'Not so sharp' Tigers
grind out 265 yards
rushing in 43‑0 rout
By
MIKE HUDAK
Independent
Sports Editor
So how good are the Massillon Tigers?
"We really weren't very sharp
tonight," said Tiger head coach Mike Currence. "We were sharp last week
against Newark, and its hard to be real sharp two weeks in a row.”
"Even the crowd was flat," chipped in
grizzled offensive coordinator Nick Vrotsos. "The fans didn't get aroused
until that bad penalty call late in the third quarter, and then they went flat
again."
The final score? The Tigers 43, Barberton 0, the
proverbial "sweet revenge" for last years 26‑24 upset at the
hands of the Magics.
The game itself wasn't very exciting - the
Tigers dominated from start to literally the finish. From a reporter's
standpoint, the highlight came afterwards in the Barberton lockerroom, when an
'upset' Magic head coach Rudy Sharkey seemed convinced that the Tigers had
tried to run up the score. (The Tigers did score on the final play of the game,
a seven‑yard sweep by junior Kirk Ivan.)
"No, this loss didn't hurt," he fumed.
"Some other year, Currence will get his. If the guy needs points that bad,
fine. Like I said, another year, and that's all I have to say.”
But you can't really blame the guy for being
grumpy ‑ he entered this season with a .718 winning percentage in 10
years at the helm of the Magics, and this year's 1‑5 start is bound to be
a blow to even the strongest ego.
But Currence disavowed running up the score. In
fact, it was only earlier this week that he told a luncheon audience that he
always tried to refrain from doing so; it only hurt the opponent's confidence
for future games, valuable for computer points, plus aroused the victims for
the next rematch.
(A final memory of the Barberton lockerroom: Sharkey's devastated troops gathered around him; the coach bellowing the answers to reporters' questions. "There'll be another year, " Sharkey grits his teeth. "RIGHT, TEAM?" "RIGHT COACH, " scream the players back.)
"In the first place, the players called
that final timeout late in the game, not me. Two, as far as I'm concerned, we
tried to run out the clock. We ran the exact same sweep four times in a row,
and they didn't defend against it right once, which isn't our fault. In fact, I
was surprised that they stayed in the exact same defense all night; I don't
think they shut down one of our sweeps the entire game," Currence said.
There was a final mitigating factor to the late
score, incidentally. The player who scored on the jaunt, Ivan, just happened to
be celebrating his birthday ‑ and as his teammates knew, what better time
to score your first touchdown as a Tiger!
Neither team scored on its first possession. But
the Tigers kept Barberton backed up in the shadow of its goal on their second
possession, forcing the first of many short punts which kept the Tigers in
great field position the entire night.
The Tigers began possession on the Magic 25 and
scored in five plays. Bushe, who led Tiger rushers with 97 yards in 13 carries,
had gallops of nine and 10 yards en route to the end zone. He then plunged over
from the one with 4:40 left in the quarter, followed by a Bronc Pfisterer
conversion kick.
Massillon didn't score again until 3:51 remained
in the half. Another short punt after being penned deep gave the Tigers
possession on the Barberton 39. The first play from scrimmage saw quarterback
Brian DeWitz hit receiver Jim Geiser with a 21‑yard pass to the 18. Four
plays later Chris Spielman pounded over from the one, with the kick no good.
Tigers see five backs tally
The ensuing kick went into the end zone and on
the first play from scrimmage, junior Ken Rector's pass was picked off by
Marcell Stephens, giving the Tigers possession at the Magic 41.
This time it took the Tigers six plays to score.
Fullback Tim Sampsel did final honors on a one‑yard plunge with 1:02
remaining, following a nine‑yard scramble by DeWitz. Pfisterer's kick was
good for a 20‑0 halftime lead.
The Tigers made it 26‑0 with their second
possession after intermission. A 73‑yard drive began when DeWitz
underthrew a wide‑open Geiser, who retreated for the ball for a 38‑yard
gain, with a late hit moving the ball down to the Magic 20. Six plays later,
DeWitz, dropping straight back for one of the few times all evening, found
Bushe wide open over the middle for a nine-yard scoring pass. The kick failed,
but the Tigers led 26‑0 with 4:57 left in the third period.
Massillon went on to score 17 points in the
final period ‑ all following the contest's most controversial moment.
Typically, Barberton was forced to punt, and the
short boot sailed towards the Tigers' Stephens, who plainly signaled for a fair
coach. The Barberton defender ran right through the signal and smashed into
Stephens while the ball was still in the air, an obvious infraction. But the
official call was a fumble, with Barberton recovering the ball! The home crowd
let out a long chorus of boos, followed by Massillon's defense regaining the
ball 22 yards the other direction following a 10‑yard sack on fourth down
registered by middle guard John Franke!
The Tigers didn't score with that possession,
but the next time they touched the ball it was at Barberton's 30, following,
you guessed it, another short, wobbly punt out of the end zone!
It took the Tigers three plays to score this
time, with fullback Tom Gruno rambling in from ten yards out with 8:33 left in
the game, followed by a successful boot.
Barberton tried again, but its next effort
resulted in a Bill Davis interception, and the Tigers had the ball on the
Magics' 30. This time the Tigers settled for a 27‑yard field goal off the
foot of Pfisterer for a 36‑zip lead with 3:35 left.
But the Tigers weren't through yet. This time
Mike Galant picked off a pass, the Tigers fourth theft of the evening, setting
up Ivan's final score as the Tiger reserves pushed the Magics all over the
field.
The key to the game was reflected in the final
rushing totals ‑ the Tigers racked up 265 yards on the ground, Barberton
a mere 54.
After the game, all the Tiger running backs
pointed to the dominance of the Tiger offensive line, consisting of the likes
of Ty Beadle, Darrell Strickling, Tim Sweterlistch, Charles Calhoun, Rick
Hamit, and others.
"They just kept opening hole after
hole," said Bushe, the Tigers' game rushing leader. "If anyone should
get the credit tonight, it's those guys."
Now, it's on to next week, when the 6‑0
Tigers will take on the invaders from Pennsylvania, a team from Sharon
shameless enough to bill themselves as the Tigers!
MASSILLON 49
BARBERTON 3
M 0
First downs
rushing 16 3
First downs
passing 3 4
First downs by
penalty 1 3
Totals first
downs 20 10
Yards gained
rushing 270 76
Yards lost
rushing 5 22
Net yards
rushing 265 54
Net yards
passing 78 59
Total yards
gained 343 113
Passes
attempted 10 22
Passes
completed 4 9
Passes int. by 4 1
Yardage on pass
int. 36 0
Times kicked 7 1
Kickoff average 53.1 34.2
Kickoff return
yards 0 74
Punts 2 6
Punting average 35.0 25.0
Punt return
yards 3 0
Punts blocked
by 0 0
Fumbles 2 1
Fumbles lost 2 0
Penalties 3 4
Yards penalized 45 51
Touchdowns
rushing 5 0
Touchdowns
passing 1 0
Miscellaneous
touchdowns 0 0
Number of plays 55 51
Time of
Possession 23:26 24:34
Attendance 9,096
Massillon 7 13 6 17 43
Barberton
0 0 0 0 0
M ‑ Bushe 1‑yard run. (Pfisterer
kick).