 130 yards and scored two touchdowns, John Stanasek passed for two TDs and four conversion points; John Ruelle had a touchdown and a two-point coversion; Mark Burns, Pauk Coleman and Steve Defillipis scores TDs; Steve Carlan netted a two-point conversion and Shawn Brickman kicked two PATs.
1975: This is the infamous “Mud Bowl” that switched from Hormel to Pearl Street Stadium because of field conditions. Malden turned out to have better “mudders” while winning its third game in a row for the Mustangs. Don Roach ran 23 yards for a TD in the second period and 10 yards for a score in the third. He also caught a conversion pass from John Stanasek as Malden won, 14-8, to clinch a tie for the GBL title with Everett.
1976: A 14-6 victory over Malden “saves” Medford’s season at Pearl Street Stadium. The Mustangs went into the contest with a winless, 0-9 record. Reserve running back Mike Finigan, who gained less than 100 yards all season, leaped over the goal line from one to give Medford a 6-0 lead. Mike Meli scored what proved to be the game-winning points on a sweep for the two-point conversion. In the fourth quarter Medford iced the game when quarterback Kenny Curtis scored on a 8-yard sweep to make it 14-0. In the final three minutes Malden;s Shawn Brickman completed 11 passes. The final one, a swing pass in the last second of play to Vic Souza, put Malden on the scoreboard.
1977: The punting game was the key to Medford’s 15-6 victory at Tufts University’s Ellis Oval. Quarterback Steve Powell’s four yard drive gave Malden the lead in the first quarter but Medford’s Tony Pasquale fell on a fumble in the end zone cause when a poor snap on a punt went over Powell’s head and the Malden kicker was hit by Ralph Tenaglia, causing the fumble. A blocked punt set up a 20-yard scoring run by the Mustang’s Mike Tortorella.
1978: Super Bowl-bound Medford needed a 19-yard field goal from Franz Eberth with 6:38 left in the game to take a 9-7 victory before 8,000 at sunny Pearl Street Stadium. The Mustangs scored first when Buddy MacLean passed 39 yards to Pat Holland on Medford’s first possession but it was the Mustang defense that won the game with a goal line stand at the end of the half when Malden couldn’t score on two tries from the two-yard line.
1979: Medford exploded for 28 points in the first quarter on the way to a record-setting 48-24 win over Malden in which more points were scored than any other in the ancient series. Malden made it close at the half with a 16-point out-burst but the Mustangs put it away with 20 points in the second half. Craig Martorana led the scoring with three touchdowns.
1980: Mike Todisco, a junior wide receiver, caught three touchdowns passes from Mike Caraviello, son of Medford coach Armond Caraviello, as Medford defeated Malden, 24-12, for the fifth year in a row. For Malden, Dan Rao completed 10 out of 20 passes for 114 yards and Ed Fitzgerald had seven receptions for 130 yards and a touchdown.
1981: Trailing 10-0 at the half, Medford battled back and whipped Malden for the sixth straight time, 29-18, on a beautiful Thanksgiving morning at Tufts. Junior quarterback Roger Martorana rushed for two scores and passed for one to lead the Medford comeback. Malden quarterback Bobby Trodden connected on an amazing 20-of-28 passes. It was the final Thanksgiving Game at the helm for Mustang coaching legend Armond Caraviello.
1982: This turned into a one-man game when Warren Olson, whose father played for Malden High, carried the ball 32 times, gained 164 yards and scored two touchdowns in Medford’s 19-0 romp. It was Medford’s seventh straight win and made Mustang coach “Bud” Kelley’s Thanksgiving debut a memorable one, despite the fact the game was played on Malden turf.
1983: Ernie Breen fired two TD passes to Steve Walsh and Medford bolted to a 25-0 half time lead and never looked back. Sophomore Steve Monaco’s brilliant passing led Malden’s second-half comeback that produced a pair of scores for the 25-14 final. This game was later ruled a forfeit by Medford, the only ever in series history, due to an ineligible. It shows as a Malden win in the all-time series slate, but it’s a known fact that Coach Finn and the players never accepted it as a win.
1984: Paul DeMayo put on one of the best one-player scoring shows in history. He had second-half touchdown runs of 56 yards, one yard and eight yards and kicked the conversion point after each score in Malden’s 21-6 victory. The running of DeMayo (95 yards), Reggie Hayes (82) and quarterback Steve Monaco (80) was the key to the Malden win. Richard Lavoie averted the shutout for the Mustangs with a six-yard run in the fourth quarter as Malden stopped the Medford win streak at eight games. Malden captains Guy Prescott and Danny Valeri along with Bob McVicar keyed the defense for the Tornadoes.
1985: The Medford ball-control game helped the Mustangs post a mild, 28-20 upset and grab a share of the GBL title with Peabody. Had Malden won, the Tornadoes would have been co-GBL champs. Played two days after Thanksgiving because of a snow storm, the game was a showcase for John Hunt. Medford’s tailback carried the ball 27 times, gained 116 yards and scored two touchdowns, including the game winner. Marc Bartalini and Scott Pynn scored the other touchdowns for Medford. Tornado quarterback Steve Monaco completed 12-of-23 passes for 154 yards but was unable to throw a TD pass. Reggie Hayes ran for two touchdowns for Malden, Monaco, who remains Malden High’s all-time career passer with over 2,600 yards, ran in the other score.
