Tigers beat
McKinley 14-6
for first
state playoff win
By ROLLIE DREUSSI
Independent Sports Editor
The Massillon Tigers had the last words Friday night
before an overflow crowd in Canton's Fawcett Stadium.
"Massillon Tigers No. 1! Massillon Tigers No.
1!" Players and coaches shouted it out over and over in the jubilant
Massillon lockerroom after the Tigers won their first playoff game in history
by defeating the McKinley Bulldogs 14‑6.
"I couldn't believe our defense," said
Tiger Coach Mike Currence, who brought his team back from the ashes of last
Saturday's 16‑7 loss to these same Bulldogs in Paul Brown Tiger Stadium.
"I don't know what the difference is," he
said, referring to the way the Tiger defense halted the Bulldogs on all five of
their second‑half possessions, four of which carried into Massillon
territory. Last Saturday, the Tigers' defense yielded over 300 yards and
allowed McKinley to control the ball game.
Friday night it was a slightly different defense,
and a whole new story.
"We just wanted the ball game more than they
did," Currence said. "It was unbelievable."
Currence said the win, which gives the Tigers the
Division I, Region 3 championship and advances them to the state playoff
semifinals, was his most important in five years as the Tigers' coach.
"This is the biggest one," he said.
"because we did something no other Massillon team ever did: we won a
playoff game. And beating McKinley made it doubly nice."
The Tigers' next opponent in the playoffs will
probably be Willoughby South which defeated Cleveland St Joseph 14‑3
Friday night. There's also a good chance the game will be played Saturday night
in the Akron Rubber Bowl. The semifinal games were supposed to be played on
Friday night but the Akron City Series game was already scheduled for that
night in the Rubber Bowl.
The final decisions on who Massillon will play, and
when and where will be made Sunday by Ohio High School Athletic Association
officials.
Back in the Tiger lockerroom Currence continued his
praise of the defense.
"I thought our offense was going to give it
away there. Thank God the defense wanted it."
He revealed that two starting defensive players
suffered injuries in last week's game and were unable to play, Linebacker John Mayles
broke his hand, and defensive end Bob Dodd tore ligaments in his knee.
"We had to go with some more quickness in
there. It was a combination of the injuries and putting quicker kids in,"
Currence explained. "But we didn't know if the younger kids could do the
job."
They did.
William Askew took Dodd's place at defensive end,
and Rick Spielman took over Mayles' linebacker spot. Mark Haubert also played
some linebacker. All are juniors.
The Bulldogs still managed to run the bill
effectively - except on fourth down attempts ‑ but their passing game
just wasn't the same as it was last week.
"We put a little more pressure on (Rick)
Worstell," Currence said, "and we had better coverage by our
secondary. Paul Turner did a great job on Todd Fisher, and clinic tip with the
big interception."
A big play by linebacker Tim Manion set up the
Tigers' first touchdown in the second quarter.
McKinley had driven into Massillon territory, when
Mike Lynch was hit by middle guard Jeff Grove and fumbled the football at the
41. Manion scooped the ball up and raced 40 yards to the McKinley 19.
Quarterback Dave Eberhart hit Mike Feller with a 12‑yard
pass for a first down at the seven. Two plays later a pass interference penalty
gave the Tigers a first down at the three. An offside penalty against Massillon
moved the ball back to the eight, and Eberhart ran a keeper to the left on the
next play. He was hit at the three yard line and fumbled the ball into the end
zone where fullback Don Fulton pounced on it for a touchdown with 9:31 to play
in the half. Eberhart booted the conversion for a 7‑0 lead.
The Bulldogs came right back with a 74‑yard
drive that took 15 plays and consumed 7:51 on the clock. Worstell scored from a
yard out with 1:40 left in the half, but a pass for the extra points failed and
the Tigers took a 7‑6 lead into the lockerroom at halftime.
