Green Washington High “11” Loses First Duel
To Akron East
RUBBER CITY YOUTHS
SCORE TOUCHDOWN
IN NEAR CLOSE OF GAME
By LUTHER EMERY
Stirred by the general realization that it was their first
football game, of the season, and urged on by a thousand anxious Massillon
fans, a sturdy little group of orange and black grid warriors plugged away with
all their might against Akron East Saturday afternoon; but were not equal to
the task and went down fighting under a 6 to 0 score.
Under a warm September sun, the two teams battled each other
fiercely in the opening game of the season for each. It might have been too hot
for football had it not been for the crisp northwesterly wind that brushed over
the field throughout the game, but the cool breeze only served to whet the
pangs for grid conquests and envelope both players and fans in a football
atmosphere.
Flash at Times
Green, with the exception of a couple of seeds in the core,
the Massillon eleven would flash brilliantly one time and then look like a group
of grade school boys on the next play.
Yet, in spite of the defeat and the mediocre showing at times, the play
of the Tigers gave evidence that Coach Elmer McGrew has the making of a winning
eleven before the end of the year.
The lack of understanding which goes hand in hand with
inexperience, coupled with the only penalty of the game, defeated the youthful
Tigers.
Simple but deceptive, the Massillon youngsters were unable to diagnose
a spin play staged by the Orientals in their victorious march to a touchdown in
the fourth period.
Spin Play Deceptive
Time and again Ostravitch or
Fontaine playing near the line of scrimmage, whirled around as if to hand the
ball to one of their teammates but completed the circle and carried the ball directly
through the center of the line, the interference wiping out the remaining
members of the Massillon defense who were not fooled by the fake passes to
other backs.
That spin play gained most of East’s yards, but even then
the Orientals might not have scored were it not for a 15-yard penalty, the only
one of the entire game called on the Tigers for piling up when it was third
down with six yards for the Orientals to go for a first down and the ball on
Massillon’s 38-yard line.
That penalty seemed to take all the fight out of McGrew’s
boys and their resistance was meager when East reeled off the remaining 23
yards on six attempts. Fontaine carried
the ball across for the touchdown, but his attempted drop kick for the extra
point was wide.
Tigers Rally
But the Tigers rallied and hearts thumped wildly the next
couple of minutes when the hopes of the Massillon
fans rose and fell with a brilliant dash of Clendening
into East territory, but the run ended for naught when he fumbled when tackled
and East recovered. Two plays netted East a first down and right then and there the Tigers got
their break of the game, a fumble, but it all came too late, for the final
whistle blew before the play could be returned.
The last dash of the orange and black was something Massillon fans, who have
been watching the Tigers in their pre-season training, expected to see earlier
in the game. But although it came late,
it gave promise of something that is liable to occur many times this season if
the line will only break up the opponent’s defense and stake the backs to a
broken field.
Line Lacks
Drive
The offense worked fairly smooth Saturday but it couldn’t
get underway for the superior charging of the Orientals’ forward wall. The Tiger linemen lacked the drive to push back
the front backs of the Akron school with the
result that the Massillon
backs had difficulty carrying the ball beyond the line of scrimmage.
One thing that can be said in favor of the Massillon boys is that they are in great
condition. Time was not called out once
for injuries, while East had time taken out several times in order to
recuperate members of the team. Of all
the Akron players, probably none was roughed
more than Sherman Grimm, a second stringer at Washington high two years ago. Grimm, who moved to Akron a year ago, played the role of fullback
and did a neat job of punting and tackling for his team. He took time out twice however as a result of
bumps received. He had an edge over Kester and Clendening in the
punting; Kester having his first kick blocked since
he began playing with Washington
high.
Long Pass Features
The feature play of the game, as far as Massillon
was concerned, was a 30-yard forward pass, Clendening
to Toles, in the second period that enabled the
Tigers to carry the ball deep into Akron
territory. On that occasion the local
eleven worked the ball by their own ability to the opponent’s 18-yard line,
where it was lost on downs when a pass that just reached Worthington’s fingertips was grounded. Had it been successful it would have resulted
in a first down for the Tigers.
East excelled in first downs, making the required yardage 10
times to the local team’s four. Seven of
the Akron boys’
10-yard gains were made in the last half.
The Tigers made three first downs in the second period and one in the
fourth.
East failed to complete a forward pass while the local team
completed one for 30 yards. Both teams
had three passes incomplete and one intercepted.
Massillon
fans are still looking for football as can be seen from the fact that 1,000 of
them were scattered among the 2,500 spectators at Saturday’s game. Considering the fact that
only a couple of members of this year’s team are seniors, the hopes of the fans
for another winning high school team may be realized.
First Quarter
The game was the first in which the school’s new system of
appointing a captain before each game was put into effect, and John Kester was honored as leader Saturday.
Willison was downed with the
kickoff on his own 30-yard line. Clendening failed to gain and a bad pass lost five
yards. Kester
booted the ball to midfield. Fontaine
gained five yards, and two tries by Ostravitch gained
but three more. Grimm punted to the
10-yard line, Worthington
fumbled the ball, but recovering it and returning 10 yards. Clendening and Worthington each cut off
a yard and Kester kicked the ball back to midfield,
Knowlton dropping Ostravitch in his tracks. Grimm made a yard, Ostravitch
eight, and then Fontaine worked a spin play for a first down on the Tigers’
39-yard line. Ostravitch
wheeled through right tackle for seven yards, but Fontaine failed to gain and a
pass was incomplete after which Grimm punted to Clendening
who returned the ball to the 18-yard line.