1986: Malden scored 20 points in the first half and 13 in the fourth quarter of a 33-12 victory. Junior Carmine Cappuccio caught three touchdown passes from Chuck Borstel for a series record that still stands. Junior Lawrence Hicks ran for 136 yards and a TD and junior Brian Hatch scored a TD for the Tornadoes. Bob Ferrante ran for a Medford TD and Drew Murphy caught a 79-yard pass from Mustang quarterback David Martorana for the other Mustang score.
1987: Malden drove to an undefeated (8-0) Greater Boston League Championship, its first in 12 years, and its best record (9-1) in over 25 years with a 28-0 victory in the historic 100th game with Medford, played at Hormel Stadium before a huge crowd and a game which included national television coverage by sports commentator Bob Costas. A pregame pep talk to Malden by former Tornado legend Dave Moulton appeared on national TV that day. Lawrence Hicks ran for 118 yards and scored two touchdowns. Bll Roderick passed for 152 yards including a 46-yard toss to Carmine Cappuccio. Roderick also scored a TD and J.P. Kelley had an interception for Malden. Chris Forbes and Joe Mucci recovered fumbles which set up Malden TDs. Leading the defense were All-Scholastic and NFL-bound Dan Jones, Brian Hatch, Nick Freni and Mike O’Brien.
1988: Malden clinched its second consecutive GBL title with a 14-13 win. Ed Dicks scored on a three-yard run in the first quarter and Bob Carroll (blocked punt and fumble recovery) caught a four-yard TD pass from Sean Davis, followed by Tim Ford’s two-point conversion run in the fourth period, which turned out to be the gamewinning points. Dave Morey scored Medford’s first touchdown on a three-yard run and Kevin Gillis kicked the PAT point with Jimmy Martorana returning a kickoff 75 yards for Medford’s second touchdown.
1989: Defense dominated this game from start-to-finish on both sides of the scrimmage line. Medford won the game, 12-8, snapping a three-game Malden win streak, and it was the Mustang defense that scored both of its TDs. Scott Tropeano stripped the ball from a Malden runner and reversed direction for a 20-yard touchdown run in the second quarter. Jimmy Martorana broke a 6-6 tie with a spectacular, juggling interception return that covered 70 yards in the fourth quarter. George Mason caught a four-yard pass from Kevin Geraghty for Malden’s lone TD. The other two Malden points came when Medford quarterback Mike Moreno took a deliberate safety.
1990: Eric Marsh and the Malden defense dominated this game for the Tornadoes, 16-2. A senior tailback, Marsh carried the ball 25 times, gained 130 yards and scored both the game’s touchdowns on runs of 31 and four yards. Malden defensive linemen Steve Froio, Christinan Fitzpatrick, Dan “Bubba” Ford and Walter Fajardo, plus a three-turnover (two fumble recoveries and an interception) by Mik Giblin kept the Mustangs in check.
1991: Mike Moreno had pretty much done it all in a three-year standout career for Medford but he saved his best for last. Moreno booted a 38-yard field goal with 3:38 left in the game to give the Mustangs their 9-8 victory. It was the first field goal for either team in 12 years, since Franz Eberth’s gamewinning 19-yarder in Medford’s 1978 win (9-7), and the longest field goal in series history. After a scoreless first half, Paul Morey scored for Medford on a three-yard run in the third quarter but the conversion try was no good for a 6-0 lead. Malden took the lead early in the fourth quarter when QB Rob Steber ran two yards for a TD and Deterrance Guyton ran in the two-point conversion for an 8-6 lead that didn’t hold up.
1992: Rob Steber and A.J. Joy scored the Malden touchdowns and Anthony Lopresti kicked both conversion points that were the difference in the Tornadoes’ 14-13 win at Macdonald Stadium on Pearl Street. Dave Dussault scored both Medford touchdowns and Rich Fleming kicked the point-after. The game started in a drizzle, which quickly became a downpour. Despite the rain and mud, there were no fumbles. Steber scored on a three-yard run in the first quarter and Lopresti’s PAT made it 7-0. Dussault caught a 34-yard touchdown pass from QB Chris Jones in the second period to cut the Malden lead to 7-6. Joy raced 54 yards for his TD later in the second and Lopresti’s boot made it 14-6. Dussault returned a punt 40 yards for TD in the fourth quarter but the Malden defense stopped the conversion attempt to seal the win. After Malden’s win, the ceremonial “mud dive” was held and enjoyed by all the Tornadoes.