The Tigers took the kickoff to open the second half,
and drove 80 yards ‑ with the help of three Bulldog penalties ‑ for
the game's final touchdown.
Eberhart hit Mike Reese with a pass over the middle
from the Pups' 12 yard line. The senior wide receiver caught the ball at the
three, sliced past a defender and fell over the goal line with 7:19 to play.
Eberhart added the extra point for a 14‑6 Tiger lead.
The drive was aided several times by the penalties
against McKinley.
On second‑and‑10 from his own 20,
Eberhart hit halfback Mike Jones with a 16‑yard pass for a first down.
Fifteen more yards were added on when a Bulldogs player was called for a
personal foul, putting the ball on the McKinley 49.
Two plays later, the
Bulldogs were called for pass interference, giving Massillon first down at the
36. The Dogs were also called for an offside penalty later in the drive, and for
another personal foul on the touchdown play, with the yardage being assessed on
the kickoff.
The Bulldogs then took the ensuing kickoff and
started driving again, Their drive started with 7:19 to go in the third
quarter, and they had the ball at Massillon's 15 yard line on fourth‑and‑two
when the period ended.
The Bulldogs' first play of the final period set the
tone for the rest of the game, when Grove and Spielman stopped the Pups' Mike
Simms for only a one‑yard gain, with Massillon taking over on downs at
their own 14.
Eberhart wasted no time in going straight to the
air, but his first two passes were batted down (by Gary Pounds and Troy
Sanders), and one was almost intercepted.
On third down, Scott Dixon sacked Eberhart back at
his own four yard line. Eberhart then punted the ball out to the 41.
Again McKinley mounted a drive. This time, on fourth‑and‑one at the 14. Spielman and defensive end Paul Spinden stopped Lynch for no gain and the Tigers took over.
But on third down, Eberhart was intercepted at his
own 24 yard line by Chris Wade. Following an incomplete pass Grove sacked
Worstell for a four‑yard loss. On third down, Worstell hit Fisher, but
the play netted only four yards. On fourth‑and‑10, Worstell passed
to Sidney Lewis coming out of the backfield, but defensive back Mike Loretto
knocked him out of bounds two yards short of the first down at the Tiger 16.
The Tigers couldn't move the ball again, and this
time Eberhart punt went off the side of his foot and out of bounds 26 yards
downfield at the 44.
On first down, Worstell's pass was intercepted at
the 40 by Turner, who returned it to the McKinley 30. A clipping penalty
brought the ball back to the Tiger 41, and with just 2:42 left to play the
Tigers looked like they had it in the bag.
However, on fourth down from midfield, Eberhart's
punt was blocked by Wade, and the Bulldogs had life at their own 49 with 1:03
to play,
The Tiger secondary was
ready for the final challenge, and Worstell threw three straight incompletions.. He had a man open out of the
backfield on second down, but good pressure by Askew forced a bad pass.
On
fourth down, Spielman sacked Worstell when he couldn't find an open receiver
and that was the ball game.
We
tried hard and we played very bad a downcast Terry Forbes said of his team's
effort. "You have to hand it to Massillon's defense for hanging in
there,'' the Pup coach added.
So it won't be a long, cold winter for Tiger
fans after all. It may have been a miserable six days, but it's like the sign -
the one on the hoop the Tigers ran through before the game ‑ said: “ Win
the One That Counts."
They did, and that's why the Tigers will be
playing in the playoff semifinals next weekend while the Bulldogs will be
staying home.
Tigers trip
Bulldogs 14‑6
Massillon turns the tables
by capitalizing on big
turnover
By BOB STEWART
Repository Sports Editor
The
mighty Massillon High Tigers, calling on three‑quarters of a century of
football tradition ‑ and a quick thank you for the miscues - knocked the
McKinley Senior High Bulldogs out of the Ohio High School Athletic Association
playoffs 14‑6 Friday night.
