TIGER GRIDDERS DEFEAT SHARON 37-20
IN THRILLING GAME
MASSILLON’S PASSES
BEWILDER OPPONENTS
Aerial Fireworks Save Game For Local Team;
There Will Never Be
Another Like It,
10,000 Fans Say Today
By LUTHER EMERY
A courageous band of Washington high school Tigers, wrote
pigskin history with skill and speed before 10,000 people Friday evening as
they raced through the fog at Sharon to a
37-20 victory.
Ox cannot lick Tiger, the old adage goes and history
repeated itself last night in one of the finest football games anyone could
ever hope to witness.
Best Game in Tiger History
There have been none like it in Washington high school history and you may
never see another. There have been
sensational finishes such as the 7-6 triumph over Shaw in 1922, but never have
four quarters been packed with more offensive football and thrills than the 48
minutes of last night’s game.
The Massillon Tigers won because they had a passing attack,
knew how and when to use it and out-smarted their opponents. Using brains and speed to overcome a
tremendous advantage in weight, they came back fighting after two bad breaks,
to wrest victory out of turmoil that completely exhausted both teams.
So tired were both elevens that they went through their
maneuvers in “slow motion”
fashion the last few minutes of the game. Roscoe Clendening
looked line a 10-second man among the tiring players when he replaced Zimmerman
in the fourth quarter. Yet he is one of
the slowest of the backfield squad – but a honey in a pinch.
It was an offensive game from the start, beginning like the
big game with Canton
in 1934, but maintaining the pace throughout the four periods.
Neither Team Would Quit
The elevens tossed touchdowns at each other with reckless
abandon. The Tigers picked off two
before the teams had hardly got warmed up, only to have Sharon make the most of two breaks and the
score at 13-13 in the second quarter.
The blow was enough to crack the heart of any player but the
Massillon eleven struck right back in the dying minutes of the first half with
two passes, shoved over a third
touchdown to flaunt a 19-13 lead at the intermission.
The third period began right where the second left off. Some 2,000 Massillon
fans who went by auto and special train to Sharon, were fearful lest
their team fade in the third quarter as it had done on three previous occasions
this year. But the Tigers quickly
relieved their apprehensions and struck back with another scoring march that
hoisted the lead to 25-13.
That gallant Sharon
team wouldn’t give up, however. Harold Matthews, had not yet done what he wanted to do to close his
athletic career in a blaze of glory. Hs
turn was coming and he found it in a hole in the right side of the Massillon line though which he raced 54 yards to Sharon’s third and last
touchdown of the game. It and the
following point after touchdown narrowed the margin to 25-20 and again made Massillon hearts pound,
but the Tigers struck right back as only a good ball team can and chalked up
two more touchdowns to shove their margin of superiority to 17 points.
Thanks For Passing
Massillon
should give thanks for its passing attack.
Without it the score might have been different. Anyone who saw the game can tell you. They saw how the smaller Tiger gridders had
to virtually block their opponents to the ground to gain yards from
scrimmage. They saw Fred Toles snare two consecutive passes, one an almost
impossible catch to wipe out the 13-13 tie.
They saw Horace Gillom go high in the air to
pull down another behind the goal after Sharon
had crept dangerously close in the third quarter. They saw Ray Getz haul down another to put
the ball in position to score.
Without a passing attack to keep the Sharon secondary from crowding the line of
scrimmage, the Tiger ball carriers would have had an even harder time of
it. But George Slusser’s
accurate right arm kept the Pennsylvanians on the alert and the Tiger backs
were able to pick up three and four yards before they could meet up with the
play.
“Massillon
has a great team,” said David B. Stewart, smiling through disappointment after
the game. “Your team can do anything and
that’s what licked us. It was an
excellent game.”
Paul Brown, who played quarterback for Washington high when Stewart coached here 13
years ago, was pleased with the courageous spirit of the team. “You could see for yourself we were badly
outweighed. We had to knock them down to
get anywhere. They were two tired teams
when that final gun popped. Did you ever
see such a game before. I didn’t.”