1993: Malden came all the way back and then some in one of the best comebacks in the series-long history, in a 46-18 win. Down 18-0, Malden roared back with 46 unanswered points. It was the most points Malden has scored since 1960 and Malden’s biggest margin of victory since 1974’s win (42-15). Senior Kurt Gaudet was the star of the day for Malden, dominating the game with three TDs and 160 yards rushing. Teammate Billy Barrat scored two TDs and rushed for 115 yards. Junior split end Rich Griffin caught a four-yard TD pass and two-point conversion pass from junior QB Ronnie Repoza. Medford scored the first three TDs of the game, all by Terrell Halls, who was unstoppable in the first half, rushing for an amazing 255 yards by halftime, finishing with just under 300 for the game, still a series record. Gaudet also had an interception to spark the defense and Richmond-bound senior D.J, Cunningham, shifted to nose tackle for the game, led defensively for Malden. It was the final Thankgiving game for Mustang head man “Bud” Kelley after 12 years at the helm.
1994: In one of the biggest upsets in the series overall, and biggest of the 1990s, heavy underdog Medford, coming into the game at 1-8 overall under first-year head coach Bill Buldini, a former Mustang standout, shut down Malden’s high-powered offense for a 6-0 victory. Malden came into the game with the most potent passing attack in the GBL and one of the best in Eastern Mass., averaging just under 25 points a game behind the rifle arm of senior quarterback Ronnie Repoza. Medford’s defense had allowed just over four touchdowns a game coming into Thanksgiving, On a bitterly cold morning in the low teens in Malden, Medford froze out Malden’s passing attack to just 57 yards on the day, on 5-of-13 numbers for Repoza, who still finished with a then school single-season passing mark of 1,447 yards in the air. Malden’s defense was solid as well, led by Durkins Anthony, as the only scoring of the game came at the end of a 61-yard scoring drive on Medford’s very first possession of the day, a nine-yard TD pass from senior Mustang QB Chris Jones to Mike Nestor. The rest of the game was scoreless for both sides. Paul Camuso led Medford with 89 yards on nine carries. Keith Bevans had two sacks to spark the Medford defense.
1995: Playing his first varsity game ever and his first game of the season, surprise starter sophomore taiback Jose Harris sparked Medford to a 25-14 victory at Hormel Stadium with two TDs and 141 yards. Medford went up 7-0 when Harris sprinted to a 75-yard TD midway through the second quarter followed by Steve Bosselman’s PAT kick. Malden had a golden opportunity when Mike Ciaburri pounced on a Medford fumble at its own five-yard line, but the Mustangs wouldn’t let Malden score on four cracks at the goal-line. Medford went up 13-0 when Harris busted free for his second TD, an 18-yard run halfway through the third quarter.Malden did rally back on junior QB Ryan Hale’s 11-of-22, 132 yards passing. A 47-yard pass to senior J.J. O’Brien set up a one-yard Hale TD in the third. Jimmy Meagher (11 carries, 71 yards) then scored on a 12-yard run for a 19-6 lead and Paul Camuso’s 30-yard TD made it 25-6 with under four minutes left. Malden’s Joe DeMartino caught an 18-yard TD pass from Hale and O’Brien caught the conversion for the final scoring with less than minute left, 25-14.
1996: This was a “Tale of Two Halves” and a near season-saver for Malden, which came into the game at 1-9 for the year, a low point in over 25 years for Malden football. But Medford staved off the comeback held on for a 27-12 win, in another frigid morning at Macdonald Stadium just 10 degrees at kickoff. Medford owned the first half of the game with a 20-0 lead at the half. Soph Dwayne D’Oyley caught an 18-yard TD pass from Rob Baldassari and Art Camuso’s kick made it 7-0. Junior Jose Harris, who scored twice the year before, got back in the spotlight, with a 62-yard TD run, Camuso’s PAT making it 14-0. Malden’s offense sputtered and Mustang junior linebacker John Murphy made it worse when he blocked a Ryan Hale punt and teammate Nick DeMaria fell on it in the end zone for another Medford TD and a 20-0 lead at the half. Junior Frank Femino scored on a 37-yard run to start the second half and Camuso’s third kick made it 27-0. After that? Malden owned the rest of the game. Hale hit senior TE Randy DiCarlo with a 13-yard TD pass with 4:38 left in the third. Junior John DeMartino recovered a Mustang fumble on Medford’s four-yard line and Tornado senior Adrian Pleasant ran it in one play later to make it 27-12. Malden drove to the Medford 19 on its next possession, but the drive stalled. Medford killed the clock and Game #109 was history.
1997: Senior Medford tailback Frank Femino had a holiday to remember in leading the Mustangs to a 34-8 victory at blustery Hormel. Femino ran for 163 yards on just 10 carries and challenged the single-game series Thanksgiving scoring mark with 22 points, three TDs and two conversion runs. On just the second play of the game, Femino motored 62 yards for a score. After Mike Vecchia blocked a Malden punt, Medford was back in the end zone four plays later when Eric Giordano scored on a three-yard run. Femino’s conversion run made it 14-0. Malden’s best weapon, junior QB Timmy Philbrook’s passing, was hampered already by the strong winds that day, and it got worse when he was injured in the second quarter and did not return, held to 2-of-10, 20 yards passing. Medford scored two more TDs on runs by senior Bryce Hopkins and Femino for a 27-0 halftime lead. Femino’s 55-yard run to the Malden 4 early in the fourth set up his own TD run a play later and a 33-0 lead. Malden senior fullback Gregg DeVincentis scored to avert the shutout on a four-yard run late. Matt Donoghue ran in the conversion points at QB. Steve Ciampoli led the Medford defense with 10 tackles and three assists. DeVincentis led Malden with 12 tackles, four assists and a fumble recovery.
