Tigers' big TD plays
jar Polar Bears
As Massillon rolls 42‑0 for seventh win
By
ROLLIE DREUSSI
Independent
Sports Editor
For almost two quarters Friday night the Jackson
Polar Bears were in the ball game.
Two plays, one minute and 13 seconds and one
halftime show later the Massillon Tigers were off and running to their seventh
straight victory and fourth shutout of the season as they beat the Bears 42‑0
for the second year in a row.
The Polar Bears (4‑3) came to Paul Brown
Tiger Stadium ready to play and they were doing just that. They trailed only 7‑0
with 1:00 left before halftime and the Tigers trying to move the ball from back
at their own 44-yard line.
That's when quarterback Bill Scott faked to Mike
Jones into the line and lofted a perfect pass down the sideline to Bill Beitel.
Who made an over the shoulder catch and never broke stride as he outran the
Jackson defenders to the goal line.
Jeff' Fry's kick made it 14‑0 Massillon
and the 13,791 fans attending the game settled back to watch a couple of fine
halftime shows.
The Polar Bears, still a little dazed, come back
out and kicked off and it took Bill Burkett ‑ who had scored the first
Tiger touchdown in the first quarter ‑ 88 yards and 13 seconds to weave
his way through the Bear coverage for the touchdown that broke Jackson's back.
"I think the opening kickoff of the second
half obviously did the trick for us," Tiger coach Mike Currence said
afterwards.
"They played a good first half. That catch
Beitel made ‑ and the throw Scott made ‑ was the best execution of
any play we've had this year. Scott picked out the secondary receiver on that
one.
“That play and the kickoff did it. When you're
making the big plays like that it's going to hurt them."
Jackson coach Tom Geschwind couldn't disagree.
"There were two plays that particularly
hurt us," he said in the quiet and dejected atmosphere of the Polar Bear
lockerroom.
"The first one was the long touchdown just
before the half, and the second was the long kickoff return. Those were the
turning points. I thought we played them well the first half.
"The first quarter we moved the ball right
down the field, then the interception hurt us. A score on the opening drive
would have meant a lot to us.
"The momentum turned after the second‑half
kickoff. Our inability' to control their running game in the second half was
the single biggest factor for us after that."
The Polar Bears will try to regroup their forces
next week against Cambridge as they prepare for the remainder of their Federal
League season. They are tied for second place (3‑1) in the league and
have games remaining with GlenOak and first‑place North Canton Hoover.
"It's still very important for us to come
back because we're still in the Federal League race. Last year we did it. We
came back and beat Hoover (the final game of the season)."
Currence had said earlier in the week he was
hoping his team would not have a letdown. It didn't happen and he claimed there
were several reasons why.
"The crowd helped a lot," he said.
"And Paul Brown being in the stands definitely made a, difference. The
kids wanted to play good for Paul.
"I was going to say something about him
being here before the game, but I didn't have to. The kids did. This crew's
been a good group this year."
Brown who was in town to promote and autograph
his book “PB: the Paul Brown
Story," must have been pleased as he watched the team he made nationally
famous strike with lightning quickness to seize the momentum and roll to an
easy victory.
However, the game started out looking like
anything but a rout.
Jackson took the opening kickoff and started a
drive that lasted better than eight minutes. Fry's kick had gone into the end
zone and the Bears started from their own 20.
There were several key plays. On third‑and‑eight
at his own 45, quarterback Mike Rankin did a nice job of scrambling away from
the Tiger rush and scooted 14 yards for a Jackson first down.
The Bears drove to the Tiger 29 where they faced
a fourth‑and‑11 situation. Rankin hit John Roman with a pass that
netted the first down by inches.
But two plays later, a Rankin pass was intercepted
at the three yard line by Tiger linebacker Tim Reese and he returned the ball
to the 18.
The Tigers then drove 82 yards in 11 plays with
Burkett banging over from the one and Fry adding the conversion kick to give
the Tigers a 7‑0 lead with 2:48 left in the quarter.
The Tigers picked up four first downs in the
drive, with Burkett getting one on an 11-yard pass from quarterback Bill Scott
and another on a 12‑yard run, Sam McDew running 19 yards for one (he
injured his knee on the play and didn't return to action) and Scott hitting
Greg Evans for 15 yards for one that took the ball to the one yard line.
