Sharon Out Of Way,
Tigers Prepare For Youngstown
South Invasion
MASSILLON
RENEWS ATHLETIC RIVALRY
WITH ANCIENT FOE
By LUTHER EMERY
Badly beaten in body, but strengthened in spirit by their
27-0 defeat of Sharon Saturday
afternoon the Washington high Tigers
point this week to stem the invasion of Youngstown South Friday evening.
Not since Dave Stewart and his Tigers walked off the field
at Youngstown 10 years ago have Massillon
and South high met in an athletic engagement.
Until this year Massillon refused to schedule its old rival, but now
that the bitter rivalry and ill feeling of the episode of 1924 has subsided,
the peace pipe has been smoked and Friday evening South high comes for an after
dark battle on Massillon field.
South Having Off Season
Memories of the rivalry and bitter feeling that existed
between the two schools in 1924 will do more to make the turnstiles click next
Friday than will the prospects of seeing a nip and tuck gridiron battle.
Its performance this season indicates that South is below
par this fall and not the powerhouse that goose stepped for Dusty Ashbaugh in years gone by.
Never-the-less the Washington
high coaching staff is forgetting the past and pointing for this week’s game
and this week’s alone, hoping that the customary letdown that invariably hits a
team sometime during a season, will not make its
ghastly appearance in the shadows Friday evening.
Second only in importance to its battle
for the Youngstown city championship is the Massillon game to
South high. Tales of 1924 have
been handed down by older brothers to
the South high gridders who 10 years ago were just
beginning to learn what the three R’s were all about.
Say Massillon Should Win
Warren scouts who witnessed the Tigers conquest of Sharon,
Saturday, including Coach Pierre Hill and Tommy Thompson, Warren sports writer,
were unanimous in the opinion that Massillon, playing the type of ball it did
Saturday would crush South with ease.
Both have seen Ashbaugh’s team perform several
times this season and although they spoke highly of the rhythm of its
performance the power isn’t there, they said.
The problem of keeping the Tigers keyed to the pitch that
struck the death knell of Sharon,
Saturday is one for the Massillon
coaching staff to cope with. Any letdown
in inspiration might prove disastrous to the crest of popularity the Massillon
gridders enjoy.
The Tigers were pointed for Sharon
and never did a group of boys want to win a ball game any more. None slept over four hours that night before,
but tossed and rolled in restless nervousness, eager to exchange pajamas for
grid togs and bed for the green sward of the Massillon
field.
They pranced around like colts at the barrier in the
dressing room and paced up and down in the hallway as minutes seemed like hours
while they waited to trot on the field.
They were keyed up and what followed when they thrust
themselves at the visiting Sharon huskies, is now a matter of history, but
history that is worth recounting for the sake of remembering the deeds of those
who write it for Washington high school Saturday in its first athletic contest
with Sharon high school.
Dutton Guides Fine Offense
Dynamic Howard Dutton, generalissimo of the Massillon
eleven and the finest little quarterback the school has had in many a year,
directed the most versatile and powerful offense that has been Massillon’s
since 1922. A single wing, a spread
formation, spinners, reverses and passes from both offensive formations, fake
punts and power plays, so bewildering the iron men of Sharon,
that 14 first downs were rolled up against a defense that here-to-fore had
proved impregnable to the running attacks of three other high schools.
While the guiding hand of Dutton directed the Massillon
offense to say there was an individual star would be doing an injustice to the
other 10 players. They were all in there
fighting for each other. Without one,
the other 10 would not have commanded the attention it received.
Take the first touchdown for instance. Dutton heaved a 20-yard pass to Lohr who caught the ball shoulder high and raced for six
points. Lohr,
however, only carried the ball across.
Bob Shertzer made a touchdown, or more
properly, made it possible when he cut across fast to hurl his body in front of
Steve Klaric and cut him down for the rest of the
game.
Klaric, Sharon’s
triple threat quarterback, who played defensive right halfback, would have
tackled Lohr or slowed him down until a teammate
could nail him from behind.
The hard legitimate block of Shertzer’s
fractured Klaric’s shoulder and took from Sharon
the main cog of its offensive setup.
Again it was Shertzer who removed
a tackler from Dutton’s path in the fourth period when the Massillon
quarterback intercepted a pass from Charles Weiser, Sharon
quarterback and galloped 35 yards for a touchdown.
Linemen Deserve Praise
Too frequently the blocker is forgotten in the praise
accorded the open field runner and what Shertzer did
for Lohr and Dutton was being done in every play on
the line of scrimmage where you cannot see it.
It is because of these clocks, hidden behind a wall of humanity, that a
ball carrier is able to penetrate into the territory of his opponent and it is
the lineman who takes the body beating while giving all for his fellow teammate
and gets little credit for it.
Such a beating did the Tigers take Saturday. Though victorious 27-0, at half time they
were battered more than they had been at the end of any previous game. Hardly a man there is who saw service
Saturday but what today is nursing cuts and bruises.