1998: This was a shocker. Two teams not known for their offensive fireworks combined to set a new combined single-game scoring record for the series in Game #111 at Macdonald Stadium. It was also the final Thanksgiving Day game for legendary Malden head coach Paul Finn, after a 26-year career. Medford used a huge game from quarterback Mike Fahey, who ran for 164 yards on just seven carries and three TDs and 133 yards from senior tailback Pat McCarthy, for a 47-32 win over Malden, which eclipsed a series record set in 1979 (a 48-24 Medford win). Medford scored the first three times it had the ball on a six-yard keeper by Fahey; nine-yard TD reception by Steve Chausse; and a 45-yard run by Fahey. Malden broke the shutout on a one-yard keeper by senior QB Timmy Philbrook in the second quarter, but Fahey hit Brandon Hopkins with a 28-yard TD pass with under a minute to play in the half for a 27-8 lead at the break. Malden came right back with a 38-yard TD catch by Craig Barton early in the third, but it was the closest they would get. The fourth quarter was a wild one, with 36 points scored combined, another series record. McCarthy scored on a nine-yard run and Fahey’s 89-yard TD run, a record for Medford on Thanksgiving Day, made it 41-16, Mustangs. Malden answered with a four-yard TD run and conversion by Tommy Kelley to make it 41-24, but Medford added another TD on a six-yard run b y Terence Burrell. Malden closed it out with a 35-yard scoring pass from Philbrook to Matt Donoghue. Philbrook finished with a Malden Thanksgiving Day record of 210 yards passing (15-for-33, 2 TDs), surpassing Mike Byrne’s numbers from the 1970 game (207 yards). Peter Kobzik kicked five PATs for Medford, another record. Junior Nick Cox, Malden’s unofficial MVP on the day, ran for 114 yards on just six carries, a TD and a PAT, catching five passes for 54 yards. Malden senior Craig Barton had six catches for 100 yards.
1999: In the last game of the century, Medford made it six wins in a row at soggy and cold Hormel Stadium, with the weather making for a smaller than usual crowd in a 37-20 victory. Senior Wlad Louis was the star for Medford, along with senior captain Steve Chausse. Louis ran for 127 yards and a touchdown and Chausse had 70 tough yards on just 10 carries and two TDs. Chausse also sparked a Mustang “D” that held Malden to just 63 yards on the ground and five first downs.Malden senior captain Nick Cox was his team’s best player on Thanksgiving for the second straight season, keeping his team in on both sides of the ball. He led Malden in rushing and in passing (3-for-12, 101 yards). His favorite target was senior Scott Haskell (2 rec., 97), who had 71-yard touchdown catch which helped Malden tie tje game at 8-8 in the first quarter. Brad Roche returned the ensuing kickoff 75 yards for a Medford touchdown. The two teams traded TDs in the second period, Chausse’s four-yard run for Medford and Cox’s one-yard run as Medford led, 21-14, at half. Medford started the third quarter with a 32-yard TD run by Brandon Hopkins, but Cox returned the ensuing kickoff 85 yards for a TD to make it, 28-20, Mustangs, as Malden was right back in the ballgame, A 32-yard field goal by Mike Piontkowski, the first FG by either team since 1991 (Mike Moreno gamewinner), and a 25-yard TD run by Chausse sealed the win. This win tied the series for all-time at 51-51-10 with the first winner of the new millennium taking the lead. This was the final game in the series with Bill Buldini at the helm for Medford, he went a perfect 6-0 on the holiday. It was the first Turkey Day leading the Malden troops for new coach Rich Cullen.
