Tigers wounded
by St. Vincent
Ashcraft, Woullard
say they'll play
against Bulldogs
By STEVE DOERSCHUK
Independent Sports Editor
The recovery will be painful
as the Massillon Tigers attempt to restore the glow on their 1991 football
season.
As head coach Lee Owens put
it, "No matter what you try to say, there's never anything good about a
loss," including Friday's 28‑25 setback to Akron St. Vincent‑St.
Mary in front of 12,300 on a warm October night at Paul Brown Tiger Stadium.
So it was when the Tigers
lost 14‑7 to Cleveland St. Joseph on a frozen night the ninth week of the
1989 season. That year's team recovered ‑‑ after a grim week of
practice for McKinley ‑ to beat the Bulldogs and win two playoff games.
"There's really no
magic about trying to come back,'' Owens said. "I've had a lot of
confidence in this team all season and that's not going to change now. We'll
just prepare as hard as we can, as always. We'll make every effort to be as
well prepared as we can."
The Tigers had to adjust Friday
to two things they hadn't prepared for ‑ in‑game injuries to
"rob" (read outside backer) defensive end Jason Woulland and fullback
Falando Ashcraft,
On the first series of the
game, Woullard suffered what was diagnosed as a bruised (not separated, as one
fast‑traveling rumor had it) right shoulder. In the third quarter,
Ashcraft sustained a sprained right knee judged to be less serious than the
one that knocked quarterback Nick Mossides out of the fifth game of the
season. Ashcraft's injury was initially thought to be a sprained ankle; in
fact, he was helped off the field after the game with no shoe on his right
foot, and his ankle heavily wrapped. After the game, he climbed out of a cold
whirlpool bath and declared, "I'll, be all right."
Woullard, like Ashcraft,
said he would be able to play against McKinley.
No one can deny the injuries
hurt the Tigers. Ashcraft had rushed for 75 yards at the time of his injury,
pushing his season total to 998 (Travis McGuire gave the Tigers 135 rushing
yards, lifting his season total to 1,113). Woullard has quietly had a superb
season in one of the Tigers' most demanding defensive positions.
On the other hand, no one
was denying St. Vincent is an outstanding team. The Fighting Irish, whose 7‑2
record is the same as the Tigers', clinched a Division III playoff spot and
could be back at Tiger Stadium next month playing for a state title.
"St. V played a great
game," Owens said. "They beat us physically and they beat us a
couple of times at the skill positions."
Third‑year starter
Chris "Juice" Campbell set a record for most yardage by a wide receiver
facing Massillon in catching five passes for 191 yards and two touchdowns. He
is simply a magnificent athlete, and he still looked fresh at the end despite
playing full‑time on offense and defense, and on kickoff teams.
Irish tailback Larry Henderson
also showed flashes of brilliance but was generally contained (27 on one
carry, 31 yards over nine other lugs) before he left the game with a cramped
thigh. Henderson's replacement, junior Cameron Puhler, hardly cramped St. V's
style after entering the game in the third quarter. He rushed 13 times for 77
yards. Puhler ' whose efforts were key in touchdown drives that reversed what
had been a 17‑7 Massillon lead was billed in advance by Irish head coach John Cistone as an outstanding
back. So, he was a surprise only to those unfamiliar with the Irish.
Everything was going the Tigers'
way at the start of the third quarter. They emerged from the locker room with a
dominating offensive march that expanded a 10‑7 halftime lead to 17‑7.
Then they stuffed the first Irish offensive possession of the second half and
got the ball back on a punt.
The Tigers drove 65 yards
for a touchdown on the opening series of the second half. Ashcraft opened the
drive with five smashing carries for 40 yards. It was third down from the 9
when McGuire made one of his most spectacular runs of the season, taking a
short pass from Mossides near the line of scrimmage, advancing the ball to the
3 where he was met by a swarm of defenders, then fighting and spinning his way
through St. V's Bosco Pearson, Brandon Stancliff, Henderson and Craig Hoffman.
All four wound up on the sand turf, with McGuire in the end zone.
Brown's P.A.T. kick made it
17‑7 with 7:43 left in the third quarter.
The turning point of the
game came midway through the third period, on second‑and‑eight from
the Massillon 42. Henderson, playing defensive back, intercepted a tipped
pass from Nick Mossides and returned it 27 yards to the Massillon 39; Henderson
pulled up lame after the run and never returned.
St. Vincent's next play was
a 23‑yard pass to Campbell. The Irish scored on third‑and‑eight
when junior quarterback Josh Zwisler hooked up with flanker Bosco Pearson on a 14‑yard
scoring pass to the right flat. Ed Jamison's P.A.T. boot made it 17‑14
with 3:26 left in the third quarter.
The Tigers then started
their first series after Ashcraft's injury. They punted after three plays.
Two plays later, Zwisler lobbed
a bomb over the middle, and Campbell ran under it for the catch and a 48‑yard
gain to the Tiger 25. Puhler's running took care of the rest of the 71‑yard
drive. A 17‑yard gain put the ball on the 4, and he scored on the next
play. Jamison's kick made it 21‑17, St. V, with 10:44 left in the game.
