TIGERS DEFEAT
IN SETTING OF COLOR
WELL-TIMED AERIALS
TURN BACK INVADERS
Pennsylvanians Unleash
Versatile Offense
That Surprises
Huge Crowd Attends Opening
Gridiron Contest
In a setting of
color on Massillon Field that exceeded all expectations, the Washington high
Tigers whipped a stubborn McKeesport, Pa., eleven 19-7 here Friday evening
before a crowd of between 8,000 and 10,000 spectators.
A hard fought game
and a thrilling finish combined with a musical demonstration and tumbling
cheerleaders, it was a faster show than many a college game for which fans pay
three times the admission price.
Passes Did It
Two well executed
passes gave
“They played like a
college team,” said
It was a ding-dong
battle from start to finish, marked by hard tackling and sparkling passes.
The Tigers scored
all their touchdowns in the first half on perfect plays. With his linemen blasting a huge hole in the
visitors’ forward wall, George Slusser romped 28
yards for the first
Passes Net Two
Passes from Slusser to Freddie Toles in an
unprotected secondary, produced the other two scores. Freddie caught one 25-yard heave on the
five-yard line and scampered over. He
took the other, another 25-yard pass on the 10-yard stripe and raced
across. Only seven seconds of the first
half remained after the third touchdown.
A peg to Horace Gillom produced the extra
point.
Mixing passes with
Herrera’s end sweeps from his quarterback post and “Casey” Ploszay’s
line smashe, the visitors marched the ball 71 yards
across the
Briefly, that tells
the story of the scoring.
It was a game such
as you seldom see in an opening engagement.
It was what high school officials had bargained for.
In fact
Present Versatile Offense
The answer was given
last night. Running to the weak as well
as the strong side, sweeping the ends and tossing passes, the Pennsylvanians
produced the kind of football that would have tripled the score against
Follansbee.
They brought
everything out of the bag in the second half, including laterals off passes and
had the Tigers up in the air as they drove to their touchdown. A second march was throttled on the Tiger
36-yard line and the visitors never got their hands on the ball thereafter, the
game ending with Massillon in possession of the leather, first down on the
five-yard line, the result of another of those well directed passes, Slusser to Toles.
In Toles, they saw an end who goes
down so fast that once he catches up with the secondary, he is almost certain
to pass it.
He raced straight
through the
“I had a pair of
green halfbacks out there and they let him get by,” said Coach John Stinson
after the game. “
We only have three
boys on the team who were classed as starters last year, but I think as the
season progresses we will develop into a pretty good football team.”
Two Real Threats
As you have already
been told, Ploszay and Herrera were the offensive
sparkplugs but as widely different in their running tactics as their size. Ploszay propelled
his short, powerful legs and 15- pounds into the forward wall with trip-hammer
driving force, while Herrera wheeled it around end and hurled his passes in the
face of a roughing, with 130 pounds of dynamite.
The Tigers showed
promise. In Slusser
and Toles they may have another
Byelene-Anderson combination that brought fans out of their seats two years ago.
Slusser was the chief ground gainer last night and
he carried the ball more than any other member of the backfield. Ray Getz and Red Snyder carried it
sufficiently, however, to show the fans they too could lug the mail when called
upon. Only once did Bill Zimmerman sneak
through with it. He made several yards
on the play.
The backfield was
given good support by the line, which from end to end gave a good account of
itself for an opening game. Linemen,
with the exception of the ends, Toles and Gillom usually escape unnoticed, but they take a bruising
in the course of the game. Bill McMichael and Red Henderson were on the tackles last night,
Jim Russell and Lynn Houston at the guards and Earl Martin at center.
Few Substitutes
Only four
substitutes were made by Coach Brown and that tells the story of
Victory was not
alone on the Tigers’ side. So were the
statistics. The
The local team made
343 yards from scrimmage to 187 for
Ploszay’s quick kick which caught the Tigers asleep in
the first period was one of the slickest plays of the game. Standing on his own 36-yard line less than
five yards behind the line of scrimmage, he booted the ball over the
Getz had the honor
of booting the opening kickoff to Lauris who was
downed on the
12-yard
line. However on a fake kick, Smith raced through
to the 30 before the
Snyder and Slusser in two dashes went to the 27 yard line. Getz lost a yard the next down but helped
open a yawning hole for Slusser on the next play and
the Tiger quarterback cut through for a touchdown.
Ploszay’s quick kick on the next series of plays
nearly stymied the Tigers on their goal line, but the ball was brought out to
the 20 and the
Aided by a 15-yard
penalty, the visitors got back to their 42 but had to punt again, Snyder racing
back 28 yards with the return to his 43.
It was a shot of T.N.T. for the Tigers.
Slusser pegged the ball to Getz for a
seven-yard gain and carried it himself for a first down on the 30. The secondary came in and Toles
went out to snare Slusser’s long pass in the clear
and race to the second touchdown.
The visitors passed
up a scoring opportunity after
Another Touchdown
An exchange of punts
and Getz flopped on Lauris’ fumble on the visitors’
35. On the first play Slusser caught the Pennsylvanians asleep and pegged the
ball to Toles who again caught it in the clear and
raced for the third touchdown. A pass to
Gillom got the extra point this time and time expired
before the teams could lineup for the kickoff.
A
five-yard penalty.
It was then that
A lateral off a
forward gained five and Herrera worked his sneak around end for a first down on
the
McKeesport got up
steam again but blew a valve on the 36-yard line from which the Tigers launched
their final drive which probably would have meant another touchdown had not the
timekeeper shot off the end of the game with the ball on the five-yard stripe
and first down coming up.
School officials
argued over the size of the crowd but generally estimated it as between 8,000
and 10,000 people. It included a large
delegation of
How did you like the
Massillon Tiger? The athletic board got
the idea at
The Massillon Tiger
was introduced while the band blared, “Hold that Tiger.”
And the tumbling
cheerleaders added a new touch of skill to the show.
It’s
A Good Start
Toles LE Carr
Russell LG Rubenfield
Martin C Carrazzo
McMichael RT Laughlin
Gillom RE
Slusser QB Thompson
Getz LH Laurie
Zimmerman RH Smith
Snyder FB Ploszay
Score by periods:
Substitutions:
Touchdowns:
Massillon – Slusser; Toles 2.
McKeesport – Mull.
Points
after touchdown:
Massillon Gillom (pass).
McKeesport – Herrera (dropkick).
Statistics
Mass. McKeesport
First downs
18 10
Yards gained passing 120 57
Yards gained rushing 223 130
Total yards gained 343 187
Yards lost 8 23
Passes attempted 9 11
Passes completed 5 4
Passes intercepted 2 2
Passes incomplete 2 4
Punts 2 4
Average punts 35 39
Penalties 5 3
Yards penalized 55 25