2000: This was a memorable “season saver” game for first-year Medford head coach Al Pare, as the Mustangs pulled the “Dominick Hasek” to take a 14-13 win at sunny, but brisk Macdonald Stadium. Medford came in winless at 0-8 and Malden was 1-9, with the victor having at least a Turkey Day win to savor. Medford also took the lead in the series for the first time since 1946, going ahead, 52-51-10 with their only win. Junior two-way end Luis Zamora and junior split end Angel Ortiz were Medford’s stars. For Malden, senior Ricky Bethelmie went over the 1,000 yard rushing mark for the year. Malden struck first when freshman quarterback Breno Giacomini (believed to be the first freshman to start at quarterback ever, for either side) hit Nevy Marc with a 30-yard pass, followed by a 20-yards TD run by Bethelmie and a PAT kick by Carmelo Bari. Medford QB Dave Foley then hit Ryan Driscoll with a seven-yard TD pass and Zamora’s PAT tied it at 7-7 at the half. A big catch by Zamora and a 20-yard run by freshman tailback Julien Mundele fueled the drive. A trick, inside kick by Medford opened the second half as Ortiz leaped high to snare Zamora’s “pooch” kick. A 40-yard run by Zamora and six-yard TD burst by Terence “The Bus” Burrell gave Medford a 13-7 lead. Zamora’s PAT made it 14-7 and turned out to be the gamewinning point. A lightning response by Malden came with a 72-yard TD run by Bethlemie, but the PAT kick to tie bounced off the goalpost and Malden trailed, 14-13.Dave Richard and Jack Dolabany made key sacks for Medford as the visiting Mustang crowd, a large one despite the team record, roared with each one. On Malden’s last chance drive, Ortiz sealed the win with an acrobatic interception at his own 25-yard line, following his gamesaving play with a “Mustang Dive” into the Medford fans as the Mustangs won for the seventh straight time on Thanksgiving.
2001: In front of the largest crowd in years at drizzly Hormel Stadium, this one was thought to be an evenly-matched battle before kickoff, but Medford exploded in the first half for a 27-0 lead en route to a 34-6 victory. Sophomore tailback Julien Mundele led the way with four TDs and 219 yards rushing, one TD short Mike Colonna’s series record of five TDs set in the 1972 game. Medford senior Angel Ortiz scored the other first-half TD, on a reception from senior QB Peter Krasco, who returned to action after missing three games with injury. Krasco went for 138 yards on 8-of-13 numbers. A PAT kick by by Mike Piontkowski and two-point conversion by Dennis Giannino off a pass from the kicker were Medford’s other first-half points. Mundele scored his fourth TD on a 31-yard third quarter run. Malden senior quarterback Mike Hudd passed for 143 yards, including a 43-yard TD strike to Tim Konick to avert the shutout. Hudd set single-season Malden passing mark (1,571 yards) in the loss. Medford tied an all-time series record with its eighth straight Thanksgiving win.
2002: A heavy snowstorm blanketed Macdonald Stadium in Malden with nearly a foot of the white stuff, but the Malden players and coaches shoveled it off in time to hand Medford a 12-0 shutout loss and snap an eight-game Malden loss streak. Malden won for the first time since 1993 and also shut out Medford for the first time since the fabled 100th game in 1987 (28-0). On the “frozen tundra” Tornado junior Elisee “Buddha” Pompilus rushed for 149 yards on 23 carries and an 11-yard touchdown. Running behind senior captain Jim Noble and the Malden line, Pompilus’ running set up a one-yard TD burst by senior quarterback A.C. Callahan with 8:53 left in the half. The PAT kick was no good and Malden led, 6-0, which stood up at half. Medford drove to the Malden 20 next, but Malden’s Dan Laskey pounced on a Mustang fumble.A scoreless third period left it at 6-0 heading into the final quarter. A 34-yard run by Pompilus set up his own three-yard TD with 6:53 to go in the game and the conversion pass was no good, Malden led, 12-0. Malden’s J.D. Pappagallo was credited with slowing down Mustang star runner Julien Mundele who was held to just one long fourth-quarter run.
2003: Malden won for the second straight year, 7-0, at sunny and brisk Hormel, the first time Malden shut out Medford in two consecutive games in 44 years since 1958-1959 (26-0, 20-0) and the first time Malden won two years in a row since 1992-1993. The win also re-tied the all-time series at 53-53-10. The game’s lone TD came on a jet sweep by Malden junior Jamal Woods (7 carries, 56 yards). Senior co-captain Devin McNelis drilled the PAT kick in the first quarter, and that was it for scoring for the day, as the defenses took over. The anticipated showdown between star backs Elisee Pompilis for Malden and senior four-year starter Julien Mundele of Medford never materialized as each was essentially held in check, though Mundele did lead all rushers with 77 yards on 20 carries. Penalties stalled Medford all game which never got inside the Malden 20 in the second half. For Malden, seniors McNelis, 6-7 NFL-bound end Breno Giacomini (4 sacks), Rob Quigley, Sam Nelson and junior Kevin Newhall bottled up Medford’s attack. After the game, Medford coach Al Pare announced his retirement after four years at the helm.
2004: One of the biggest offensive lines in Malden High football history simply dominated the line of scrimmage as Malden won its third straight, 28-6, on a partly sunny, brisk morning at Macdonald Stadium. Malden won its third straight for the first time in 26 years (1986-1988) and spoiled first-year Medford coach Mike DeFelice’s Thanksgiving debut. Seniors Kevin Newhall and Maurice Rodriquez, junior Brendan McNelis and sophomores James Brito-White and Brian Melo dominated up front and Jamal Woods carried 13 times for 117 yards and two TDs to lead Malden. Junior fullback Renaldo Bloodworth ran for 60 yards and junior slotback Anthony Pappagallo had 49 yards and a TD. Medford scored on the last play of the first half when senior QB Kevin Krasco hit junior end Kamal Mgaresh in the back of the end zone for an eight-yard TD. Bloodworth and Woods scored in the second half and junior Wiston Jeuen hit 4-of-4 PATs. Outsized, Medford played tough all day, led by senior linebacker Gerry Murphy’s 12 tackles and two sacks. NU-bound Newhall led Malden’s defense with 10 tackles. Malden re-took the all-time series lead, 54-53-10 in the victory.
