MASSILLON’S 74-0 TRIUMPH AMAZES OVER 20,000 FANS
Cathedral Prep Takes First Local Bow Saturday Afternoon
Meeting Ashtabula in Stadium;
Colonels Invade Sharon Friday Night
By Charles Haughney
STILL stunned, dazed and
unbelieving of what had been its role in the most astounding chapter in the
history of local scholastic football, the task of picking up the pieces of
East’s shattered Scarlet and Grey gridiron machine was begun today to carry out
a city series assignment against Tech’s Centaurs Friday night in the Stadium.
The Warriors, while what was
estimated at a record shattering throng of over 20,000 sat, stood and hung
pop-eyed around the concrete banks of the Stadium Saturday night, went down to
the worst defeat ever suffered in 20 years of campaigning – a 74 to 0 score
rolled up by Massillon’s mighty Tigers.
Again the Massillon line with its
brilliant charge and stonewall defense, was an outstanding factor in the
Tigers’ big victory. Most noticeable of
all from an offensive standpoint, was the passing attack which accounted for
five of the touchdowns.
The percentage of
completions, 9 of 21 was not particularly impressive but the fact that five of
the pegs scored touchdowns tells a different story. Two passes were intercepted, 10 others were
grounded.
East, for some unknown
reason, did not take to the air until the last period. The Warriors tried 11 passes, but only
completed one for a gain of seven yards.
For the first minute of the
game, it appeared that the inspired East team might give the Tigers a busy
evening. Ray Getz only moved a couple of
yards with the kickoff before he was downed.
Tom James smashed at right tackle, the same play that doomed Warren a
week ago, but he was met hard by Erie tacklers and
gained but two yards. Fred Blunt poked
his way through for six, but with fourth down coming up, Horace Gillom dropped back and lofted the ball to the Erie 34-yard
line. That was one of three times the
Tigers failed to score when they got the ball.
Pass interceptions halted their other two efforts. The Warriors moved the ball up four yards on
three attempts and Ed Skovron punted to Tom James who
caught the leather on the 20 and brought it back to his 34.
James Gets Going
There Massillon began to
move. On the second play James shook himself
loose and was in the open when Bill Crotty brought
him down from behind on the 27-yard line while he was staggering, trying to
regain his balance. It was a run of 36
yards. James and Getz moved the ball to
the 17 and Blunt on his second attempt, went through the Warrior line as though
fired from a cannon, to score standing up.
Getz kicked the extra point.
The 7-0 score was the lowest
first period score of the season, but it only missed being 14-0 by a play, for
on the first play of the second period, Blunt plunged over from the one foot
line for a touchdown that ended a drive from the 13-yard line where Eli Broglio, swarthy tackle, had covered an Erie fumble.
The Tiger attack reached
devastating proportions and the heavier Erie team was
completely demoralized thereafter. The
Warriors received, but on the first play, Skovron
fumbled, and John Hill, who had substituted for Jim Russell while the latter
was getting some sideline instruction, was on the bottom of the pile on the
East 39-yard line. The Warriors closed
in to stop the Tiger ball carriers so James eased back and fired a long shot to
Herman Robinson who made a fine catch and raced over the goal for the 20th
point. Getz missed the placekick.
The Warriros
received and when they stopped, Skovron attempted to
punt. Russell crashed through and
blocked the ball. It fell into the arms
of Robinson who raced over the goal for his second touchdown in 60 seconds. Getz planted the 27th point
between the uprights.
East earned its only first
down after the following kickoff when Skovron and
Fran Lininger gained 12 yards on two plays. The drive was stopped on the Warrior 41,
however and Skovron’s punt to the Massillon 24 was the
signal for another Tiger march. Gillom, Blunt and James carried the leather to midfield,
where James faded back and fired a long pass that Gillom
caught on the East 14 and ran for a touchdown.
Getz’s kick was wide of the goal posts.
When Erie failed to
make its yardage after the following kickoff, Skovron
punted to James who returned brilliantly from the 30 to the 49-yard line. He ran to a first down on the 31, passed to
Robinson for a first down on the nine-yard line and followed it with a pass to Gillom for a touchdown, Gillom
taking the ball in the corner of the field.
Getz kicked the 40th point.
Another Touchdown
The Tigers received at the
start of the second half and began moving from their 34. A pass to Robinson was good for 14 and Getz
took the ball from James on a Statue of Liberty for another
first on the 35. Getz and James took the
ball to the seven-yard line, where James pegged it to Robinson for a
touchdown. Getz kicked goal and four Massillon subs entered
the game.
No more scores were made in the third period but the
Tigers’ were well on their way at the end of the quarter, having marched from
their 35 to the East six-yard line when the period ended. Pizzino in two
smacks at the line put the ball on the one-yard line and Adams
bucked it over. Pizzino
kicked the extra point and it was 54-0.
Fred Cardinal had blocked a punt and Gordon Appleby had covered to put
the Tigers in position for the score.
Another blocked punt put the locals in position for their next
touchdown. This time it was Pizzino who drove through the East line and stopped the
ball, Keve Bray covering for Massillon
on the 13-yard line. Junior White moved
it up two yards and Pizzino on four attempts took it
over and kicked the extra point.
Hard plunging by Chuck Holt
and a 13-yard run by Adams brought the ball on the next attempt to the East 31. There Holt added seven more and White circled
left end for 24 yards and a touchdown. Pizzino’s kick was wide.
The last Massillon touchdown
came with the third team in the game.
Having stopped the Warriors’ on the ground and in the air the third stringers
got the ball on the East 44. Frank Erdley passed to Power for a first down on the 34 and came
right back with a second peg to Bob Graber for a first on the 19. Erdley and Holt
advanced it to the 10 where Erdley dropped back and
pegged to Dallas Power for a touchdown. Holt
plunged the 74th and final point across.