Tigers pull
switch
in beating St.
Joe
St. Joseph’s husky lumberjacks were wide as they were
tall, but a question dogged the Cleveland boys, which Tiger has the ball?
By STEVE DOERSCHUK
Independent Sports Editor
MASSILLON
– Enter, please, a new cliche in The World Book of Wonderful Sports Quotations.
He
who lives by the game film dies by the game film.
The
Massillon Tigers who were studied all week by the Cleveland St. Joseph Vikings
weren't the same Tigers who ambushed them 28‑14 Friday night before a season‑high
crowd of 11,482 in Paul Brown Tiger Stadium.
"The
new stuff they did hurt us," said St. Joseph linebacker Ralph Godic.
"There were a lot of tricky things they did which we didn't see on the
films."
Oh,
how the films can lie.
"Their
backs were a lot quicker in person than they appeared on film," noted St.
Joseph head coach Bill Gutbrod. "My, they have the backs."
It
was a marvelous Massillon defensive effort, really, that was at the heart of
the victory that sent St. Joseph to its second defeat versus five victories.
But
it was an exotic offense that set P.B.'s Big House a buzzing as the Tigers
improved to 5‑2 and got back in the playoff hunt.
The
two most prominent scenes not played on Gutbrod's game films were Cornell
Jackson running the football and Wes Siegenthaler playing quarterback.
Jackson,
a surprise starter who had missed five games with a knee injury, brought 6
feet, 3 inches and 205 pounds of fast‑lane excitement to the Tiger
offense. He ended the night with 10 carries for 51 yards and a touchdown.
The
numbers weren't overwhelming, but as Tiger head coach John Marrow noted,
"Cornell Jackson is a force."
"I
can't describe how great it felt to play again," Jackson said, "I was
as excited as I was when I was a sophomore.”
Scene
No. 2 was a delicious variation of the old switcheroo.
On
the eighth play of the game, after Paul Fabianich had taken all seven snaps at
quarterback, with Siegenthaler playing split end, Fabianich came out of the
huddle and lined up at wide out, with Siegenthaler lining up over center.
Siegenthaler
kept the ball and got buried for a two‑yard loss, but the St. Joseph
defense started wandering.
The
Tigers pulled the switcheroo more times, with Siegenthaler running the QB
keeper on seven occasions for 64 yards.
Sometimes
the game films don' lie.
"In
the films, we saw that a lot of yardage was gained against St. Joseph on the
option," said Fabianich. "Wes, of course, is a very good runner. When
we pulled the switch, I heard their coaches saying a couple of times, 'Watch
for the double pass.' But the situation was designed for Wes to run the ball. I
think we crossed them up.”
Sometimes
the game films lie.
Sophomore
Jerome Myricks, who is listed incorrectly in the program as a junior, doesn't
show up as a ball carrier in any of the Tiger game records. But the speedy
Myricks hit St. Joseph for a 15‑yard gain on the Tigers' third‑play
of the game and finished with five carries.
Junior
tailback Michael Harris, a star of the game films and the Tigers' leading rusher
coming in, surprisingly didn't play ‑ he was slightly injured but was
available if needed.
In
another twist, junior Jerry Gruno saw his first extensive action on defense,
playing most of the game at left tackle.
In
short, Game No. 7 was full of surprises.
About
the only thing it lacked was high suspense.
The
Tigers grabbed an early lead, got a late challenge from the Vikings, then
staged a clutch drive on which Mike Norris scored his third touchdown of the
night.
After
a scoreless first quarter, the Tigers stalled early in the second period and
sent in Ken Hawkins to punt.
Hawkins
got off a beautiful boomer that backed up St. Joseph deep man Andre Smith to
the 15. Smith's back peddling left him off balance and caused him to drop the
ball, which squirted to the nine, where the Tigers’ Todd Perdue pounced on it.
0n
second and goal from the 4, Jackson swept right and high stepped into the end
zone. Norris' PAT kick was flat but went through and the Tigers led 7‑0
with 8:34 left in the half.
St.
Joseph drove 57 yards to the Tiger 30 after taking the ensuing kickoff, but on
fourth and one Lance Hostetler's tackle stopped Godic, who plays fullback in
addition to linebacker, and the Tigers took over at the 29.
After
an eight‑yard loss, Siegenthaler and Fabianich pulled one of their
switches, with Siegenthaler keeping for a 25‑yard gain to the Viking 41.
Two
plays later, it was back to the exotic, as Fabianich pitched to Norris, who
pitched to Siegenthaler, who gunned the ball to a wide-open Bart Letcavits.
Letcavits caught the ball and crashed to earth at the 1 for a 38‑yard
gain.
Norris
then hit the middle three times, going over the left side for score on third
and goal from the 1.
The
PAT kick failed at the 1:28 mark, and the Tigers settled for a 13-0 halftime
lead.
