Passing duo
highlights
Tigers’ 7th
win
By ROLLIE DREUSSI
Independent Sports Editor
The
red hot passing combination of Brent Offenbecher to Curtis Strawder thawed out
the Jackson Polar Bear defense as the Tigers rolled to a 42‑0 victory Friday
night at Paul Brown Tiger Stadium.
A
crowd a 13,112 saw Offenbecher set a single game passing record for completions
as the senior quarterback hit on 15 of 19 passes for 201 yards and three
touchdowns.
Strawder,
the fleet wide receiver with gazelle‑like grace and‑more moves than
a belly dancer, hauled in eight passes for 133 yards and one touchdown, He used
his speed to turn several short passes into sizable gains.
"Curtis
had a great game," Tiger bead coach Mike Currence said afterward,
"just a super game. That's the best he's done,"
Currence
also praised the work of Offenbecher, citing a 19 yard scoring pass to Marty
Guzzetta in the third quarter as an especially alert play.
"He
sure read that one nice to Marty. Brent waved him upfield," Currence
explained.
Guzzetta
made a great diving catch in the end zone for what turned out to be
Offenbecher's 15th ‑ and record‑setting ‑ completion.
Jackson
coach Tom Geschwind, a former Tiger gridder himself, was very disappointed
after the loss.
"I
thought we played well the first half," Geschwind said. The Polar Beam
trailed only 7-0 after the first quarter before falling behind 21‑0 at
the half.
Geschwind
explained that his team ran the ball a lot in the first half in an effort to
control the ball. He also noted that the defense gave the Tigers the short out
patterns in hopes of cutting off the long pass.
"If
we didn't give them that (short outs), we would have given them the deeper
patterns. We knew we had to come up fast and tackle them but we didn't do a
very good job."
The
young Polar Bears had juniors at 15 different positions, but Geschwind said he
didn't know if the game would help or hurt the development of his players.
"At
this point it is too early to tell. It will take a while to determine," he
said.
Currence
said that despite the lopsided score, the Tigers knew they had been in a tough
ball game.
They
really hit us the first quarter . . . the first half," he said,
"we're really bruised up. Tom Gehring (fullback) hurt his ankle and we
have some other people banged up. We have to get well for next week (Warren
Harding) in a hurry.
“They
shut off our running game," he noted. The Tigers totaled 149 yards
rushing, "we couldn't run on them, but they couldn't contain the pass. They had trouble-covering
Strawder.
"Their
offense just kept turning the ball over to us and you can't do that. You can't
control the ball on us. Eventually we'll try our whole offense and that's what
we did. We went to Strawder and did some other things outside. If they could
have controlled the ball the first half it would have been a different
game."
However,
Currence preferred to put this win ‑ the Tigers' seventh straight without
a loss ‑ behind him.
"We
don't want to talk about records now, we'll do that after the season's over.
We've got a big week this week, we've got to start thinking about Warren."
Jackson
drops to 3-4 on the year, including a 1‑3 record in the rugged Federal
League.
The
Tigers took the opening kickoff and marched 52 yards in six plays with Job
Belief breaking a counter play through the middle and making a good cut to the
right behind solid blocking for the final 15 yards.
Ron
Wright booted the first of five straight conversions and the Tigers led 7‑0
with, 9:10 left in the period.
The
rest of the quarter was a defensive struggle as both teams punted back and
forth.
Jackson
managed a first down ‑ its first of the game on the last play of the
first quarter, but Tiger linebacker Dick Cleveland intercepted a Rich Bubenchik
pass on the next play and returned it 12 yards to his own 34 yard line.
Twelve
plays later Offenbecher hooked up with Strawder on a sensational 20‑yard
scoring play. Strawder caught the ball at the Polar Bear seven, broke one
tackle and danced around another defender before scampering into the end zone
with 6:44 to go in the half. Wright's kick made it 14‑0. That drive was
aided by a series in which the Tigers were mistakenly given five downs.
Air game nets
42-0 win over Jackson
With
the ball at the Jackson 34, Offenbecher hit Bill Belief with an eight-yard pass
on first down. On second and two, Jeff Beitel gained about a yard and a half.
An
official time out was called for a measurement, which showed the Tigers to be short
of a first down. However, when the chains were brought back to the sideline,
the down marker was not advanced, making it second and one when it should have
been third and one.
An
incomplete pass and a run for no gain followed. Offenbecher ran a keeper for
five yards and a first down on what was actually fifth down instead of fourth
and one.
It
should be noted, however, that the mistake was made on second down, and play
selection by the Tigers was made according to the official down marker and
scoreboard (both of which were wrong).
