Tiger's whip Walsh
Tigers rewarded
With 2nd win
By STEVE DOERSHUK
Independent Sports Editor
A night of penalties
held rewards enough for the Massillon Tigers.
The Tigers were
flagged for a Warren Mollenkopf Stadium like 100 yards in penalties but roared
for a 466‑130 edge in total offense Friday night in repelling the Walsh
Jesuit Warriors 28‑7. A crowd of 13,273 watched on a clear night with a
moody summer sunset in Paul Brown Tiger Stadium.
"We've got to
work on that," Tiger head coach Lee Owens said of the trouble with
yellow hankies.
He said it with a
smile on his face. The Tigers did plenty of good things in improving their
record to 2‑0 against a game Walsh team that fell to 1‑1.
The bag of goodies
included:
* A Massillon record
154 receiving yards (on eight catches) by senior flanker Marc Stafford.
* Triple figures from
two running backs: Travis McGuire (22 carries for 117 yards) and Falando
Ashcraft (20 for 105, two touchdowns).
* Quarterback Nick
Mossides completed 14 of 26 passes for 217 yards.
* Fabulous defense
against a traditionally strong running team with an outstanding fullback,
Kevin Rottinghaus. Walsh rushed for a net two yards in the first half, a net
minus‑two in the second.
Even so, Walsh made it
interesting.
The Warriors cut a
Tiger lead to 14‑7 midway through the second quarter; then, a would be
77‑yard touchdown pass from Mossides to McGuire was called back by a
blocking-below‑the- waist penalty: Back Judge John Evans and line judge
Charlie Williams, two respected veterans, saw the infraction and both threw
flags. Owens said it was a fair call.
"It got to be gut
check time along about then," Owens said. "We get a long one called
back and then they wind up with the ball in our territory.”
Turned out the Tigers
had iron in their guts. They took control of both lines of scrimmage the rest
of the way.
With the score still
14‑7 late in the third quarter, Walsh faced fourth‑and‑eight
from the Tiger 16. That field possession was set up by Stafford's only miscue
of the night, a fumble on an endaround.
Walsh's junior
cornerback, Matt Smith (9‑for‑23, 120 yards, 1 TD, 1 interception)
threw into the corner of the end zone, where Tiger defensive backs Dana Wofford
and Ron Roberson smothered Warrior end Mike Carroll, and the ball.
From there, the Tigers
drove 84 yards in 10 plays. McGuire took advantage of good trap blocking and
made a number of impressive runs. Ashcraft smashed through the line for 12
yards and a touchdown. Jason Brown's kick made it 21‑7 with 11:29 left in
the game.
Ashcraft scored from
six yards out with 4:40 left to put the game on ice.
Walsh Jesuit head
coach Gerry Rardin was upbeat afterward.
''I'm convinced we'll
be back," he said. "We got beat by a very fine team. They have a lot
of guns they can fire on offense and they're very quick on defense."
Top gun this night was
Stafford, one of the few high school "speed receivers" who also
happens to bench press 300 pounds.
His 154 yards passed
the school record of 133 set by Curtis Strawder against Jackson in 1978.
''Nick threw the ball
extremely well," Stafford said. "All I had to do was catch it. We've
been working hard and it all jelled for us.
"When it was 14‑7,
we just had to reach down and keep playing hard.
The Tigers were
playing without senior captain Chris Dottavio, who faces a one‑year rehabilitation
after successful knee surgery Wednesday. Dr., Robert Erickson said Dottavio's
four‑hour operation is called "the terrible triad," but that it
went well and Dottavio has a chance to try for college football if that is his
wish.
Juniors Mark Miller
and Brandon Jackson alternated at the tackle spot. Miller played part of the
second quarter after someone stepped on starter Scott Charlton's ankle. Charlton
returned in the second half.
"We dedicated the
game to 'Dot.' We just went out and tried to play well," said senior guard
Ryan Orr. "It was a little different not playing beside 'Dot' because
we've been together since the ninth grade. Mark and Brandon did a good job,
though.
"In the fourth
quarter, we started coming off the ball better." Added McGuire, also a
co-captain, "We lost one of our best linemen, and we started a little
slowly. The line picked up the blocking in the second half.”
"They were
stunting a lot and we started picking that up better. We played pretty well,
but we've got to get better."
On defense, the Tigers
did get better. Tailback Andrae Martin and the fullback Rottinghaus, who had
rushed for 250 yards last week against Garfield Trinity, combined for 14 yards
in 13 attempts against the Tigers.
