Blunt
Registers Only Touchdown
19,500 Fans
Pack Stands to See
By Luther Emery
The six points represent a tremendous effort by the veteran
The Great Show
So the Tigers won 6-0, a thrill packed victory that was
commensurate with the thrilling performance by the Weirton and Tiger bands that
made your spine tingle with patriotism and love for a country in which people
of all races and nationalities will rub elbows and rise as one in a salute to
America.
You asked for them, and you are going to get them – close
scores. There will be no parading out of
the gates at the end of the half this year – there was none last night.
Right down to the last five seconds the teams battled and
the result hung in the balance to the very last play.
Weirton Passes Just Miss the Mark
Twice in the last minute, once with five seconds remaining
to be played,
But Kevie Bray, who played a fine
defensive game all evening, leaped high in the air to pull down one of Guido De
Veechis’ long passes.
Six inches higher and he couldn’t possibly have reached it and it would
have been an easy catch for Pete Zinaich, Weir
quarterback. Again with only time left
to run a play, a pass to Kraina was a bit short. Had he caught it, he too, would have crossed
the goal.
It was the first time since the
Tiger football lovers have been accustomed to seeing the
kill in the first quarter, and have turned out in record crowds despite their
protests of large scores.
Things will be more interesting from a rivalry standpoint
this season, judging from last night’s game, and the stands should be crowded most
of the season, with neighbors and opponents bringing their dollars, hoping to
be on hand when the Massillon record ends.
But this year’s Tiger team is going to take a lot of
hammering before it ever goes down. Last
night’s games was the first for 10 members of the
starting lineup, and although there were noticeable weaknesses, they were not
flaws but what can be corrected with more attention and experience.
There’s the making of a good team there and don’t sell them
short. “We learned a lot tonight,” Coach
Houghton said after the game, “and we will be out to change things around next
week.”
Faults Easy To Correct
Most noticeable was the weakness of the secondary against
passes, poor ball handling, partially accountable to uncertain passing from center,
and jittery fingers.
The coaches should have no great difficulty overcoming all
three and when they do – watch the score mount.
The ball handling caused frequent interruptions in the
timing that were just sufficient to throw the offense off balance. Coach Houghton had seen it coming. He expressed the belief as early as Monday
that his team was going a bit stale.
Apparently it reached its peak a week ago and had been sliding backward
since. “That one will do us all a lot of
good,” he said.
The Tiger team was under more pressure last night than any
eleven in the history of
Teams Gunning for Them
The players knew too that with the loss of 10 of their 1940
starters and their entire coaching staff every team on the schedule would point
to overthrow them. These conditions,
too, may have been part of the cause for jittery fingers that lost the ball
four times on fumbles and slowed the offense with bobbles before the ball
carrier could pick up his blockers.
But the Tigers got by last night and beat a toughie,
too. A team that lived
up to the prediction of being one of the hardest marks on the schedule.
The Red Riders were high for the game. They tackled fiercely and hit hard, and on
the admission of their own coach are a vastly improved ball team over that of
last year. “We have spirit this year,”
said Carl Hamill.
“Of course we wanted to win badly and we nearly got our touchdown with
those last minutes passes, but we don’t mind losing to you. I think both teams are good teams and are the
kind that will improve as the season ages.”
The game produced what the Siegfried and Maginot
lines were supposed to do in this second World War. It was a battle between two defensive
bulwarks that would smear gains with counter attacks that frequently ended in
net losses.
Good Defensive Team
The Tigers in all their championship years never looked
better defensively than they did last night save for their forward pass
defense. The line charged hard, tackled
fiercely and held
This line will absorb a lot of beating. It will be to the Tigers what a good pitcher
is to a baseball team, and may be able to make up for the deficiencies of the
offense.
Guido De Veechis was a good
halfback. He was unable to play in the
Tiger game last year because of injuries but was picked out at that time by
Paul Brown in a scouting trip as the outstanding ball carrier on the Red Rider
team. He ran hard and fast but was held
to the low average of one yard per ball carrying attempt. Fans feared he might break loose at any
moment, and he was just that dangerous, but the Tiger linemen never let him get
away.
It may have been smart football on the part of individual
players but more than likely it was the result of careful planning by Coach Hamill, that the Red Riders appeared to know where the
Tigers were moving all the time and what to do about it. The
Bray Save the Day
To Bray, a lean junior assigned the
task of backing up the line, goes credit for saving the ball game, for
Early in the game he pulled down one of De Veechis’ passes on the 10-yard line. Had that one connected there’s no telling
what the result might have been for it came on the Riders’ first series of
plays.
Late in the game he made an even greater interception, after
committing the unpardonable mistake of allowing the receiver to get behind
him. Bray saved his skin with a leaping
catch on the nine-yard line that would have been a sure-fire touchdown for
Offensively neither team had anything to crow about.
The local team had the edge in punting and through two fine
boots by Dick Adams, and a defense that seized the advantage,
the Tigers worked themselves out of a hole they got into on a fumble by Bob
Graber on the third play of the game.
It took a period and a half to do it, but a booming, 49 yarder grounded the pigskin
back on the Weir 18-yard line and forced the Riders into their own back yard
the rest of the half.
The Tigers never threatened the first half. In fact, if you want to know the cold truth,
they only made one first down to
In the second half it was a different story. The Tigers showed improvement from the start
of the third period until their offense took on new strength. The blockers hit harder and a well-placed
punt by
With their backs to the goal,
The Tigers staged one other offensive effort in the last
quarter, but only got to the 30-yeard line when
Next week the local eleven will face
A Close Shave
Bray LE Torchip
Paulik LT
Miller LG
Fuchs C
Hill RG
Weisgarber RT
De Mando RE
Cardinal QB P. Zinaich
Graber LH De Vecchio
White RH J. Kraino
Blunt FB R. Kraino
Score by Periods
Substitutions –
Touchdown – Blunt
Referee – Slutz
Umpire – Gross
Head linesman – Schill
Field judge -- Howell