LOCALS
DEFEATED
OBERLIN ACADMEY
Outplayed the Collegiate’s in Every
Department.
SCORE
– MASSILLON 9,
OBERLIN 0
The Visitors
Were Fairly Bewildered
With Massillon’s Exhibition of
Fast, New-Style Football
Oberlin
Made First Down but Once Through Massillon
Displaying perhaps the greatest exhibition of fast and open
football witnessed on a Massillon gridiron, the
local high school defeated the Oberlin
Academy, Saturday
afternoon on the high school grounds by the score of 9 to 0, before two
thousand people, by far the largest crowd that ever surrounded the North street field.
The Massillon
team worked together like a machine and playing individually like so many
Carlisle Indians, outplayed the visitors in every
department of the game. Oberlin arrived,
backed by a successful season and expecting to win handily, but departed in no
way dissatisfied with itself at being able to hold so
well against the quality of football displayed by the Massillon team. Although at no time during the game did they
have a ghost of a show through Massillon’s stone
wall defense, they fought doggedly to the last to keep Massillon’s offense from carrying them
altogether off their feet. Not until the
situation became hopeless in the latter part of the last half did they lose heart.
The local high school is still the undefeated claimant of
the state title. The team in every game this
season has played up to and just above the strength of its opponents. Such was the case against Oberlin and to what
bounds the limit of its possibilities extend no one is
able to guess.
The game proved every player on the Massillon team an individual star, yet it
would be almost impossible, by any comparison, to place one above another. Team work won the game. It was team work that held the Massillon line against
Oberlin’s constant attack, and it was team work each time which carried the
ball within striking distance of the goal.
As long as team work was needed the Massillon machine was on the spot and when
circumstances called for individual playing each man called upon stepped up and
delivered the goods. Coupled with an
invincible determination which has become a habit with the locals, Massillon had to
win. There was no choice.
Oberlin’s offense showed form, but was clearly faded by the Massillon defense, which
did not allow the Academy to make first down more than once. This was when Boger,
the quarterback, broke around Massillon’s
left end in a desperate run of fifteen yards.
Oberlin, feeling from time to time the sting of defeat, tried to become
desperate but with this exception Massillon
smothered its passionate aspirations easily.
Once in a great while Oberlin would make an unexpected gain of a few
yards but never enough in succession to make first downs. Punting was their only game and although not
as strong as Heyman in this department the Oberlin
kicker was very shrewd in placing the kicks out of reach of the Massillon backs. Massillon
never lost the ball although it touched the ground often. Time after timer the Oberlin quarter called
forward passes but so keen were the Massillon
smashers in getting to the runner that the ball was
never in the air once. Aside from these
forwards Oberlin tried but once to break into tricky football but so
effectually was the play stopped that Massillon
could not decide what the trick was supposed to be like.
Massillon’s offense at need
could undoubtedly have battered the Oberlin defense to smithereens and won the
game on straight football, but as it was, the game was won on tricky and
skillful team work, directed by good headwork on the part of Atwater
in mixing up Massillon’s
almost unlimited repertoire of irregular formations and triple passes. These plays, all new in this vicinity and
mostly original, have been given to the team one at a time by Coach Fugate and
worked out to perfection. Massillon fairly
bewildered the visitors with their ever changing front and tricky
formations. The plays were mixed just
enough to keep the Academy guessing and wondering what new thing would come
next. Time and again double passes into
the line would throw the Academy ends off their guard and allow a Massillon player to skirt
the end alone for a substantial gain.
The first touchdown was made on a double pass into the line from a fake
punt formation, twenty-five yards from goal.
Blackburn kicked goal after it
successfully put out to Wagner. Massillon’s other three
points were made by a freak drop kick made during the second half. The ball which started low struck Sonnhalter in the back and rose in a high arch over the
cross bar.
When line plunging was the order of the day, the Massillon backs tore
through the Oberlin line at will. Blackburn plunged through on cross bucks and Sonnhalter marched down the center for several yards each
time. Miller, at left end, besides
playing a good defensive game, carried the ball often for gains. Ellis on the other wing,
played a great smashing game and received forward passes. Erb and Wagner at
the tackles, were as usual, the mainstays of the line,
opening large avenues for the backs to march through. Clay, on the defensive, held his position
like a stone wall. Heyman,
besides playing his usual strong game at guard, beat Oberlin each time on an
exchange of punts, driving the spheroid far into the enemy’s country on long,
high spirals, which the Massillon
ends could get down under and nail.
Leahy played his usually first class game at center. Captain Hopkins at left end, Boger at quarter and Neill at center, played well for
Oberlin.
Line-up and summary:
Oberlin – 0 Pos. Massillon – 9
Kelner le Miller
Heller, Barr lt Erb
Andrus lg Heyman
Neill c Leahy
Robbins rg Clay
Bellows rt Wagner
Graham re Ellis
Roger qb Atwater
Hopkins lh Wells
Stiles rh Blackburn
Gray fb Sonnhalter
Touchdown:
Massillon – Wells.
Goal from touchdown:
Massillon
– Blackburn.
Goal from field:
Massillon
– Blackburn.
Referee and umpire, alternating:
Wittmann, of Massillon
Bedortha, of Oberlin.
Head Linesman – Bast.
Timekeeper – Merwin.
Time of halves – 25 and 20 minutes.