WHS-Warren rivalry
may be over
Coach Owens enraged at referees
as Tigers fall 25-22
By
STEVE DOERSCHUK
Independent
Sports Editor
WARREN:
Today is Sweetest Day for lovers.
Friday
was Bitterest Day for Tigers.
The
Tigers' high school football series with Warren Harding has lived long and
prospered. It may have died Friday night at Mollenkopf Stadium, when the Black
Panthers were awarded a controversial touchdown with 30 seconds left that gave
them a 25‑22 victory.
If
it is dead, the coffin will be draped with a giant yellow flag.
Massillon
head coach Lee Owens believed the Tigers were, to put it bluntly, homered.
"It's
not fair to our kids to have happen what happened here tonight," said
Owens, referring to the officiating. "As long as I'm the head coach in
Massillon, we'll never schedule them again."
Owens
was enraged by the volume of penalties against his team ‑ 12 for 149
yards ‑ and the timing.
Two
yellow hankies bothered him the most.
One
was a 15‑yard personal foul against fullback Jason Stafford, who leaped
out of a pile thinking he had scored, but was informed he had been stopped
short of the goal line.
Stafford,
who had rushed for 120 yards to that point in the fourth quarter, was ejected
from the game with the Tigers trailing 19‑14 and facing second and goal
from the 16 ‑ after the penalty ‑ with 4:55 left in the game.
After
a five‑yard encroachment penalty against Warren, quarterback Lee Hurst
rolled right and threw left to tight end Jeff Harig, who caught the ball in the
end zone.
Surprise,
no flags. Touchdown.
Defensive
tackle Bob Dunwiddie, suddenly a running back in a Tiger surprise called the
"Bull Offense," carried for the two‑point conversion and
Massillon led 22‑19 with 4:29 left.
Several
Clayton Waite completions, a pass interference panelty and a personal foul
infraction later, Warren had the ball a few inches short of the goal stripe on
fourth down.
Warren
head coach Frank Thomas, a former Massillon assistant, called for a
quarterback sneak during a timeout. Waite drove over center into a huge
Massillon, pile and bedlam ensured while the 6,000 fans waited for the official
call. After a five‑second delay, the referee's hands went up.
Touchdown.
Interestingly,
Massillon lineman T.R. Rivera had the ball when the touchdown was signaled.
"Half
my body was over the goal line," Waite said. "I'm sure it was a
touchdown.
The
Massillon camp disagreed.
"I
talked to our players and 11 guys told me it wasn't a touchdown," Owens
said. "Waite hit the pile and was stopped. When he realized he was
stopped he reached ahead and while he did that the ball came loose. T.R.
recovered the fumble."
The
Tigers have not been a heavily penalized team this year. They were averaging
48 penalty yards against them per game heading into Friday.
Did
they suddenly turn into a team of Jack Tatums‑gone-berserk? Or was there
another explanation? Namely, that Warren's reputation as a homer palace has
been built on actual hose jobs?
Thomas,
whose team was penalized eight times for 71 yards, rejected the
"homer" theory.
"I
have to believe the officials are ‑ there because they like athletes and
they like kids," Thomas said. "Whether you're talking about Warren,
Steubenville or Massillon, I don't believe high school officials purposely try
to take a game away from a team. I feel strongly about that."
Informed
of Thomas' comment, Owens said, "I disagree.
"I've
never complained to a newspaper about the officiating," he said. "But
I have to say something tonight. I've never seen anything like this as long
as I've been coaching. If beating Massillon is so important that circumstances
like this are created, I can't accept that.
There
is no question beating Massillon was important to the Black Panthers.
"I
didn't care if we went 1‑9 this season as long as we beat Massillon,"
said Waite, a 6‑foot‑3 senior who completed 19 of 36 passes for 195
yards, rushed seven times for 28 yards, and intercepted three passes, two
coming one play after clipping penalties against Massillon.
"We
never beat Massillon, and that goes all the way back through my junior high
days. This isn't just at the top. It's at the tippy top."
Gerald
Simpson, a 6‑foot‑4 senior who missed most of the season with a
broken arm, was a big factor Friday, catching seven passes for 92 yards and
running 33 yards for a touchdown.
He
credited the victory, however, to Waite.
"In
my opinion, Clayton is the best quarterback in the country," Simpson said
of Waite, who says he will play college football at Michigan or South
Carolina.
The
victory pushed Harding's record to 5‑2 and reduced Massillon's lead in
the all‑time series to 44‑17‑3. The Panthers, however, owns a
7‑6-2 lead in games played at Mollenkopf since 1960.
Owens,
whose team dropped to 4-3 with its third straight loss, was not sure if there
is a contract to play Warren next year in Massillon, but he talked about the
possibility of voiding it if there is.
Warren
and Massillon first faced each other in 1921.
The
first time the Tigers touched the ball Friday, they moved to midfield but were
stalled when Hurst was sacked for a three‑yard loss, followed by a five‑yard
encroachment penalty and a 15‑yard clipping foul.
Three
punts later Massillon had the ball at its own 45 but quickly lost it right
there on a fumble. Harding overcame a 10‑yard holding penalty against a
Panther linemen that set up a second and 20. Waite scrambled 16 yards and, on
third down, passed for 17 yards to Simpson. Moments later, Simpson made a leaping
catch in the end zone on a 10 yard scoring play. The P.A.T. kick gave the
Panthers a 7‑0 lead with 1:29 left in the first quarter.
