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Bret Watzka Inducted: 2004 - Graduated: 1976
With a mop of curly brown locks, a gunslinger’s bravado and the ability to back it up, BretWatzka dashed his way to Golden Knight fame on the cross country trails and on the track oval. Bret is the only male Nanuet athlete to win an individual state cross-country championship, capturing the Class B crown on a sodden course in Buffalo his senior year, the fall of 1975.After running in the shadow of teammate John McNulty the previous year, Bret established himself as the man to beat in ’75, winning his division of the St. John’s Invitational at Van Cortlandt Park, finishing runner-up in theManhattan Invitational, and scoring a convincing victory at the Rockland County championships. With his flowing mane of hair, beaded string necklace and carefree running style, Bret was viewed by opponents as a bon vivantwho loved to have a good time – at the expense of his subdued foes, that is. But after finishing a well-beaten fourth in the Section 9 Class B meet, Bret’s trademark confidence was shaken badly. Now he would have to expunge that memory quickly, regroup and rechannel his focus to the State Intersectional meet the following week. Could he do it? Lightning, thunder and a soaking rain threatened to delay the start of the Class B race at Elma Meadows golf course in Buffalo on that gray Saturday inNovember 1975. While the rain persisted, however, the lightning abated enough to get the race under way. Bret bolted immediately toward the front of the pack and never looked back. He finished so fast that the meet photographer missed him crossing the finish line, and had to stage a "do-over" shot later on. Bret could have excelled at any sport he chose. He was a star righty pitcher and infielder in youth baseball, once striking out all 18 batters he faced in a 2-0 Cubs’ victory over the Pirates in the Nanuet Little League. He posted a solid 6-3 record for the Nanuet baseball varsity as a sophomore before devoting his talents fully to running. In his junior-year cross country season, Bret was tabbed “the surprise runner of the year” by The Journal-News, and CoachDaveHanson called himthe key toNanuet’s success. Running close behind established No. 1 man McNulty, Bret finished third in the Section 9 meet, ninth in the New York State Intersectionals and eighth in the inauguralNew York State Federation championships, helping the Golden Knights win that meet, which brings together all of the best teams in the state regardless of class size. Bret’s track accomplishments were similarly impressive. In winter track, he finished third in the New York State championships in both the two-mile run and as a leg on Nanuet’s two-mile relay in his junior year. He was a twotime Rockland County champ in the two mile; won county titles in the mile and two-mile relay; was Section 9 two-mile champ and mile runner-up his senior year; and won Section 9 State Qualifier titles in the two mile and two-mile relay. Bret’s indoor track two-mile time of 9:19.8 ranks fifth on the all-time Rockland list, and he ran on a Nanuet two-mile relay that ranks No. 3 all-time in county winter track annals (8:00.2). In the 1976 spring track season, Bret swept the mile and two-mile titles in both the Rockland County and Section 9 Class B championships, and won the Section 9 State Qualifier two mile. At the Eastern States Championships, he placed second in the 3,000-meter steeplechase in 9:29.0, which ranks No. 2 on the all-time Rockland list in that event. He also won the mile and two mile in the Section 9 meet his junior year. Bret was honored as a Black and Gold Club scholarship recipient in 1976, joining Tony Harlin and Joanne Little as honorees that year. Bret continued his running success in college, first at Community College of Allegheny County in Pittsburgh. At Allegheny, he was a junior college All- America in cross country once and in the marathon twice, and helped lead Allegheny to the junior college national championship his freshman year. Bret later transferred to St. John’s University, where he was crowned 10,000-meter run champion at the inaugural Big East Conference championships in 1980. Bret continued to run competitively for the next decade, performing well in local and area races, before turning his athletic pursuits to golf. He has won or finished among the top few in numerous local tournaments and is one of the top amateur players in the county. Bret works as an insurance investigator and lives in Nanuet with his wife, Ingrid, and daughters Brittany, 10, and Johanna, 8. |