TIGERS DEFEAT ALLIANCE 19-6
BEFORE CROWD OF 10,000
TWO PERFECT PLAYS
BRING VICTORY HERE
Capt. Red Snyder and Ray
Getz Dash For Touchdowns
As Every Player Gets His
Man;
Alliance Scores On
Forward Pass In Third Period
By LUTHER EMERY
The Washington high Tigers plowed on toward the Ohio
scholastic football title before an overflow crowd of 10,000 fans at Mt. Union
stadium, Friday evening and executed two perfect plays to defeat Alliance’s up
and coming Aviators 19-6.
It was Alliance’s
first lost in five games and the Tigers fifth successive triumph of the season
and their eighth in a row.
Perfect Plays Win Game
Two lightning like first period thrusts gave the Massillon eleven its first period margin and it can thank
its lucky star that Alliance
had not encountered any strong opposition in previous games.
The lightning struck on the second play of the game and the Alliance line, not
knowing what it was to be hit, was flattened to the ground by the Tiger
forwards as Capt. Red Snyder dashed 70 yards for a touchdown.
Lightning doesn’t strike twice in the same place, they say,
but when “Horse” Gillom intercepted an Alliance pass on the third play after the following
kickoff, the Alliance
linemen again found themselves looking up at the stars while Ray Getz dashed 77
yards for another touchdown.
Alliance Fights Back
Those first two came cheap, but the fire sale ended then and
there when the Aviators took time out and decided they must charge. And charge they did, from there on to the
final gun, to battle the Tigers on even terms.
Touchdowns were hard to get after that. The Massillon eleven capitalized on Red
Henderson’s recovery of a fumble in the
second period to shove over a third touchdown from the Alliance 24-yard line,
but found it impossible to roll back the Aviator defenses for any more
scores. Once they were stopped by inches
on the one-yard line and again they lost the ball by less than a foot on the
10-yard stripe.
It was a terrific struggled, with the Tigers showing the
effects of the body beating they took at Sharon
last week and Alliance, playing an inspired game
that bottled the Massillon
offense.
Hillis Hume, ace of the Aviator
bombers, was all that they said of him.
He didn’t break loose for a touchdown dash as he had done in every
previous game this year but he was dynamite every time he carried the ball and
dangerous until Tiger tacklers brought him to earth.
He tossed the pass that gave Alliance
its only touchdown in the third period and he threw a lot of others that would
have hit their mark were it not for an alert Massillon secondary.
It was on the fourth play of the second half, following
Eugene Grimes’ recovery of a Massillon fumble on
the Tiger 35-yard line, that Alliance scored. Stopped once in an attempt to carry the ball,
Hume faded back and fired a perfect pass to August Palozzi,
who streaked through the Massillon secondary to snare the ball in a leaping
catch inside the five-yard line and race into rainbow land.
Save for that, Alliance
never got close to the Tiger goal.
The touchdown pass was one of two completed and Alliance made both; Hume
tossing another to Palozzi for 28 yards in the
closing minutes of the game.
Massillon Relies On Running
Alliance
presented a well guarded secondary with which the Tigers took no chances. Though the forward pass has been Massillon’s most potent
weapon this year, it was kept undercover last night. Only once did George Slusser
pitch and the ball was too high for Gillom to catch
in the flat.
Save for their two perfect play executions in the first
period and their ability to keep Hume from crossing the goal where others had
failed, the Massillon
team possessed little in the way of superiority over the Aviators. First downs were 14 to 13 in its favor and Gillom had the edge on Hume in punting.
With low level press box and the crowd standing on chairs on
the sidelines, nearly one-half the field was invisible to reporters and it was
impossible to collect other statistics on the game. From the middle of the first quarter on to
the final gun, the two elevens gathered approximately the same yardage.
The heat of the struggle could be traced on the faces of
players after the game. The Tiger eleven
which has been wading through the toughest schedule ever arranged for a Massillon team, had additional
stripes whipped on top of those sustained at Sharon.
Bruised lips and swollen eyes told a painful story in the dressing
room. Bill McMichael,
right tackle was the most serious casualty.
He sustained a charley horse that forced him to the bench for a rest and
may cause him more trouble before the season is over.
Injuries kept two Massillon
players, Jim Russell, sophomore guard and Bill Zimmerman, blocking halfback,
from starting the gamer.
Zimmerman never got in at all but Russell was rushed into
the breach when Alliance
showed signs of getting dangerous in the fourth quarter.
The crowd had no more than eased back from the thrill of the
kickoff when it was shocked by the first two Massillon touchdowns.
Every Player Gets His Man
The plays were so perfectly executed that they are worthy of
repetition. It was second down, 10 to go
with the ball on the 30-yard line.
Snyder’s signal was called. He
drove to the line with perfect blocking in front of him. Each of his 10 teammates took out an opponent
and Snyder had only to outrun the safety man and that he did in his 70-yard
touchdown dash. The Alliance line fell as one on the play as
though it were knocked over backward. In
reality most of the Aviator players were prone on the ground with only the stars
to look at.
