LINEMEN SHOW
GREAT
COURAGE
Break
Visitors’ Morale In First Period Goal Line Stand; None Expected So Large A Score
The heralded invasion of
When
20,000 fans leaned back amazed at the strength of the Massillon forward wall as
it twice weathered goal line stands in the early minutes of the final quarter,
they never believed that the game eventually would turn into a rout that at one
time reached the fast pace of three points a minute.
The Tigers were magnificent,
and the margin of superiority over their stubborn foe of many years was exactly
the same as last year – 40 points.
Who would have thought it
when the first period ended in a scoreless tie, and
the half only 6-0 in the
But the Tigers came out a new
ball team in the second half, marching the kickoff right back 58 yards for a
touchdown, and broke the spirit of the visiting team.
The Aviators appeared to quit
then and there, and that is something new for a team coached by “Dutch” Hoppes. The loss of
a couple of injured players, key men so to speak, may have started it, and
there was little left in the way of opposition to the Tigers from there on in.
They shoved four more
touchdowns over the
It was an improved
More remarkable than the
increased offensive power was the defensive demonstration in the first few
minutes that developed into one of the most courageous bits of line play ever
seen here.
Twice the Tiger forwards
threw back the visitors in the shadow of their goal posts, pushing them back
from the four to the five-yard line on one occasion after they had had four
downs to put it over.
You can hardly get an
argument anywhere now but that this line is the best defensive high school line
in years. All season it has been
throwing opponents backward and seldom yielding an inch of ground. Why in 24 rushes at the Tiger forward wall
last night,
The two boys tackled
viciously and time and again crashed through to throw
The same line also beat down
the visitors offensively, blocking and cutting paths for Fred Blunt, Bob
Graber, Dick Adams, Chuck Holt, and Junior White. It was through its efforts that the backs
were able to roll up net gains of 418 yards from ball carrying.
Their only fault was
inability to hold out the opposition in the early minutes of the game when two
blocked punts by Earl Branfield put the Tigers’ in
the hole. But their goal line stands
made up for it all.
The Tigers were decidedly the
better team the first two periods even though the 6-0 halftime score does not
show it that way.
The blocked punts at the
start got them in a hole and penalties at inopportune times also hurt. In fact, all but 30 second of the entire
first quarter were played in
That was the first flash of
an offense that began reeling off yards as you would run clothes through a
ringer.
The Tigers didn’t get a
touchdown on this attempt but they pushed it over the next time they laid their
hands on the ball and followed with others that stabbed the Aviator line with
lightning rapidity. Once Blunt raced 70
yards to score, again Junior White pranced 66 yards into the promised
land and then there was a 20-yard touchdown pass hurled by
None the less startling was
the perfect peg from
The Aviators manufacture
little in the way of offense. Their net
gain of 17 yards describes their running attack, but they managed to pick up 89
additional yards on six completed passes.
The Aviators had a couple of
light, but speedy backs in McClure and “Bud” Howell, but their linemen couldn’t
turn them loose. McClure barely scales
140 pounds, and looks smaller than that in the dressing room.
“The only way to beat you
fellows is to get faster boys,” was Coach Hoppes’
comment after the game. “I can’t figure
it out – how a team that would hold an opponent to six points the first half
could collapse so completely the second.
A lot of other fans couldn’t
understand it either, but a survey of the visitors’ dressing room after the
game was enough to show that the red and blue took a physical beating as well
as a trimming in points. The boys
appeared tired, despite their apparent good condition. None was believed seriously injured, though
Harry Geltz, a substitute halfback, may have sustained
a fractured rib.
An occasional limp was also
noticeable in the Tiger dressing room.
Don Fuchs, first string center, was among them. Bob Kanney,
substitute guard, had a swollen eye, the result of a hard bump he received in
the face late in the game.
Herman Robinson, one of two
regulars left from last year, who suffered an injured knee the first day of
practice, put on his uniform for the first time last night, but he will be
unable to play for several weeks. The
cast was only removed from the knee Friday.
Mel Knowlton, who was an
assistant Washington high coach for several weeks this spring before accepting
the head job at Steubenville, had his entire staff in the stands to watch the
game. “This years team is faster than
that of last,” Mel contented after the game.
“I don’t know what we can do to stop you next week.” The Tigers play at
The game had its freak plays,
one of which you may not see again in 1,000 football games – a passer
completing a pass to himself. It
occurred in the second half. Bob Graber
threw the ball, a bullet pass that struck an
Getting back to the game, the
hair-raising first quarter created a need for better protection for the
punter. The Tigers moved the ball well
the first time they got it and were inches short of a first down in three
attempts. They decided to punt rather than
chance a mishap on their own 17, but they had the mishap just the same. The left side of the
A five-yard penalty for
offside on the next play put the leather just four yards short of the goal with
four downs to make it in.
Here the Tigers again rose to
the occasion just as they did against
Dick Adams was sent in to
punt for
Holt and Blunt picked up
seven more and Blunt shook himself loose for a dash to
the
This time the
Fumbles and penalties slowed
the game the rest of the second quarter, a 15-yard verdict for holding
nullifying a fine 20-yard run by Blunt.
The second half was nothing
but a touchdown parade. It stated with a
38-yard march after the kickoff featured by Graber’s 20-yard pass to De Mando for a first down on the 10-yard line. It took Blunt only one play to smash through
for the touchdown. Holt kicked the
point.
Howell fumbled on the first
play after the kickoff and Dave Miller was Johnny on the spot for
Held after the next kickoff,
McClure punted to the
Early in the fourth quarter,
a 39-yard pass from Graber to De Mando put the ball
on the five-yard line. Joe was sent over
the goal on an end around play, but the ball was called back and the Tigers
were penalized five. Graber took it over
and Holt kicked the extra point that made it 39-6.
Holt pulled down an
Second and third teams
finished the game for
Bombers Crash
Armour LE Fritz
Paulik LT Andreannl
Miller LG Bard
Fuchs C Ruff
Hill RG Maniho
Weisgarber RT J. Habien
De Mando RE Branfield
Cardinal QB McClure
Graber LH Howell
Blunt RH J. Rogel
Holt FB Artino
Scores by periods
Substitutions:
Frazer; Berger; Profant;
Gibson; Stout; B. Wallace; Dolmos; Power; Kanney;
Willmot;
Heskett; Bamberger; Williams.
Touchdowns – Blunt 3,
Graber 2, White, Armour, Rogel.
Points after touchdown – Holt 3 (placekick),
Referee – Gross.
Umpire – Graff.
Field judge – Hudson.
Headlinesman -- Boone