2005: Malden High started quietly but finished with a loud thump in a 39-6 demolition in a traditional “Mud Bowl” game at Hormel. The fourth win in a row for Malden was the first time in 40 years for a Golden Tornado “Four-Peat”. The one-sided win also capped the most successful Malden season since 1988, the first time it had won nine games since 1987 as it finished 9-2. Star of the day was junior Derek Freni, with three touchdowns, one running, one receiving and one punt return TD. Classmate Jimmy Chery capped a banner All-Scholastic campaign with 13 carries for 122 yards. Freni, senior co-captains Brendan McNelis and Anthony Pappagallo along with seniors Wiston Jeune, and Sam Guillaume led the defense, allowing Medford only one completed pass all game and less than 50 yards rushing. Medford (3-8) scored its only points on an 85-yard kickoff return TD by senior Kamal Mgaresh in the third quarter. It was coach Rich Cullen’s last game at Malden as he retired in the offseason.
2006: Medford came in winless, shut out on the scoreboard for six straight games at 0-10 and the only history many gave the Mustangs a chance at making was they’d be the losingest team in school history if they dropped #11. There was positive history to be made instead, as Mustang Sean Foley booted a 26-yard field goal on Medford’s first possession in the first overtime game ever played in the storied, 119-year history of Medford-Malden, a stunning, 17-14 upset at rainy, muddy and dark Macdonald Stadium in Malden. Medford’s fans rushed the field after the “season-saver” win, the second time in the decade (2000) they had entered the game winless and won it, and third time overall (1976). Malden finished 3-7 in coach John Lopresti’s Thanksgiving debut. It also turned out to Medford coach Mike DeFelice’s final game at the helm, as Medford broke a four-game win streak by Malden. Steve Murphy was the Mustang workhorse in this game, 138 yards and a TD on 23 carries, as Medford shocked Malden by taking a 14-0 lead as drenching rain soaked the field. Malden did regroup and owned the second half, scoring twice to tie it, once on a short keeper by sophomore QB Justin Richardson and then on a 15-sweep around left end with just 46 seconds to play in the game by senior All-Scholastic Jimmy Chery. Chery caught the two-point conversion pass in traffic to tie it. Both teams got four downs from the 10-yard line in the historic, first-ever OT period. Malden was stopped at the three-yard line on fourth down by a Steve Murphy tackle in its try. Medford appeared to win it on second down on a Murphy eight-yard TD run on its try, but it was called back due penalty. Two plays later, Foley’s FG sealed the win.
2007: Game #120 at Hormel in Medford featured the best weather since the 2000 game, sunny and “balmy” in the high 40s, and also brought the closest finish since that year as well, as it took a PAT kick by sophomore Nick Hoyt, the first of the season and of his career to make the difference in a 7-6 Malden victory. This was a “pick ’em” game to start and ended the same way. Medford scored first on an 11-yard run by senior star runner Steve Murphy, but could not convert and led, 6-0. Malden (4-7) came back and tied the game on a three-yard run by backfield “newcomer” junior captain David Freni and it was up to Hoyt to deliver the end-over-end kick that made it by about two feet over the upright for the lead at the half. That was it for scoring as the defenses took over. Both Freni and sophomore Marcos Almeida ate up lots of yards for Malden and Murphy did the same for Medford (2-9), but no one could into the end zone. Medford last and best bid ended on Malden’s eight-yard line with 3:26 left to play when Murphy was stopped short of the stake by Malden seniors Andrew Dinisco and Rodney Borgella. Medford still didn’t quit, held Malden and got the ball back with under a minute to play, but sophomore Mustang QB Mike Sullivan’s last pass of the day was intercepted by Richardson with 41 seconds left on the clock. Interim head coach Jon Wilson was at the helm for the Mustangs in his first and only Thanksgiving game. Coach Lopresti of Malden earned his first Thanksgiving win.