“Nor I,” piped up Hugh McGranahan,
assistant coach, who himself went into action in the third period when a
spectator edged in on the Massillon
bench and took a swing at Pizzino, a
sub-fullback. “P, (P is for Paul), you
can send me away scouting after this. I
won’t be able to stand another like that.”
And McGranahan expressed the
sentiments of practically every Massillon
fan there.
Both teams were so “high” that neither would quit under
pressure that would make most elevens surrender.
They had seasonal and traditional records to preserve and
gave every effort toward that end. Today
the Tiger record of having lost but one game in 34 still existed, but Sharon’s string of 15
straight was broken. It was the
Pennsylvanian’s first loss in 19 games.
Statistics Favor Tigers
Not only the score but the statistics in general were with Massillon. The forward pass made the difference.
The Tigers rolled up 13 first downs to Sharon’s four and not one did the latter team
get in the last half.
The local eleven made 191 yards rushing to Sharon’s
174 and gained 123 yards passing to none for Sharon.
The Pennsylvanians had a slight edge on running back punts
and kickoffs and owned a margin in punting.
Penalties were the same.
To pick out an outstanding player would do an injustice to other
members of the Massillon
team. From end to end and throughout the
backfield each individual gave everything he had.
The same can be said for Sharon, though the defensive playing of
O’Brien and Wolansky and Matthews’ ball carrying
ability demanded attention.
Two Tiger players went out with injuries. Jim Russell, who injured an ankle in practice
Wednesday evening, was forced out early in the first half and was replaced by
Red Henderson, sophomore, playing his second game. Henderson was
hurt in the McKeesport
game and had not played since. Bill
Zimmerman aggravated an ankle injury in the second half but hobbled around on
it for 10 minutes before he got another bump that put him out. Clendening took his
place.
The game was packed with the unexpected, recovery of
fumbles, long runs for touchdowns and sensational passes.
Tigers Score Early
Joe Cvelbar fumbled on the second
play of the game and the alert Freddie Toles flopped
on the ball on the Sharon
37-yard line. There began your first
touchdown drive. Red Snyder ripped
through for nine yards at right tackle and Ray Getz cut through left tackle for
a first down on the 21-yard line. Snyder
and Slusser running hard made it first down on the
seven-yard line. Snyder moved the ball
three yards nearer the goal, but a stubborn Sharon defense, ganged up on Fred Toles when he tried to circle on an end around play and Wolansky tossed him for an 11-yard loss. On the very next play, Getz swept the left
flank and carried to the two-yard line before being downed. With fourth down and two yards needed for a
touchdown, Capt. Snyder, head down, smacked the center of the line and went
through standing up. Getz kicked the
extra point and it was 7-0.
Sharon
received and when three downs lacked a yard and a half of a first down, Wolansky punted to Capt. Red Snyder. The red head caught the ball on his own
20-yard line and almost doing a tight wire act as he raced along the line, ran
straight up the field 80 yards for a touchdown without a hand being laid on
him.
The play came so fast that few saw Snyder’s interference
form as a screen between the Sharon players and
the Massillon
ball carrier. Little blocking was needed
for before the Sharon
gridders could get to him, Snyder was past them and traveling at top speed in
midfield. Massillon fans were hilarious. It was the signal for a rout and would have
resulted in just that were it not for the stout hearts of Dave Stewart’s
boys. They fought back after Getz missed
the extra point from placement, took the kickoff and worked the ball to
midfield where Freddie Toles intercepted Cvelbar’s pass to give Massillon the ball.
Sharon Scores After Fumble
Both teams stopped each others’ scoring efforts until early
in the second quarter when Wolansky got off a good
punt which bounded in front of Capt. Snyder.
Red tried to pick it up on the 15-yard line but the ball rolled out of
his hands and Cvelbar recovered for Sharon on the Tiger one-yard line. On the first play Wolansky
crashed through center for the touchdown and Cvelbar
kicked the extra point. It was a tough
break for Massillon
and Shaorn made the most of it.
Another break went to Sharon
after the following kickoff. The Tigers
marched the ball to midfield where Slusser was
tackled hard while attempting to pass.
