Tigers oust
Orangemen
By STEVE DOERSCHUK
Independent Sports Editor
Late autumn. Orange‑and-black vs. Orangemen. Two good
running teams. Too cold to pass.
It was a perfect night for some smash‑pumpkin
football.
And that is what the Massillon Tigers played Saturday night
in carving out a 28‑6 football playoff victory over the Akron Ellet
Orangemen in front of 11,000 frozen customers at Fawcett Stadium.
Massillon advanced to the Region 2 (of Division 1) championship
game Saturday night at 7 against Toledo St. John's at the Akron Rubber Bowl.
Ellet finished the year with a 9‑2 record.
The Tigers ripped open a 21‑0 halftime lead and had no
trouble riding out the victory even though starting quarterback Nick Mossides
spent the second half in the locker room after his head bounced off the hard
turf after a hit late in the first half.
It was so clear Massillon was the better team that Ellet
head coach Joe Yost didn't bother moping.
"They're the best we've seen, he said. "We didn't
play our best game, but let's face it. They're an outstanding team."
Massillon, 9‑2, was mightier on both lines of
scrimmage against an Ellet team billed as a big bunch of bruisers.
"They looked bigger on film than they actually were
" Massillon head coach Lee Owens said. "They did, in fact, have good
size. But Walsh Jesuit, Cincinnati Moeller and Akron St. V all had bigger
teams.
"They were very aggressive. The only team that's played
more physical than Ellet was probably St. V."
The Tigers got back their one-two running punch, with fullback
Falando Ashcraft, who sat out most of a 42‑13 win over McKinley with a
sprained ankle, rushing for 102 yards.
'G.A.' to apply
at Rubber Bowl
All tickets
for Saturday's 7 p.m. Massillon‑Toledo St. John's playoff game at the
Akron Rubber Bowl will be general admission, Washington High ticket official
Josie Rollstin said Sunday.
Tickets, $5
apiece, will go on sale Tuesday at Paul Brown Tiger Stadium. Hours that day
will be 7:30 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Hours will
be 7:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. Wednesday at Tiger Stadium.
The sale
will shift to Washington High School Thursday (7 a.m. to 7 p.m.) and Friday (7
a.m. to noon).
There will
be no special hours for season ticket holders, and no limit on the number of
tickets one can buy.
Travis McGuire stayed on fire with a 19‑carry, 198‑yard,
two‑touchdown night.
Ellet wound up with a 48‑21 lead in passing yards, but
it was the smash‑pumpkin stats that mattered: Massillon led 318‑124
in rushing yards.
McGuire expanded his school‑record, single‑season
rushing total to 1,612 yards (8.1 per carry). Ashcraft moved nearer second
place on the Massillon career rushing yards list. He has rushed for 1,106
yards this year after totals of 195 as a sophomore and 1,182 as a junior. That
adds up to 2,483, just short of Bill Harmon's second‑place total of 2,505
(1973-75). Tops on the list is Art Hastings (3,090 yards, 1958‑60).
In Saturday's game, Ashcraft exploded over the right side on
a trap play for a 49‑yard touchdown run that gave the Tigers a 21‑0
lead with 7:25 left in the second quarter.
"I wasn't 100 percent ... probably in the late
80s," Ashcraft said. "I was still a little sore. This was like a
little test. I'll definitely be back close to 100 percent next week."
The Tigers advanced to the Region 2 championship game
against Toledo St. John's Saturday night at the Akron Rubber Bowl. St. John's
nipped Barberton 10‑7 in another playoff opener.
Ellet, also 9‑2, gave the Tigers a dose of Jackson
deja vu on the first play from scrimmage.
A year ago, Jackson scored early in a playoff game against
Massillon at Fawcett on a long run by Jaiye Murdock. On Saturday, Ellet would
have scored on a broken play had not one of the Orangemen been caught clipping.
Ellet tailback Bobby Clark picked up a bad pitch deep in his own territory,
retreated to his own goal line, and wound up running at least 150 yards to the
opposite end zone. The clip was nowhere close to the streaking Clark; Yet, it
brought the ball all the way back to the Ellet 26‑yard line.
