Massillon romps to 35-14 win
Tiger offense
gets 448 yards
By ANDY CALL
Repository sports
writer
MASSILLON
‑ There's one risk undertaken by a team attempting to play what some
call "smash‑mouth" football with the Massillon Tigers ‑
you could come out with a bloody lip and minus a few teeth.
That,
in essence, was what happened to Toledo St. Francis Saturday night. The state's
fourth‑ranked team tried to play Massillon straight‑up and saw its
interior line disintegrate almost from the outset. Final score: Massillon 35,
St. Francis 14.
"That's
the kind of game linemen look forward to," said offensive tackle Ryan
Orr of Massillon. "We don't like to pass the ball."
The
Tigers rolled up 381 yards rushing and 448 yards total offense, running 67
plays from scrimmage and holding a 31:02‑16:58 advantage in time of
possession. Massillon running backs Travis McGuire (23 carries, 187 Yards, one
touchdown) and Falando Ashcraft, 27 carries, 160 yards, two TDs) both had big
games against a defensive interior Tiger linemen said was the best they had
faced.
"There
were a lot of holes , McGuire said. "We just powered it down their throat.
Our line had its best game of the year."
Quarterback
Nick Mossides, showing signs of recovery from a sprained knee that kept him out
of last week's game, twice completed passes to tight end Greg Paul for
touchdowns as Massillon (5‑1) never trailed.
St.
Francis (5‑1) managed 218 yards total offense, 95 of it coming on two
plays. Quarterback Tom Takats was 4 of 16 passing for 73 yards thanks to a pass
rush that had Tiger lineman Jonathon Jones breathing down Takats' neck on
nearly every attempt.
"The
pass rush was the main thing we've been trying to improve upon." Jones
said. We knew it would be smash‑mouth football, and we had to mentally
prepare for that kind of game."
The
Tigers scored on their second, third and fourth drives of the first half to
lead 21‑7 at intermission.
With
3:18 to go in the first quarter, McGuire had 103 yards rushing. He high‑stepped
into the end zone on a counter play to the right side that went 37 yards for
Massillon's first TD. Later in the quarter. Mossides rolled right and found
Paul in the right side of the end zone for a 4‑yard score and a 14‑0
lead,
Takats
recorded three of' his four completions on a 74‑yard drive that pulled
the Knights within 14‑7, dropping a perfect strike to Scott Davison for a
29‑yard touchdown. Massillon fumbled the ensuing kickoff, but stopped the
Knights cold before reeling off a 69‑yard, seven‑play drive.
Ashcraft went in standing tip from a yard out for a 21‑7 Tiger advantage.
The
Tigers scored on their second and third drives of the second half to lead 35‑7.
Mossides lobbed a fourth‑down pass, to Paul for a 17‑yard score
and Ashcraft hit pay dirt on a dive over the right side from a yard out.
Toledo
St. Francis 7 0 0 7 14
Massillon 14
7 7 7 35
M ‑ McGuire
37 run (kick failed)
M - Paul 4 pass
from Mossides (Ashcratt run)
T ‑ Davison 9
pass from Takats (Woollard kick)
M ‑ Ashcraft
1 run (Brown kick)
M ‑ Paul 17
pass from Mossides (Brown kick)
M ‑ Ashcraft
1 run (Brown kick)
T - Harshman 66 run
(Woollard kick)
Records:
Massillon 5‑1: St. Francis 5‑1.
Commings
sidelined
by cancer
By BOB STEWART
Repository sports editor
PLAIN
TWP. ‑ Bob Commings may have coached his final game at GlenOak High
School Friday night when his Golden Eagles came from behind to beat Timken 35‑18
in Fawcett Stadium.
Saturday
morning the GlenOak players learned what he had told his coaches Friday night
after the game.
"I
just told them the truth, that I have lung cancer," said Commings Saturday
in his matter‑of‑fact style.
The
man who soared from head coaching positions at Massillon High School to the
University of Iowa had only learned the bad news himself Friday night.
He
had undergone tests and a biopsy earlier in the week, and his wife Sharon was
told the bad news Friday afternoon.
She
told him that night, and he told his coaches, one of' whom is his son.
"We
are going to have Bob Commings, Jr. be the team leader of the coaching staff
the rest of the season," said GlenOak Principal Jackie DeGarmo‑Reigner,
who indicated the staff will remain intact for the remainder of the season.
"That
will make for a nice communication between father and son," she said.
"My
doctor has made arrangements for me to start things at the Cleveland Clinic
right away," said the elder Commings.
“I
understand that the tests and treatments will be time consuming, painful and
probably make it impossible for me to be with the team.”
Commings
didn't speculate on whether or not he would be "around" but the
players were told by the coaches Saturday Coach Commings might be at the games
but he wouldn't be at the practices.
Commings
is in his 12th season as the head coach at GlenOak, and his record going into
this year was 71‑39‑1. His present club is 2‑4.
The
graduate of Youngstown East High School played at the University of Iowa
under Forrest Evashevski, and was a starting guard on the 1956 Hawkeyes team
that went 9‑1 and earned the Rose Bowl berth.