Currence
warns:
beware
of Big Red
By CHUCK HESS, JR.
Independent Sports
Editor
Mike Currence gave Tigertown a warning.
“The best
A crowd of about 10,000 is expected to watch the Big Red
(4-1, 1-0) and the Tigers
(3-2, 1-0) battled in an All-American Conference game at
Paul Brown Tiger Stadium. Plenty of good
tickets are still available, according to WHS ticket officials. Windows at the stadium will open at
ALSO IN action tonight
will be
(4-1, 0-1) on Saturday night.
When told that the Steubers
haven’t scored on the Tigers in seven of the last eight games, Currence replied, “That’s very unusual. I think this
The last time the Big Red came here 4-1 was in 1974. Last year they were 3-2. Both times
The 1972 team came in 5-0 but the Tigers won 12-0.
“
The Big Red was not ranked in the Top Ten in the Ohio High
School Athletic Association’s Region 3 computer poll released Thursday.
“THE STRENGTH of the Big
Red is their defense,” Currence said. “They have eight players returning. In one film I watched their defense get a
touchdown. They literally took the ball
away and scored.”
“Bill Bohren has put a lot of his
good kids on defense and plays three kid both ways. We’re hitting a year when everybody has a lot
of players back.”
Currence picked middle guard
Darrell Soloman (5-9, 205), linebacker Dave Medich
(6-2, 225), tackle Mark Fahey (6-1, 230) and end Tony Zatta (6-0, 190), all seniors, as the toughies.
The key to stopping the offense appears to be halting junior
fullback Bob Rush (5-11, 175), the AAC’s leading
ground gainer.
“He is very quick in hitting the holes and he does well on
the quick pitch,” Currence said. “I watched him on film tear Youngstown North
apart. He’s like Cleveland Benedictine’s
Bob Conwell.”
CONWELL AVERAGED 2.4
yards, picking up 77. Rush has averaged
5.2 yards, picking up 516.
“
“They have some good play action passes and the quarterback
(Sam Baldwin) puts the ball right on receivers’ chests,” Currence
said. “They have dropped some good
passes.”
But the Tigers have worked hard on pass defense this week because
of misreading tendencies that have shown up.
The skipper doesn’t want to get beat by one pass thrown at the right
time.
The specialty teams have come in for some hard work too.
“I WAS disappointed with
those units last week,” he said. “They
weren’t real sharp and ready to field the ball.”
One change will be made in the Tigers’ starting defensive
alignment. Junior Tony Matie (6-0, 210) will get his chance because of an
outstanding performance against Cleveland Benedictine last week.
At stake in this game is the Mayor’s Bucket Trophy. If the Tigers win, the prize will stay here
because the
Tigers beat Big Red 10-0
for
first shutout
By CHUCK HESS, JR.
Independent Sports
Editor
To borrow a trick of the old TV show, “The Wild, Wild,
West,” it was “The Night of the Pass” Friday at Paul Brown Tiger Stadium.
Before 13,891 fans, the largest crowd to see the Tigers play
this season, the Tigers combined their best passing performance with a sixth
straight week of outstanding defense and downed the Steubenville Big Red 10-0.
THE WIN gave the Tigers
undisputed possession of first place in the All-American Conference with a 2-0
mark.
Friday’s win was the fourth straight for
Tiger quarterback Bret Traylor, improving with every game,
completed nine of 16 passes – his best effort – for 117 yards. One went for an 11-yard first quarter
touchdown to end Bob Grizzard.
The Tigers rushed for 100 yards against a huge
The “Tiger Claw Defense” meanwhile held the Big Red to 76
yards on the ground and 54 in the air.
The 1969 contest, played at
BY WINNING Friday night,
the Tigers retired the Mayor’s Bucket Trophy with three wins.
Even though the
“It was the best passing we’ve done, but we dropped some we
should have caught,” Currence said. “When Bret (Traylor) gets the ball to them,
the least they ought to do is catch it.
And then when we caught it we fell down with it. The kids could have walked into the end zone
a couple of times.”
Because
About the defense, Currence enthused,
“It was great! It was the best we’ve
played! I thought they put some pressure
on us from the ends.”
CURRENCE WAS unhappy that
the Tigers had drives stopped at the
“I don’t know whether they tightened up or we didn’t
execute,” Currence said. “We’ll have to analyze it and see what
happened.”
