Tigers
Crush Cathedral Latin 64 – 0 In Opening Game
GREAT BLOCKING
FEATURES VICTORY
Visistors,
In Good Condition, Fight To Finish But Are Unable To
Stem Tiger Advances;
Midst a setting of splendor
that made between 16,000 and 17,000 fans gasp with amazement and enthusiasm,
the Washington high Tigers launched their 1940 football season at Tiger Stadium
Friday evening with a 64-0 triumph over a game Cathedral Latin Lion.
With teams battling, bands
playing, fans cheering and fireworks shooting beneath a peaceful harvest moon,
you could hardly help wondering why the other half of the world had given up
this sort of thing and sent its youth to be killed and maimed in a struggle for
life and death, and when the bands formed the letters USA and played “God Bless
America,” you were thankful that there is not blackout here – that America can
still congregate without fear from rain of death, and that its youth can still
fight its battles on the gridiron.
The 64 – 0 score doesn’t
look like much of a fight, but the Tiger players themselves will tell you the
Lions were hard to move, that they never once gave in.
Perhaps the awe of the
spectacle, the capacity crowd, the impressive opening
ceremonies upset the visitors a bit.
Whatever it was, they played their poorest football the first five
minutes while the Tigers were at their best at the same time to run up a 20 – 0
score and establish a lead that the Latin Lion could not hope to overcome.
With a big, strong line,
charging in front of the pony backs, the Tigers looked the part of another fine
football team. They made errors as any
team will make in an opening night performance, but they beat down what was
supposed to be the toughest high school line in
Line
Stops Latin Offense
It was the charge of the
There was no quitting on the
part of the Lions, however, and they made their strongest defensive showing at
the very end when they tossed the Tigers back for losses totaling 24 yards in
three plays.
Behind their big line, the
Supporting the ball carriers
too was good blocking. When Junior White
got away for his 72-yard run from the statue, young sophomore Charles Holt cut
down the last possible tackler with as pretty a block as you ever saw. Dick Kingham, to whom falls the task of blocking continually was bowling
tacklers over all evening with vicious blocks that put his opponents on the
ground for keeps.
It is blocking of this type
that wins football games, and that is one big reason why the Tigers Friday
evening were able to stretch their consecutive victory string to 24 games.
Three touchdowns were shoved
over the Latin goal in the first quarter, two in the second, three in the third
and two more in the fourth.
Nineteen of the points were made
by inspired and speedy Tiger substitutes, who took over early in the third
period after the score had mounted to 45 – 0.
They finished the game. The
lineup was also half filled with substitutes midway in
the second quarter, but when the third period opened, all the regulars went
back into the game.
Though the visitors failed
to score and made but four first downs, one of them after pass interference
they produced a good back in George Couisineau, a
sophomore, who was up to his neck in the game at all times.
The Tigers had little in the
way of an outstanding star. Horace Gillom carried out his numerous duties well and Coach Paul
Brown after the game let it be known that he was pleased with the running of
substitute Dick Adams, who scored two touchdowns and got away for several nice
gains.
James’ Passing O.K.
An optimistic note also rode
with the passes tossed by Tom James. He
completed one for 50 yards, the ball carrying almost that distance in the air
from the point of throwing. Several
other long ones could as well have been completed, but were dropped by
receivers.
All told the Tigers
completed five of 13 pass for 99 yards.
The
The honor of scoring the
first touchdown fell to “Pokey” Blunt after Ray Getz had passed up the chance
when he dropped James’ well placed pass on the 10-yard line. It came on the second series of plays after
the kickoff. The Lions booted to the
Tigers who got the ball out of bounds on their 33. Blunt made three yards, Gillom
five, and James carried 21 yards to the Latin 38. Blunt advanced the leather six yards closer
and James shot a pass that got into Getz’s hands but bounced out before he
could get a secure hold on the ball. On
the next play, Blunt dashed for a touchdown and Getz kicked the extra point.
Latin again chose to kick
and again the Tigers obtained the ball on their 35. Gillom and James
carried to midfield, where James dropped back, fired to Gillom,
who caught the ball over the Latin safety man’s head and ran 10 yards for a touchdown. Getz’s
placekick split the uprights for another point and the score was 14 – 0.