A squib kick left the Tigers
buried on their own 10, and they again had to punt after three plays. The Irish
got the ball on the Massillon 42, and scored on a 33‑yard play on which
Campbell ran under a bomb along the right sideline. Jamison's kick again was
good, and it was 28-17, St. V, with 6:25 left in the game.
The Tiger offense responded
with its most impressive scoring possession of the night, 55 yards in six
plays, eating up just 1:56.
A 13‑yard run by
McGuire, a 15‑yard Mossides pass to Marc Stafford, and a 14‑yard
Mossides pass to McGuire set up McGuire's 4‑yard TD run on first‑and‑goal.
The Tigers went for two so they could close the gap to a field goal, and succeeded
when McGuire hit Greg Paul on an option pass.
It was 28‑23 with 4:29
left in the game.
"I felt real good about
our chances if we got the ball back,'' Owens said. '"The offense showed a
lot of determination, on that drive.”
Essentially, the game came
down to a third‑and‑eight play with the clock winding toward the 2
1/2‑minute mark. With the ball on the Irish 33, Puhler took the ball on a
sprint draw, in the face of a blitz, dodged a tackler, and sprinted up the
middle 12 yards for a first down to the 45. Puhler ran 10 yards on the next play,
and from there the Irish had no trouble running out the clock.
Massillon had dominated the
first half, except for the game’s opening series when Campbell burst over the
middle on a third-and‑nine and was wide open when he caught a Zwisler
pass in stride en route to a 64‑yard touchdown play.
It was 7‑0 with 61
seconds gone in the game.
The Tigers struck back quickly,
driving 66 yards in seven plays, ignited by a 14‑yard completion to
Terry Holland. On first down from the 9, McGuire broke up the middle, broke two
tackles and burst into the end zone. Jason Brown's booming P.A.T. boot to the
top row of the north end zone made it 7‑7 just 1:57 after Campbell's TD.
Following a missed 45‑yard
St. Vincent field goal try, the Tigers drove 67 yards before running out of
downs at the 13. The Tigers quickly got the ball back on a Henderson fumble and
Jonathon Jones' recovery at the Massillon 40. The Tigers drove 56 yards to the
4 before settling for a 21‑yard field goal by Brown. It was 10‑7
with 8:56 left in the half.
It stayed that way at halftime,
at which point St. Vincent led 178‑175 in total offense.
The Irish wound up with a
386-309 edge in total offense.
The Tigers still have a
solid chance to make the playoffs for the third straight year and seventh time
overall.
However, Owens said,
"The playoffs are the last thing on my mind right now."
The Tiger locker room was
not a happy place. Outside the locker room, a woman walked toward a parking
lot on the outside of a fence. "Yea, Tigers," she said. "I still
love you."
St. Vincent head coach John
Cistone was happy but not gloating after the game.
St.
VINCENT 28
MASSILLON 25
M S
First downs
rushing 12 7
First downs
passing 4 7
First downs by
penalty 2 0
Totals first downs 18 14
Yards gained
rushing 225 162
Yards lost
rushing 6 8
Net yards rushing 219 154
Net yards
passing 90 232
Total yards gained 309 386
Passes
attempted 15 19
Passes
completed 8 9
Passes int. by 0 1
Times kicked
off 5 5
Kickoff
average 49.2 50.0
Kickoff return
yards 108 83
Punts 4 3
Punting
average 35.0 36.7
Punt return
yards 12 15
Fumbles 0 1
Fumbles lost 0 1
Penalties 1 9
Yards
penalized 5 53
Number of
plays 59 53
Time of
possession 24:24 23:36
Attendance 12,300
St.
VINCENT 7 0 7 14
28
MASSILLON 7
3 7 8 25
SCORING
SUMMARY
SV ‑ Campbell
64 pass from Zwisler (Jamison kick)
M ‑ McGuire 9
run (Brown kick)
M ‑ Brown 21
FG
SV ‑ Pearson
14 pass from Zwisler (Jamison kick)
SV ‑ Puhler 4
run (Jamison kick)
SV ‑ Campbell
33 pass from Zwisler (Jamison kick)
M ‑ McGuire 3
run (Good pass from McGuire)
INDIVIDUAL
STATISTICS
RUSHING
(Massillon) McGuire
23‑135, Ashcraft 16‑75, Mossides 1‑0, Seimetz 2‑5,
Stafford 1‑4;
(St. Vincent)
Henderson 10‑58, Pethel 6‑15, Zwisler 4‑4, Puhler 13‑77.
PASSING
(Massillon)
Mossides 8‑15‑90, 1 TD, 1 int.;
(St. Vincent)
Zwisler 9‑19‑232, 3 TDs.
RECEIVING
(Massillon) Holland
1‑19, Stafford 2‑41, Ashcraft 1‑4, McGuire 4‑26;
(St. Vincent)
Campbell 5‑191, Pethel 1‑3, Frattura 1‑22, Henderson 1‑2,
Pearson 1‑14.