in Fine
Offensive Exhibition;
South Tries Desperately With Passes
But Fails To Score
By LUTHER EMERY
Under a sky illuminated by the fire belching furnaces of the Mahoning Valley, the Tigers of Washington high school rolled on to their fourth straight victory Friday evening.
Youngstown South was the victim and Busty Ashbaugh’s sons of steel workers went down under a 64-0 score. The Tigers milled touchdowns with the same crushing force as the boys who rolled steel nearby.
Have Made 246 Points in Four Games
They scored on brute strength that overwhelmed a lighter line. They made points on trickery, that baffled the South high gridders and they took to the air when secondary reinforcements moved in to halt their land attack. Their 64 points hoisted their total for the season to 246, an average of 51.5 points per game. They have kept their goal line clean.
The victory will have more advertising strength for the
Tigers than all of the previous triumphs combined for South even in lean years has always commanded respect in scholastic football
circles. The
The victory, the most decisive registered by either team in
their interrupted and prolonged series, gave
Many
Ten thousand fans perhaps 1,000 of them from Massillon and maybe more ,no one knows, looked on as the teams lined up for the opening kickoff. The last cloud had just disappeared and moonlight bathed the bleachers which were saturated with an all-day rain.
The Tigers discarded the orange and black clothing and put on their mud clothes. They appeared in white sweaters and white helmets, with khaki pants.
They kicked off and when South failed to gain in two cracks at the Tiger line, Domhoff booted the ball to Jake Gillom who returned seven yards to the South 48. There began the Massillon offensive which produced the first touchdown of the game, 10 touchdowns in all and 24 first downs to five for South.
Gillom hit right tackle for 13 yards and a first down on the South 35. Dutton passed to Gillom 17 yards for another first down on the 18-yard line. Dutton hit left tackle for nine yards. Glass went through center for three yards and a first down on the six-yard line. Then Charley Anderson legged around right end to take a lateral and scamper across the South goal. Five plays, six points. Glass’ attempted kick for the extra point was wide of the uprights.
One Touchdown First Quarter
That by the way, was the only touchdown the Tigers could get
in the first period. Once they pushed it
down to the 25-yard line where a 15-yard penalty ended their effort. Again they shoved it down to the 18-yard
line, where South bolstered and turned back the advance,
The first quarter attack, however did angle the ball in position for a touchdown on the second play of the second period.
Having gained possess if the ball on the
Second Period
Gillom made two yards at right tackle and Glass slipped through for an 18-yard dash to a touchdown. His attempted placekick for the extra point was wide.
The Tigers scored on the following kickoff. Mayer booted the ball which was caught by
Charley Anderson on his own 22-yard line.
South came back on the following kickoff to carry the ball into Tiger territory when interference was called on a pass. But Morningstar, who might better be called the evening star as a result of his fine all-around play last night, went up into the air to pull down Domhoff’s pass on the 30-yard line. Augie was going full steam forward with a clear field ahead of him when he stumbled and went down on his own 39. It made no difference, for Ed Herring, who had substituted for Jake Gillom, immediately wheeled around right end for 61 yards and a touchdown in as brilliant a jack rabbit dash as you ever saw. He flanked South on the right, then cut back to his left from the sideline to the middle of the field. Then he headed for the sideline again and finally wound up cutting back across the field to scamper over the goal line near the middle. Bob Glass plunged the ball over for the extra point and that made it 26-0.
Morningstar Stops South Rally
South kicked to Herring who was brought down on the 25-yard line. The Tigers
drove back past midfield where Collins intercepted Byelene’s
pass. Domhoff
passed to Bush to carry South to the
Byelene gained a yard. Byelene fumbled and recovered and when a pass was grounded Mike punted out of bounds on the 48-yard line. On the first play Byelene intercepted Domhoff’s pass and came back to the 50. He ran 16-yards at left tackle for a first down on the 34-yard line. Herring skirted right end for a first down on the 19. A five-yard penalty for offside gave the Tigers the ball on the 14-yard line. Byelene made it first down on the five-yard line. Glass went to the one-yard line and Byelene took it over. His attempted pass for the extra point was grounded and the half ended with the score 32-0.
Third Quarter
The Tigers failed to gain after the kickoff and Dutton
punted out on the South 30-yard line.
Somebody broke through to block Domhoff’s
attempted pass and old Neri Buggs
reached up and
caught it before it could touch the ground, giving
That set the stage for the prettiest play of the
evening. A reverse, Gillom
to Dutton and a lateral to
South took the kickoff and again launched a passing attack
coupled with a 14-yard dash by Cortelezi that brought
the ball into
five-yard loss. Glass came back to hammer for 10 yards and Jake himself made it first down on his 47. Dutton faded back and hurled the ball to Anderson who got to the South 15-yard line before being tackled. It was good for 38 yards. Dutton immediately tossed another pass, this one to Morningstar for a touchdown. Glass kicked goal and the score was 45-0.
Sontag brought the kickoff back to the 35-yard line, but Dutton pulled down a pass and ran back to the 40-yard line before being tackled. Bob Glass went through between guard and center for a touchdown. The try for point failed. That ended the scoring in the third period at 51-0.
Fourth Quarter
As a result of two passes, one called on interference and
the other completed for a 16-yard gain, South had the
ball on the Tiger 32-yard line at the start of the period. Domhoff tried three
more passes in succession but all were knocked down and Tiger linemen blocked Domhoff’s punt on the fourth down to five
Domhoff nearly crossed the Tigers up on the following kickoff when Collins gave him the ball on a reverse. He carried it back to his 43 before being hauled down from behind by Willie McDew. Following an exchange of fumbles, South lost the ball on downs on the Tigers 20-yard line when three passes failed. Herring made a yard and Glass a yard. Herring then went to the midfield on a lateral pass. Byelene made 19 on a spinner. Herring went to the 13-yard line where he fumbled but recovered. A pass off a lateral was grounded. Herring made seven yards and Byelene went over for the touchdown. The attempt for the extra point failed.
Throughout the game South tried desperately to score and
obtain some satisfaction out of the defeat.
As predicted before the game, Ashbaugh relied
on the forward pass. His boys threw 28
in all and completed nine, three on charges of interference, for gains of 117
yards. The Tigers intercepted seven
passes.
Busty Ashbaugh, after the game
told Coach Paul Brown he thought
Dave Stewart Pleased
Dave Stewart, former
With their drum major strutting a
new orange uniform, the Tiger band performed before the spectators between
halves, spelling “YSH” before the
Some fans were wondering today why
Biggest Of All
C. Anderson LE Bush
Held LT Isaacson
Updegraff LG Senzik
Voss C Fisher
Woods RG Raab
Buggs RT Stabilito
Morningstar RE Morrison
Dutton QB Mayer
J. Gillom LH Collins
Molinski RH Domhoff
Glass FB Sontag
Score by periods:
Substitutions:
South – Gaston, le; martin, qb; Cortelezi, lh; Concrecote, lt.
Touchdowns:
Points after touchdown:
Referee – Howells.
Umpire – Boone.
Head Linesman – Wick.