James kicked off to Mason
who returned 10 yards to his 25-yard line.
On the first play, Getz reached out, speared Mason’s pass on the 35 and
returned to the 30. Blunt took the ball
to the 15-yard line. James moved it up
three yards and Blunt took it over for the touchdown. Getz’s kick for the extra point was low.
The Tigers had to work hard
for their next score that came in the first minute of the second quarter. After overcoming 30 yards in penalties, a
pass from James to Robinson, planted the ball on the seven-yard line and it
took three plays to get it over. Blunt
cutting inside right tackle for the points.
It boosted the score to 26 – 0.
An intercepted pass set the
stage for the next, Gillom hauling in one of Sague’s desperate pegs on the 10-yard line. Interference was ruled on Adam’s following
pass, giving the Tigers a first down on the one-yard line. Gillom went around
left end on a mousetrap to hoist the score to 32 points. Gretz’s kick for
the extra point was again wide.
With the regulars back in
the game, the Tigers scored quickly in the third period. Getz returned Tom McFadden’s kick to his 44
and Blunt ran to a first down on the Latin 41.
Gillom was brought around end and he carried
the mail for 41 yards and a touchdown.
The kick for the extra point was wide.
Leading 38 – 0, Bill Wallace
put the locals in shape for their next points when he pounced on a Latin fumble
on the 35-yard line after the visitors had gained 13 yards on the play. Line plays took the ball to the one-yard
line, where James lugged it over and Getz kicked the extra point.
That was all for the
regulars. They went to the showers and
the rookies took up – and how. Adams
hauled down another of Mason’s passes to give the Tigers the green light, on
the Latin 42-yard line.
A quick kick by Richard
Browne that soared over
Latin got ambitions in the
fourth quarter and tried to make yardage on fourth down deep in its own
garden. John Pizzino
wormed through a hole, however, and tossed Browne for a big loss before he
could kick the ball, gaining the pigskin for the Tigers on the 19-yard
line. Pizzino
made nine yards, lost two and then Adams crashed through for the remaining
distance, leaving Pizzino to buck the 64th
point across.
Coach Brown filled his ranks
with third stringers, and gave all but a few of his players an opportunity to
get in the game.
The Tigers emerged
unscathed. Not a single time out was
taken for injury to a
The Tigers lost 74 yards in
penalties, principally for holding and failing to stop the necessary second on
the shift. Latin only lost five yards in
penalties, for taking too much time in running a play.
First
downs 15 4
Yards
gained passing 99 31
Total
yards gained 556 61
Yards
lost 39 29
Net
yards gained 517 31
Passes
completed 5 3
Passes
intercepted 0 6
Passes
incomplete 8 6
Yards
lost penalties 74 5
Lost
ball on fumbles 0 2
Recovered
own fumbles 2 2
Times
punted 2 3
Average
punts 40 38
Times
kicked off 9 3
Average
kickoff 50 28
Robinson LE Haggerty
L. Cardinal LT Paltani
Wallace LG Hirsch
Appleby C
Russell RG Meter
Broglio RT Fougerousse
Gillom RE McFadden
Kingham QH Reinartz
James LH Mason
Getz RH Sague
Blunt FB Couisineau
Score by
periods:
Substitutions:
Erdley, hb; White, hb; P.
Getz, e; Kanney, e;
Weisgarber, t;
Graber, hb;
Dolmas, t; Holt, qb;
Miller, g; Fuchs, c.
Latin –Lange, t; Phelps, c; Caleb, qb; Bindokas, fb; Egert,
t;
D. Browne, hb; Abood, g; Tercek,
e; Galfidi, t; D’Arcangelo,
e;
Phillips, t.
Touchdowns – Blunt 2,
Gillom 3,
Adams 2, James, White.
Points after
touchdown – Getz 3 (placekicks), Pizzino
(carried).
Referee – Brubaker.
Umpire – Jenkins.
Headlinesman – Hudson.
Field Judge – Graf.
