Tigers nip
Central‑Hower 7‑3
Emotions
run high
after
Tiger defense
rises
to new heights
By
MIKE HUDAK
Independent
Sports Editor
MASSILLON ‑ An emotional win does
different things to different people.
Friday night at Paul Brown Tiger Stadium, the locals
remained unbeaten by downing a stubborn Akron Central‑Hower squad 7‑3.
A big factor in the contest was senior defensive end Derrick Johnson, who twice
broke through the offensive line to record sacks late in the game while the
visitors attempted a final surge towards the Tiger goal.
Afterwards, friends surrounded his locker,
squeezing the big senior with bearhugs of joy. But Johnson was too emotionally
spent to laugh or talk or celebrate.
All Johnson could do was sit and cry tears of joy.
There may not have been a lot of scoring in the
contest, but the 8,114 fans who sat through four quarters of a chilly autumn
rain didn't feel cheated, and certainly didn't exit until the final gun assured
Massillon of victory.
The rain certainly had an effect on the game,
but it certainly wasn't the deciding factor.
"Basically, we lost to a very good team
tonight," said Ram coach Tim Flossie, whose squad drops to 1‑2 on
the year after going 10‑1 last season. "I thought both teams did an
excellent job under the conditions; had the weather been ideal it just would
have meant both teams would have been a bit more effective offensively,"
insinuating that the Tigers would have won no matter what was failing out of
the sky.
"We threw the ball well tonight, but the
rain caused us to drop some passes we may have caught," said Tiger head
coach Mike Currence. "Of course, the wet field caused our running backs to
lose their footing several times, too.
"But in the end, everyone did their job
tonight. If they didn't, we wouldn't have won.”
It was a battle of the trenches from the
beginning. The Tigers took the opening kick but had to punt. The Rams then used
up most of the first quarter with a 14‑play drive that went 46 yards
before the Tigers stopped Eric Mosley inches short of a first down on the
Massillon 34‑yardline on a fourth down option pitchout from the
quarterback. Earlier, the Rams had proved their intentions of gaining victory
at all cost by going for the first down on a fourth‑and‑one
situation on their own 34 and making it.
The Tigers then reciprocated with a drive to the
C‑H 33 that ended when Brian DeWitz endzone bomb was intercepted by the
Rams Paul Miller. But the Rams' gave the ball back moments later when the Rams'
wishbone offense stumbled at an inopportune moment ‑ an option pitch was
fumbled and recovered by Tiger linebacker Chris Spielman after an eight‑yard
loss on the Ram 29.
Massillon capitalized on the break with the only
touchdown of the night. The seven-play drive saw Spielman tote the final 14 yards
on three consecutive carries, the capper a six‑yard run with 6:04
remaining in the half. Bronc Phsiterer's kick was good for a 7‑0 lead.
it appeared that the Tigers might score again before
the half. A beautiful coffin corner punt by DeWitz bounded out of bounds at C‑H's
2, where they were stymied and had to punt ‑ a short boot that the Tigers
took over on the Ram 26 with about two minutes remaining.
The Tigers soon found just three yards short of
paydirt with 51 seconds remaining. But two cracks into the line failed, and on
fourth down, an incompletion gave the ball back to C‑H.
Most of the fans were wondering why the Tigers
didn't stop the clock and try the field goal ‑ what they didn't know is
that the Tigers were out of time outs, their final clock‑stopper having
been used without official notification to the pressbox or stands.
Tigers stay perfect!
"I used the last time out to attempt to
save time for us," explained Currence. "I thought for sure that we'd
be able to punch it in in one or two cracks, and I was stunned when we didn't;
we had been blowing them out at the line. But one thing they did was move 205‑pound
Troy Rackley over from defensive end to tackle when we weren't expecting it,
and he really plugged the hole."
The Rams actually switched a lot of personnel
around for the game, including switching 220‑pound Destin Scott to the
middle guard spot, when the Tigers were expecting a 160‑pounder there!
"We had been preparing for this game for
two weeks," admitted Flossie. "The defensive switches worked well for
us; I was especially pleased with the play of our interior linebackers."
The second half was more great defense on both
sides. The Rams almost broke the opening kickoff, returning it to the C‑H
42, and proceeded to drive to the Tiger eight, where it was second‑and‑seven.
But Ram quarterback Ray Jackson was hit for a
two‑yard loss on the next play, followed by a great defensive play by the
Tigers' Marcell Stephens, the 160‑lb. defensive back, who stopped an
endzone pass with a great hit.
"The play was a tight end out cut, and I
was back‑peddling on the coverage," said Stephens. "The footing
was terrible and I lost my balance momentarily, but I caught the ball out of
the corner of my eye and regained my balance to stick him good just as the ball
arrived."
The Rams then had to settle for a 26‑yard
field goal by Kelly Clark with 5:58 left in the third quarter, cutting the
Tiger lead to 7‑3. The scoreboard never changed again.
The Rams threatened again when Miller grabbed
his second interception and returned it to the Tiger 18.
"The receiver broke the pattern; it was
supposed to be a curl and he decided to change it. If the quarterback had been
able to read the move it might have gone for a long‑gainer, but it was
too late and only the defensive back ended up where the receiver was supposed
to be."
But the defense stiffened, regaining possession
on the 18 when a pass was overthrown into the endzone. The Tigers then moved 67
yards themselves before losing the ball on downs at the Ram 18. A key play in
the clock‑eating march was a 41‑yard pass play from DeWitz to
senior receiver Jim Geiser on a third‑and‑12 situation.
"I told the coach I could beat the guy
deep, and he, 'let's take the risk, "' reported Geiser, the team's leading
receiver on the year.
"That was a great catch," added
Flossie. "Our guy was right there, but it was just a great catch."
After the Tigers' drive ended, the Rams had two more
chances to score. The first possession ended in a punt after a clipping call
and a sack by the Tigers' Junior Neff forced the boot.
Central‑Hower's final chance saw Johnson's
fierce rush put the final icing on what was hardly a piece of cake.
Statistically, Massillon outgained C‑H 230‑119,
including a 126‑0 advantage in the air. DeWitz completed 9‑of‑19
tosses on the night, with Spielman catching four passes for 26 yards and Geiser
three passes for 63 yards. Spielman led the Tiger ground attack with 20 totes
for 95 yards.
"Massillon jut didn't make mistakes,
they're a helluva team," concluded Flosie, who might have been beaten but
left Massillon with the respect of all who watched his team.
MASSILLON 7
CEN‑HOWER 3
M 0
First downs
rushing 8 8
First downs
passing 5 0
First downs by
penalty 0 1
Totals first
downs 13 9
Yards gained
rushing 131 156
Yards lost
rushing 27 37
Net yards
rushing 104 119
Net yards
passing 126 0
Total yards
gained 230 119
Passes
attempted 19 4
Passes
completed 9 0
Passes int. by 0 2
Yardage on pass
int. 0 17
Times kicked
off 2 2
Kickoff average 55.0 54.0
Kickoff return
yards 22 32
Punts 2 3
Putting average 32.5 26.0
Punt return
yards 18 0
Punts blocked
by 0 0
Fumbles 1 2
Fumbles lost 0 1
Penalties 3 2
Yards penalized 35 25
Touchdowns
rushing 1 0
Touchdowns
passing 0 0
Miscellaneous
touchdowns 0 0
Number of plays 57 51
Time of
possession 25:14 22:42
Attendance 8,114
Cen‑Hower 0 0 3 0 3
Massillon 0 7 0 0 7
M ‑
Spielman 6‑yard ran. (Phisterer kick)
CH ‑ Clark
26‑yard field goal.