The
sellout Crowd of some 20,000 at Fawcett Stadium watched the 86th meeting of the
Bulldogs and Tigers since 1894, and the second in six days. Saturday, McKinley
spanked the Tigers 16‑7 in Massillon's Paul Brown Tiger Stadium before
21,745.
Friday
night's win in what was the Division I quarter‑final game for Region No.
3, puts Massillon in the semifinals next week. The Tigers apparently will play
Eastlake Willoughby South, a victor last night over Cleveland St. Joseph, next
Saturday night in Akron's Rubber Bowl.
The
official pairings will not be made until Sunday in the OHSAA Offices in
Columbus. Massillon tickets will be put on sale at Tiger Stadium Tuesday and
Wednesday.
"This
is the biggest game since I've been here," said an emotion‑racked
Mike Currence, who as coach of the Tigers has won five out‑of six battles
with the Bulldogs in his five seasons.
McKinley's
first‑year Coach Terry Forbes, hailed as the conquerering hero last week,
found the words hard to come by. "It was very frustrating,” Forbes said,
referring particularly to the final period when Massillon looked as though it
was trying to give it away, and McKinley couldn't grasp the brass ring.
McKinley
had the ball five times in the fourth quarter ‑ four times in Massillon
territory ‑ and three of those times inside the Tiger's 20‑yard
line, but came away empty.
The
Tiger defense rose to the occasion in spite of its sputtering offense in the final
canto.
McKinley
opened the fourth period with a fourth‑and‑three on the Tigers' 15,
and Mike Simms was stopped after a yard gain and the Tigers took over on their
own 14 with all but four seconds remaining in the final stanza.
Currence
then shocked his followers as Massillon quarterback Dave Eberhart put the ball
in the air two straight times, one batted down, the other missed, and both
nearly intercepted. The third down play looked like another pass, but
McKinley's Scott Dixon smashed through from his defensive end post to sack
Eberhart clear back at the 4.
Eberhart
punted out, and McKinley's Bob Davie returned it 10 yards to give the Pups
position at the Tiger 41.
Bulldogs lose
rematch
McKinley
quarterback Rick Worstell moved his club to the 14, but on a fourth‑and‑one
there, Mike Lynch was nailed by the center of the Tiger line and Massillon
again took it over at the 14, with 8:12 remaining.
Massillon
ran twice, but with third‑and‑seven at the 17, Eberhart put it up,
and McKinley's Chris Wade took the aerial away from intended receiver Mike
Feller.
In
business with 6:38 left at the Tiger 24, Worstell missed on a pass to Sid
Lewis, and then Tiger linebacker Jeff Grove sacked Worstell for a 4‑yard
loss. The Pups' junior quarterback got it back with a 4-yarder to Todd Fisher,
and on fourth‑and 10, Worstell hit Lewis over the middle, but the
speedster couldn't get loose and picked up only 8 of the needed 10 yards.
Massillon
took over on its 16 with 4:53 left.
Eberhart
punted out of bounds at the Tiger 44 four plays later, and the Bulldogs started
with 2:42 left.
This
time disaster struck early.
On
first down, Paul Turner picked off Worstell's aerial on his own 39, and
returned it all the way to the McKinley 30. A clipping penalty put the ball back
to the Tiger 41, but Massillon had the ball with 2:30 left.
When
the Tigers got nine yards in three plays, Eberhart went back to punt again, but
this time McKinley's Wade blocked the kick, and teammate Tony Parsons fell on
it at the Bulldogs' 48.
There
was 1:08 remaining. Worstell threw three times, two of them deep, all
incomplete. On fourth down with only 43 seconds left. he couldn't find a
receiver, and was sacked, ironically, by Rick Spielman, the son of former
Timken Coach Sonny Spielman, who played for Timken last year and moved to
Massillon when his dad was named an assistant there this summer.
Ahead
7‑6 at halftime, Massillon took the second‑half kickoff 80 yards in
10 plays, aided by two 15‑yard penalties against the Pups. The final TD
was a 12‑yard pass from Eberhart to senior end Mike Reese, who caught the
ball at the two and dove over the goal line.
