TIGERS TURN BACK
NEW PHILADELPHIA
65 TO 0
Powerful Offense Rolls up 10 Touchdowns,
28 First Downs
as Team Plays
Perfect Football;
Travel to Niles Saturday
By LUTHER EMERY
Having turned back the New Philadelphia
invasion 65-0 Saturday, the Washington high
Tigers today began two weeks of intensive training for their all important
battle Nov. 23 at Canton, the game that will
give Massillon
a chance to lay claim to the state title.
Niles will be played Saturday
in an N.E.O. Big Six contest, but that game should take care of itself and
except for setting up a defense to meet Niles’
system of play, Coach Paul Brown will pay little attention to this Saturday’s
game.
Tigers Demonstrate Great Power
Brown began bringing his Tigers uphill with the New Philadelphia contest
and if they keep on coming like they did Saturday, they will carry dynamite in
every move by Nov. 23.
It was Dads’ day Saturday and the Massillon boys showed off before their
fathers seated on the sidelines by playing perhaps their most perfect game of
football this season. Only once before
during the year did they approach that performance and that was at Portsmouth when they rolled over the Ohio
River city 46-0.
The Tigers were never at full strength Saturday, for Bob
Glass their regular fullback, was kept on the sidelines with an injured
ankle. What’s more the other 10 regulars
played only half a game because they were not needed.
Snyder Plays Fine Game
All the subs got their chance Saturday and how they did come
through. John Snyder played the entire
game at fullback. He carried the ball
well and his blocking was superb.
Matthew Carter stole the show from the other backs, when supported by
fine blocking, the raced 67 yards to a touchdown in the third period. Willie McDew played
a fine defensive game, as did Don Snavely, next
year’s center and from end to end and around the ring in the backfield the subs
distinguished themselves with a fine performance.
The offense of both first and second teams was smooth and
versatile. When long gains were needed,
Howard Dutton and Mike Byelene threw passes and
seldom were Massillon
backs stopped without gain. That was
because of the superior charge of the Tiger forward wall that always kept
pushing the Quakers back toward their goal.
The Massillon
offensive produced 28 first downs and 10 touchdowns. When a team is working as smoothly as that,
it is retaining possession of the ball most of the time and the opposition has
little chance to gain. New Philadelphia
made six first downs, three in the third period when the visitors’ second
stringers pitted against Massillon second and third stringers, passed and
plunged their way to three consecutive first downs the last on the Tigers
two-yard line. The period ended there
and the Massillon
first stringers went in to protect their goal.
They succeeded. Four plays failed
to net a single inch and Howard Dutton punted back safely to midfield. A boo went up from the visitors stands and
some Massillon fans joined, for not allowing the Quakers to score, but Coach
Paul Brown desired to test the defensive strength of his first team when backed
up against its own goal.
Tigers Smother Plays
It was only the second time this season the team was in this
position and the first time, a week ago, Akron West pushed over a touchdown.
Not so Saturday however.
Every play on the two-yard line was smothered under a mass of orange
sweaters. After Dutton had punted out
safely, the visitors made three attempts to carry the ball but failed each time
and on fourth down Francis muffed a bad pass from center and the ball rolled
back to the Quakers’ 30-yard line where Morningstar covered for Massillon. Coach Brown immediately sent his second team
back in to finish the game.
Apparently disregarding New Philadelphia’s fine record the past two
seasons which included 16 victories in 17 games, the Tigers went to work at the
kickoff and Snyder carried the ball back to the 34-yard line. Dutton and Jake Gillom
made five yards and Dutton made it first down on the visitors’ 39-yard
line. Gillom,
running hard line he did at the start of the season, made 14 yards in two trips
and a first down on the 25. Gillom again made four and Dutton swept his left end for 17
yards and a first down on the four-yard line.
Anderson
came around end but plunged over for the touchdown. But the play was sent back, New Philadelphia was penalized to the
one-yard line for being offside. Gillom plunged over for the touchdown. Dutton failed to make the extra point.
