Another
loss
in
Austintown
Tigers'
Twilight zone
rears
its ugly head, 14-7
By STEVE DOERSCHUK
Independent Sports
Editor
AUSTINTOWN ‑ The
Massillon Tigers have found their Bermuda Triangle. They have located their
Twilight Zone. They have landed on their Field of Dreams (nightmares are
dreams, too, aren't they?). For the Tigers, its name is Fitch Stadium. They
lost there 14‑7 Friday night to drop to 3‑2 in the 1990 high school
football season.
The Fitch Falcons, 5‑0
this year, improved to 3‑0 against Massillon at that dastardly place. In
1986 the Tigers lost at Fitch on the last play from scrimmage. In 1988 they
lost on a game‑ending field goal.
Last night they lost
with a quarterback who played much of the fourth quarter with a concussion not
discovered until after the game, played in a murky rain.
Counting the games in
Massillon, the Tigers are 2‑4 in the all‑time series against Fitch.
'We
could make so many excuses if we wanted to. But maybe that's not what we need
to be doing right now'
Lee
Owens
Fitch's head coach
throughout has been David Hartman.
In 1965 Hartman earned
a diploma from Washington High. Maybe they should take it back. On the other
hand, it's nothing personal. "You've got to do what you've got to
do," Hartman said amid Fitch's post‑game celebration.
What Fitch does best
is block out of the wing‑T formation on offense. Hartman ought to get an
honorary masters degree in misdirection.
"We have guys
going this way, that way and every which way," Hartman said.
"Massillon has a lot of quick kids who really swarm to the football. If
you run the same guy on the same play all of the time, they'll kill, you. With
a.11.9ur misdirection, they had a difficult time ganging up on us."
Tiger head coach Lee
Owens knows better than anyone two straight losses is the wrong direction.
"We were flat,
there were some big penalties, the field was wet we could make so many excuses
i
we wanted to. But
maybe that's not what we need to be doing right now," Owens said.
"There was a
point in the game when
they were outplaying us. We started playing harder, but we couldn't get over
the
hump.
"There's no
reason for what happened tonight. I really felt coming in we were definitely
the better team. Fitch played a good ball game. We didn't."
Fitch's misdirection
started clicking at the end of the first half when the Falcons drove 57 yards
for a touchdown. With 1:22 left in the half, 6‑4 tight end Dave Fitz‑Patrick
caught an eight‑yard touchdown pass from 5‑9 quarterback Frank
Senediak on third‑and‑eight.
"We thought their
cornerback would be playing up and he was," Fitz‑Patrick said.
"That enabled me to get pretty open."
Senediak, a carbon
copy of Fitch's bootlegging wizard who was the 1988 quarterback, Derrick
Fletcher, passed just enough to keep the Tigers off balance, completing six of
seven for 68 yards.
Senediak also ran 16
times for 64 yards. His ball handling was the key on Fitch's opening possession
of the third quarter, which ended when he hit another wide‑open receiver,
running back Chris Davis, on an 18‑yard touchdown pass.
Gary Pritchard, who
gave up soccer to be a placekicker, boomed the P.A.T. and it was 14‑0
with 7:54 left in the third quarter.
Facing a must‑score
possession, the Tigers did just that, driving 65 yards off the ensuing kickoff
for a touchdown. It wasn't easy. Following two bootleg runs by quarterback
Barry Shertzer that went for losses, it was fourth‑and‑16 from the
29.
Tight end Chris Roth
lined up on the right side, beat the coverage on a post pattern, and hauled in
a nicely thrown bomb from Shertzer for the touchdown. Ryan John's P.A.T. kick
sneaked over the crossbar and it was 14‑7 with 3:47 left in the third
quarter.
It was unclear when
Shertzer suffered the concussion, but it may have been on a hit during one of
those bootleg runs.
Shertzer, who
completed a key third‑and‑11 pass of 37 yards to split end Steve
Brown, was woozy after the contest. At 1:15 a.m., he was in the emergency room
at Massillon Community Hospital. It was believed he would stay overnight as a
precaution.