McKinley
took the ensuing kickoff and rolled from its own 20 to the Tigers' 15 when the
quarter ended, and started the fourth period with the ill‑fated fourth‑down
play. The 15‑play drive consumed the final 7:19 of the third period.
McKinley
never was ahead in the game, but threatened in the first period when Eberhart
missed a 29-yard field goal attempt.
Tim
Manion's 44‑yard return of a Mike Lynch fumble set up the fist Massillon
score, putting the ball on the Pups' 19, from where Eberhart passed to Feller
for 12 yards, and then after Bob Oliver ran for a yard, McKinley was called for
pass interference, giving the Tigers an automatic first down at the 3.
After
a motion penalty put the Tigers back to the 8, Eberhart rolled to his left and
got to the 3, where he was hit by several McKinley defenders and coughed up the
ball, which squirted into the end zone to be covered by Massillon's Don Fulton
for the touchdown 9:31 before the band show.
McKinley
brought its followers to life as the Pups showed the offensive punch of last
week, marching 74 yards in 15 plays with Worstell hammering in from the 1 on a
quarterback sneak with 1:40 left in the half. The drive was aided by a 15‑yard
personal foul penalty on the Tigers, but the Pups also got a 14‑yard
jaunt from Mike Simms during the march, and an 18‑yard Worstell‑to‑Fisher
pass put the ball at the 1. Fullback Dwayne Randle hit the Tigers twice in the
middle without success before Worstell sneaked it in.
Then
came a big play. Down 7‑6, Forbes elected to go for two, and Worstell's
pass was on the mark to Lewis at the goal line, but he couldn't hold it.
It
was as close as the Pups would get this season.
While
McKinley had an edge in some of the statistics, the Pups came far from the
domination they showed over the Tigers last week.
McKinley
outrushed the Tigers Friday night 142‑64, but Massillon had a slight edge
in passing yards, 72‑69, even though Eberhart hit 6 of 8 and Worstell 8
of 16.
McKinley
had the edge in time of possession, 26 minutes to 22, and McKinley converted 5
of 9 third down situations (3 of 4 in the first half), while the Tigers
converted only 2 of 5 in the first half and none in four second half tries.
Flags
flew frequently, as each team drew eight penalties, McKinley for 83 yards,
Massillon for 70.
Simms
was the game's leading rusher with 86 yards, Fisher the top receiver with four
catches for 44 yards.
But
the “game, set and match" went to Massillon, and it kept several streaks
alive.
For
example, despite the fact Massillon was in the playoffs for the third time, and
McKinley for the second time, the winner of the regular season McKinley‑Massillon
game has yet to win the playoff game the following week.
It
also means McKinley still has never beaten Massillon at night. The last time
the two teams played under the lights, in 1963, Massillon won, and went on to
also win the second meeting that year, in daylight.
This
was the 10th time the two teams have meet twice in the same season, but
McKinley has not won both since 1909.
The
end of the game was marked by several altercations, mostly outside of the
stadium.
Police
Lt. Wayne Arnold said two arrests were made during the game and about three or
four after the game. Suspects were charged with either disorderly conduct or
assault, Arnold said.
Police
didn't have details of the arrests Friday night, but Arnold said there was
"a lot of commotion" in the Fawcett Stadium area.
There
certainly was.
Massillon
0 7 7 0 ‑ 14
McKinley Senior 0 6 0 0 ‑ 6
Mas ‑ Don Futton covered fumble in end
zone (Dave Eberhart kick)
McK ‑ Rick Worstell 1 run (Pass failed)
Mas ‑ Mike Reese 12 pass from Dave Eberhart
(Dave Eberhart kick)
Att ‑ 20,000 (est.)