Walsh had to resort to
a short passing game. The junior, Smith, handled the aerial effort fairly well,
but he was fortunate that the Tigers' one interception wasn't more like four
or five.
"I dropped
two," winced Tiger linebacker Eric Wright, like Owens smiling when he
said that. "Overall, I thought we played better than last week. The
defensive line played a good game. We tackled better. We have to keep getting
better every week."
Wright had a few more
big hits to add to his growing highlights reel.
"The whole
defense played well," Owens said. "I thought we swarmed to the ball.
I think we're starting to play the kind of defense Massillon people have been
waiting a long time to see."
The Tigers didn't
score until their third possession. They ended the lull in dramatic fashion
when Stafford broke behind the defense and was wide open for a 46‑yard
scoring bomb from Mossides.
Brown mis‑hit
his point‑after kick attempt. It appeared the ball might have been
blocked, but it was not touched, which is why a roughing‑the‑kicker
penalty was allowed to stand. Ashcraft proceeded to run for the 1 1/2-yards
that netted a two point conversion and an 8‑0 lead with 3:46 left in the
first quarter.
It took the Tigers
three more possessions before they scored again.
The defense held Walsh
at bay, getting key plays like a sack from Joey Lococo, before the offense
registered again.
Brown kicked a 22‑yard
field goal with 4:43 left in the half to make it 10‑0.
It seemed a Tiger
drive at the end of the half had stalled on a fourth‑down incompletion;
however, a roughing‑the‑passer call kept Massillon in possession
of the ball and allowed Brown to boot a 29‑yard field goal on the final
play of the half. That made it 14‑0.
Walsh Jesuit used the
short passing game to drive 61 yards on its first possession of the second
half. On second‑and-long from the Tiger 39, Smith zipped a pass in the
left flat to Carroll. Two Tiger defenders bumped into each other, giving
Carroll room to wheel to the outside and turn it into a 39‑yard
touchdown play.
Pat Hyland's P.A.T.
kick made it 14‑7, but the Tigers regrouped and went on to post an
impressive victory.
Their next task will
be a home game next Friday against Akron Garfield.
As for the penalties,
Walsh had 39 yards worth, meaning the Tigers were penalized 61 yards more than
the visitors.
Any fears Walsh might
have had about getting "homered" on their first regular‑season
trip to Tiger Stadium were allayed. The crew was led by Chet DeStefano, who has
worked many college and professional games.
WALSH JESUIT 7
MASSILLON 28
M W
First
downs rushing 16 0
First
downs passing 8 7
First
downs by penalty 2 1
Totals first downs 26 8
Yards
gained rushing 238 23
Yards
lost rushing 15 23
Net yards rushing 223 0
Net
yards passing 243 130
Total yards gained 466 130
Passes
attempted 26 26
Passes
completed 14 10
Passes
int. by 2 1
Times
kicked off 5 2
Kickoff
average 43.8 41.0
Kickoff
return yards 8 67
Punts 3 6
Punting
average 39.3 29.0
Punt
return yards 21 17
Fumbles 1 0
Fumbles
lost 1 0
Penalties 10 4
Yards
penalized 100 39
Number
of plays 73 43
Time
of possession 27:02 20:58
Attendance 13,273
WALSH JESUIT 0 0
7 0 7
MASSILLON 8 6 0
14 28
M
‑ Stafford 46 pass from Mossides (Ashcraft run)
M
‑ Brown 22 FG
M
‑ Brown 29 FG
W
‑ Carroll 39 pass from Smith (Hyland kick)
M
‑ Ashcraft 12 run (Brown kick)
M
‑ Ashcraft 6 run (Brown kick)
Individual statistics
Rushing
(Massillon)
McGuire 22‑117, Ashcraft 20‑105, Mossides 1‑3, Stafford 2/‑2.
(Walsh)
Martin 10‑9, Rottinghaus 3‑5, Smith 4/‑14.
Passing
(Massillon)
Mossides 14‑26‑217. 1 TD, 1 int..
(Walsh)
Smith 9‑23‑120, 1 TD, 1 int.; Evans 1‑3‑10, 1 int.
Receiving
(Massillon)
Stafford 8‑154, Merchant 3‑25, McGuire 1-9, Hawkins 1‑15,
Ashcraft 1‑14.
(Walsh)
Mason 3‑32, Carroll 249, Martin 2‑8, Rottinghaus 1‑17. Tyla
1‑14, Maruna 1‑10.