Second Half Splurge
PELLEGRINI SCORES TWO
TOUCHDOWNS
Washington High Football
Team Scores Victory In First Game of 1943 Season Before Surprisingly Large
Crowd Of Over 13,000
By Fred J. Becker
Independent Sports Editor
Rolling again are
those Tigers of Washington high school.
Kept away from pay dirt during the first two periods and rather badly
jolted by a determined enemy offensive in the opening minutes of the battle,
Coach Elwood Kammer’s young orange and black warriors came surging back in the
final two periods Friday night at Tiger stadium to roll up two touchdowns, a
point after touchdown and an automatic safety through the medium of a blocked
punt to defeat a hard-fighting, courageous Canton Lincoln high team 15 to 0 in
their opening combat of the 1943 scholastic football season before a crowd that
passed the 13,000 mark.
It was a victory No.
1 in a string which Massillon’s young Tigers hope to roll up to 10 before the
end of November and the start of a new series of triumphs which they hope will erase
the memory of the Canton McKinley defeat last November when a Massillon streak
that had mounted to 52 games without a defeat was snapped by a 35-0 Bulldog
triumph.
Hard Fought Ball Game
It was a tough ball
game from start to finish. Both teams
put everything they had into it and not until the fourth quarter was well under
way did the Tigers hold the upper hand and a margin sufficiently large to
permit their supporters to take a free and easy breath. It was a well deserved victory for the
Tigers and a defeat without disgrace for Junie Ferrall’s Lincoln Lions.
The lads from the
city which annually produces Massillon’s biggest gridiron rivals fought their
hearts out and the local lads will not meet many teams during the next two
months able to match the Cantonians in defensive ability. A brick wall wouldn’t be much harder to dent
than the defense which the Lions showed last night.
Those who witnessed
the game know now that Coach Kammer was not just doing a lot of talking when he
said the Lions would be about the toughest foe any Tiger team had ever been
called upon to face in an opening engagement.
The Lions proved Friday night that every word Kammer said was true.
Tigers Rough In Spots
They were hard to
beat – mighty hard, in fact, and in chalking up a 15 to 0 triumph over the east
enders the Tigers are deserving of a lot of credit. Only a hard-driving physically fit team could have turned the
trick and the Tigers were that kind of a ball club last night. Sure they made mistakes, sure they didn’t
complete one pass all night and both on offense and defense they were rough in
spots but always remember that the Tiger team last night was one of the
youngest to ever represent Washington high school, but they are youngsters with
a mighty fine fighting spirit and now that they have had their baptism of fire
they’ll be a better ball club and some of the mistakes made last night will not
occur next week or in the weeks to come.
The Tigers very
definitely have possibilities and they’ll get better as the season grows older.
A surprisingly big
crowd, one which surpassed even the expectations of the Tigers’ most optimistic
supporters, sat in on last night’s engagement and were treated to a really fine
football game, a contest that was interesting all the way and a battle royal
from the opening kickoff to the final blast of the referee’s whistle.
Two beautiful runs
of 21 and 29 yards respectively by Romeo Pellegrini, a swarthy hard hitting
junior, aided and abetted by splendid interference, brought home the bacon for
the Tigers. Another two points were
added on an automatic safety when quarterback Glenn Keller blocked a Canton
punt, driving the ball back beyond the end zone.
There were no
outstanding stars on the Massillon team last night. Every boy gave the best he had while he was in the game. The Tiger line acquitted itself in fine
shape. It had a hard customer to handle
in Captain Mike Rejina of the Lions, a big, bruising back who could run and
plunge and around whom the Canton offensive was built but they stopped Mike
before he got too troublesome, even though in addition to his running ability
he proved himself to be a capable southpaw passer and kicker.
Pellegrini Shines On Offense
Pellegrini
spearheaded the Massillon attack. He
got away for a lot of fine gains and his two touchdown gallops were beautiful
to watch. Defensively such boys as
Capt. Bob Wallace, Bob Williams, R.C. Arrington, and Henry Mastriann performed
in a highly creditable manner.
Although its forward
passing attack failed to click, not one in seven attempts being good, the
Tigers held a 12 to 6 advantage over the Lions in first downs. The Tigers gained a total of 203 yards while
the Lions were held to 146 yards.