Mass McK
First
downs rushing 3 11
First
downs passing 5 2
First
downs penalty 3 1
Total
first downs 11 14
Rushes‑yards 32‑64 44‑142
Passing-yards 72 69
Return
yards 66 33
Passes 6‑8‑1 8‑16‑2
Punts 2‑37 1-34
Fumbles‑lost 1‑0 2‑1
Penalties‑yards B‑70 8‑83
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
RUSHING ‑ Massillon, Oliver 9‑29, Fulton 6‑17, Jones 5‑7,
Eberhart 9‑7, Huth 3‑4.
McKinley, Simms 16‑86, Randle 11‑34, Lynch 5‑20, Snell 1‑6,
Worstell 8‑minus‑2, Lewis 3‑minus‑2.
PASSING ‑ Massillon, Dave Eberhart 6‑8‑1‑72
McKinley, Worstell 8‑16‑2‑69.
RECIEVING ‑ Massillon, Jones 3‑32, Feller 2‑28, Reese 1‑12.
McKinley, Fisher 4‑44, Lewis 2‑15, Giavasis, 1‑9, Dixon 1‑11.
Tiger pride
comes
alive in
playoff win
McKinley 14‑6 victim
in regional title game
By ROLLIE DREUSSI
Independent Sports Editor
"This
is what it's all about," Doug Eberhart screamed above the happy mayhem in
the Massillon Tigers' lockerroom.
The
senior center was holding up a T‑shirt with lettering that read
"MASSILLON TIGERS" across it. And in between was the word
"PRIDE."
That's
what produced the Tigers' 14‑6 win over the Canton McKinley Bulldogs
before over 20,000 fans in Canton's Fawcett Stadium Friday night.
The
Tigers were still smarting from last Saturday's 16‑7 spanking at the
hands of the Pups, but they had the desire it took to change the outcome this
time.
It
was a gutsy performance. One earned more on emotion and desire than on talent
and execution.
The
Tigers' defense, embarrassed last weekend in the loss to the Bulldogs, turned
in a simply incredible performance.
Five
times in the second half they turned back the Bulldogs. Twice on fourth down
and short yardage inside their own 20 yard line.
“Unbelievable,” Tiger Coach Mike Currence
said.
He
could offer no explanation for his defense's dramatic turnaround, except to say
his players simply wanted it more than the Bulldogs.
"We
made a few changes on defense, but determination was the key factor,"
Tiger middle guard Jeff Grove said.
"We
wanted this game so bad. We wanted to go out and win the ball game, and that's
what we did," he added.
One of the unlikely
defensive heroes was junior Rick Spielman. He was a starting linebacker last
year for the Timken, Trojans, but this year he was the team's backup
quarterback. When John Mayles broke his hand in last week's game, Spielman
started practicing at linebacker again.
"I
was real excited about getting to play," said Spielman, whose father,
Sonny, is the Tigers' quarterback and wide receiver coach.
“I
played linebacker last year and after a couple of plays it all came back to
me," he explained.
Spielman
was in on the tackle both times that the Tigers stopped the Bulldogs on fourth
down and short yardage, He also sacked McKinley quarterback Worstell to end the
Pups' final chance with less than a minute to play.
"Ah,
great," Spielman said when asked how he felt after that sack.
That
was the same reply defensive halfback Paul Turner gave when asked about his
interception that thwarted a fourth‑quarter drive by the Bulldogs.
That
"as a big play, since it came immediately following a poor punt that gave
the Bulldogs possession at the Tiger 44 yard line.
Turner
had a big job ‑ covering McKinley's Todd Fisher, a big, fast wide
receiver who gave the Tigers fits last week. Currence credited Turner with
doing 'a great job" covering Fisher.
Junior
William Askew also did a fine job stepping into the breach. Defensive end Bob
Dodd tore knee ligaments in last week's game, and Askew helped defensive tackle
Ed Newman hold down the right side of the Tigers' defensive line.
