BRILLIANT
STRUGGLE WON BY HIGH ELEVEN NEAR END OF TUSSLE
A lad so ill that his iron
nerve alone kept him on the field of battle striving to maintain the reputation
his team had made, and a tall, rangy youth with a penchant for tackling and
drop kicks were the heroes of Washington high school’s spectacular 7 to 6
football victory over Shaw high of Cleveland last Saturday afternoon on the
Pearl street gridiron before 6,000 rabid and enthusiastic fans. It was victory snatched from the very jaws of
defeat in the last minute of play by as brilliant a
display of gameness and dogged determination as has ever been witnessed on any
gridiron.
The lad
whose illness had robbed him of the strength he generally displayed in football
clashes, was “Dutch” Hill,
There were many heroes in
this great struggle but Hill and Edwards were the outstanding figures for it
was due to their individual prowess and ability that the youthful Tigers came
through and won after even their staunchest supporters had given up hope. Harry Potts, dark haired and slender, who
tackled with the viciousness of a demon, let loose and who grabbed forward
passes out of the air with his fingertips, was another hero. Captain “Tink”
Ulrich, who spurred his followers to perform feats that will long be remembered
in scholastic football circles, was another hero. And there were many others, not only on the
Fighting against a team that
was well versed in all the tricks of the game, a team that could forward pass,
run the ends, crash through the line, and had a defense that resembled ribbons
of steel, Massillon’s great eleven, with six consecutive victories behind it
and touted as the strongest high school aggregation in the state at last was
forced to admit that it had nearly met its match in the versatile Shaw high
team, coached by Jack Snavely, former local high
school coach.
Up until two minutes before
the game ended it looked as if Snavely was to realize
his ambition and that his team was going to stop the victory march of Coach
David B. Stewart’s lads. Snavely’s team had scored a touchdown in the second quarter
on a long forward pass from an open formation but it failed to kick goal.
Leading by six points the
visitors put all their remaining efforts into keeping
But even though they were
fighting an up-hill battle against a team that was not going to be defeated if
it could help it, the local gridders never stopped
trying. The touchdown Shaw scored in the
second quarter only spurred them on to greater efforts. It made them fight all the harder to win, but
until the last two minutes of play it looked as if the efforts put forth by the
orange and black would not be able to keep its slate clean of defeat.
But a football game is never
lost or won until the final whistle blows.
Even though Shaw was stalling and consuming all the time it possibly
could to keep
But then the greatest rally
and attack ever displayed by any local high school team was launched and before
it was finished the orange and black was destined to win this greatest of all
battles. Hill who was knocked out at the
end of the second quarter, had returned to the game a
few minutes before. He was ill, had been
all through the game, but he called upon his last few ounces of strength and
On the first play after the
punt, Hill shot a long forward to Potts who snatched the ball out of the air
while running with his face toward the Shaw goal. It was a brilliant catch and was good for a
gain of 15 yards.
On the next play Hill shot
another pass over the line but Potts missed it by inches. Not despairing Hill again tried another
forward on the next play and this time Potts dashed into the midst of the
struggling warriors and grabbed the ball.
He was 20 yards nearer Shaw’s goal when he finally was brought to earth.
Then Captain Ulrich called
Hill to smash the Shaw line and pleaded with his linemen to open up holes in
the visitor’s defense so that the stocky fullback could plunge through. The line responded nobly and Hill shot
through for a gain of three yards. Again
Ulrich called upon him and once more Hill responded by ripping off a 10-yard gain.
The ball was on Shaw’s
six-yard line. A minute of play
remained. Thousands of anxious fans were
shouting for
It was then or never for the
orange and black. Ulrich barked out the
signals. The orange and black linemen,
their faces grim and dirty, stiffened.
Across from them a band of lads clothed in red jerseys sensed that the
supreme test of the game was near. They
wore a determined look on their faces.
No longer were they certain of victory.
They knew that they must stop Hill’s next plunge or see their triumph
snatched from their grasp.
