Crusaders prevail in title game 30-7
Moeller ends Tiger
‘Cinderella Story'
By ROLLIE DREUSSI
Independent
Sports Editor
Massillon’s 1980 Cinderella football team met
its midnight Sunday afternoon in Cincinnati's Nippert Stadium.
Behind
the record four-touchdown performance of senior fullback Mark Brooks, the
Crusaders powered their way to a 30‑7 victory and a second straight state
championship before 25,000 fans. It was also Moeller's fifth title in the past
six years.
The Tigers fell behind 14‑0 in the first
quarter and never recovered as Moeller's offensive and defensive lines
dominated play against the out manned Tigers.
Moeller rolled to a 24‑0 halftime lead and
were never threatened, despite a game effort by the Tigers.
"We made mistakes ourselves, and they made
very few," Tiger coach Mike Currence said afterwards. "That’s the
ball game. You can't do that against Moeller.”
"This is not run‑and‑shoot
weather," he said of the rainy, dreary weather, “It’s great weather for a
big fullback."
And Moeller's 6‑2, 220‑pound Brooks was up to the task. He scored three touchdowns in the first half as he rushed for 84 yards in 23 carries. He finished the game with 133 yards in 33 carries, and his four touchdowns and 24 points are both playoff records.
"Brooks?” Currence asked rhetorically. “Ohio State could have used him against Michigan."
If stopping Brooks wasn't enough of a problem
Moeller quarterback Mike Willging rifled several key passes and had five
completions (in seven attempts) for 105 yard. Wide receiver Rob Williford
caught four of those for 77 yards and Brook caught one for 28 yards.
Moeller outgained the Tigers 212‑42 in
total yardage in the first half.
But despite the Crusaders' offensive fireworks, it
was a defensive play by halfback Rob Brown that hurt the Tigers the most.
Moeller took the opening kickoff and drove 61
yards in 13 plays with Brooks going over from three yards out. The Tigers had
almost stopped the drive at their own 40, but halfback Tim King barely made a
first down on fourth-and-one. Tony Milink kicked the extra point after the TD
for a 7‑0 Moeller lead with 5:24 fell in the first quarter.
Massillon took the kickoff and started from its
own 23. Quarterback Dave Eberhart went straight to the air, but his pass
intended for Mike Feller on the right sideline was picked off by Brown at the
36 and returned to the 32.
Willging hit Brooks with a 28‑yard pass,
and Brooks then scored from four yards out with 4:29 on the clock. Milink's
kick made it 14‑0.
The Tigers were hurt by the interception, but
came back. They took the kickoff and drove to Moeller's 22 yard line where they
had a second‑and‑two.
But halfback Robert
Oliver was thrown for a four-yard loss, Massillon was called for an illegal
motion penalty, a pass from Eberhart to Oliver gained only a yard and Eberhart
was sacked for an eight‑yard loss on fourth down, ending the threat,
ending the first quarter, and just about ending any hopes the Tigers had of
coming back.
Moeller took over at the Massillon 38 and drove
62 yards in 10 plays with Brooks diving over from a yard out. Willging kept
that drive alive with a 35‑yard pass to Williford, and a nine‑yard
pass to Williford on a third‑and‑six play that netted a first down
at the Tiger four. Milink converted and it was 21‑0 with 7:23 to go in
the half.
Massillon suffered another blow on its next
possession when halfback Mike Jones injured his knee on a pass reception. Jones
had gained 29 yards in live carries with some fine running, and at the time was
just about the whole offensive attack for the Tigers. His knee was to be
checked this morning.
Massillon punted and Moeller added its fourth
straight score with five seconds left in the half when Milink kicked a playoff‑record
49‑yard field goal for a 24‑0 halftime bulge.
The Tigers came out in the third quarter and
took it to the the Crusaders ‑ for a while.
They put together an opening drive that carried
from their own 32 to the Moeller 12. The drive was highlighted by Eberhart's
passing, as he completed five for 44 yards. A roughing the kicker penalty also
gave Massillon a needed first down at the Moeller 26.
But Eberhart's
11th pass of the drive was intercepted by Mike Larkin at the five and returned
to the 20.
Following an exchange of punts, Moeller drove
deep into Tiger territory, but Ed Newman killed the threat when he fell on a
fumble by Willging at his own six yard line.
Ron Davis recovered a Massillon fumble at the
Tiger 21 in the final period, and Brooks capped the drive with his fourth and
final TD of the day on a two‑yard run. Mike Loretto blocked Milink's
extra point try.
With under a minute to play. Jeff Grove
recovered a fumble by reserve quarterback Tim Jolley at the Moeller 23.
With Just 20 seconds to play, Tiger backup
quarterback Greg Radtka found Rick Boerner wide open for a 23‑yard TD
pass Eberhart booted the extra point to complete the scoring.
We knew we had to throw on them," Currence
said. "Our quarterback threw an interception on our first play, but we
settled him down and he came and threw well for us (Eberhart finished the game
with nine completions in 19 attempts for 80 yards).
"We had a couple of sparks, and I thought
we were going to put a couple in on them.
“There's a lot of heart on this team, and it
fought back all year. If we would have had a little more momentum, we might
have comeback," he said.
The Tigers finish the season as the Division
playoff runnerup with a 10‑2‑1 record. Moeller went 13‑0 to
take the title.
And now, Tiger fans need wait only 43 more weeks
to prove they can give Moeller a better game than they did Sunday. On Saturday
Sept. 19,1981, the two playoff finalists will square off in the Akron Rubber
Bowl.