He fumbled the ball and O’Brien recovered for Sharon
on the Massillon
31.
The Tigers apparently stemmed the attack until a five-yard
penalty for offside moved the ball up for Sharon
to third down on the 26-yard line. Wolansky and Matthews made a first down by inches on the
21.
There Matthews was turned loose and he carried one tackler
after another until he was finally downed with six on his back on the 14-yard
line. Wolansky,
Matthews and Izenas got a first down on the nine-yard
line and here Sharon
was faced with a problem. The big Pennsylvania backs had
to fight for every yard. In three downs
they got to the one-yard line. Matthews
was given the ball on fourth down. He
moved forward, the lines piled high, but the officials found the ball had gone
over by a few inches. There was tumult
in the Sharon
bleachers. The score was tied
13-13. Wolansky
tried to sneak the extra point over but was met by a fast charging Massillon line.
Only two minutes of the half remained when Wolansky kicked off to Gillom. He got back 11 yards to his 41 when
downed. Slusser
dropped back and protected this time by his fellow backs fired a long pass to
Freddie Toles.
A Sharon player was there to get it but
Freddie went over his head to pull down the ball o n the Sharon 30.
Back Slusser dropped for another pass. This time Toles cut
diagonally across the field, snared the all on the
10-yard line and went over.
The touchdown came so quickly that 10,000 spectators watched in silence
a moment, then let loose with a terrific blast of groans and cheers.
Getz’s attempt to kick the extra point was wide of the
uprights but the Tigers were ahead 19-13 and Sharon could run but one play before
expiration of the first half.
Another March Begins
Both teams came out strong the third quarter and neither
threatened until mid-way in the third period when Snyder on a 10-yard return of
a punt was forced out of bounds on his own 40-yard line. The local eleven didn’t look particularly
dangerous then, but quickly launched its longest offensive of the evening.
Stopped on a sweep around right end, Slusser
hurled a long pass to Gillom for a first down on the Sharon 43. A pass to Getz was a little too high and Slusser and Getz moved the ball within a foot of a first
down. Snyder banged through for extra
yards and a first down on the 31.
There the Massillon
eleven pulled the old Michigan Statue of Liberty out of the bag. With the ends crashing in to block Slusser who dropped back to pass, Getz circled behind him
took the ball off the palm of his hand and pranced to a first-down on the Sharon 20. Slusser hit for
seven yards, but after Getz was thrown for no gain, Snyder tore through center
and ran to the three-yard line before being downed. On the next play he plunged for the
touchdown, Getz’s kick was wide of the post.
That hoisted the Massillon margin to 25-13 and it looked
safe enough until Sharon took the kickoff, moved up the field to its 46-yard
line where Matthews found a hole in the left side of the Tiger line and ran 54
yards for a touchdown. Cvelbar placekicked the extra point and the score in two
minutes had changed to 25-20.
Sharon
was too close so Slusser began throwing again after
the kickoff. He fired a long one to Getz
who caught the ball on the Sharon
30 and ran to the 18-yard line before being tossed out of bounds. Two line plays only gained two yards and Slusser’s pass to Getz on third down dropped into the end
zone. With fourth down and eight to go, Slusser dropped back for another pass. He looked toward Toles
cutting diagonally across the field, then turned and fired to Gillom who was moving diagonally the other way. It was a wobbly pass but Gillom
sprang into the iar at the right time and hauled down
the ball behind the goal line while a Sharon
player made a frantic effort to block it.
Slusser tried to carry the ball
over for the extra point this time but was stopped.
Clendening Starts Drive
Both teams were tiring rapidly as the fourth quarter began
to wane. Then Clendening,
sent in to replace the injured Zimmerman, took Wolansky’s
punt and ran hard down the east side line to the Sharon 22-yard line. He did not know he stepped out of bounds on
the 22 and raced on across the goal with tackler after tackler bouncing off
him.
Snyder found a hole at right guard and ran to a first down
on the two-yard line. Slusser went through the same spot for the sixth and final
touchdown. Again the kick for the extra
point was wide.