And
senior defensive tackle Bob James, who had a rough time last week, called on
his pride to help Paul Spinden anchor the left side of the defensive line.
Then
there was Tim Manion, a junior who was too talented to sit the bench as a
backup quarterback and was moved to linebacker in the pre‑season. He came
through in fine style.
Manion picked up a tumble caused by middle guard
Jeff Grove and returned it 40 yards to set up the team's first touchdown.
Turner's
mates in the secondary, Mike :Spicer, Mike Loretto and Dwayne Boss, improved
their coverage to help upset the McKinley passing game.
And
the Tigers' offense, while almost blowing the game in the second half, still managed
to put enough points on the board. And more importantly, managed to control the
ball for at least almost as long as the Bulldogs.
The
Tigers' came out throwing, and the difference this time was that the offensive
line gave quarterback Dave Eberhart time to pass. His 12-yard toss to Mike
Reese in the third quarter was the clinching touchdown.
All
in all, it was a team effort. From the players and coaching staff right down to
the fans.
Currence
had special praise for the Tiger fans, who started raising a ruckus before the
game started and were still carrying on into the wee hours of the morning.
When
told that some of the McKinley fans started leaving the game with four‑and‑a‑half
minutes still to play, Currence said: "Their fans don't compare to our
fans. Our fans stay with us to the bitter end. That's the difference between a
Bulldog and a Tiger.
"We
didn't get one bad remark from anyone last week," Currence pointed out.
"They had confidence we'd come back.”
The
win now gives the Tigers a 48-33-5 edge in the storied rivalry, and gives
Currence a 5‑1 record against the Bulldogs.
Also,
for the first time in their history, the Tigers won a playoff game. They had
suffered losses in 1972 and 1979 in their only other playoff appearances.
Now
they will advance to the Division I playoff semifinals, and will probably play
Willoughby South, a 14‑3 winner over Cleveland St. Joseph Friday night.
It
was as a Friday night no Tiger fan will ever forget. And a Tiger team Massillon
will always be proud of.
TIGER GRIDSTICK
First
downs 3 11
First
downs passing 5 2
Total
first downs 12 15
Yards
gained rushing 85 156
Yards
lost rushing 19 17
Net
yards gained rushing 66 139
Net
yards gained passing 72 70
Total
yards gained 138 209
Passes
attempted 10 16
Passes
completed 6 8
Passes
intercepted by 2 1
Yardage
on passes intercepted 1 0
Times
kicked off 3 2
Kickoff
average 50.0 50.0
Kickoff
return yardage 27 22
Punts 3 1
Punting
average 25.3 33.0
Punt
return yardage 0 15
Punts
blocked 0 0
Fumbles 1 3
Fumbles
lost 0 1
Penalties 8 9
Yards
penalized 70 83
Touchdowns
rushing 0 1
Touchdowns
passing 1 0
Touchdowns
by interception 0 0
Miscellaneous
touchdowns 1 0
Total
number of plays 42 58
Total
time of possession 21.11 25.49
Attendance
20,550
MASSILLON 0 7 7 0 ‑ 14
McKINLEY 0 6
0 0 ‑ 6
MASS – Don Fulton recovered fumble
in end zone (Dave Everhart kick)
McK ‑ Rick Worstell one yard
run (pass failed)
MASS ‑ Mike Reese 12‑yard pass from Eberhart (Eberhart kick)
Player 'knew' Tigers could do it
By STEVE DOERSCHUK
Big victories never fit into small locker rooms.
Following
their 14‑6 Division I football playoff victory Friday over McKinley
Senior High, the Massillon Tigers crammed into Fawcett Stadium dressing quarters
like so many 190‑pound sardines ‑ lively ones at that.
The
room or the Tigers ‑ it was hard to tell which ‑ jumped. Young men
and grown men did nasty numbers on their voice boxes in conveying the idea the program Paul Brown built is
numero uno.