Neither
team and few of the fans noticed the error, which was made in the confusion of
the first‑down measurement.
Dan
Venables gave the Tigers the ball back a couple minutes later when he far
intercepted a Jackson pass at the Polar Bear 48 yard line. Bill Beitel capped
an eight play drive with a six‑yard scoring run and Wright's kick made it
21‑0 Tigers with 2:46 left in the half.
The
Tigers wasted no time getting on the board again in the third quarter.
Following a Polar Bear punt. The Tigers drove from their own 49 to the Jackson
22.
Offenbecher
hit Strawder with a quick pass in the left flat and the speedster turned it
into a 19‑yard gain. Offenbecher
found Wright open on a down and out pattern in the right comer of the end zone
for the final three yards and the score. Wright booted the point after for a 28‑0
lead.
Following
another Jackson punt, the Tigers drove 55 yards (not counting a 15‑yard
clipping penalty) in five plays with Offenbecher capping the drive with his 19‑yard
scoring toss to Guzzetta.
That
15th completion broke his old record of 14 set last year in the loss to Warren
Harding. The score came with 4:54 left in the third quarter and Currence sent
in the subs for the rest of the game.
The
final Tiger touchdown came on an eight‑yard halfback pass from Bill
Burkett to Dion Johnson with 4:11 to go
in the game.
The
win was the third straight shutout for the Tigers, and the defense hasn't
allowed a score since Niles McKinley notched a touchdown in the third quarter
of Massillon's 27‑7 win on September 30.
Massillon
will travel to Warren Harding for an All-American Conference game next Friday
and Jackson will entertain Canton Timken.
M J
First downs – rushing 12 3
First downs – passing 10 2
First downs – penalties 0 0
Total first downs 22 5
Yards gained rushing 161 92
Yards lost rushing 12 21
Net yards gained rushing 149 71
Net yards gained passing 265 22
Total yards gained 414 93
Passes attempted 28 21
Passes completed 19 3
Passes intercepted by 2 1
Yards on passes intercepted 4 4
Times kicked off 7 1
Kickoff average (yards) 42.3 30.0
Kickoff returns (yards) 18 97
Times punted 2 6
Punt average (yards) 36.0 34.0
Pont returns (yards) 30 0
Had punts blocked 0 0
Fumbles 1 2
Lost fumbled ball 1 0
Penalties 5 3
Yards penalized 65 33
Touchdowns rushing 2 0
Touchdowns passing 4 0
Touchdowns by interception 0 0
Misc. touchdowns 0 0
Total number of plays 54 57
Total time of possession 25:51 22:09
JACKSON 0 0 0 0 0
MASSILLON 7 14 14 7 42
M
- Jeff Beitel 15 run (Ron Wright Kick);
M
‑ Curtis Strawder 20 pass from Brent Offenbecher (Wright kick);
M
- Bill Beitel 6 run (Wright kick);
M
‑ Wright 3 pass from Offenbecher (Wright kick);
M
Marty Guzzetta 19 pass Offenbecher (Wright kick);
M
Dion Johnson 8 pass from Bill Burkett (Jeff Fry kick).
Final is 42-0
Massillon
routs Jackson
MASSILLON ‑ Quarterback Brent Offenbecher's 15 connections on 19 pass
attempts set a Massillon single game completion record Friday night as the
undefeated Tigers romped to a 42-0 finish over Jackson High School.
Offenbecher's
air game covered 201 yards included completing three touchdown passes. The old
school mark of 14 single game completions set last year was held by
Offenbecher.
Six
plays going 52‑yards after the opening kick‑off, Jeff Beitel scored
the solo first quarter touchdown for the Tigers.
Curtis
Strawder, who grabbed a total of eight tosses for 133 yards, entered the end
zone with a 20‑yard pass for the second TD.
Dick
Cleveland intercepted a pass by Jackson's Rich Bubenshik at the Massillon 28‑yard
line and took it back to the 34 to spark the 12‑play drive ending in
Strawder's score.
Dan
Zenables nabbed the second of the two Massillon interceptions at the Jackson 48‑yard
line which eight plays later sent Beitel
again in to score, this time on a 6‑yard trip.
A
51‑yard drive on seven plays set up Wright's sixed pointer in the third
period.
In
the same quarter, 55 yards and five plays of after a punt, Massillon moved in
for the record setting pass of 19 yards received by Marty Guzzetta. off the arm
of Offenbecher.
Dion
Johnson took an eight‑yard halfback throw from Bill Burkett over the goal
line with 4:11 left in the game to end the barrage of scoring.
Massillon
has won seven, Jackson is 3‑4, 1‑3 in the Federal League.