The
Tigers took the second‑half kickoff but stalled at midfield.
Then
the Massillon defense, which yielded just 107 yards in the first half, buried
the Vikings deep in their own territory, forcing a fourth‑and‑12
punt train the nine.
Siegenthaler
fielded the punt near midfield and danced his way to another of his spectacular
returns, getting the bull to the 15. But for the third time this season, a long
Siegenthaler return was negated by a clipping call, which, for the record,
"de‑finitely wasn't clipping," according to Siegenthaler.
The
Tigers started from their own 41 and scored anyway, using Norris' power running
and a 13‑yard burst by Jackson to get the ball to the 4 on first and
goal. Norris went over the right side and scored easily from there, and
fullback Derick Newman tacked on a two‑point conversion run to make the
score 21‑0 with 1:11 left in the third quarter.
Than
the Vikings made it interesting, starting on their own 28 after the kickoff and
rampaging 72 yards in just five plays, with split end Dale Pratt breaking wide
open along the right sideline and hauling in a 30‑yard TD toss from
quarterback Bob Duffy. Smith's two‑point run made it 21‑8 with one
second left in the third quarter.
Siegenthaler
streaked 48 yards with the kickoff, but the Tigers ran out of downs on the
Vikings 16. St. Joseph drove to midfield but had to punt, but the Tigers
stalled and had to punt from deep in their own territory.
Another
good boot by Hawkins forced the Vikings to start on their own 46. From there,
they marched 54 yards in seven plays, with Smith racing in from 11 yards out.
The PAT kick failed, but St. Joseph now had a chance, trailing 21‑14 with
2:55 left in the game.
The
key to the game became St. Joseph's ability to recover an onside kick. The
squibber traveled 11 yards to Massillon's Bob Foster, who smothered the ball at
the Tiger 49.
The
Tigers' offensive line and Newman took over from there. On first down, Newman
exploded over the right side for 33 yards to the 18. Six plays later, Norris
swept left to score from three yards out. Norris' kick made it 28‑14 with
30 seconds left.
In
the end, the game looked even on paper, with the Tigers holding a 303‑301
edge in total yards. But the Tiger
defense played extremely well while the Tigers was all but putting the game out
of reach during the first three quarters.
"St.
Joseph was as big an offensive team as we've seen, but we have great defensive
quickness and tonight we played as a team,” said Perdue, a junior linebacker.
"If we'd played this well last week, we could have beaten Austintown
Fitch."
"We
just had to watch them up the middle," added Tiger tackle Duane Crenshaw.
“We reduced our mistakes and played good team ball tonight."
When
the defense began to give ground in the second half, Newman counterpunched an
offense. The 206‑pound senior gained just three yards in three first‑half
carries but surged for 69 yards in nine second‑half lugs.
St.
Joseph's wishbone backfield spread the carries among Al Forney (seven for 73),
Godic (12 for 73) and Smith (10 for 57). Norris gave the Tigers 53 yards in 15
trips.
Duffy
completed 10 of 24 passes for 115 yards. Fabianich connected on just one of
eight tosses for four yards, but Maronto created him with doing "a good
job of running the offense.”
St. Joe’s
defense just didn’t
Have
Siegenthaler’s number
By STEVE DOERSCHUK
Independent Sports Editor
MASSILLON
‑ Wes Siegenthaler is a split end, wingback, quarterback, kickoff
returner, punt returner and cornerback.
Maybe
it was only fitting that a guy who wears so many hats wore more than one number
Friday night in the Massillon Tigers' 28‑14 high school football victory
over Cleveland St. Joseph.
Siegenthaler
wore No. 87 in warm-ups and No. 20 during Friday's first half. At the start of
the second half, No. 1 was on his back.
Actually,
it wasn't fitting. No. 20, which used to belong to Robert Cooley - he
transferred to Tuslaw ‑ is one size smaller than Siegenthaler's regular
jersey No. 1.
"He
forgot his jersey, that's all," said Tiger head coach John Maronto.
But
that's not all there was to it in the mind of Bill Gutbrod, the St. Joseph head
coach. The start of the second half was delayed several minutes while
Siegenthaler's jersey change was debated.
Ohio
high school rules prohibit such a jersey switch, unless there are extenuating
circumstances.
The
second half began only after Siegenthaler's ripped No. 20 was presented to
Gutbrod on the St. Joseph sideline.
"The
jersey had a little tear in it – I think they tore it. It was about that
big," said Gutbrod, holding his thumb and index finger two inches apart.
Gutbrod,
who at age 60 and with 36 years under his belt at St. Joseph is one of the
nation's veteran high school coaches, wasn't happy about the incident but cut
the jersey talk short.
"It
had nothing to do with the game,” he said. "They did a good job. Give them
credit.”