Shertzer had thrown
only one interception in four games but was picked off twice Friday. The Tigers
also fumbled the ball twice.
"Their offense
did a nice job, but as far as their defense I thought it was mostly a matter of
us stopping ourselves," Owens said.
The Massillon (defense
took control in the fourth quarter. With just under seven minutes to go, the
Tigers had caught on to Fitch's misdirection and stuffed the falcons deep in
their own territory. On a third down carry that went nowhere, Fitch senior running
back Jim Toto made the mistake of yelling an expletive at Tiger cornerback Chad
Buckland.
Fitch was penalized
half the distance to the goal and had to punt from its own 14.
A 43‑yard punt
still left Massillon in excellent field position, but Fitch had the ball back
on a fumble on the next play.
The Tiger defense made
another big stand, but a punt evaded return man Troy Burick, who pounced on the
pigskin at the 7.
On the next play,
Falando Ashcraft charged over the left side and nearly broke away for a touchdown.
He was stopped after a 21yard gain. Two plays later, Ashcraft bounced outside
and gained 32 yards to the Fitch 42. The Tigers were in business.
Ashcraft ran two yards
on a critical fourth‑and‑one moments later, but on first down, a
Shertzer pass seemed to slip out of his hand and went directly into the arms of
Toto.
"It was an
automatic," Owens said. "Fitch didn't have our receiver covered and
Barry called the audible."
But Fitch called the
shots after that, and ran out the clock.
Nobody seemed to give
Fitch much of a chance before the game, a fact not lost on the Falcons.
"Even the local
paper, The Vindicator, said we didn't have a chance," said Senediak.
"It got us fired up when we read we weren't supposed to have much talent or
much size. We didn't think we were going to win. We knew we were going to
win."
Fitz‑Patrick,
the tight end who caught the early touchdown pass, painted the Falcons as a
confident bunch.
"We think we can
win the state championship," he said.
Owens had said before
the game this year's Fitch team is capable of beating any state power on a
given night, but may have difficulty doing it consistently.
Hartman concedes the
Falcons still have some proving to do. "That remains to be seen," he
said, when asked if his team is capable of beating Ursuline, Mooney and
Boardman, three powerhouses left on the schedule.
The Tigers' next three
games are against Nordonia, Indianapolis North Central and Youngstown East, all
at home.
'To tell you the
truth, I didn't say much to our players after the game," Owens said.
"It's clear what we have to do ... work our tails off and rebuild after
these setbacks."
FITCH 14
MASSILLON 7
M F
First downs rushing 3
11
First downs passing 6
3
First downs by
penalty 1 0
Totals first downs 10 14
Yards gained rushing 119
177
Yards lost rushing 25
14
Net yards rushing 94
163
Net yards passing 155
68
Total yards gained 249 231
Passes attempted 25 7
Passes completed 10
6
Passes int. by 2 0
Yardage on pass int 0
20
Times kicked off 2
3
Kickoff average 38.0
44.7
Kickoff return yards 32
34
Punts 3 4
Punting average 42.7
38.5
Punt return yards 14
27
Fumbles 3 2
Fumbles lost 2 1
Penalties 4 6
Yards penalized 35
46
Number of plays 50
55
Time of possession 18:11
29:49
Attendance 11,500
Individual statistics
Rushing
(M) Ashcraft 12‑89.
(F) Senediak 16‑70,
Javit 12‑38, Davis 10‑39.
Passing
(M) Shertzer 10‑25‑2,155
yards.
(F) Senediak 6‑7‑0,
68 yards.
Massillon 0
0 7 0 7
Fitch 0
7 7 0 14
F – Fitz-Patrick 8
Pass from Senediak (Pritchard kick)
F ‑ Davis 13
pass from Senediak (Pritchard kick)
M ‑ Roth 29 pass
from Shertzer (John kick)