Morningstar kicked off to Wortman
who brought the ball back 15 yards to the 30-yard line. When two plays failed to gain, Wortman quick kicked to Gillom on
the 35. He returned 12 yards. New
Philadelphia drew a five yard penalty for offside and
on the first play thereafter, old Jake tucked the ball under his wing and
hauled the mail 48 yards around right end for the second touchdown. Snyder failed to carry the extra point
across.
Long Pass Scores Touchdown
Simonetti brought Morningstar’s
kickoff back to the 39-yard line. Two
plays gained three yards and Wortman kicked a beauty
to Herring who took the ball on a bounce near his goal line and got back to the
15 before being downed. Herring made
eight yards and Byelene ripped off 17 for a first
down on the 40. Snyder made two but
Herring lost two. Byelene
then stepped back and shot a 30-yard pass to Charley Anderson who caught the
ball and with a clear field ahead raced another 30 yards for the
touchdown. Byelene
failed to carry the ball over for the extra point.
The Tigers were on their way to another touchdown when the
first quarter ended. Following the third
touchdown, Morningstar kicked to Wortman who returned
to the 27. Updegraph
got through for four yards but other attempts to carry failed and the visitors
punted to Herring who took the ball on his 30 and ran back 19 yards. Byelene completed a
pass to Anderson
but Charley was out of bounds when he caught the ball. He stepped right back and tried it over,
completing one for a gain of 17 yards.
There the quarter ended.
Second Period
Snyder rammed through for 18 yards and a first down on the
16-yard line. Herring made a yard at
center and Byelene made it first down on the six-yard
line. Snyder added two and Herring
carried to within inches of the goal but the Tigers were penalized 15 yards for
holding. Byelene
made five and then tossed to Herring for a touchdown. Eddie Molinski
placekicked the extra point.
A complete second team took over the game for the
Tigers. New Philadelphia received and when Duda tried to pass, Byelene came
up with the ball and was downed on the Quakers’ 48-yard line. Herring made four yards and Byelene passed 14 yards to Bob Swoger
who was in for the first time this season.
Herring and Byelene made it first down on the
Quakers’ 19-yard line. Byelene passed to Odell Gillom
for a touchdown and plunged the extra point across. That made the score 32-0 and there it stood
the remainder of the half.
First Team Starts Second Half
The first team went back in for the Tigers at the start of
the third period. McDew
took the kickoff back to the 20-yard line. Jake Gillom
fumbled and Stempfly covered for New Philadelphia on the Tiger 30. Stempfly was tossed
for a five-yard loss and when two more plays failed, Wortman
kicked out on the 23-yard line. Dutton
ran 16 yards to the 39 and passed to Snyder for a 15-yard gain. A nine yard pass to Morningstar and a plunge
by Snyder made it first down on the 37.
When two passes were wide of their mark, Dutton circled his left end for
10 yards and a first down on the 27. He
passed to Anderson
for 27 yards and a touchdown and another pass to Morningstar produced the extra
point.
Morningstar kicked off to Wortman
who brought the ball back to the 25-yard line.
Simonetti lost two yards on a fumble and when
he tried to pass, Morningstar intercepted and ran for a touchdown. The officials, however, ruled that Held
clipped from behind on the play and penalized the Tigers 15 yards from the
point where the violation took place.
Dutton immediately passed to Morningstar for a first down on the nine-yard
line. New Philadelphia was penalized five yards for
being offside on the next play and Dutton ran for a touchdown. Gillom plunged the
extra point.
The subs carried on for the Tigers. Updegraph brought
the kickoff back to his 40. Simonetti passed 16 yards to Reiser
for a first down and flipped another to Wortman for a
first down on the Tiger 32-yard line. Simonetti plunged for four but when he tried to pass on the
next play, Snyder intercepted on the 20 and brought the ball back to the 33-yard
line. Carter was immediately turned
loose around his right end and behind fine interference,
he wove his way into the open and raced 67 yards for a touchdown.
Byelene’s pass for the extra point
was knocked down.
New Philadelphia
made its only threat thereafter. Trimmer
brought Miller’s kickoff back to the 41-yard line. Duda passed to
Trimmer just short of a first down and then rammed center for a first down on
the Tiger 47. Duda
passed to Rodd for five and then tossed one to
Trimmer for a first down on the 25.