You would have thought that would have finished the Sharon team, but Stewart coached teams are typically courageous
elevens and Izenas, sub-fullback, took the kickoff
and ran to the Massillon
22-yard line where he was tackled from behind by Getz after being out in the
clear. The Pennsylvanians in four downs
only advanced the ball three yards and the Tigers took the pigskin and kept it
until the game ended, three plays later.
The two elevens dragged themselves off the field and the Massillon gridders were
too tired to rejoice over their victory.
The 10,000 spectators flooded the gates, piled into their autos and
immediately there was a traffic jam.
Massillon
fans who drove to the game feared a heavy fog on their
way home. It was already descending on
the field in the third quarter but apparently centered on the hill top. Little fog was encountered elsewhere until Canton was reached.
It was a fine night for the return trip. A bright moon made driving easy and fans who
had expected to grope their way in fog were treated instead to a brilliant
display of the Aurora Borealis.
The special train which conveyed the band and 200 fans to
the game arrived in Sharon
ahead of schedule and reached home shortly after 2 a.m.
And did the Massillon
band click! Sharon has no small band,
it won the state championship last year.
Sharon sports writers were unusually enthusiastic over the performance
put on by the Massillon musicians. “Why
that’s better than you see in most of the big universities,” they said. “Boy how they can swing it.”
The bands appeared simultaneously on the field. The Sharon musicians wearing orange and black
cadet uniforms took position on the field and the Massillon band marched
through the ranks both playing in unison.
The Massillon spectators took big appetites with them. The “sold out” sign was hung up in many
restaurants. Schoolboys were sitting
three deep on the stools in one hamburger shop.
Miss Margaret Busse, Massillon’s
acrobatic cheerleader, covered up last night.
It was a bit too frosty for the tights.
The drum major lassies strutted as usual but made good use of blankets
when off the field.
Occasionally fists flew in the stands and police found it
necessary to escort a fan to the gates now and then, but all in all this crowd
was unusually orderly, especially considering how tense the game was and
Massillon people returned home praising the sportsmanship of fans and police of
the Pennsylvania city.
One In A Million
Massillon Pos. Sharon
Toles LE Wild
Lucius LT Dunn
Russell LG Bruno
Martin C Sasala
Houston RG Lysohir
McMichael RT Kalwarski
Gillom RE Colclaser
Slusser QB Wolansky
Getz LH Marstellar
Zimmerman RH Matthews
Snyder FB Cvelbar
Score by periods:
Massillon 13 6 12 6 37
Sharon 0 13 7 0 20
Substitutes:
Massillon – Henderson, lg; Clendeing, rh.
Sharon – Izenas, fb; Brickley,
le; O’Brien, lt.
Touchdowns:
Massillon – Snyder 3; Toles; Gillom; Slusser.
Sharon – Matthews 2; Wolansky.
Points after touchdown:
Massillon – Getz
(placekick).
Sharon – Cvelbar 2
(placekick).
Referee – Allison (Beaver).
Umpire – Gross (New Philadelphia).
Head Linesman – Landis (Cleveland).
Statistics
Mass. Sharon
First downs 13 4
Passes 8 2
Passes completed 5 0
Passes intercepted by 1 0
Passes incomplete 3 1
Yards gained passing 123 0
Yards gained rushing 191 174
Total yards gained 314 174
Yards lost rushing 11 18
Net yards gained 303 156
Punt, kickoff returns 174 189
Kickoffs 7 4
Average kickoffs 42 37
Punts 4 6
Average punts 28 34
Fumbles 3 2
Lost ball on fumble 2 1
Times penalized 3 3
Yards penalized 25 25
INDIVIDUAL BALL CARRYING
Player Times Yds. Ave.
Carried
Gained
Snyder 20
98 4.9
Slusser 9 33 3.6
Getz 13
60 4.6
Toles
1 11 0.0
Wolansky
3 4 1.3
Matthews 14
96 6.8
Marstellar 19 40 2.1
Cvelbar
5 16 3.2
Izena
2 0 0.0