The Tigers put together a 13‑play drive
that carried to the Polar Bear 14 yard line, but that one fizzled when Jim
Kirven came up with his first of two interceptions, (he now has five on the
year). A personal foul penalty against Massillon on the play gave the Bears the
ball at their own 26.
They had to punt, however, and the Tigers took
possession with just over a minute to go in the half.
On first down from the Tiger 35, Scott handed
the ball to Burkett ‑‑ who handed it to Beitel ‑ who handed
it back to Scott ‑‑ who eluded a Jackson defender and hit Marty
Guzzetta with a 9-yard pass to the 44.
Then came the big play, with Scott and Beitel
hooking up for a picture‑perfect 56‑yard TD pass play and a 14‑6
halftime lead.
Burkett then returned the opening kickoff of the
second half 88 yards for a touchdown and Massillon had a 21‑0 lead over
its shell-shocked opponents.
Later in the quarter, the Tigers drove 52 yards
in nine plays as Beitel scored his second touchdown ‑ this one on a 3‑yard
run. He also had a 20‑yard run for a first down in the drive. Fry's kick
made it 28‑0 with 2:45 to go in the‑third quarter.
Jeff Mayles intercepted a Rankin pass at the
Jackson 28 and returned it to the 15, and a personal foul penalty on the Bears
gave Massillon ‑ a first down at the seven yard line early in the final
period.
Three plays later Bob James scored on a dive
play from a yard out and Fry's kick made it 35‑0.
Jackson then drove to the Massillon 17, but gave
up the ball on downs when Bill Francis was stopped just short of a first down
on a fourth‑and‑two play.
The Tigers then drove 85 yards in 10 plays with
Don Fulton going the final four over right tackle and Dave Eberhart capping the
scoring with an extra point kick with 1:07 on the clock.
Scott started at quarterback for the Tigers and
completed 9 of 13 passes for 146 yards and one touchdown.
Guzzetta caught five of those passes for 58
yards and Beitel had two receptions for 63 yards.
Beitel also gained 47 yards in eight rushes.
Burkett topped all ball carriers with 71 yards in eight carries and Mike Jones‑
who filled in at fullback for MeDew ‑ gained 49 yards in 12 carries.
For Jackson, Francis totaled 54 yards in 16 carries.
Both teams came out of the game with a couple of
injured players. Jackson guard Todd Hufstetler and tackle Hank Evans both suffered
ankle injuries. For the Tigers, McDew and defensive tackle Bryant Lemon both
suffered knee sprains.
The Tigers will host All American Conference
foe Warren Harding ‑ a team they have not beaten since 1976 ‑
Friday night in Paul Brown Tiger Stadium. Jackson will host Cambridge the same
night.
FINAL STATISTICS
MASS OPNT
First
downs:
Rushing 12 4
Passing 7 3
Penalty 1 2
Total 20 9
Yds
gain rush 243 112
Yds
lost rush 28 28
Net
yds rush 215 84
Net
yds pass 199 35
Total
yds gain 414 119
Pass
attempted 17 13
Pass
completed 11 3
Pass
int by 2 2
Pass
int yds 28 8
Kickoff 7 1
Kickoff
ave 49.3 48.0
Kickoff
ret yds 88 112
Punts 2 6
Punt
ave 41.0 36.5
Punt
ret yds 6 9
Punts
blocked 0 0
Fumbles 0 2
Fumbles
lost 0 0
Penalties 6 4
Yds
penalized 77 19
TDs
rushing 4 0
TDs
passing 1 0
TDs
by int 0 0
Other
TDs 1 0
No.
of plays 59 52
Time
of poss 25:
24 22, 36
Attendance 13,791
JACKSON
0 0 0 0 0
MASSILLON 7 7 14 14 42
Mass - Bill Burkett I run (Jeff Fry kick)
Mass - Bill Beitel 56 pass from Bill Scott
(Fry kick)
Mass - Burkett 88 kickoff return (Fry kick)
Mass - Beitel 3 run (Fry kick)
Mass - Bob James 1 run (Fry kick)
Mass - Don Fulton 4 run (Dave Eberhart kick)