There
had been talk last Saturday following McKinley's 16‑7 regular season win
over these Tigers that Bulldogs' coach Terry Forbes is Canton's Moses.
"Moses
only saw the promised land. He didn't get in it," Massillon assistant Nick
Vrotsos said with a wink.
Center
Doug Eberhart who helped give his twin brother Dave, Massillon's quarterback.,
protection he lacked last week, expressed himself with wailing instead of wit
"I
knew we could do it!" he shouted repeatedly at the top of his lungs.
If the
Tigers are to reach their promised land, they must "do it".
Tigers
jubilant over victory
"We
may wind up playing Moeller," Massillon head coach Mike Currence said with
a peculiar smile.
Cincinnati
Moeller won its first round playoff contest 28‑3 over Cincinnati
Princeton Friday. Moeller and Massillon will clash if both teams win semifinal
games next weekend.
Lots
of heroes helped the Tigers stay alive in the chase for a state crown.
Senior
defensive back Paul Turner was one.
Turner
provided good single coverage on star McKinley end Todd Fisher. With Massillon
leading 14-6 at the 2:30 mark of the final period, he picked off a pass that
all but put the decision on ice.
"A
defensive end was putting a lot of pressure on the quarterback" Turner
said. "I knew I'd have a good chance of getting to the ball. Man, that was
a good feeling."
Putting
Turner on Fisher was one of several changes made in the Massillon defense since
last week when McKinley, racked up a 313‑96 edge in total offense. Some
of the changes resulted from injuries Currence admitted he "kept
quiet." A knee injury sidelined senior defensive end Bob Dodd. Senior
linebacker John Mayles was out with a broken hand.
"We
used a quarterback Rick Spielman, at linebacker, and a tackle, Bill Askew, at
end," Currence said. "They played well."
Currence
said he assigned Turner to single coverage on the dangerous Fisher because
"he was our only guy fast enough to do the job."
Like
Turner, Tim Manion stood tall.
Manion,
expected to battle Spielman next year for the quarterback job, scooped up a
Mike Lynch fumble in the second quarter and ran 37 yards to the McKinley
19-yard line to set up the game's first touchdown.
"Jeff
Grove hit him (Lynch), and the ball came loose. I picked it up and knew what to
do with it," Manion said.
Manion thought pressuring
Pup quarterback Rick Worstell kept McKinley from repeating last weed’s
performance, although the Tigers’ play against the run enabled them to shut off
three fourth-quarter McKinley penetrations inside the 20-yard line.
"Rush
their quarterback and you shut them down," echoed senior tackle Ed Newman.
"We played better. Coming off a loss, we had to."
Dave
Eberhart hit rough sledding in the 16‑7 loss but bounced back to complete
six tosses for 72 yards, including a 12-yard touchdown strike to Mike Reese
that capped an 80-yard march beginning when the Tigers received the second‑half
kickoff.
"That throw to Mike was a new pass play we used for this game," Eberhart said. "A couple of new plays helped us throw them off balance.
"We had to go all out
for this game and not be conservative."
The
let‑it‑all‑hang‑out approach was evident in the late
stages when Eberhart kept throwing despite the fact Massillon was deep in its
own territory and clinging to the 8-point lead. Two of his passes were batted
and nearly picked off by McKinley linemen during one fourth‑period
possession.
"I
probably should have been shot for putting pressure on Dave like that,"
smiled Currence. "We have a lot of confidence in him."
Currence
was ecstatic.
"I've
finally done something no other coach has done at Massillon, won a playoff
game," he said in reference to the fact the Tigers lost their only other
playoff games, in 1972 and 1979.
Currence
reserved special praise for the assistant coaches who installed a “50"
defense in place of the "4‑4” used last weekend. They include Jim
Letcavits, Dale Walterhouse, Gary Wells and LaVerne Hose.
"The
new look helped us get a better pass rush and contain their outside running
game," Currence said.
