Offenbecher
does it
to Pups again
BY BOB STEWART
Repository Sports Editor
It was a case
of deja vu,
as Offenbecher
threw for two.
Massillon won
again, of course.
The '10‑run
rule' was not in force!
MASSILLON ‑ The Lord giveth. The Massillon Tigers taketh away!
Massillon
High quarterback Brent Offenbecher turned the 83rd high school football classic
against McKinley Senior High into an aerial circus in the final six minutes of
the game to wipe out a 10‑0 deficit and give the Tigers a 13‑10
victory before 21,592 at Paul Brown Tiger Stadium Saturday afternoon.
Offenbecher,
the 6‑foot‑1, 175‑pound senior who last year passed for two
TDs and ran for another in the Tigers 21‑0 win in Canton, gave the
McKinley followers an unwanted rerun.
Only
this year it was in more heartbreaking.
McKinley
had nearly blown the Tigers off the field in the first half. But in the end,
the Bulldogs just blew the game in the waning minutes.
Not
only Offenbecher's passes helped beat the Bulldogs. It was the McKinley passes
which really put the Pups down the tubes, the last two of which were
intercepted by the Tigers.
So
for one more year, the McKinley fans went home mumbling. Not since 1968 have
the Pups won here in the Tigers' lair, and the Massillon win was its third
straight over the Bulldogs and its seventh in the last nine games.
But
there was no clock malfunction this year. The timepiece ticked to perfection.
The officiating was adequate, and no flag felled the visitors. So for the
vanquished, only one villain remained ‑ the coach.
The
second‑guessers were out in force for McKinley's Coach John Brideweser's
decision to throw the ball on first‑and‑15 from the Pups' own 22
with 5:20 left in the game and the Bulldogs leading 10‑6.
"We
had to maintain ball control," said Brideweser in answer to the inevitable
question.
Tigers dump
Bulldogs
"We
had to get the first down, and, after we drew the motion penalty and had a
first‑and‑15, I thought we needed to hit the pass."
McKinley's
Dave Seaman, the junior quarterback who stepped in at mid‑season, saw his
aerial tipped by Tiger tackle Harry Foster and grabbed off by junior linebacker Tim Reese in a diving
catch just before the ball hit the ground at the McKinley 31.
Offenbecher
then threw three straight quick lookin Passes, a 14‑yarder to Curtis
Strawder, a 10‑yarder to Martin Guszetta and then the winning TD of 7
yards again to Strawder, the amazing pass‑eating machine who finished a
two‑year career with a record 68 catches for 1,072 yards. Saturday he
caught eight for 92 and both TDs.
It
was not a bad call," said Massillon coach Mike Currence of Bridey's first‑down
pass.
"They
needed the yardage and the first down, and‑they might not have been able
to get it running," he said.
But
the Pups took their 10‑point lead mostly by ripping through the Massillon
defensive line on the ground.
In
the first half McKinley gained 71 yards in 27 rushes, while holding the Tigers
to a net yards rushing of "minus‑11."
But
despite the running of the Pups, they had to get a big break to get in the end
gone.
Massillon's
leading rusher this season, Jeff Beitel, fumbled on the first play after a Todd
Maragas punt, and McKinley's Tony Floyd covered at the Tiger 16.
Six
running plays later Brantley Kelly crashed in from the 2‑yard‑line
and John Grimsley kicked the conversion to put the Pups on top 7‑0 with
less than four minutes left In the half.
McKinley
moved the ball 55 yards in 11 plays to get Grimsley's 22‑yard field goal
with 9:29 left in the game. That drive was keyed by Seaman's 28‑yard pass
to Doyle Lewis.
Lewis,
whose catch came on his only offensive play of the game, was made at the seven
between two Massillon defenders. He just out‑jumped them. But a motion
penalty put the Pups back at the 19, and three runs got but seven yards, and
they settled for the three.
Sam
Hill's 35‑yard return of the ensuing kickoff put the ball at the Tigers'
43, from where Offenbecher directed his team to the end zone in seven plays,
hitting Strawder an the 12‑yard TD. It was his fifth completion in that
drive.
After
Massillon's go‑ahead TD, Seaman unloaded from his 29 and a broken pass
pattern by his receiver allowed Darren Longshore to intercept at the 43 with
3:25 remaining. Longshore fell catching the ball, and then leaped up and ran
off the field holding the bail high. The result was a brief bench‑clearing
brawl, but the police, sheriff's deputies and coaches restored order rather
quickly, and Massillon resumed running out the clock.
Offenbecher's
final pass of the day, a 14‑yard completion to Strawder, naturally, came
on third‑and‑10 with 1:28 left and sent the McKinley fans scurrying
to the parking lot.
Offenbecher
completed 9 of 9 for 95 yards in the fourth quarter, giving him 17 of 20 for,
the day for 177 yards. He finally has completed his career at Massillon, with
more than a mile‑and‑a‑half in yards passing, and virtually
all the passing records in the Tigers school record book.
Massillon
finished with an 9-0-1 overall record and won the All‑American Conference
with a 4‑0‑1 mark. McKinley finished 7‑2 overall and 4‑1
in the AAC.
