WARREN
WHIPS TIGERS 12-0
TWO WELL EXECUTED PASSES
OPEN WAY FOR TOUCHDOWNS
By LUTHER EMERY
TWO well executed passes off the same formation,
coming when passes were expected, enabled the Presidents of Warren high school
to down the Washington high Tigers in the second half of Saturday afternoon’s
12th encounter between the two schools by a score of 12-0. The victory was Warren’s fourth in the 12
years of rivalry. Massillon has won the
other eight.
Their string of
victories brought to a halt at Alliance a week ago, the Tigers did not play
with the same old snap Saturday that character-have taken something out of
them, something which they must regain if they have any hope of winning
Friday’s battle at Dover and the following traditional classic with Canton
McKinley Saturday, Nov. 19.
Warren Disappointing
From the spectators’
standpoint the Warren team was a disappointment. Hailed as a powerful football outfit by virtue of its perfect
record save for the one defeat by the Martins Ferry juggernaut, Warren looked
slow and sluggish, Saturday, anything but a fast and alert football team. Furthermore there was little deception in
its attack.
Had Massillon met
Warren earlier in the season and Warren played the type of ball it did
Saturday, the Tigers would have won.
The light Massillon team, however, has depended almost entirely on
deception to overcome its lack of weight and from game to game opposing coaches
have gotten wise to the Massillon system, information has been exchanged and as
a result the Tigers have little left with which to fool the enemy and lack the
power to force their plays for gains.
It is difficult for
a team of light weights to stand up under a training grind week after week and
take a battering on successive Saturdays without a breather and that probably
accounts for the lack of zip and alertness shown by the Tigers Saturday.
First Half Quiet
There was nothing to
pant about in the first half. Massillon
never got nearer than the Warren 40-yard line and Warren could only work the
pigskin five yards nearer the Massillon goal.
Play was largely confined to midfield as a result of poor punts, Sierra
getting off two poor kicks for Warren and Knowlton booting one laterally for
the Tigers.
The battle continued
in no man’s land throughout most of the third period until Warren finally
angled for a position, got it and marched to a score through a long forward
pass.
A penalty that set
the Tigers back to the one-yard line set the stage for the Warren
touchdown. Heben was downed with a punt
on the 10-yard line, but Schimke was caught using his hands on the next
scrimmage and the Tigers were set back to the one-yard line. Heben standing on the end zone line had to
kick quickly and hoisted a high one that only traveled out to the 11-yard
stripe where it was downed by the Tigers.
Davis tried to circle right end but was stopped without gain. Noland hammered center for a yard. H. Hartlett squirmed through to the
five-yard line. Davis on the fourth
down struck through right tackle for a first down on the one-yard line but the
play was called back and Warren penalized 15 yards for holding.
Noland Scores
A forward pass
seemed a certainty but the Tigers were caught asleep and Gisseralli was left
wide open to snare Davis’ pass and was stopped a yard short of the Massillon
goal, a first down by 18 inches. On his
first attempt to carry the ball over, Noland was thrown for a one-yard
loss. He went over the second time,
however crashing through the left side of the Massillon line. Bray blocked Steele’s attempted drop for the
extra point.
Warren scored again
early in the fourth quarter. Backed up
to his goal line, Knowlton punted to Davis who ran the ball out of bounds on
the Massillon 35-yard line. Noland made
two yards at right guard and Davis four more but Warren was declared offside
and penalized five yards. Davis circled
his right end for a 12-yard gain missing a first down by inches. Noland plunged through center for a first
down on the 24-yard line. Noland lost a
year on an end run but picked up seven on a spinner. Davis made three more but Warren was declared in motion on the
play and was penalized five yards.
Davis hurled a pass to Gisseralli for a first down on the 13-yard
line. Noland waded through his left
guard for two yards. H. Bartlett made
four on a reverse. Davis lost a yard at
right end. On the fourth down Davis
hurled a pass to H. Bartlett who caught the ball on the goal line in the
northwest corner of the field and fell over for a touchdown. Steele’s attempted drop kick for the extra
point was low.
The Tigers opened up
with a pass attack after the second Warren touchdown and succeeded in
completing two before the alert hands of a Warren back intercepted one of
Knowlton’s passes and the final gun found Warren again hammering away at the
Massillon line, 17 yards short of the goal, third down and eight to go.
Massillon never had
an opportunity to score. It never got
closer toe the Warren goal than the 40-yard line and then only through a
recovered fumble in the early minutes of the game. Warren’s pass defense completely stopped the Tigers overhead game
on all but two occasions, two flat passes being completed, one for a gain of 18
yards.
Warren showed little
more than a straight running attack depending principally on Noland for
yards. Davis, however gained his share
of ground for the visitors. Massillon
made but three first downs during the afternoon while Warren made the distance
13 times. Massillon was penalized 25
yards, Warren 55 yards.
Line
up and summary:
Massillon Pos. Warren
Lohr le Zoba
Burkish lt March
Ripple lg Hutchko
(Rest
of line not available)