He
praised his players for "being so fired up. ‑ 1
"McKinley
beat us up last week," he said. "I think we had something to
prove."
Words come hard for Pups’
pilot
Splendid season ends
in frustrating loss
By BILL LILLEY
The
stroll from the south side team bench at Fawcett Stadium to the McKinley Senior
lockerroorn is about 60 yards.
Friday
night, however, the trudge must have felt more like 60 miles to McKinley Senior
Coach Terry Forbes afte the Bulldogs' 14‑6 loss, to Massillon in a
Division I quarterfinal playoff game.
Losing
doesn't come naturally to most, and to Forbes during his eight year career
losing has been an infrequent incident as attested by his 60‑13-2 record
entering the rematch with Massillon.
This
loss was the toughest one to swallow for Forbes and left the veteran coach
nearly speechless as he groped to find the right words for both his players and
the media.
“I
just don't know what to say.” I’m proud of the character displayed by our young men, both in the victory over
Massillon last Saturday and in this game.
"We played to win and
that’s just the way it goes."
For
Forbes and the Bulldogs it was a tough way to go, especially after last
Saturday's 16‑7 win over Massillon at Paul Brown Tiger Stadium. It not
only ended a four‑year winning streak by the Tigers in the 86‑year
classic, but catapulted the Bulldogs into first place in the Region 3 computer
standings.
What
made it tougher was the manner in which the Bulldogs' eight‑game winning
streak ended.
Although
McKinley didn't dominate as it had last week when the Bulldogs out gained
Massillon 313‑96 in total offense, they still held a convincing 211‑136
advantage. Senior was 8 of 16 for 69
yards.
It didn't
seem to bother McKinley Senior that Massillon held a 7‑6 halftime edge. After all, that had been the standing a
week ago and, ironically the Tigers' touchdowns in both instances had been set
up by an outstanding defensive play.
And
even though Massillon tacked on another touchdown on its first possession of
the second half, something else frustrated Forbes more.
The
Bulldogs picked the most inopportune time of an otherwise great season to have
trouble finding their way into the end zone. Three times in the crucial fourth
quarter McKinley Senior cracked the Massillon 20-yard line only to come away
empty‑handed as the Tiger defense proved to bendable but unbreakable.
The
initial frustration came on the yard line, but Mike Lynch was stopped cold on a
fourth-and-three run.
The
Bulldogs' defense forced Massillon to punt three plays later. Tiger punter Dave
Eberhart hit a 47-yard punt that was returned 10 yards by Bob Davie to give
McKinley possession on the Tiger 41-yard line.
This
time the Bulldogs drove to the Massillon 14 from where Lynch was again gang‑tackled
for no gain on fourth‑and‑one with 8:12 left.
McKinley
Senior linebacker Chris Wade gave the Bulldogs the ball on the Massillon 24
three plays later when the senior picked off an Eberhart aerial.
The
Bulldogs went to air this series, but were shot down by the Tiger pass defense.
Worstell's fourth‑and‑10 pass to Sidney Lewis came up two yards
short and Massillon had the ball on its own 16 with 4:53 remaining.
The
Bulldogs' defense wouldn't budge and again gave its offense excellent field
position. Eberhart, whose booming 65‑yard punt had helped set up
Massillon's lone score in the first encounter, shanked a 27‑yarder out of
bounds at the Massillon 44 with 2:42 to play.
This
time, however, there was no heart stopping drive as Tiger back Paul Turner
picked off a Worstell pass at the Massillon 39 on the next play.
And
when Eberhart's final punt was blocked by Wade with 1:08 left to give the
Bulldogs the ball near midfield, Forbes knew his team had squandered its real
opportunities to win the game.
"We
played very badly at some critical times," said Forbes, whose team closes
its season with a 9‑2 mark.
"But,
you also have to hand it to Massillon's defense for hanging in there. That was
the game."
And to Forbes and his Bulldogs it must have been a very frustrating game, indeed.