CAMBRIDGE, MASS. – Frank "Bucky" Caruso was a well-known lawyer in Greenwich, Conn. There were three Caruso children when his wife Judith died. His son Glenn was the youngest at age 8.
"He was a very busy man, but also determined to stay entrenched in our lives,'' Glenn said. "So, he would pick out weekends and say to one of us, 'OK, this is your weekend. Pick the town. Pick out what you want to do … you and me.'
"For me, the choice was easy. It was almost always Boston. The history, the melting pot of people, the sports. I've considered it the most interesting city in the country.''
The activity in the Caruso home increased substantially when Frank married Mary McLaughlin and she brought four daughters along with her. They became a close-knit collection of seven kids, and the source of great pride for Frank before his death at 68 in 2005.
Glenn Caruso has had an excellent reason to reflect this week on those long-ago trips to Boston with his father, for in Year 16 of his exceptional run as the St. Thomas football coach, his Tommies will be right across the Charles River on Saturday playing Harvard in the famed U-shaped stadium that dates to 1903.
Imagine that: St. Thomas, in its third season since leaving Division III and the MIAC, playing the Harvard Crimson, titans of college football in its formative years, attached to 12 national titles from 1890 through 1920.
"I'm probably the only guy you are going to find who is a fan of both the Yankees and the Red Sox,'' Caruso said. "We lived 30 miles from Yankee Stadium and 180 miles from Fenway Park, but I saw almost as many games in Fenway.
"I'm not much of a hockey guy, but thanks to my dad, I saw games in the Beanpot Tournament. You know what that is, right? The annual tournament among Harvard, Boston College, Boston U and Northeastern.