CANTON
BOWS TO ORANGE
AND BLACK,
24 TO 0
LOCAL ELEVEN ENDS CAMPAIGN
WITH TEN STRAIGHT TRIUMPHS
Chalk up for Massillon another athletic triumph over its ancient
rival, Canton. It
happened last Saturday when the great orange and black football team of Washington
high school vanquished its perennial foe – McKinley high, of Canton – 24 to 0
in the annual fracas between the two schools staged on the Pearl street
gridiron before the largest crowd that has seen Coach David B. Stewart’s wonder
eleven in action this fall.
Chalk up also for the
local team a season finished without a defeat and a string of 10 straight
victories over the strongest high school aggregation in Ohio.
Massillon’s claim to scholastic championship honors of the Buckeye state
became rivet bound Saturday when Coach Stewart’s lads trimmed the east
enders. But in addition to their
championship claims and their 10 straight triumphs the orange and black also
established another record in that hectic duel.
They registered the largest score that has ever been made in the history
of athletic relations between Massillon and Canton since their resumption in 1912, beating by
three points the 21 to 0 victory Massillon scored over Canton
in 1919.
Coach Stewart’s lads
said they would do it and they did even though they had to wait until the
fourth quarter before they finally pierced the defense of the Canton eleven and scored their first
touchdown. For three quarters the east enders fought with all their strength to hold the orange and
black in check. And favored by the
breaks they succeeded in halting Coach Stewart’s lads during the first 45
minutes of the struggle even though the local team several times was within the
shadow of the Canton goal posts.
But in the fourth
quarter Massillon’s attack found a vulnerable spot and when Captain “Tink” Ulrich, playing his last game with the orange and
black smashed off Canton’s right tackle and ran 28 yards over the snow covered
gridiron for the first touchdown, Canton’s fighting morale was broken and from
then on the local team drove its steamroller through the east enders almost at
will.
Canton
Plays Hard
To Canton must be given the credit for putting up a
stiff fight. In comparison Massillon held a big advantage. So much so that the east enders
appeared defeated even before they stepped upon the battle field. But they showed a fighting spirit that fought
with untold fury until Captain Ulrich made that first touchdown. Then it disappeared.
From the way it
played McKinley appeared to realize that it could not defeat Massillon.
But it hoped for a scoreless tie and that’s what it was playing
for. Had it succeeded in bringing the
game to an end without either team scoring it would have registered a moral
victory for it would have accomplished something that no other team had been
able to do all season.
But Canton’s hopes were to be blasted. After that first touchdown had been recorded
the orange and black piled up three others in rapid succession and came very
near scoring a fifth but for “Dutch” Hill who carried the ball to Canton’s one foot line late in the fourth quarter
only to fumble it when tackled.
Snow Covers Field
The game was played
on a snow covered field. It snowed
steadily during the contest and a wintry wind which blew fiercely, numbed the
hands of the struggling warriors and made it exceedingly difficult to hold the slippery
oval. Under such conditions neither team
was able to resort to an open attack.
Straight football for the most part predominated although each team
attempted several forward passes but none of them were completed.
Team Plays Well
Massillon had no outstanding hero Saturday. The entire team played brilliantly and kept
on fighting manfully even though Canton
had all the best of the breaks during the first three quarters. Those lads of Coach Stewart had been through
too many heated battles before to lose heart in that final tussle. They just kept on plunging, waiting for their
big opportunity and when Captain Ulrich brought it by his brilliant 38-yard
dash the orange and black machine started off under full steam and never
stopped until the whistle ended the big contest.
On the line the work
of Salberg and Edwards stood out prominently. This pair of tackles stopped many a Canton drive.
Pflug, Kallaker and
Miller also were in the midst of every clash while the ends saw to it that few
gains were made by the east enders or runs around the wings. On offense Ulrich, Hill and Define were Massillon’s chief ground gainers.
End Runs Gain
Massillon’s best attack Saturday was the end runs in
which Ulrich and Define made big gains in the third quarter. Hill played consistently but until the fourth
quarter could not gain much as the Canton defense, coached to stop him, watched
the big fullback like a hawk. But Hill
showed them his driving power by scoring three touchdowns in the last 10
minutes of play.