Lincoln completed four passes out of 11 for 59 yards and had one intercepted. The Tigers fumbled five times, and recovered
two.
The Lions, fortified
by three practice games with other schools, began to get troublesome right from
the opening kickoff and threw a big scare into the orange and black camp before
being halted on the Massillon 10.
Early Lincoln Splurge
The visitors
received, Arrington kicking out of bounds with the Lions putting the ball in
play on their 35.
Right away Capt.
Rejina and Jim Watson began to make life miserable for the Tigers and in a
series of end sweeps and line smashes carried the ball deep into Massillon
territory. It looked quite dismal for
the Tigers for a few minutes but they managed to pull themselves together and
repel the invaders on the Massillon 10 yard line. Then the Tiger offensive began to move and three first downs in
succession carried the ball to Massillon’s 45 yard line.
Here the march
slowed down and Pellegrini attempted a pass.
It was intercepted by Watson on the Lions’ 35. This time, however, the Tigers stopped young Mr. Rejina and he
was forced to punt soon after the second quarter began. His kick went out on the Massillon 34 but
the Tigers couldn’t go anywhere and Tom Jasinski booted one to Rejina who was
downed on his 44. Once again the Tigers
held and when Cheyney attempted a pass Don Willmot snared it on his 27.
Here it was that
young Pellegrini shifted into high and turned loose an exhibition of running
that before the evening was over was destined to bring victory to the Tigers.
Lugging the leather
on smoothly working reverses around his right side, Pellegrini stepped off
gains of 14, nine, 15, and 18 yards to carry the ball to Lincoln’s 12 yard
line. Here the Tiger march bogged down
and was wiped out completely when Glenn Keller fumbled and a flock of Lions
covered the ball on the visitors’ 17.
After making a first down Rejina was forced to punt and once gain the
Lions got a break when Pellegrini fumbled the kick and Bill DeGarmo recovered
for Lincoln on the Massillon 30.
Massillon, however, held and took possession of the ball a few seconds
before the second quarter ended.
Pellegrini Hits Pay Dirt.
Massillon received
to open the third period and after an exchange of punts set in motion the
offensive thrust that produced the first Tiger points. Rejina punted out of bounds on the Massillon
47. Mastriann hit the line for four,
then made it a first down. Keller made
two and Wallace one before Pellegrini set sail for six before being forced out
of bounds. Mastriann made it a first
down on Lincoln’s 21. Here the Lions
took time out to talk it over but on the next play Wallace flipped the ball to
Pellegrini on another reverse and the Tiger halfback, with good blocking ahead
of him raced around Canton’s left end for 21 yards and into the promised land. He scored the extra point on a dash through
the line and Massillon fans began to breathe easier and tell each other that it
was a pleasant evening after all, even though a bit chilly.
The touchdown put
new confidence into the Tigers and they began to smack Mr. Rejina around quite
lustily, so much in fact that he began to lose some of his effectiveness. A fumble by Vic Turkall gave Lincoln the
ball on its 21 but set the stage for the safety. Rejina lost 10 on a bad pass from center and when he attempted to
punt his team out of danger, Glenn Keller broke through and blocked the kick,
sending the ball beyond the end zone and giving Massillon two points on an
automatic safety.
Canton kicked from
its 20 and Turkall brought the ball back to the Lions 45 as the period
ended. With Pellegrini, Mastriann, and
Wallace sparking the Tigers in a steady march toward the Canton goal the
Massillonian’s soon were within striking distance of another score shortly
after the fourth quarter opened. But
with their goal line threatened the Lions put on a brilliant stand that
shattered the Tiger march inches away from the goal line.
With the ball on
Canton’s seven yard line, Mastriann plunged to the one-yard marker. He was stopped inches away from the goal on
his next try only to see the ball go back to the six because the Tigers were
offside. Wallace was tossed for a one
yard loss but Mastriann made two on his next try and Pellegrini drove to the
one yard line with fourth down coming up.
Mastriann tried for the score but was smothered without gain by the
aroused Lincoln Lion line.