2008: Nick Hoyt’s foot made the difference in 2007 game when he kicked the extra point that won the 121st meeting in 2007, 7-6. In this one, Hoyt used both feet to grind out 153 yards rushing and a TD, the most rushing yards for a running back for either team since 2001 in a 33-22 Malden win. The win actually cemented a winning record for Malden, as it put put theTornado team at 5-6 overall. Malden was awarded a forfeit win when one of its non-league opponents was later found to have used an illegal player, so Malden finished 6-5. Medford finished 0-11 and, unfortunately, interim head coach Mike Marchese’s Mustangs became the first team to ever lose 11 games in Medford history. Marchese was coaching inplace of head coach Jim Atkins, on paid suspension for the second straight Mustang football season on Thanksgiving Day. Hoyt ran in a TD, junior David Console and sophomore Frankie Dunn also scored on the ground for the largest first-half lead for Malden in 20 years, 19-0. Soph Ronnie Pitterson caught TD pass from QB Alex Krasco and Medford trailed, 19-8, after three periods. Herbens Antenor caught two fourth-quarter TDs from Malden junior QB Skakarus Semexant and Malden led 33-8. Krasco finished off with pair of TD tosses to aenior Jan Lopez for 31 and 23 yards to Jimmy Richardson for a comeback try that fell short. Giovanni Sanders and Mike Sullivan each has rwo-point conversion scores for Medford. It turned out to be the last Thanksgiving game for both head coaches, as Malden’s John Lopresti retired in the offseason with a 2-1 Turkey Day record in his three years at the helm. Marchese departed when Medford hired a new football coach in the offseason, Rico Dello Iacono, a former Everett High assistant.
2009: Malden made it three in a row with a hard-fought, 13-7 win over host Medford on a crisp, sunny day at Hormel Stadium. This one turned out to be an “Insrant Classic†as it went down to the very last play in one of the moat exciting finishes in many years. With 18 seconds to play and Medford facing fourth-and-goal from the Malden 4-yard line, QB Alex Krasco fired a pass to Giovanni Sanders in the corner of the end zone. But Malden’s Frankie Dunn was there to tip the pass away and seal the win. Both teams came in with different hopes. Malden, at 4-5, sought to avoid having a losing season. Medford, at 5-4, was looking to complete its first winning season since 1998. Malden scored first on a 17-yard TD catch by Ramon Viches from Malden QB Shak Semexant. Nick Hoyt’s PAT made it 7-0. Medford tied it in the second quarter on a nine-yard keeper for a TD with freshman Isad Dzolota’s PAT kick making it 7-7 at halftime. Malden drove 45 yards after a Mustang turnover for a go-ahead score, four-yard run by Hoyt after series of short passes to Frankie Dunn and David Console. Hoyt’s PAT fluttered away and it was 13-7, Malden. Malden turned the ball over in its own territory twice in the final four minutes of the game on fumbles after completed passes, but Medford could not capitalize. Malden firsr-year coach Joe Pappagallo became the first Malden coach in 36 years to win his Thanksgiving debut since Malden Hall of Fame coach Paul Finn’s boys beat Medford in an upset in 1973.
2010: Malden head coach Joe Pappagallo won his second game in two tries at the helm in a 29-0 shutout victory over Medford in Game #123 at Macdonald Stadium in Malden, keeping pace with the legendary Paul Finn in 1973 and 1974. But Pappagallo made more series history when his senior captain, 6-1, 305 lb.lineman Aaron Samano scored the game’s first touchdown on a five-yard “lumber†into the end zone in the first. Little did anyone know this would be the only score of the first half as Malden led a spirited Medford bunch, 7-0, at halftime. In the second half, Malden used its size advantage to play ball-control as senior quarterback Kevin Valley threw a 29-yard touchdown pass to Frankie Dunn and the scored himself on a five-yard touchdown run in the third quarter. Senior Kenny Metellus scored on an eight-yard run in the fourth quarter. Medford could not get much going offensively, though it did get solid efforts out of a pair youngsters, a freshman starting at quarterback, Gene Consalves and junior Nick Olivier out of the backfield. Malden’s three best defensve players in this shutout win were juniors Austin Teal, Withchie Exilhomme and Jamie McInerney, all of whom were named tri-captains for the 2011 season.
2011: This one was all Malden as the visitors may have scored the fastest touchdown in the 124-game series history when junior Ray Sainstril dove on a fumble in the end zone after Medford’s first snap from scrimmage. It was never in doubt thereafter as junior quarterback Jake Martino threw three first-half touchdown passes on the way to a 36-0 Malden win, two shutouts in a row and for the first time in 50 years, five straight Malden Thanksgiving victories (9-of-10 since 2002). It was the fourth time in series history Malden won two years in a row by shutout, the first since 2002-2003 (12-0, 7:0).Head coach Joe Pappagallo’s Malden team posted the biggest Thanksgiving shutout win in over 100 years, since a 1907 Blue and Gold victory by a 44-0 count. Malden used its size and speed advantage to pile up points for a 28-0 halftime lead. After Sainistril’s fumble recovery touchdown, Malden made it 14-0 after the first quarter on a five-yard touchdown pass from Martino to senior captain Witchevalence “Witchie” Exilhomme and a Martino keeper for two. Malden stayed in air raid mode in the second quarter, Martino to senior Garvin Cius for a 23-yard TD pass, with a Pat DeCicco run for a 22-0 lead. Late in the second quarter, Martino hooked up again, hitting junior Franklin Huynh for a 15-yard TD pass. Malden played ball control in the second half, feeding top back O’Shane McCreath, who picked up 87 yards on just 11 carries nd became the first Malden back to top 1,000 yards rushing in a seeason (1,0121) since Ricky Bethlemie ran for 1,130 in 2002. Martino threw for 198 yards on the fame, 1,550 for the year and 19 TDs. Malden’s defense ruled for the shutout win led by fellow co-captains Austin Teal, Jamie McInerney and Exilhomme, the best defensive player in the GBL in 2011. Tyler Williams’ 32-yard interception return for the game’s final points five minutes into the second half completed the scoring. The Mustangs had some solid plkay from Max Clancy, Chris Bucknam and Reggie Fleurial. Medford started a freshman at quarterback in this one for maybe the first time in series history in Gene Gonclaves. They were hurt by loss of top offensive weapon, senior back Nick Olivier, who was injured and out of action for this one, gametime decision. It ended up being the final Thanksgiving game on the sidelines for third-year head coach Rico Dello Iacono, who stepped down after Game Three in the 2012 Mustang season. He went 0-3 for the holiday classic.