Canton never threatened to score. It did not once get inside Massillon’s 30-yard line. It made but two first downs during the entire
game. Massillon smashed its attack like
an egg shell, stopping Kirk and Johnson, Canton’s best backfield bets, time
after time without gain. And Canton by no means placed a team of weaklings on
the field. It had a big rangy
aggregation of lads but they simply were outclassed by Coach Stewart’s well
drilled team every man of which had a part to play and played it well.
19 First Downs
Massillon made 19 first downs, 11 coming in the last
quarter. Three were registered in the
first quarter, one in the second and four in the third. Penalties inflicted by the officials hurt the
orange and black in the first half and several times kept them from
scoring. The officials probably knew
what they were doing but it looked as if more competent men could have been
secured to handle a game so important as a
Massillon-Canton clash.
In the first quarter Massillon worked the ball within Canton’s 30-yard line and was marching steadily
through the east enders when a 15-yard penalty for
holding spoiled its chance to score.
Another 15-yard penalty before the quarter ended did not help Massillon’s chances any.
In the second quarter
Ulrich grabbed a Canton punt and returned it for a gain of about 30 yards
before he was tackled but the ball slipped out of his grasp and bounced right
into a Canton man’s arms.
Breaks Favor Canton
Another unfortunate
break in Canton’s favor came right at the start of the
third quarter when Edwards kicked off to Kirk who fumbled and Edwards covered
the ball on Canton’s 10-yard line. A touchdown seemed inevitable but after Hill
had taken the ball to the five-yard line the officials ruled Massillon had been offside and the ball was taken
back to the 15-yard line. Then Ulrich
was thrown for a loss of 9 and on the fourth down Edwards dropped back to the
28-yard line to try a drop kick. Again
fortune favored Canton for Bill’s kick was headed straight
between the uprights but it struck the cross bar and bounded back into the
field. Another inch and it would have
gone over.
These breaks all
helped to keep up Canton’s spirit and the east enders were beginning to have
visions of holding the Massillon eleven in check when the fourth quarter
opened. Ulrich and Define made several
big gains around Canton’s ends ending up on the east enders’ 30-yard line.
Then he went skimming around Canton’s left end for 20 talking the ball to the
10-yard line. Hill plunged into the Canton line three times and the ball was over for
the third touchdown. Jamison had his
eyes open also and when he covered a Canton fumble on the Canton 25-yard line he paved the way for another
touchdown. Thomas took the ball to the
15-yard line and then Hill crashed into the Canton line and went over for his third
touchdown.
Just shortly before
the game ended, Broda attempted to punt from his 20
yard line but the pass was bad and he was downed on the 10-yard line and Massillon gained possession of the ball, it being
fourth down when Canton tried to punt. Hill made 5 on his first plunge and was on
his way to another touchdown when he was tackled near the goal line and
fumbled. Reno covering for Canton. Canton punted but before Massillon could start a play the game ended.
A Clean Slate
Massillon – 24 Position Canton – 0
Potts LE Borda
Edwards LG Whipple
Kallaker LT Gibson
Roth C Huffman
Pflug RG Fellows
Salberg RT Reno
Jamison RE Dimino
Thomas Q Asboom
Borza LH Reiner
Mercer RH Kirk
Hill F Johnson
Score by quarters:
Massillon 0 0 0 24 – 24
Substitutions: Massillon – Ulrich for Mercer, Weirich
for Potts
Rohr for Jamison, Boerner for Thomas, Miller for Kallaker,
Define for Borza, Jamison for Rohr, Potts for Weirich,
Shaidnagle for Pflug, Eschliman
for Salberg, Hax for
Ulrich.
Canton – Collier for Whipple, Meeks for Collier,
McConnell for
Dimino, Farrell for Reiner,
Arnold for Kirk, Valmer for Asboom.
Touchdowns:
Hill 3, Ulrich.
Referee
– Litick, Miami.
Umpire
– Kumweiler, Zanesville.
Healinesman – Brannon, Wooster
Timers – Rider and Bietner
Time of quarters – 15
minutes