Sharon suffered
an even heavier toll of casualties and Coach Stewart and his assistant, Ted
Rosenberg, a former Washington
high gridder, who learned his football under Dave,
lamented the loss of Klaric, a costly blow to a team
that will be forced to pit itself against four strong opponents in consecutive
weeks. Mike Lyshoir,
a hard hitting center, likewise succumbed to the drive of the Tigers as he was
crushed beneath the feet of D.C. McCants when the Massillon
fullback smashed through the Sharon
line in the third period. Knocked
senseless by the blow, it took Stewart and the entire Sharon
team, subs included, to get Mike off the field to the bench. The same thing has happened to Mike before
and affected him in the same way and perhaps that is the reason why Stewart and
his squad did not take it too seriously.
Mike in the locker room after the game was shouting his glee and patting
fellowmen on the back for defeating Massillon. He thought Sharon
had won.
Tigers Score On Pass
The Tigers scored their first touchdown in the middle of the
first quarter. Getting the ball on their own 23-yard line, where Lohr
was dropped after a short return of Klaric’s punt, Dutton
reeled off 12 yards for a first down on t he Massillon
34-yard line. McCants
waded through this right tackle for six yards and Krier
missed a first down by inches. Krier then raced 16 yards for a first down on the Sharon
41-yard line. Having drawn in the
visitors’ secondary, Dutton saw his chance to pass, dropped back and heaved a
20-yard peg to Lohr who raced the remaining 21 yards
along the sidelines for a touchdown. Shertzer removing the last would be tackler, Klaric, from his path.
Krier carried the ball across for the extra
point.
In Sharon
territory nearly all the time, the Tigers didn’t punch the ball over again
until near the end of the second period when they launched an offensive from
their own 46-yard line. Again forward
passes advanced the ball into position.
One to Shertzer gained eight yards. Byelene lost a yard
but Dutton pegged another pass to Lohr for a gain of
26 yards that brought a first down on the Sharon
20-yard round. Shertzer
made three on the mouse trap and a five-yard penalty on top of Dutton’s dash
made it first down on the nine-yard line.
Byelene hit right tackle for four yards. Sharon
threw up a blockade for McCants as he thundered down
Hogan’s alley, but Dutton swept his left end for three yards. Fourth down and two to go and McCants dropped back for more alley slumming, but he
bobbled the pass from center and as Sharon tacklers closed in on him suddenly
cut to his right and out raced two would be tacklers as he crossed the goal
line at the corner of the field. An
attempted pass for the extra point failed.
Massillon made a
bid for a touchdown in the third quarter as it marched to the four-yard line,
where a mix-up lost six yards on the second down and two incomplete passes gave
Sharon the ball. Sharon
too passed into Massillon territory
for the first time during the game and carried the ball to the 25-yard line
where the drive stopped with a fourth down pass over the goal.
Lohr’s 25-yard return of Niec’s punt to the Sharon
40-yard line started the Tigers on the way to their third touchdown. Krier made five but
Massillon was penalized five on the
next play. Dutton passed 22 yards to Krier for a first down on the 22-yard line. A penalty set the Tigers back five yards and
a pass failed to gain. A fake punt
gained five yards and Dutton crossed up his opponents with a pass over the line
of scrimmage to Lohr for 17 yards and a first down on
the four-yard line. McCants
lugged it over in two attempts and Krier placekicked
the extra point.
Dutton scored the local’s last touchdown shortly afterward
when he intercepted Wieser’s pass and behind fine
blocking raced 35 yards for the touchdown.
Krier kicked the extra point.
Sharon passes
again penetrated deeply into Massillon
territory but failed with a touchdown in sight and the ball on the 15-yard
line.
Stewart Compliments Tigers
Before leaving the clubhouse Saturday, Coach Stewart paid
tribute to the Tigers as being a fine ball club capable of beating everything
in their path up to the Canton
game.
The drum and bugle corps of Massillon Post No. 221 acted as Sharon’s
representative musical organization.
Mayor J. Fred Thomas, of Sharon
was the guest of Mayor Williams “Pat” Limbach of this
city.
The crowd numbered somewhat in the vicinity of 4,500
fans. Instead of a guarantee, the
schools shared receipts on a 50-50 basis.
The game will be discussed tonight at the meeting of the
booster club at 7:30 in the high
school. Tickets for the Youngstown South
– Massillon game will be placed on
sale at this meeting
The lineup and summary:
MASSILLON Pos. SHARON
Shertzer LE Nichols
Wolfe LT Popovich
Molinski LG Phillips
Morningstar C Msysohir
Snavely RG Mitch
Buggs RT Bartholomew
Lohr RE Bayer
Dutton QB Klaric
Krier LH Seaman
Lange RH Niec
McCants FB Donato
Score by periods:
Massillon 7 6 0 14 27
Substitutions: Massillon – Byelene, lh;
McDew; Price, lt; Gillom, fb. Sharon – Weiser, qb; Lombardo, c; J. Jones, rt;
Bowie, lh; Thomas, rh; Ben
Jones, le; Keryan, re; Ogg,
le.
Touchdowns:
Massillon
– Lohr; McCants 2; Dutton.
Point after touchdown:
Massillon
– Krier 2
(placekick); Krier 1 (carried).
Referee – Howells (Sebring).
Umpire – Shafer (Akron).
Head Linesman – Boone (Canton).