GAME UPHILL RIGHT BRINGS TRIUMPH TO
PLUCKY HIGH ELEVEN
Arvine “Tink” Ulrich
midget half back of Washington High school’s football team, last Saturday
afternoon for the first time in three weeks donned war paint and, ably assisted
by 10 other fighting warriors, carried the orange and black banner of the local
school to a 14 to 7 triumph over Rayen High of
Youngstown, in one of the most brilliant scholastic encounters ever staged on
the Pearl street gridiron. Greatly
outweighed and with its captain “Chuck” Hess and its star defensive center Ted
Roth on the sidelines because of injuries the youthful Tigers by one of the
gamest uphill fights ever fought on any battlefield cam through with one of the
most spectacular and entirely unexpected victories ever registered by a local
high school team.
For three weeks
Ulrich had been laid up with an inured knee sustained in the
Rayen was confident of victory. The Mahoning county school knew that injuries
had riddled the orange and black and greatly weakened its defensive
strength. It expected to teat
That
the invading aggregation forgot to reckon with the indomitable fighting spirit
of Coach Stewart’s gritty lads. They forgot that overcoming a tiger with its
back to the wall is a Herculean task.
Striking out with the
unleashed fury of a hurricane the local team in the final quarter swept Rayen off its feet by a wonderful rally, tied the score
hanging up a touchdown early in the fourth period and then swept on to victory
by a brilliant drive that carried the ball three quarters of the length of the
field. The final orange and black charge
was a suitable finish to a battle that had raged fiercely up and down the field
during three periods of hectic strife.
That final fighting
comeback covered the orange and black lads with a halo of glory. They had fought a game battle against a much
heavier foe and they deserved to win for against a stouter foe they never once
had showed any indication of displaying the white flag. They were in the game to fight to the finish
and to know how well they fought one has but to recall the score. It was a sad blow for Rayen,
that
It was only by a
break that Rayen scored its touchdown against
Ulrich’s sensational
work by far was the outstanding feature of the battle. “Tink” was
everywhere on defense and a veritable battering ram on offense. The game also served to uncover a new
backfield star in Boerner, who since injuries riddled
the regular backfield, has been doing duty behind the line. His line smashing drives were features of the
contest.