94 To 0
In Ninth Victory
Displaying an
interference that swept aside its opponents like a strong wind blows chaff, the
orange and black eleven of Washington high school Saturday afternoon ran rough
shod over the Akron North high eleven on the Pearl street gridiron, burying the
Summit county aggregation under a 94 to 0 score, the largest count ever piled
up by a local high school eleven in recent years. It was
A team that does not
show improvement in each succeeding game must either be an aggregation
without football brains or lacking in proper coaching. The local eleven Saturday showed a decided
improvement with the interference it gave the player carrying the ball. From start to finish the visiting gridders were unable to break up the sterling way in which
the orange and black blocked their attempts to break through and drill the man
with the ball.
From the time Captain
“Tink” Ulrich grabbed the first kickoff on the
19-yard line and ran 81 yards for a touchdown until the game ended with the
It is seldom that a
player takes a handoff and runs through the entire punting team for a
touchdown. But that’s what Captain
Ulrich did twice Saturday. After his
brilliant interference, the dark haired leader a few minutes later grabbed
another
The way Coach
Stewart’s lads took the Akronites out of the play was
pleasing to watch and with such interference next Saturday the local team
should be able to plow its way through Canton McKinley for a decisive
victory.
Outside of the work
done by
That forward wall of
Coach Stewart’s certainly played a bang up game Saturday. In fact it has done superb service all year
but the way it smashed
Although Captain
Ulrich’s long runs through the
On the first kickoff
Ulrich grabbed the ball and dashed down the side of the field for a touchdown. Nary an
On the next kickoff
Ulrich took the ball on his 10-yard line and again the
Before the first
quarter ended
The second quarter
had barely started before Hill plunged through from the 10-yard line for a
touchdown. A few minutes later Borza pounded his way through from the five-yard line for
the seventh touchdown. Thomas ripped off
25 yards on a double pass from Hill taking the ball to the 15-yard line and
from their Hill went through for touchdown No. 8. Near the close of the second quarter Miller
intercepted a forward on
Thomas added another
point by drop kicking the ball over. It
was the first point the orange and black made after touchdown. The quarter ended with
Although they had a
55 point lead the local eleven did not ease up in the final two quarters. The time was reduced from 15 to 12 minutes in
order to enable
Hill ran 43 yards for
the twelfth touchdown soon after the fourth quarter opened. On a punt Boerner
carried the ball back to
The kickoff was
hardly over before Edwards pulled down an
Time as nearly up but
the orange black was on its way to another touchdown when the whistle
blew. Coach Stewart’s lads played
excellent football Saturday. Their
defense w s like a stone wall and on offense they did as they pleased. Little was used by the youthful Tigers except
straight football. There was no need for
anything else. The line, composed of
Edwards, Salberg, Miller ,Brooks,
Kallaker, Pflug, and Roth,
did yeoman service in stopping the
Now For
Potts LE Weidle
Edwards LT Schwartz
Kallaker LG Booth
Roth C Ziezig
Miller RG Hoopes
Salberg RT Louis
Weirich RE Gill
Ulrich Q Macaluso
Mercer LH McMillan
Borza RH Jenkins
Hill F Querry
Score by quarters:
Substitutions:
Rohr for Potts, Pflug for Miller, Jamison for Weirich,
Hax for Thomas, Borza
for Reis, Boerner for Mercer,
Thomas for Hax, Kammer for Boerner, Brooks for Salberg,
Reis
for Borza, Eschliman for Pflug.
Touchdowns – Hill 8, Ulrich 3, Roth, Borza,
Thomas, Kammer.
Points after touchdowns - Thomas
3, Pflug.
Referee
– Maurer,
Umpire
– Brannon,
Headlinesman – Bast,
Time
of quarters – 15 and 12 minutes.
Bill’s Off Day
A Good Omen,
So He Claims
Bill Edwards, smiling tackle of
the local high school team, whose
defensive playing has been a
bright spot all season, was a little
off form Saturday when it came
to hoisting drop kicks over the
bars for extra points after touch-
downs. Bill tried several times to
kick but each time the ball went
straight up in the air.
Then Bill gave it up for a bad
job. It was Bill’s kick which gave
Shaw.
“An off day today means a good
day next Saturday,” said Bill,
thinking of what he was going to
do to
from now.