Tiger, Bulldog Lineups
TIGERS
Offense
QUARTERBACK: 14 Brent Offenbecher (Sr., 6‑1. 175);
FULLBACK: 43 Tom Gehring (Sr., 5‑10, 171), 16 Wally Neff (Jr., 5-8, 172),
49 Sam Hill (Jr., 5‑6, 160); HALFBACKS: 45
Jeff Beitel (Sr., 5‑7, 158), 22 Bill Beitel (Jr., 5‑7, 148);
ENDS: 42 Curtis Strawder (Sr., 5‑10, 153), 13 Ron Wright (Sr., 5‑9,
173), 25 Marty Guzzetta (Jr., 5‑9. 160); TACKLES:
67 Doug Wood (Sr., 6‑2, 191); 76 Mark Kircher (Jr., 6‑1, 212);
GUARDS: 69 Jim Horton (Sr., 6‑0, 177), 79 Eric Barnard (Sr., 6‑2,
215), 65 Larry Massie (Jr., 5‑7, 195);
CENTER: 51 Scott Kasunick (Sr., 5‑9, 181).
Defense
ENDS: 81 Bruce Solinger (Sr., 6‑0, 175), 88 Wilson (Sr., 6‑0,
182);
TACKLES: 72 Harry Foster (Sr., 6‑2, 232), 71 Jeff Pedro (Sr., 6‑3,
204);
MIDDLE GUARD: 55 Bob Simpson (Jr., 5‑11, 190);
LINEBACKERS: 28 Dick Cleveland (Sr., 5-11, 188), 38 Kevin Harris (Sr., 5‑10,
182). 59 Tim Reese (Jr.. 5‑9, 163);
MONSTER BACK: 11 Darren Longshore (Sr., 6‑1, 175);
SAFETY: 21 Jamie Schlegel (Jr., 5‑11, 160);
HALFBACKS: 34 Jeff David (Sr., 5‑9, 188), 12 Dan Venables (Sr., 5‑10,
160).
KICKERS: 13 Wright (punts, extra points), 86 Mike Hodgson, 79 Barnard
(kickoff).
BULLDOGS
Offense
QUARTERBACK: 12 Dave Seaman (Jr., 165);
FULLBACK: 34 Charles Taylor (Sr., 190), 31 David Faur (So., 167), 30 Michael
Lynch (So., 157); HALFBACKS: 42 Doyle Lewis
(Sr., 180), 33 Robin Kindell (Jr., 150), 32 Lucius Rowser (Sr., 180), 40
Brantley Kelly (Jr., 160), 11 Todd Maragas (Sr ., 184);
ENDS: 82 ‑Jeff Thompson (Sr., 168), 84 Ron Rankin (Jr., 170);
TACKLES: 73 Steve Stranan (Sr., 215), 50 Brian Blosser (Sr., 205);
GUARDS: 64 Milton Young (Sr., 197), 67 Scott Dean (Sr., 170), 65 Cyle Cole (Sr., 185);
CENTER: 51 Eric Kempthorn (Sr., 180).
Defense
ENDS: 34 Taylor, 86 Bo Zeren (Sr., 180), 80Mitchell Kelly (Jr., 170), 81
Phil Glavasis (Jr., 165); TACKLES: 75 Tony
Floyd (Jr., 205), 73 Strahan, 83 Troy Sanders (So., 195), 85 Joe Sanders (Sr.,
185); MIDDLE GUARD: 32 Rowser;
LINEBACKERS: 64 Young, 67 Dean, 65 Cole;
MONSTER BACK: 22 Andy Kneffler (Sr., 160);
SAFETY: 42 Lewis;
HALFBACKS: 21 ‑ Mark Green (Sr., 155), 20 Kelly Mullane (Jr., 160), 33
Kindell.
SERIES: 83rd meeting, Massillon holds 45‑32‑5 edge.
LAST MEETING: 1977. Massillon 21, McKinley 0.
POINTS SCORED BY: Massillon 265, McKinley 140.
POINTS SCORED AGAINST: Massillon 29, McKinley 42.
A lesson in
perseverance
The
Washington High School football team was the toast of the city today for its
fourth quarter conquest of arch rival Canton McKinley Saturday afternoon in
Paul Brown Tiger Stadium.
Trailing
10‑0 in the fourth period, the Massillon Tiger team lived up to tradition
Saturday afternoon by staging a comeback to score 13 points and win the game 13‑10.
In so doing it learned one of the great lessons of life - never give up.
Many
a football team would have quit after McKinley, leading 7‑0 going into
the last period, put three more points on the board - but not the Tigers.
That's when they became aroused and, at the urging of Massillon fans, scored
two touchdowns in the final minutes to complete the regular season undefeated
for the first time since 1972. A tie with Warren spoiled an otherwise perfect
mark.
It
was the Tigers' determination to succeed that saw them through, and we give
them great credit for never having given up in their efforts to win the game.
In sports they call that "desire," and the Massillon boys certainly
had it Saturday afternoon; otherwise they would have been on the losing end of
the score.
Their
late rally was typical of fourth period comebacks against McKinley a number of
times in past years. Remembrances of these historical games kept most ‑fans
in their seats hoping that what appeared to be the impossible would become
possible.
In
victory we cannot help but feel some compassion for the vanquished. They were a
dejected group of McKinley players who came off the field, their hopes crushed
after having had victory almost within grasp. They played hard and, even though
defeated, can hold their heads high for their efforts.
As
a result of the victory the Tigers are champions of the All-American
Conference, and we congratulate them and Coach Mike Currence and his assistant
coaches for winning the title.