Ellet punted after three plays, then the Tigers tried three
passes and had to punt themselves.
Thanks to its defense, Massillon had the ball back on a
punt in good field position moments later. McGuire traveled 33 yards on a
counter play for a touchdown. Jason Brown's P.A.T. kick made it 7‑0 with
5: 27 left in the first quarter.
Ellet's next possession ended when a pass from quarterback
Ryan George hit an official and ricocheted to Massillon's Wayne Gallion. Two
plays later, McGuire exploded for a 28-yard touchdown run, but the play was
called back by a holding penalty. The possession ended with a punt.
Another Ellet possession became another three‑and‑out.
This time, a 25‑yard punt return by Troy Burick gave the Tigers
possession on the Ellet 31‑yard line. By this point, the Tigers were
relying almost exclusively on the run. It took eight running plays to create
another touchdown ‑ McGuire's one-yard run. Brown's kick made it 14‑0
with 9:16 left in the second quarter.
Ellet again had to punt after three plays. This time the Tigers
took over on their own 43. Mossides hit McGuire for a seven‑yard gain on
first down. On second down, Ashcraft exploded for his 49‑yard touchdown
run. Brown's kick made it 21‑0 with 7:25 left in the half.
"Falando's touchdown was on a trap away from (the
strong side of) our unbalanced line," Owens said. "It was a great
play call."
Owens said offensive players recommended the play, which was
in turn endorsed by offensive line coach Joe Studer.
"That touchdown was a key play," Owens said. "Another
big key was our defense stopping their scoring threat late in the first half.
If they find a way to score, that gives them something to build on in the
second half."
Ellet had driven to the Massillon 27 with just over a
minute left in the half before a sack by Massillon's Jason Woullard and Brandon
Turley snuffed out the threat.
Sophomore Mike Danzy took over at quarterback for the Tigers
in the second half.
Neither team mounted a scoring threat until early in the
fourth quarter, when Danzy engineered an all‑running, 59-yard touchdown
drive. Gains of 21 yards by Ashcraft and 25 yards by McGuire set up an eight‑yard
touchdown run by Eric Wright.
Brown's P.A.T. kick gave the Tigers a 28‑0 lead with
8:36 left in the game.
Ellet salvaged some pride with a touchdown with 1:07 left, a
two‑yard run by 6‑foot‑4, 215pound fullback Danny Crookston.
The point‑after pass attempt failed, and the final
score stood at 28‑6.
"We played hard and with a lot of effort," Owens
said. "We really played well on defense. We played hard on offense, but
not as well. Our continuity was not that good.”
"Still, we had some nice explosiveness on offense, at
times. Ellet had only given up 48 points all season and we scored 21 in the
first half."
On defense, the Tigers forced Ellet to pass, and the Orangemen
were ineffective. George, who likes running the ball out of an option attack,
completed only three of 17 passes, with two interceptions. Eric Woods made his
third interception in the last two games.
As for the Jackson deja vu factor, it fizzled quickly,
Clark, the tailback whose long touchdown run was called back
by the clip, disappeared.
MASSILLON 28
AKRON
ELLET 6
M E
First downs
rushing 10 8
First downs passing 0
1
First downs by
penalty 1 1
Totals first downs 11 10
Yards gained
rushing 326 268
Yards lost
rushing 8 44
Net yards rushing 318 124
Net yards
passing 21 48
Total yards gained 339 172
Passes
attempted 12 17
Passes
completed 5 3
Passes int. by 0 2
Times kicked
off 5 2
Kickoff
average 49.2 24.0
Kickoff return
yards 12 80
Punts 4 7
Punting
average 33.8 36.0
Punt return
yards 68 6
Fumbles 2 2
Fumbles lost 2 0
Penalties 9 3
Yards
penalized 87 45
Number of
plays 49 56
Time of
possession 20:17 27:43
Attendance 11,000
Ellet 0
0 0 6 6
Massillon 7 14
0 7 28