Prize Play Of Game
Then Rejina punted
from behind his goal line and here came the prize play of the game and
Massillon’s second touchdown. Taking
the ball on Canton’s 29, Pellegrini twice eluded tacklers who had a hold of him
but couldn’t floor him. Then the Tiger
speedster set sail to his left, racing toward the sideline as a wall of
interference, that formed, as if by magic and which must have included every
member of the Tiger team, completely blotted out the white jerseyed Lions and
permitted Pellegrini to scamper the remainder of the distance unmolested for
the touchdown. Wallace’s attempted
place kick failed.
With practically all
Massillon second stringers in the lineup the hard-to-beat Lions made one more
serious threat to score late in the quarter.
It came when Rejina tossed a long pass to Lessig who was pulled down on
the Massillon 40 after an overall gain of 40 yards. Kammer rushed his first stringers back into the battle and on the
first play Willmot intercepted a Rejina pass to erase the Canton threat. The game ended shortly after with Lincoln
again in possession of the ball but not going anywhere.
There may have been
some of us in Massillon who thought the Tigers would be a better club with more
speed but Junie Ferrall, the Lincoln coach, thinks they have plenty of
speed. Chatting in the Canton dressing
room after the game Ferrall declared the Tigers were faster than any team his
Lions played last year, even faster, he said, than Lorain, the only outfit to
halt the Lions in 1942.
Calls Local Team Fast
“That Massillon team
looked awfully good out there tonight,” he said. “They handled the ball exceptionally well and they were plenty
fast.”
None of his boys
sustained any serious injuries. They
were a bit downcast because they had their hearts set on whipping the
Tigers.
Over in the Tiger
dressing room a jubilant scene was taking place as the happy Tigers celebrated
their initial triumph.
Of course Kammer was
not surprised at the fight put up by the Lions. He had seen just that kind of a game coming up for the past two
weeks and he was glad his boys were able to emerge on top.
“You kids played a
credible game tonight,” he told the boys, “but you need lots more work. We didn’t complete a pass and we need a
passing attack that will function if our ground offense is going to get
anywhere. Your good physical condition
was a big factor in your victory.
Victory No. 1
Massillon – 15 pos. Lincoln
Willmot L.E. Lessig
Arrington L.T. Wilkins
Tongas L.G. Manly
Williams C DeGarmo
Gable R.G. White
Berger R.T. Robertson
Jasinski R.E. Heckaman
Keller Q.B. Martelli
Pellegrini H.B. Watson
Wallace H.B. Cheyney
Mastriann F.B. Rejina
Score by quarters:
Massillon 0
0 9 6 – 15
Touchdown:
Pellegrini, 2
Points after touchdown: Pellegine, (plunge)
Safety:
Keller
Referee: Gross; Umpire: Graf;
Headlinesman Long;
Field Judge Rupp.
Substitutes:
Massillon – Profant, Heltzel, Belch, Turkall, Luke, Parsittie, Sedjo,
Pedrotty, Clark, Green, Richards, Cicchinelli, Ielsch.
Lincoln – Beatty, P. Permar, Hartline, J. Permar,
Shriver, Hayden, Pelligrino, Kendig, Oberlin, Miller, Latimer.
Statistics
Tigers Lincoln
Total first downs 12 6
Yards gained by
rushing 232 87
Yards lost by rushing 32 28
Net yards gained by
rushing 210 59
Forward passes
attempted 7 11
Forward passes
completed 0 4
Yards gained by
passing 0 59
Total net yardage
rushing &
passing 210 118
Passes had
intercepted 0 1
Number of punts 5 7
Average distance of
punts 34 28
Punts blocked 0 1
Number of kickoffs 3 2
Average distance of
kickoffs 24 32
Number of fumbles 5 0
Times ball lost on
fumbles 2 0
Number of penalties
against 2 2
Yards lost by
penalties 20 20
Open Meeting For Tiger Fan
The Massillon
Tiger Booster club will
hold its second
meeting Monday evening
at 8 o’clock in
the auditorium of
Washington high
school. It will be another
open meeting
and all Massillon football fans,
men and women
are invited to attend.
Because the
Tigers won the opening game
against Canton
Lincoln 15 to 0 Friday night,
the Booster
club gathering will have cause for
celebration and
a rousing meeting is in prospect.
Coach Elwood
Kammer will be on hand to
give the fans a
detailed report on the opener
and to tell
them something about the team’s
plans for the
Akron West game here next Friday.