TIGER GRIDSTICK
First downs
rushing 2 11
First downs
passing 6 4
First downs by
penalty 1 2
Total first
downs 9 17
Yards gained
rushing 59 197
Yards lost
rushing 64 18
Net Yards
gained rushing -5 179
Net yards
gained passing 103 109
Total yards
gained 98 288
Passes attempted
20 11
Passes
completed 10 6
Passes
intercepted by 0 2
Yardage on
passes intercepted 0 19
Times kicked
off 2 6
Kickoff average
32.5 46.0
Kickoff return
yardage 102 25
Punts 4 2
Punting average
36.5 35.5
Punt return
yardage 0 0
Punts blocked 0 0
Fumbles 2 3
Fumbles lost 1 2
Penalties 5 7
Yards Penalized 95 75
Touchdowns
rushing 0 4
Touchdowns
passing 1 0
Touchdowns by
interception 0 0
Miscellaneous
touchdowns 0 0
Total number of
play 45 61
Total time of
possession 20:35 27:25
Attendance 25,000
MOELLER 14 10
0 6 30
MASSILLON 0 0 0 7 7
MOE ‑ Mark Brooks 3‑yard run (Tony
Milink kick)
MOE ‑ Brooks 4‑yard run (Milink kick)
MOE ‑ Brooks 1‑yard run (Milink kick)
MOE ‑ Milink
49‑yard FG
MOE ‑ Brooks 2‑yard run (kick blocked)
MASS ‑ Rick Boerner 23‑yard pass
from Greg Radtka (Dave Eberhart kick)
'Still Tigers,
and that's
what counts'
By
ROLLIE DREUSSI
Independent
Sports Editor
“At the beginning of the season, people were
saying we’d go 6-4,” Massillon senior
center, Doug Eberhart was telling a group of reporters outside the Tiger
lockerroom.
“But
we ended up state runnersup. We’re still Massillon Tigers and that's what
counts."
With that remark
the Tigers' only returning starter from a year ago excused himself and
walked into the quiet team lockeroom. he had made his point. The long‑awaited
match with Cincinnati Moeller had turned into an easy 30‑7 state
championship game for coach Gerry Faust and his Crusaders.
Moeller dominated the game from beginning to end
and claimed its second straight state title all fifth in the last six years.
They proved they are without a doubt the very
best team in Ohio high school football. Maybe the best in the whole country.
And despite the defeat, the Tigers proved something too. They proved their tradition and spirit is still as strong as ever. And they proved that a lot of hard work - and a lot of heart ‑ can take a team a long way.
“We actually were
inexperienced,” Tiger Coach Mike Currence said referring to his team at the start
of the season.
“But there's a lot of heart on this team and it
fought back all year."
The Tigers seemed destined on several occasions to fail to make the
playoffs this year. They had a 10-0 season in 1979, but lost in the first
playoff game. With almost the entire team graduating, it looked like an uphill
battle to get back into the playoffs.
It was. The Tigers had to come from behind in
the fourth quarter to defeat Akron Garfield and Youngstown South.
They had to rebound
from a 7‑7 tie against perennial nemesis Warren Harding – a tie that
came on a long pass play just before the game ended.
The team did falter in the season final against
Canton McKinley. But thanks to the expanded playoff format which qualifies the
top two teams in each region they got another shot at the Bulldogs.
I an emotion packed contest, their pride refused
to let them lose. A much maligned defense miraculously held the Bulldogs at bay
as the Tigers won their first playoff game 14‑6.
The team did it again the following week when
they routed Willoughby South in the semifinal game.
Suddenly, the team that was going nowhere was
going to Cincinnati's Nippert Stadium to play Moeller for the state title.
That Moeller proved
awesome and handled the Tigers easily should not detract from all the high
points of this past season.
There will be other seasons and hopefully ‑
other state title games. But that will have to wait.
After the longest football season in Tiger
history (13 games), this Massillon team deserves to be remembered for what it
accomplished, and not for what it failed to do.
Moeller's Faust pays
Tribute to Tiger spirit
By
ROLLIE DREUSSI
Independent
Sports Editor
"I've never been so impressed with a city of
people who back their high school like the city of Massillon."
That's
what Moeller coach Gerry Faust called
to say this morning. In all the celebrating Sunday after another state
football title, Faust didn't have much time to talk to reporters.
So he called this morning to pay his compliments
to the team and people of Massillon.
Some 8,000 Massillon fans made the 4 1/2‑hour
drive to Cincinnati's Nippert Stadium to see their Tigers play Moeller for the
Division I football championship.
I was impressed not only with the cheering and
spirit and complete dedication to the school, but also with their
sportsmanship." Faust said of the fans.
“It
was really a great thrill for us to play the great Massillon. Just playing
Massillon was really a highlight for us.
"I just want to say hats off to you people.
You have fine tradition and fans. We don't get impressed that easily, but it
was as an unbelievable experience to witness the great Massillon family, It was
a privilege for us to play them. I’m even more impressed now than I was
before,” Faust added.
The
Massillon fans were to be commended. They traveled en mass to see their Tigers.
They decorated their cars in fine style for the long trip down, and they kept
them decorated for what proved to be an even longer trip back.
And
even when the Tigers weren’t fairing well on the field, they stayed and
cheered. Despite the lopsided score and the persistent, drenching rain most of
the Tiger fans stayed until the bitter end.
And their spirit never wavered, not even in the
miserable ride home, through fog and
rain.
At
a roadside rest area just before the I-71 bridge over the little Miami River, a
vanload of Tiger fans had stopped to wait out a traffic jam.
''We'll
get 'em next year one of them said. And the rest agreed (the two teams will
meet Sept. 19, 1981 in the Akron Rubber Bowl).
The Tiger faithful had worn their orange and
black colors proudly, even in defeat.
They were still proud of this Tiger team. A team
that wasn't supposed to go anywhere this season, but ended up going to the
state title game.
This team had a lot of heart and never quit. And
the same can be said of its fans.