HIGH GRIDDERS BEAT
ALLIANCE 13 TO 0 TO WIN FIRST GAME
OF COUNTY SERIES
WHIRLWIND OFFENSE
IN OPENING MINUTES
DEFEATS OLD RIVAL
Believing that the early bird
catches the worm, Coach Elmer McGrew, of Washington High, unleashed his tigers
in the Mount Union stadium Saturday afternoon with
strict orders to cross the goal line of the Red and Blue of Alliance at the
earliest opportunity.
And they did just that thing
and thereby won their first game of the Stark county series by beating Alliance 13 to 0. Just how obedient those boys wearing the
orange and black were can be seen from the fact that they took the kickoff and
marched 70 yards down the field for a touchdown.
That was the first score, and
the six points looked bigger and bigger to Alliance
fans as the game progressed, and smaller and smaller to Massillon fans when the red and blue began an
offensive in the last period that threatened the local team’s goal.
In fact Alliance threw such a
scare into the hearts of the youthful tigers in the last 10 minutes of play
that they went out and produced another touchdown in order to make their score
secure. However the same touchdown would
not have been necessary to insure victory, because the final gun cracked while Schnierle was racing toward the red and blue’s goal line,
and the last seven points were of no good other than making the local team’s
score look more impressive.
The game was a splendid one
from start to finish. It proved quite
emphatically that McGrew’s gridders found themselves in the fracas with Wooster a week ago, and
provided enough thrills to satisfy the 3,000 lovers of football, who filled the
stands.
One thrill came when George
Hess stepped away for a 30-yard run on the third play of the game. Another came when John Kester
got off a beautiful punt that went 60 yards against the wind, and still another
resulted when Keefe, flashy Alliance
quarter, dashed away for a long gain after taking a lateral pass. But the best apples grow on the end of the
limb, and so the most spectacular and unusual play of the game came in the last
few seconds when Schnierle raced 35 yards from the
line of scrimmage for a touchdown, the gun cracking when he had traveled but
half the distance.
Had it not been for the
whirlwind attack of the youthful tigers in the opening minutes of the game, the
result might have been a scoreless tie, for after the first six points were
produced the red and blue braced and turned back every other scoring
threat. Had it not been that the local
team was leading by six points with only a few seconds of the game remaining to
be played, it is doubtful if the orange and black would have scored its second
touchdown, for Quarterback Keefe took one desperate chance to score, and tossed
a forward pass from his own 35-yard line which was grounded, giving the local
team the ball. Schnierle’s
long run for a touchdown and the end of the game came on the next play.
The way the orange and black
tore the Alliance line to pieces on its opening
march for a touchdown gave evidence that the game would be a one-sided contest,
but the Alliance line braced suddenly and
stopped the plunging Massillon
backs. The Massillon attack showed itself at other
stages of the game, but lacked the consistency necessary to score
touchdowns. A penalty also ended one
scoring threat of the youthful tigers.
Alliance showed a plucky team. Its forward wall stood up well under the
battering of the Massillon
backs and the ends appearing exceptionally strong in turning in runs around the
flanks. The red and blue’s six first
downs were made largely as a result of end runs and several forward passes.
The Alliance gridders wanted to win the game
badly. Coach George Wilcoxen,
before the game, declared that if his eleven could take the measure of the
local gridders he believed that the victory would provide the necessary
confidence to make the team a winning one for the remainder of the season. Such was the case a year ago, when Alliance, after beating
the orange and black, went out and defeated everything in sight with the
exception of Canton McKinley. In fact it
was over-anxiety that partly contributed to Wilcoxen’s
defeat Saturday, for his team was penalized six times for being offside, and
several of these penalties stopped threatening Alliance offensive drives. A few aided the orange and black in its goalward march. The
two penalties, however in the latter instance only helped out by a few yards
for a play by play account of the game shows that in one case the Massillon
back had plunged for four yards, which were given up for the five-yard penalty,
while the other penalty helped but little, for it came just before George Hess
got away for his long run of 30 yards. Alliance also received
two penalties for not completing two consecutive forward passes, and twice
suffered reverses of 15 yards for holding.
All told the red and blue was set back a total of 70 yards, while the
youthful tigers lost 35 yards in penalties.