Massillon
struck back quickly. Lamont Dixon's 49‑yard kickoff return put the ball
at the Warren 41. Two plays later the Tigers were hit with another clipping
penalty but that was negated two plays later still by a personal foul against
Harding. On first down from the 17, Hurst took off around left end on a bootleg
run and maneuvered his way through traffic for a touchdown as the first
quarter expired. The point‑after kick failed and the Harding kept the
lead,,7‑6.
Warren
took over at its 27 after the kickoff and, on second‑and‑10, moved
to the 42 on a pass interference call. Two Waite completions advanced the ball
to the 33, where on third and two Simpson swept right and seemed to be caught
in the backfield. He bounced off the pack, however, and sprinted left, breaking
into the clear and scoring. The kick failed, and Warren led 13‑6 with
8:56 left in the second quarter.
Massillon
drove 57 yards to the Warren 15 before running out of downs on its next
possession but soon got the ball back on an 11‑yard punt that rolled dead
on the Harding 31. A 19‑yard sideline pass to Jeff Harig put the ball at
the 12, and three runs by Stafford setup fourth-and‑two at the 4.
That's
when the Tigers sent in their "bull offense," featuring Dunwiddie (6‑3,
225) and his fellow defensive lineman Trace Liggett (6‑3, 268) in the
offensive backfield.
Liggett
and Dunwiddie had run through the pre‑game hoop together and with more
than the usual gusto, so one might have guessed they were up to something.
Their
presence made an impact the first time the "bull offense" hit the
field, with Liggett throwing a block that helped spring Dunwiddie for a three‑yard
touchdown run.
Hurst
passed to Stafford for a two‑point conversion and the Tigers led 13‑12
with 1: 39 left in the half.
The
Panthers, however, struck quickly and scored an important touchdown with seven
seconds left in the half. A 70‑yard drive featured a 22‑yard
scramble by Waite, two completions for 25 yards, and a third‑down run of
five yards for the touchdown. The conversion run attempt failed and Warren
settled for a 19‑14 halftime lead.
The
Tigers spent most of the second half in scoring range. Tom Mattox's
interception on the second play of the third quarter gave Massillon possession
at the Warren 33, but on second and eight from the 12, another clipping penalty
put the Tigers in a hole. Waite's intercepted Hurst on the next play.
Waite
put Warren on the move again but Massillon linebacker David Ledwell intercepted
him at the Massillon 41.
This
time, Warren's defense stopped the Tigers, who ran out of downs at the
Panthers 31. Warren eventually punted and Massillon threatened again when
Hurst, fooling the Panthers on third‑and‑one, found Harig all
alone deep. The play might have gone for more than 39 yards but Hurst had to
throw with a Harding defender tugging at his leg and Harig had to come back for
the ball. Stafford ran five yards to the 20, then an apparent Tiger touchdown
run on the next play was called back by still another clipping penalty. Again,
Waite intercepted Hurst on the next play, with 10:34 left in the game.
Again,
the Tigers forced a punt, getting the ball at midfield. They drove to the 12,
where it was fourth and five, and they lined up to go for it. This time, it was
Massillon helped by a penalty, as Warren lined up offsides, giving the Tigers a
first‑and‑goal at the 7.
The
"bull offense" re‑appeared, but this time Dunwiddie lined up at
fullback, Liggett was beside him at wingback, and Stafford was the tailback.
Stafford followed the big bulls for six yards to the 1, and followed them
again to what he thought was a touchdown, but at that point found out his carry
was not ruled a score, and was subsequently ejected for his reaction.
The
ball was marched 15 yards backward, and then five yards ahead when Warren
encroached on the next play. Hurst then hit Harig with the go‑ahead TD,
and Dunwiddie, again lining up in the "bull," carried for the two‑point
conversion.
Massillon
led 22‑19 with 4:29 left.
Warren
had trouble with the kickoff and set up on its own 7. Waite passed the
Panthers to the 20 but faced second and 10. He passed again, long down the
right sideline. the ball was nearly intercepted by safety Joe Pierce but pass
interference was ruled and Warren had another first down. Waite clicked for
big passes of 27 and 17 yards to Keith Jordan, with the latter play having a
half‑the‑distance penalty tacked on when Chad Buckland, was ruled
for leading a tackle with his helmet ‑ another call that upset Owens
greatly.
"That
play never gets called ... and to call it there," Owens said.
Eventually,
it was fourth and inches, and Waite was ruled in for the touchdown.
The
Tigers now must try to rally for a battle next Saturday at Cleveland St.
Joseph, which fell to 5‑2 Friday by losing to Cleveland St. Ignatius.
WARREN 25
MASSILLON 22
W
M
First downs rushing 7
6
First downs passing 6
11
First downs by penalty 3 3
Totals first downs 16 20
Yards gained rushing 192
136
Yards lost rushing 12
15
Net yards rushing 180 121
Net yards passing 158
195
Total yards gained 338 316
Passes attempted 26
36
Passes completed 13 19
Passes int. by 2 3
Times kicked off 4
5
Kickoff average 47.0
40.4
Kickoff return yards 77
49
Punts 2 5
Punting average 22.0
25.6
Punt return yards -2
0
Fumbles 2 0
Fumbles lost 1 0
Penalties 12 8
Yards penalized 149
71
Number of plays 60
63
Time of possession 21.51
26.09
Attendance 6,000