Tiger ground game key
to 14‑7 victory
Grimsley,
Moore, Newman do in Harding
By ROLLIE DREUSSI
Independent Sports
Editor
Warren Harding had the right defense, but Massillon finally
came up with the right combination of running backs as the Tigers rallied to a
14‑7 win over the Panthers before 10,223 fans in Paul Brown Tiger Stadium
Friday.
Abandoning its passing game in the face of a blitzing
Panther defense, the Tigers took to the ground with a trio of rushers who
proved too versatile and too much for Harding to handle.
Fullbacks Greg Grimsley and Michael Moore and halfback Larry
Newman combined for 127 yards rushing and all 14 Tiger points as Massillon
raised its record to 4‑1.
Harding lost Its second straight game and falls to 3‑2.
They’ve got a good defense," Tiger coach Mike Currence
said after the game. "We did not plan on running as much as we did."
Harding coach Bob Wolfe said he didn't expect the Tigers to
be able to run the ball the way they did.
“Teams don't run on us the way they did," he said.
"The toss sweep to the sideline, we couldn't stop it," he said of the
play that worked so well for the Tigers.
“We thought we had a very good defensive package to stop the
run‑and‑shoot," Wolfe said. He explained, that they changed
their basic "40" defense, which worked well in a scrimmage against
Lakewood St. Edward's run‑and‑shoot offense, because he knew
Massillon would have films of that scrimmage.
"We put in another defense, like the one Moeller used.
It's a seven‑diamond effect with man‑to‑man
coverage," Wolfe explained
"It worked for two and a half quarters, but then they
got moving," be said.
"They were very good at the fire game," Currence
said, referring to the Panthers' blitzing tactics. "We'd move the ball,
but own they'd throw us for a big loss.
"We thought we'd be able to read It and hurt them, but
they disguised it better than we thought. We'd make the wrong call right into
their blitzing defense. They were playing man‑to‑man and firing
like hell. Sometimes you get away with it," Currence explained.
The defense worked for the Panthers through the first half,
which ended in a scoreless tie. The Tigers had two drives into Panther
territory stall in the second quarter, and both ended in missed field goals by
Tim Manion, the first of 45 yards at 5:06 and the second of 48 yards with :27.
After a Massillon punt early in the third quarter, the
Panthers got a break.
On third‑and‑10 from their own 25, flanker
Darnell Robertson hit wide receiver Gary Hughley with a pass that covered 60
yards to the Tiger 16. Hughley was wide open down the middle, caught the ball
at his own 45 and was finally hauled down from behind by linebacker Chris
Spielman.
“That was a prayer, a miracle," said Wolfe of the play.
"It was supposed to go to the tight end, but he didn't
go out."
On the next play, quarterback Mike Surin hit Marcus Elkins
for 16 yards and the touchdown with 7:58 to play in the third quarter, Greg
Bumbu's kick made it 7‑0.
That score seemed to pull the Tigers together, however, and
Grimsley gave them the spark they needed.
on third‑and‑eight at their own 29, he went left
on a sweep and fired a pass to Dan Ricker for 16 yards and a first down at the
45.
"That was a big play," Currence said. "We
were having trouble. We had to come out and get a first down to get something
going. These kids have had trouble all year doing that."
That proved to be the turning point for the Tigers, as they
stayed on the ground the rest of the way and Grimsley bulled over from two
yards out with 1:38 to play in the quarter.
Grimsley was the key man in the drive, gaining 25 yards in
seven carries, and three times rushing for first downs. He finished the night
as the game's leading ball carrier with 56 yards in 16 carries.
Manion's kick to tie the game was wide left, and the Tigers
trailed 7‑6. Currence said Manion has had trouble kicking because of a
sore left knee, which also limited his playing time at linebacker to only a few
plays.
Harding couldn't move the ball, and had to punt. Pressure on
Dave Gantz by Bob Yoder and Charles Calhoun caused him to get off only a 13‑yard
punt.
Massillon took over at its own 42 and drove to a touchdown
in 10 plays, with Moore getting 21 yards in four carries, including the final
four yards for a TD with 8:35 to play.
Newman had a key run for a first down, taking the ball from
the 15 down to the eight. Grimsley gained four yards and then Moore swept right
for the score.
On the run for the extra points, Newman took a pitch right
and Bumbu blitzed through the line to stop him.
Newman made a sharp cut to elude him at the seven, ran up to
the three and literally dove the rest of the way into the end zone.
"I didn't know if it was a good play," Currence
said, "but I just wanted to get the ball to Newman. He came of age
tonight, He probably hasn't been playing as much as he should. But he's our
specialist. He returns kicks and we were working him at halfback and receiver.
He said to let him try concentrating on one position, halfback, and we did.
That move paid big dividends as Newman gained 35 yards in
seven carries. Moore finished with 36 yards In 10 carries.
Of course, Harding didn’t give up, and came back several
times, but the Tiger defense held strong.
Tony Morelli, who came In at defensive end when Scott Zupp
injured his ankle, sacked Surin for a nine‑yard loss on a third‑down
play and Chris Spielman killed another threat with an interception, a leaping
grab in which he took the bail away from Robertson.
The Panthers got one last shot when defensive tackle Nick
Frankos blitzed through and hit quarterback Rick Spielman just as he was about
to hand off to Newman. He caused a fumble which end Scott Wilson recovered for
Harding at the Tiger 46. However, four straight passes fell Incomplete, and the
Tigers took over with 2:54 left and ran out the clock.
The Tiger defense drew praise from Currence and defensive
coordinator Jim Letcavits. With Manion, middie‑guard William Askew and
tackle Rick Heather out with injuries, the Tiger backups did a fine job.
Charles Calhoun and Sam Clark started at the tackles' Brian
Schodorf played middle guard and Mark Haubert played linebacker.
"When we had to do it, we obviously did it,"
Currence said. "We came together as a team tonight. I'm proud of the
offensive line and of the defense. But we still have to improve. We have a long
way to go. Barberton (Massillon's opponent Saturday night in the Akron Rubber
Bowl) is a good team."
But with a gritty comeback, and their suddenly potent ground
attack, the Tigers proved Friday night that they too are a tough team.