Could the future Bulldogs stalwart have drawn up anything quite like how his career played out?

The younger Shuman skated off TD Garden ice a two-time state champion with Sunday’s 2-1 win over Tewksbury, ending his freshman and senior seasons with a Division 2 title and having a third appearance in the title game as a junior, a loss to Billerica.

“It means the world,” said Teddy, a 6-foot defenseman who finished with more than 100 career points.

“I wanted it so bad, [my father] wanted it so bad, which makes it that much more special for both of us. We’re all just one big family, he’s like a dad to all of us.”

Get Starting Point

A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday.

Brian Shuman has been in charge behind the Canton bench for 21 seasons and five state titles.Taylor Coester for The Boston Globe

Brian Shuman, who has steered the Bulldogs to five state titles and more than 350 victories over 21 seasons, was overflowing with emotion in the aftermath of Sunday’s victory, understanding it would be the last time he coached Teddy.

The elder Shuman noted the immense pressure of being a coach’s kid, regardless of talent.

“You get all sorts of heckles from the other team and their fans,” Brian Shuman said. “You get unfairly judged by a lot of people and you get unfairly yelled at by your coach, who overcompensates for people thinking he gets special treatment.

“He is absolutely five times the player that I was and five times the person that I was, in terms of maturity and leadership,” said Brian, who played on Catholic Memorial’s unbeaten team in 1998 and later at Bowdoin College. “I couldn’t be prouder of him.”

Teddy’s athletics career for the Bulldogs isn’t over just yet; his senior baseball season gets underway this week. As far as hockey goes, he hopes to continue to play at the club level after enrolling in college this fall.

“He loves Canton hockey, Canton athletics more than anybody,” Brian Shuman said. “He embodies everything that’s right about playing for your town all the way through from when you were little until now. I couldn’t be happier for him and all his friends. He did it with all the kids he loves and calls his brothers.”