Before 17,000 Amazed Fans
Paul Brown’s State Champs Score At Will
Against Clevelanders In Inaugural Game
CATHEDRAL LATIN’S grid team,
Cleveland champions, either is weaker this year than last….or
For the state championship
Tigers romped to a 64 – 0 triumph over Latin last night before 17,000 fans in
Sixty-four points, and these naturally do not include two brilliantly
staged touchdown plays which were wiped out because of
Coach Paul Brown lifted his
entire varsity team shortly after the second half got under way and never again
returned his regulars to the field. The
change only slowed down but did not stop the Tiger scoring.
Possibly if the announcement
of
Brown started 10 experienced
players and they started scoring right off the bat. Three times in the first quarter – first on a
32-yard line play by Pokey Blunt, then on a 50-yard ground gainer pass play
from Tom James to Horace Gillom, the pass being 30
and the run 20; and then on a triple reverse with Blunt winding up as the
carrier and scampering 20 yards….all within the space of eight minutes.
James’ pass to Blunt set up
the next touchdown, in the second period, and Blunt eventually went over from
the four-yard stripe, after which the Tigers tamed their attack and fiddled
away until half time.
On the third play of the second
half Gillom swept right end for 41-yards and six
points. Minutes later, following a
recovered Latin fumble, James jumped over tackle for the sixth touchdown and
when Ray Getz place-kicked the 45th point the varsity was jerked.
Dick Adams intercepted a
Latin pass and came back to Latin’s 41-yard line from where the
second-stringers went to work to boost the point total. Adams and Junior White collaborated to get to
the three – and from there
And that’s how it stood
until the fourth quarter when in the first minute White swept his left end and
raced 77 yards for the next touchdown to make it 57. That only tied McKinley’s total…
So……
In the second quarter Getz
had gone over from the 19-yard line only to have a holding penalty called, and
not many minutes later James swept his right end from the 10-yard line into pay
territory only to have this one ruled out for the same reason.
Latin had plenty of size,
the only measurement in which the Clevelanders did have an advantage. The Tigers are light, particularly in the
backfield, but their speed is tremendous.
They will simply out race
the opposition to the goal line this season, in the event there is any
opposition encountered before the McKinley classic.
Red Bird’s band established
some sort of new record for first game perfection. Last year Latin’s band gave Massillon’s a run
for top honor and Latin’s team scored 13 points in losing by only 40 – 13. Last night the Tiger show was completely a
Tiger proposition.
Robinson le Haggerty
Cardinal lt Lange
Wallace lg Hirsch
Appleby c
Russell rg Meter
Broglio rt Fougerousse
Gillom re McFadden
Klingham q Cousineau
James lh Mason
Getz rh Sague
Blunt f Reinartz
Substitutions:
White, h; E. Getz, g; Weisgerber, t;
Hill, g; Stout, c; Graber,
h; Dolman, t; Holt, q; Fuchs, c.
Latin – Lange, t; Phelps, c; Prokop, q; Brown, h.
Touchdowns – Blunt 3, Gillom 3, Getz, Adams 2,
James, White.
Extra points – Getz 2 (place kicks), Pizzino (plunge)
Referee – Brubaker.
Umpire – Jenkins.
Linesman – Graf.
Field Judge – Hudson.
POWERFUL TEAM LIFTS LID
WITH IMPRESSIVE WIN OVER
CATHEDRAL LATIN
War, Election
Take Back Seat As Tigers Open Grid Season
A record opening game crowd
of nearly 17,000 has already forgotten Friday night’s 64 – 0 massacre over
Cleveland’s Cathedral Latin and has already turned its attention to next Friday
night’s battle with Weirton, W. Va.
A newcomer to the Tiger
schedule,
A
Tickets
for the
With
the record standing at one down and nine to go, Massillon residents already
have a gleam of the sixth consecutive state championship title in their
eye. It will probably remain a mystery
how a city of 27,000 residents can draw crowds as high as 20,000 to high school
football games.
Newest
event of Friday night’s game was the spangled chorus girl costumes of Band
Director George Bird’s six drum majorettes.
Made by a
Miss
Leeper A Veteran
Only
one of the majorettes, Mary Leeper, is a veteran from
last year. The other five, Betty
Luttrell, Jerry Show, Marjorie Marks, Ann Anania and
Beverly Hanicq, are new.
Bird’s
band, rated as the best in the state, if not the country, will present a
novelty dance act to the music of “Madam Lazonga” at
the
The
Massillon Booster club, enthusiastic organization of