ORANGE and BLACK
WINS OPENING TILT
29 to 7
INITIAL CONTEST BRINGS
VICTORY OVER WOOSTER 11
Again the crushing steam
roller of the Orange
and Black of Washington high school is in motion.
Facing a schedule of 10 hard
games with the strongest scholastic elevens in the state and Harrisburg Teach,
of Harrisburg, Pa., gridders of the South Mill street institution, Saturday,
began their defense of gridiron laurels heaped upon the orange and black in
1922 when the eleven went through a schedule of 10 conflicts without a reverse.
With a line as strong and
heavy as that of last fall and a backfield equally as fast and speedy as that
of the undefeated aggregation of 1922, Coach David B. Stewart’s protégés of
moleskin tossers came through their first game with
the Orange and Black flying high and a 29 to 7 victory over the highly touted
Wooster high eleven.
Although the initial win was
decisive, it was war from an easy task that the schedule-maker of the local
school mapped out for the opening fray.
The athletes of the Wayne
county school, slightly outweighed, were a most formidable foe for the fall
opener. It must be remembered that the Wooster school held the Washington
high championship outfit of a year ago to a 19 to 0 score after the Orange and Black steam
roller had gained mid-season form.
Saturday practically the same team that represented the Wayne county institution in 1922 took the
field against the local eleven, with several green men filling vacancies caused
by the June graduation.
The Orange and Black squad made a most pleasing
impression upon local fans and followers of the eleven, but it still appears to
be a diamond in the rough. There were
numerous defects that cropped out against Wooster,
but with a week’s hard drill under Coach Stewart’s capable training, these
rough edges are bound to be smoothed before next Saturday when Salem high plays here.
Displaying an abundance of
speed and with a set of backs all of whom can hit the line like a battering
ram, hopes of orange and black adherers were boosted to believe that another
championship eleven is in the making. New
men appearing in the lineup showed up exceptionally well, and no doubt will
make the local supporters forget the shining lights of a year ago before the
present season is far underway.
Coach Stewart sent
practically his entire first string squad into the fracas and every one
distinguished himself nobly. They showed plenty of fight and spirit which
in itself is essential to a good gridiron outfit.
But not only did the local
gridders show true football spirit, but also the visitors. Although trailing and fighting mostly a
defensive battle, the brown and blue never gave up and their spirit finally was
rewarded in the fourth period when Captain Fritz, of the Woosterites,
crossed the orange and black goal line for a touchdown.
The orange and black gained
the jump on its adversaries from the very outset of the 60 minutes of
strife. After Edwards had kicked off to Wooster, a Massillon
lineman blocked an attempted Wooster punt on the
second play of the game, the orange and black covering, within Wooster’s 40-yard zone. Wooster held
for three downs and on the fourth play Edwards stepped back for a drop kick,
but the attempt of the husky East Greenville
youth fell short by five yards.
Mowery punted for Wooster and after being
held for three downs, Edwards again missed a try for a goal. Mowery again punted and Borza
made a return of 22 yards before being down on the 35-yard line. Five crashes at the Wooster line by Schrader, the plunging halfback
from Canal Fulton, and Borza, regular of the last
season, gave the local squad two first downs, with goal to gain.
Here the Woosterites
braced and four smashes at the Brown and Blue line failed to score for Massillon, Wooster
gaining the ball on the one-foot line.
Mowery kicked out of danger but a pass, Price to Potts, was good for 15
yards and placed the ball on the 27-yard line.
Schrader and Borza again battered their way
through the visitors’ line to the five-yard line with four downs to cross the
line. Price lost one and Schrader made
two yards as the period ended. On the
second play of the second period, Borza and Price
successfully manipulated a double pass and Price scored. Edwards’ attempt at goal was blocked.