Kester returned the kick to the Akron 40-yard line where Ostravitch muffed the ball but recovered without
return. Fontaine lost three yards on two
cracks at the line and Kester went high into the air
to pull down Fontaine’s pass on the Massillon
32-yard line. Clendening
gained two yards and then the dusky youth caught the Akron boys asleep and punted to the East
18-yard line, where the period ended.
Second Quarter
Fontaine picked up two yards and Grimm punted to Massillon’s 30-yard line, Worthington returning 10 yards. Houriet picked up a yard and then Clendening
hurled a pass to Toles that brought a first down on
East’s 30-yard line. Worthington gained four yards, but Clendening slipped and fell on an off tackle dash without
gain. He shortened the distance by four
yards on the next play, however, which paved the way for Houriet
to slip through for a first down on Akron’s
20-yard line. Clendening
got but two yards on his next two attempts and his pass to Worthington on third down just touched the
latter’s finger tips. The Tigers lost
the ball when Clendening failed to gain on the next
play.
Grimm made four yards and Fontaine’s spin play brought four
more. Ostravitch
broke away for a run of 14 yards giving Akron a
first down on the Akron
40-yard line. Grimm and Fontaine picked
up but two yards on the next two plays, and Grimm then punted to Clendening who returned 20 yards to his own 40-yard
line. Clendening
got two yards, Houriet four yards at left tackle, Worthington three yards,
and then Houriet made it first down on East’s 48-yard
line. Clendening
and Worthington
reeled off eight yards in two attempts, but Clendening’s
pass was high, after which he punted short and out of bounds on East’s 31-yard
line. Lindsay and Mitchell made nine
yards and then Fontaine slipped away for a run of 22 yards, but he fumbled when
tackled and Clendening recovered for Massillon.
Houriet gained four yards as the half came to
an end.
Third Quarter
Clendening kicked off to East’s
35-yard line. Grimm punted to Clendening who was downed on Massillon’s 30-yard line. Worthington
and Williams each bucked the line for two yards, and Kester
punted back to East’s 38-yard line. Mesko got a yard but Grimm failed to gain. Grimm punted to Clendening
who returned to his own 40-yard line. Clendening lost a yard on a double pass, and Mitchell
pulled down a Massillon pass on Akron’s 42-yard line. Fontaine gained 15 yards through right
tackle. Grimm failed to gain but
Mitchell reeled off eight yards on two charges at the line. Fontaine’s pass was incomplete and the Tigers
took the ball on downs on their own 32-yard line. Kester immediately
punted to East’s 39-yard line. Mitchell returning to the 44-yard line. Mitchell and Fontaine made seven yards and
Mitchell slipped through for a first down on the local’s 48-yard line. Fontaine was tossed for a loss of three
yards. Grimm punted to Clendening who returned to the 35-yard line. Clendening’s pass
was high and Kester’s punt was blocked by Thomas;
Fontaine recovering on the Tigers’ 38-yard line, where the quarter ended.
Fourth Quarter
Fontaine and Ostravitch failed to
gain and a pass was knocked down. Grimm
punted out of bounds on Massillon’s
nine-yard line. Kester
returned the kick to Akron’s
48-yard line. Ostravitch
gained two yards and lost a half yard in two plays. Fontaine however slipped through for seven
yards on a spin play and then repeated for a first down on the Massillon 41-yard line. Fontaine gained three yards and the Tigers
were penalized for piling up, giving East the ball on
the 23-yard line. Fontaine gained four
yards on a spin, and Ostravtich made it first down on
the 12-yard line. Fontaine made three
more yards and then Ostravitch cut in through right
tackle for a first down on the two-yard line.
Ostravitch failed to gain, but Fontaine went
over for the touchdown. His try for
point drop kick went wide of the uprights.
Pfister took the kickoff and was
downed on his own 40-yard line. Kester circled left end for seven yards, Williams failed to
gain at center, Kester executed a beautiful lateral
pass to Clendening who dashed to Akron’s 35-yard line
where he fumbled, East recovering. Ostravitch gained three yards, and Fontaine raced the ball
back for a first down on his own 48-yard line.
East fumbled on the next play, and Massillon
recovered but the game ended before play could be resumed.
Lineup and summary:
Akron East Position Massillon
Brubaker LE Toles
Miller LT Willison
Gillespie LG Pfister
Thomas C Lewis
Pudelka RG Herman
Chenoweth RT Blatz
Mowery RE Knowlton
Fontaine QB Worthington
Ostravitch LHB Clendening
Mesko RHB Houriet
Grimm FB Kester
Score by periods:
Akron East 0 0 0 6 6
Massillon 0 0 0 0 0
Substitutions:
Akron East – Tarbox for Miller; Ferguson for Mowery; Bennett for
Gillespie; Mitchell for Ostravitch; Lindsay for Grimm;
Mowery for Ferguson; Grimm for Lindsay; Ostravitch for Mitchell.
Massillon – Williams for Houriet;
Houriet for Knowlton; Price for Herman; Herman for
Price; Rice for Worthington.
Touchdown:
Akron East – Fontaine.
Time of periods – 12 minutes.
Referee – Michaels.
Umpire – Young.
Head Linesman – Kester.