Another to Trimmer gained first down on the
15-yard line. Duda made six yards
and a five-yard penalty inflicted on the Tigers for being offside gave New Philadelphia a first
down on the four-yard line. Francis made
two yards but a lateral, Duda to Francis failed to
gain. The quarter ended with the ball on
the
two-yard line and the Tiger first
team went into the game.
Fourth Period
Duda twice tried the center of the
line and failed to gain. Dutton kicked
back to Francis who was downed on the Massillon
43-yard line. Three plays gained a yard
and Francis got a poor pass from center when he tried to punt on fourth down
and the ball rolled back to the Massillon
30-yard line where Morningstar recovered.
The Massillon
subs went back into the game. Byelene and Carter made eight yards and Snyder rammed
through for a first down on the 20.
Snyder made nine yards and Byelene made it
first down on the
10-yard line. Carter skirted right end for seven. Byelene put the
ball on the one-yard line and Snyder went over.
Byelene passed to Swoger
for the extra point.
Following the kickoff New
Philadelphia made another brief rally. Trimmer brought the ball back to the 34 and Duda tossed a pass to Rodd for a
first down on the Tiger 49. Duda to Simonetti gained five and
Duda plunged to a first down on the 39. Duda lost two yards
and Carter intercepted his pass on the 36.
Carter made five but Massillon
w as penalized 15 for holding.
Byelene made five on a spinner and
the visitors were penalized five yards for taking too many times out. Carter made three but New Philadelphia was offside and was
penalized five yards. Byelene ran to a first down on the visitors’ 40. Snyder was stopped without gain but Byelene came around left end for 13 yards and another first
down on the 27. Carter advanced the ball
six yards and Byelene went over on a 21-yard
run. The try for the extra point failed
and the game ended shortly thereafter.
Both teams threw many passes. The Tigers completed 11 of 21 for 200 yards
and two extra points. New Philadelphia completed eight of 18 for 73
yards and had three intercepted.
Where the visitors only lost 20 yards in penalties, the
Tigers were set back 70 yards.
Season’s Second Largest Crowd
The crowd of 6,500 fans was perhaps the second largest of
the season while the reserved seat sale even exceeded that of any other game.
The New
Philadelphia band of 100 pieces and the Tigers’ snappy
band drilled between halves.
The game ended the Tigers’ home season and that suggests a
pat on the back for S. Earl Ackley, faculty manager, who always remains in the
background and who seldom sees a football game because he is too busy making
everything else run smoothly in the park.
Ackley likewise makes all arrangements for road trips and as business
manager for the Tigers had done a great job this year.
Power To
Spare
Massillon Pos. New
Philadelphia
Anderson LE Emery
Held LT Fisher
Updegraff LG Sherer
Voss C Smith
Woods RG Kuenzil
Buggs RT Bedilon
Morningstar RE Resier
Dutton QB A. Gopp
J. Gillom LH Updegraph
Molinski RH Wortman
Snyder FB Simonetti
Score by periods:
Massillon 18 14 20 13 65
Substitutions:
Massillon
– McDew, lg; O. Gillom, le; Anderson, lt; Moffett,
rt; Miller, rg; Snavely, c; Byelene, qb; Herring, lh; Spillman, rh; Snyder, fb; Carter, lh; Swoger, re; Lee, c; Graybill, lg; Howard, lg.
New Philadelphia – Mason,
rg; Francis, lh; Stempfly, rh; Stoneman,
re; M. Hanna, lg; Trimmer, fb;
Brick, lt; Banks, qb;
Hostetler, c; Hummell, c; Bliss, lt;
Eichel, rt; Swisshelm, qb; Duda, fb; Rodd,
qb.
Touchdowns:
Massillon
– J. Gillom 2;
Anderson 2; Herring
1; O. Gillom; Dutton; Snyder; Carter; Byelene.
Points after touchdown:
Massillon – Molinski (placekick); Byelene, J.
Gillom (carried); Swoger,
Morningstar (passes).
Officials:
Referee – Howells.
Umpire – Rang.
Head Linesman – Barrett.