2012: The largest crowd in years turned out for last year’s historic 125th Game held at Macdonald Stadium in Malden under a fabulous, sunny sky with temperatures perfect around 40 degrees.Malden won the game, by a 32-6 final, to capture its sixth straight, behind the passing of senior QB Jake Martino, who completed 12-od-23 passes for 123 yards on the day. Junior Reggie Thelemaque led Medford from the QB spot with 89 yards rushing.He scored Medford’s only TD on an exciting, 54-yard run to open the third quarter. Junior Malik McLaren finished with 72 yards on 14 carries. Senior Rodney Blaise scored two TDs for Malden on a three-yard run in the second quarter and on a five-yard pass from Martino in the third. Junior Ray Sainristil opened the scoring with a first quarter, one-yard TD plunge. Senior Captain Paul Kiernan caught a two point conversioon pass from Martino for an 8-0 Malden lead. Senioee Patrick Provitola, who also played great at linebacker, caught a two-point conversion pass. Sainristil scored two TDs.
2013: For one of the few times in the series ancient 126-game history, Malden High scored as many points defensively (eight) as offensively in a holiday win, topping host Medford, 16-0, at cold and blustery Hormel Stadium. The wind chill was even lower than the Malden final score on this day. Malden scored on its first possession on a 21-yard run by Raymond Sainristil. The extra-point conversion try was no good and it stayed 6-0 until Malden senior captain Jensen Ayuk leveled Medford’s Xavier Gibson on the very last play of the first half, scooped the loose ball and ran it in for a safety, Malden 8-0 at the half.Medford’s defense also played tough, causing three Malden fumbles on the day, recoveries byMustang Matt Sullivan and Gibson. Ayuk struck again midway through the third quarter running back an interception off Mustang QB Reg Thelemaque for a 58-yard Pick 6 score.Malden QB Loveng Francois ran in the two point conversion for the 16-0 final.
2014: This was another classic “throw out the records†upset win that few saw coming, except for those on the Medford sidelines, of course.Under a full cover of snow, over a foot on the artificial surface of Malden’s Macdonald Stadium before it was cleared by gametime, Medford head coach Jason Nascimento recorded his first Thanksgiving Day coaching win in a 36-12 win over host Malden. Medford came into the game at 1-9 overall and looking to break a long, seven-game Thanksgiving Day win streak for Malden and they got the job done. Medford QB Adrien Pineda led the way offensively, 5-of-12 passing for 244 yards and three TDs, two to Myles Olivier. Pineda also scored a TD himself on an 11-yard run in the fourth quarter and threw a TD pass to Jose Lopes. For Malden, junior Danley Exilhomme scored both of the Malden’s touchdowns but Medfrod looked in command with an 18-12 halftime lead. It was all Medford in the second half, led by Pineda and the two-man wrecking crew defensive duo of Matt Sullivan and Anthony DiRienzo, who were dubbed “The Smash Brothers†in reports on the game. Each also had a key interception in the second half. Sullivan and DiRienzo each had double-digit tackles, making life miserable for the Malden offense.
2015: They showed up at Hormel Stadium for Game #128 at Hormel Stadium… and a Madden Game broke out. Malden scored early, often and then some in a raucous, record-setting victory, thst honked and hollered all the way in a 59-36 Tornado victory, the highest scoring game, two teams combined —ever— in series history. It was also the most points Malden had ever scored on Thanksgiving Day and the most since a 50-6 win in 1960. Medford scored 36 points for the second straight year (and the most points in the 128-game history for the series by a team that did mot win the game. Malden also set a record in this game as the Tornado defense scored a whopping (and record) five times on the morning. Malden led 28-0 after the first quarter, and 45-8 at halftime, but Medford did not quit, led by Cory Moore, who finished with three TDs ans 155 yards rushing. Medford owned the second half, outscoring the visitors, 28-14, but led by the Exilhomme Brothers, DJ and Danley, Malden held Medford at bay long enough at the end. Danley Ex returned two interceptions for TDs and ran for two more. DJ scored three TDs, seven TDs between them. Malden clinched irs first GBL title since 1989 with the win. Eighth-year head coach Joe Pappagallo added to the momentous day by announced his resignation at halftime.
Photos by Josh London and Allison Goldsberry