On a second quarter drive which was cut short, Steubenville
linebacker John Adams batted down a fourth down pass intended for halfback Mike
Grove, thus negating a 44-yard pass-run from Traylor to end Mark Pringle.
On an aborted third quarter drive 12 and 16-yard Traylor to
Grove pass-run went out the window. And
then Traylor was tossed for a one-yard loss on fourth and one.
In the fourth quarter a 35-yard Traylor to Grove pass-run
went down the drain when Traylor was thrown for a five-yard loss on fourth and
eight. The first drive followed a
touchback from a punt, the second, a
THE TIGERS’ only
touchdown came with
A 27-yard Traylor to Grove pass-run, with Grove running 19
yards and a 25-yard Traylor to Jay Harper pass-run, with “The Jaybird” flying
23 of those yards, were keys in the drive as was Rich Cleveland’s 11-yard run.
“My player told me we had a piece of that punted ball,” said
Steubenville Coach Bill Bohren. “Therefore, it’s not roughing.”
The Tigers got what Currence
called a big break on the drive which resulted in a field goal.
But back judge Bill Kalapodis
inadvertently blew his whistle. By a
rule change this year the ball had to go back to the previous spot for a
re-kick.
“I KNEW he had blown the
whistle and he wasn’t going to call it but the other guy heard it,” Currence said.
Bohren said, “It took the ball
away from us and gave it to
On the second punt Grizzard made a
fair catch and seven plays later Hardwick kicked his 20-yard field goal from an
angle to the right with
Dave Medich tried a 41-yard field
goal kick. It fell short.
Defensive end Tony Zatta blocked
Westover’s punt from the
THE BIG Red got to the
Tigers’ 32 in the third quarter but tailback Billy Ware failed, by inches, to
make three yards on fourth down.
“He tried an option and got ahead of the stick but they
brought the ball back,” Bohren said. “He got knocked down parallel to the line of
scrimmage.”
Currrence said, “I thought he hit
and bounced ahead.”
After a punt late in the fourth quarter
Bohren thought his
Ends – Kline, Edwards, Sweeney, James, Constantini, Lockett, Andresen, Hays.
Tackles – Medich, Michalak, Fahey.
Guards – Adams, Becker, Zada.
Center – Barrett.
Quarterback – Baldwin.
Halfbacks – Ware, L. Brown, T. Brown,
Thorn, Stevenson.
Fullback – Rush.
Middle guard – Solomon.
Defensive halfbacks –
Kick holder – Bryan.
Ends – Clendening, B. Grizzard, Pringle, Chovan, Engler, Sweterlitsch.
Tackles – Laase, Toles, Matie, Dennison, Kovacsiss, Baughman, Namanny, Tournay, Daniels.
Guards – Hauser, Lauber,
Berquist, Baus.
Center – Ramsey, Lutz.
Quarterbacs – Traylor, Offenbecher.
Halfbacks – Grove, Harper, Carpenter.
Fullbacks – Cleveland, Nagle.
Middle guard – Dorsey.
Linebackers – Border, Walterhouse.
Defensive halfbacks – Grizzard,
Jones, Lash, Letcavits, Henderson, Nagle.
Kicker – Hardwick.
Punter – Westover.
SCORING SUMMARY
M – Bob Grizzard, 11 pass from Bret Traylor (Mike Hardwick kick);
M – Hardwick, 20 field goal.
OFFICIALS
Referee – Al Francesconi.
Umpire – Nick Frascella.
Head Linesman –
Field Judge – Frank Wahl.
Back Judge – Bill Kalapodis.
ATTENDANCE –
13,891.
GRIDSTICK
M S
First downs rushing 5 6
First downs passing 7 1
First downs penalties 1 2
Total first downs 13 9
Yards gained rushing 128 121
Yards lost rushing 28 45
Net yards gained
rushing 100 76
Net yards gained
passing 177 54
Total yards gained 277 130
Passes completed 9-16 2-8
Passes intercepted by 1 0
Yards on passes Intercepted 31 0
Kickoff average (yards) 3-42.3 1-40.0
Kickoff returns (yards) 0 49
Punt average (yards) 2-39.0 4-31.0
Punt returns (yards) 1 0
Had punts blocked 1 0
Fumbles 2-5 5-1
Yards penalized 4-47 6-43
Touchdowns passing 1 0
Total number of plays 52 56
Total time of
possession