The second touchdown was executed with the same
precision. Hume nearly got loose on the
kickoff as he raced the ball back from his own 15-yard line and reversed the
field to the Massillon
47. When he tried a forward pass,
however, Gillom was on the job to gather in the ball
on his own 23-yard line. On the very
next play Getz ran 77 yards for a touchdown with 10 Alliance men on the ground and one making a
futile effort to catch him.
Alliance
braced after that and the Tigers had to fight for every yard.
The Aviators’ courage was bolstered when they recovered a Massillon fumble to end
another touchdown threat on the 17-yard line.
Play was confined to each eleven’s respective section on the
field until the last five minutes of the second period when the Tigers advanced
the ball to a first down on the Alliance 25.
Wood covered a Massillon fumble on the
24-yard line but on the very next play, Hume fumbled and Henderson
pounced on the ball to regain it for Massillon
on the 25.
Getz and Snyder rammed to a first down on the 15-yard line
and after Snyder and Slusser had picked up four, Fred
Toles circled his right end for five more and Snyder
rammed through for a first down on the two-yard line. The redhead rammed the ball over the goal on
the next play.
That ended Massillon’s
scoring. Getz placekicked the first
point through the bars but missed on his last two attempts.
Alliance Scores On Pass
The half ended at 19-0 but Alliance made the most of a break on the
opening kickoff of the second half to score.
Snyder brought the kickoff to the 35, but a fumble on second down with
eight to go was covered by Alliance’s Grimes on
the Massillon
35. Hume picked up five yards and on
second down backed up and shot the ball to Palozzi
for the touchdown. Two Massillon
men were near the Alliance
end when he snared the pass but they were off balance and couldn’t’ get to the
ball. Two steps and he was over the goal after the catch.
The Tigers struck right back with a terrific drive that
carried the ball to the four-yard line. where they
lost it on fourth down by inches.
Alliance worked it right back
up the field to the Massillon
43 before it was required to punt. Then
back came Massillon to
carry the ball from its own 15 to the Alliance
14 where again it lost the pigskin by inches.
An exchange of punts and Alliance
unleashed its last bid, a long pass that Hume threw from the 32-yard line to Palozzi who caught it on the Massillon 40.
A five-yard penalty and a bad pass from center,
sent the Aviators reeling back to their own 35 where the game ended.
Call the last three periods what you may, a let down on the Massillon team or an inspired Alliance eleven bottling the Tiger offense
and making it look bad, the game was worthy of the patronage it received.
The crowd was the largest that ever saw a football game in Alliance, exceeding the previous record attendance of 1932
when Alliance
won its last victory over the Tigers.
Alliance
capitalized on this game every two years and the lust for finances resulted in
the stadium being oversold. So much so
in fact that persons who plunked down their 75 cents
for a seat stood throughout the game and many of them could only see one-half
the field.
A large section of the crowd was composed of Massillon fans. The Massillon-Alliance
Rd.,
was one continual string of autos from 6 p.m. until game time and cars were
bumper to bumper on the return trip.
Give That Band A Hand
The Tiger band was splendid as it went through its best
exhibition of the season. A tin soldier
number, with the young musicians acting the part brought down the house. Then too the band, maneuvering quickly and
without hesitation, formed an airplane, with rolling drums indicating the roar
of the “motors”. Persons situated in the
top of the stands declared it one of the best formations they have ever
seen. Block letters were also formed in
front of the Alliance and Massillon sections.
Too much praise cannot be given the young musicians for
their performance, the result of tireless work, five nights a week.
Praise for the band was not confined to Massillon
fans alone but to Alliance
spectators as well. They joined the
local delegation in giving the young musicians a tremendous cheer during their
maneuvers and when they walked off the field.
The Alliance
band also gave a pleasing drill between halves, with two acrobatic girl drum
majors in the lead. The Alliance band is handicapped with lack of
time and a place to practice.
The young Massillon musicians
were accorded rather rough treatment on their return trip through Canton. Jubilant over their team’s victory, their
cheers were met with a barrage of tomatoes and garbage.
A
Hard Battle
Massillon Pos. Alliance
Toles LE Cironi
Henderson LT Taylor
Lucius LG Zupanic
Martin C Dawson
Houston RG Chester
McMichael RT Chernikovich
Gillom RE Grimes
Slusser QB Hume
Getz LH Murari
Clendening RH Wood
Snyder FB Koch
Score by periods:
Massillon 13 6 0 0 19
Alliance
0 0 6 0 6
Substitutions:
Massillon – Russell, lg; Sweezy, rt.
Alliance – Palozzi, le.
Touchdowns:
Massillon – Snyder 2; Getz.
Alliance – Palozzi.
Point after touchdown:
Massillon – Getz
(placekick).
Referee – Rupp.
Umpire – Jenkins.
Head Linesman – Howells.