Ulrich finished calling
signals. Roth snapped the ball back to
Hill. The lines crashed together, Hill
plowed into the wall of human flesh that was battling – one group to hold, the
other to push forward. For an instant
the
Pandemonium broke
loose. A thousand cheering fans rushed
onto the field. They grabbed a
On a bench on the south side
of the field sat a man who had hoped that his team could defeat
Police and school officials
finally succeeded in getting the field clear so that the teams could line up
for the attempt to score another point from field goal, the point that would
decide whether the contest would end a tie or a victory for Massillon. Then it was that Bill Edwards got his chance
to become a hero. It was upon Edwards
shoulders that the responsibility for kicking the goal rested.
“I’ll kick that goal or die in the attempt,” muttered Bill
as he dropped back to receive the pass.
The referees’ whistle blew. The
ball came back to Edwards. There was a
thud as leather met leather and then the oval sailed over the cross bars, a
scant few inches from one of the uprights and
As was expected, Snavely brought to
It was a titanic struggle
throughout. Never once did the fight
lag.
Play was about even in the
first quarter although
Statistics of the game show
that
In the third quarter a pass
from Ulrich to Potts, that was good for 35 yards, took the ball to Shaw’s 22
yard line. Line plays, carried it to the
nine-yard line before
The fourth quarter found
Shaw largely on the defensive and stalling as much as it could whenever it had
possession of the ball. The visitors
were penalized once by the referee for stalling but they felt their strength
going and realized that they must hold
The two teams were evenly
matched in weight. Shaw had a 250-pound
tackle in Brown and the rest of its team was of sturdy build. The visitors displayed a smooth working
machine.
He was not at all well and a
bump near the end of the second quarter stretched him out and he had to be
carried off the field. He was out of the
game during part of the third quarter, but when he returned he gave
Potts LE Stopple
Edwards LT Carpenter
Kallaker LG Burgess
Roth C Cox
Pflug RG Ozinski
Salberg RT Hofne
Weirich RE Kyle
Ulrich (c) Q Momberger
Thomas LH Hayslett
Boerner RH Hotckiss
Hill F Remley
Score by
quarters:
Shaw 0 6
0 0 –
6
Substitutions:
Rohr for Weirich,
Hill for Weirich, Jamison for Rohr.
Shaw – Brown for Horne, Mixer for Hotchkiss,
Kriss for Remley.
Touchdowns – Kyle, Hill
Point from
drop kick after touchdown – Edwards
Referee – Gibson,
Umpire – Bietzer,
Headlinesman – Wilson.
Time of quarters – 14
minutes.
Coach Stewart of
THE GAME ---
PLAY
BY PLAY
Ulrich and Boerner failed to gain but Hill made a first down in two
plunges at Shaw’s right side. Snavely yanked Horne out of right tackle and sent in Brown,
a big 250 pound lineman to plug the hole.
Shaw held and Edwards tried a drop from the 20-yard line which went wide
of the bars. It was Shaw’s ball on its
20-yard line. Momberger
passed to Stopple for a first down. Roth
dropped Hotchkiss after the latter had made 12 yards on a double pass
formation. Hill batted down a Shaw pass. Edwards and Salberg
tackled Momberger for a loss of 9. Hayslett skirted
Shaw fumbled and Edwards
covered on Shaw’s 26-yard line. Ulrich
lost 3 and Hill’s pass to Ulrich was grounded.
Edwards tried a drop from the 35-yard line which was short and Shaw put
the ball in play on its 20-yard line.
Edwards and Weirich broke through and threw Hayslett for a 5-yard loss.
Shaw punted and the ball was downed on Shaw’s 36-yard line. Hill tore through for a first down. Thomas lost 3. Ulrich passed to Boerner
for a gain of 5. Ulrich’s short kick was
covered by Shaw on its 28-yard line. A
forward failed and Shaw punted to Ulrich who was downed in midfield. Shaw was penalized 10 and it was
Shaw received and Hayslett was downed on his 37-yard line. Momberger passed to
Stopple for a gain of 15 yards. Momberger then heaved the ball to Brown for a gain of
8. Shaw was penalized 15 for unnecessary
roughness and Momberger from punt formation ran
18-yards.
Fourth Quarter
Shaw punted to Ulrich who
was downed in midfield. Thomas passed to
Ulrich for l3 and a first down. Three
attempted passes failed and then Kriss intercepted a