After the kickoff and exchange
of punts and a 25-yard return by Price, the Orange
and Black elusive pivot man, advanced the oval to Wooster’s 30-yard line. But Massillon
was penalized 15 yards for holding and was forced to punt. An exchange of punts found Massillon in possession of the spheroid on
the 30-yard line. A pass V. Define to
Rohr netted eight-yards and Boerner plunged for three yards and a first down. J. Define circled Wooster’s right end for nine and Boerner made
it first down and goal when he plunged for three. Two plays and V. Define scampered across the
coveted line. Attempt at goal
failed. This concluded the scoring of
the period.
The Wayne county gridders play took on a
different aspect in the final half. They
launched an attack of open plays in the third period that carried the oval into
Massillon
territory, the first time in the entire game.
Massillon registered twice in this period
but the Wooster
team showed up better than it did earlier in the game.
The Orange and Black possessed the oval on the 45
yard line after an exchange of punts.
From there they marched up the field for the third touchdown. A 15-yard pass, Price to Define, and a steady
pounding off tackle by McCarty and Borza registered
three Orange
and Black first downs and carried the ball to the three yard line, where Borza registered.
Edwards kicked goal, giving Massillon
a total of 19 points.
Wooster then began its best offensive with King, colored star
of the visiting eleven, skirting Massillon’s
ends and hurling passes with Lehman and Jolliff on
the receiving ends. They registered
three first downs and had advanced the ball 50 yards before Fletcher, rangy
center, who hails from Canal Fulton, intercepted a pass on his own 25-yard
line. This was the first time play was
in Massillon
territory.
Massillon punted and Captain Pflug,
of the Orange and Black covered a fumble on Wooster’s 40-yard line, from
where the local squad marched to its fourth and final touchdown, Borza crashing across from the four-yard line. Pflug kicked
goal. The period ended without further
scoring.
In the final quarter King
again led an offensive, this time that resulted in a touchdown. The Wayne
county athletes led by their dusky warrior marched 45 yards for a goal, Fritz
going around Massillon’s
left end for 11 yards and touchdown.
Gould kicked goal. This ended the
scoring until near the close of the game when Captain Pflug
dropped back and booted a drop kick between the goal posts from the 31-yard
line, boosting Massillon’s total of points to 29
against 7 for Wooster. This was the way the score stood at the final
whistle.
All in all Coach Stewart has
the makings of another wonderful eleven.
In Price, V. Define, McCarty, Schrader, Harris and Fletcher, all
newcomers to the Washington
institution, Coach Stewart has six players, who although green, promise to
develop into stars. In
addition, Brooks, Ries and Hise,
substitutes of the 1922 eleven and Murdock, Grant, Thomas and Quigley, of last
year’s second team, show topnotch caliber, while the veterans of the squad
displayed the same ability a year ago.
Starting Right
WOOSTER MASSILLON
Russell L.E. Potts
Lippert L.T. Edwards
Stoll L.G. Miller
Ernest C Fletcher
Mowery R.G. Pflug
Dunn R.T. Brooks
Jolliff R.E. Rohr
King Q Price
Lehman L.H. Boerner
Fritz (c) R.H. Schrader
Gould F Borza
Score by periods:
Massillon 0 12 14 3 29
Wooster 0 0 0 7 7
Substitutions:
Massillon – J. Define for Schrader, V. Define for
(unreadable), R. Grant for Price, McCarty for Boerner, Harris for Brooks,
Schrader for J. Define, Borza for V. Define, Price
for Grant, Potts for Flectcher, Fletcher for Potts, Hise for Potts, Thomas for Rohr, Brooks for Edwards, Ries for Price, Murdock for McCarty.
Wooster – R. Hallerna for Lippert,
Carson for Jolliff, Swigert
for R. Hallerin, Lippert
for Stoll.
Touchdowns – Fritz, Borza 2, Price, V. Define.
Goal from Field – Pflug.
Goals from Touchdowns – Edwards, Pflug, Gould.
Referee – Maurer, Wooster U.
Umpire – Bletzer – Mt. Union.
Head Linesman – Wilson.
Time of Periods – 15 minutes.