In first downs the local team
excelled its rivals, making the necessary yardage on 12 occasions, while the
red and blue could make the distance but six times.
McGrew’s team improved greatly
in one department Saturday and that was in the manner in which it intercepted
and knocked down Alliance
forward passes. Alliance tried to gain by the aerial route on
14 occasions. Three times it was
successful, gaining 42 yards, but eight of the passes were knocked down, while
three others were intercepted. The three
aerial attempts of the orange and black were unsuccessful.
The long punting of Kester was one of the features of the local team’s
play. Kester
averaged nearly 50 yards on his boots, which not only were long but also high
enough to permit the Massillon
ends to camp under the ball when it came down.
The ends, however, did not take advantage of the opportunity and
although they slipped by the Alliance
interference and got down on most of the punts, they usually failed to make the
tackle and allowed Keefe to return the ball several times for substantial gains
before being thrown. Kester’s
first kick was the prettiest of the lot and when the ball twisted through the
air it brought a sigh from the fans similar to that heard when a pretty sky
rocket explodes in a fireworks celebration.
Saturday was migration day for Massillon fans, and approximately 1,500 from this city
followed the local gridders to Alliance. The automobiles formed a long procession as
the fans returned home, horns blowing and colors waving.
The high school band was taken
to the game, and played frequently. Alliance’s band also made
itself heard many times during the afternoon.
The Massillon fans were seated in the concrete
bleachers until shortly before the start of the second period when they
deserted their section because of a light rain, and made a rush across the
field to the covered section on the opposite side.
The game was the first high
school tilt played in the new stadium, and Alliance fans have yet to see their school or
college teams score a victory on the new field.
Mount Union
met defeat at the hands of the University
of Michigan’s second team
when the stadium was dedicated a week ago.
Captain Potts was taken from
the game in the fourth period when he was knocked out from a kick on the
head. With the exception of a discolored
face, however, the captain is O.K. and is ready for another melee.
It has already been told how
the second Massillon
touchdown was scored and here are the plays that led up to the first.
Watkins kicked off to Kester, who took the ball on the Massillon 10-yard line and returned to the
25-yard line. Schnierle
failed to gain on a dash around left end, but Alliance was declared offside on the play and
was penalized five yards. Kester plunged for a yard, and Hess then broke through
right tackle for a run of 30 yards, carrying the ball to the Alliance 40-yard line. Had he not stumbled over his own feet, he
might have slipped away for a touchdown.
Schnierle picked up five yards and Hollwager plunged through for a first down on the Alliance 30-yard
line. Hess made four yards and Hollwager two more after which Kester
rammed through for a first down on the 20-yard line. Alliance
took time out and talked things over.
With the resumption of play, Hess was tossed for a one-yard loss. Hester picked up two yards and Hess made
three more. Hollwager
then pushed his way through for a first down on the 10-yard line. Buttermore was
given the ball and rammed through for four yards, but Alliance was offside, and Captain Potts took
the five-yard penalty in a preference to the gain. Hess made a yard and on the next play Buttermore rammed through for the touchdown. Schnierle missed
his try for the extra point.
Alliance
came nearest to scoring in the last period when two passes and end runs put the
ball on Massillon’s
23-yard line. The chance to score was
lost, however, when Keefe fumbled on an attempted pass, Blatz
covering the ball which rolled backward to the 37-yard line.
Lineup and summary:
Massillon Pos. Alliance
Schnierle LE Curtis
Fisher LT Miller
Blatz LG Speidell
Potts C King
Goodman RG Clark
Slinger RT Hammontree
Houriet RE Battin
G. Hess QB Keefe
Hollwager LHB Watkins
Kester RHB Dann
Buttermore FB Windland
Score by periods:
Massillon 6 0 0 7—13
Substitutions: Massillon
– Lewis, c; Minger, re. Alliance – Daly, le; Curtis, re.
Touchdowns
– Buttermore, Schnierle.
Point after
touchdown – Schnierle (dropkick).
Referee—Howells (Sebring).
Umpire—Barrett (Sebring).
Headlinesman—Clark (Kenyon).
Timekeepers—Whittacre
(Alliance), Rider, (Massillon).