Rams make
Tigers sweat
By JOE SHAHEEN
Independent Sports Editor
It
sure seemed like the Massillon Tigers were on a roll when they carried a 21‑6
lead over the Akron Garfield Rams into the halftime locker room, Friday at Paul
Brown Tiger Stadium.
But
the Tigers stumbled and bumbled their way through the second half, before
regrouping to hold off the Rams 21‑14 in front of 10,872 fans. The
victory boosts Massillon to 3‑0, while their counterparts from the Rubber
City fell to an uncharacteristic 0‑3.
In
a subdued Tiger locker room after the game, head coach Jack Rose admitted the
signs were there the orange-and‑black might be in for a struggle.
"We
didn't practice very well all week,'' Rose reported. "We just weren't real
crisp like we were the week before.
"We
focused on Moeller real well. I didn't see that same look this week. Anytime
you have a 'big win like (Moeller), that's going to be the drawback. Plus the
short week,. But (Garfield) is going to win some games. They’re a pretty good
team."
Garfield
fumbled the game’s opening kickoff and it seemed the Tigers were in business at
the visitors' 35 yard line. But Massillon was unable to move the football and
turned it over on downs at the 26.
Bill
McGee's Rams mounted one of their patented, clock eating, run‑dominated
drives. They converted four third
downs, the biggest coming at the Massillon 15 when a face mask penalty moved
the ball to the 2‑yard line. Junior fullback Anthony Blackwell hit the
middle of the line on first‑and‑goal and burst into the end zone
to give the Akron crew a 6‑0 lead at the 1:41 mark of the first quarter.
The
15‑play, 74‑yard march consumed 8:04 and it seemed the Tigers'
worst fears were being realized.
After
the ensuing kickoff, Massillon took over at its 33. Quarterback George
Whitfield Jr. picked up the host's first first down of the evening on a two‑yard
quarterback sneak on the first play of the second period.
After
Vinny Turner picked up 12 yards up the middle, Whitfield bootlegged left and
found a wide open Vaughn Mohler along the left sideline at the 10‑yard
line. Mohler hauled in the football and coasted into the end zone. Josh Hose's
PAT made it 7‑6 Massillon at the 10:20 mark of the second quarter.
Garfield
cranked up its full house T‑formation offense once again, moving from the
Ram 31 to the Tigers' 30. But the Massillon defense pushed Garfield back nine
yards on three plays, forcing the punt which traveled out of bounds at the
Tiger 17.
On
first‑and‑10, Whitfield handed the ball to Turner, who found a seam
off right tackle and was off to the races. He didn't stop until 83 yards later,
leaving several Garfield defenders in his jet stream. Hose was true on the
conversion kick and Massillon suddenly had an 8 point lead at 14‑6 with
5:42 left in the half.
Garfield
got poor field position after Matt Stanley boomed the kickoff. The Rams,
starting at their 19, went three‑and‑out and set up to punt at
their 25. But Massillon's Bill Condon broke through and spiked the kick. It
rolled toward the Garfield goalline and after a mad scramble the Tigers' Lance
Grimsley fell on the football in the end zone for a touchdown.
Hose
made it three‑for‑three and Massillon seemed to have it all their
way at 21‑6 with 2:40 until the band show.
"It's
a crime to lose it on the kicking game," lamented McGee. "But that's
what happened. We allowed them to block a punt. Those are always bad things. I
don't ever remember winning a football game in which we had a punt b1ocked. We
haven’t had many blocked over the years. Maybe two or three. It's something
that's not a good sign. It's a momentum thing. We score first and we come in at
halftime down 21‑6."
Massillon
fumbled away the second half kickoff and that was pretty much the way the third
and fourth quarters would go for the Tigers.
Massillon
held after the fumble, forcing Garfield to turn it over on downs at the 21.
But the Tigers, after a couple of first downs, failed on a fourth‑and-one
at the Ram 39.
Garfield
quarterback Phil Mitchell hit tight end Erick Hawkins for 33 yards on the
second snap of the next series and the Rams were in business at the Tiger 25.
Another facemask penalty against the locals helped move the ball to the 8-yard
line. Three snaps later, Blackwell found the end zone from two‑yards out.
The junior also hit paydirt for the two‑point conversion and it was a 21‑14
game with just over one period left to play.
After
a Massillon punt, Garfield got one final chance, taking over at its 22 at the
1:55 mark. The Rams hit on four passes, but Lavell Weaver's sack of Mitchell
eftded the game.
M G
First downs
rushing 7 12
First downs
passing 4 3
First downs
penalty 1 0
Total first downs 12 15
Net yards
rushing 190 169
Net yards
passing 98 79
Total
yards gained 286 248
Passes
attempted 12 10
Passes
completed 6 6
Passes int. 0 0
Times kicked
off 4 3
Kickoff
average 41.0 47.0
Kickoff return
yards 69 29
Punts 2 4
Punting
average 36.0 19.8
Punt return
yards 12 8
Fumbles 2 1
Fumbles lost 2 1
Penalties 7 6
Yards
penalized 41 47
Number of
plays 39 59
Time of
possession 16:24 31:36
Attendance 10,872
GARFIELD 6
0 8 0 14
MASSILLON 0
21 0 0 21
SCORING
SUMMARY
First
Quarter
G ‑ Blackwell 2 run (run failed)
Second
Quarter
M ‑ Mohler 44 pass from Whitfield (Hose
kick)
M ‑ Turner 83 run (Hose kick)
M ‑ Grimsley recovered blocked punt in
end zone (Hose kick)
Third
Quarter
G ‑ Blackwell 2 run (Blackwell run)
FINAL
STATISTICS
Rushing:
Massillon
Turner
16‑157, 1 TD;
Whitfield 5‑24;
Weaver 3‑4;
Wonsick 1‑4;
Blake 1‑1.
Garfield
Miller
11‑67;
Owens 12‑50;
Blackwell 12‑39, 2 TDs;
McNeil 6‑18;
Weaver 1‑4.
Passing:
Massillon
Whitfield
6‑12‑0, 1 TD,
Garfield
Mitchell 6‑10‑0.
Receiving:
Massillon
Mohler
2‑49, 1 TD;
Williams 2‑18,
Turner 1‑17,
Wonsick 1‑12.
Garfield
Gibson 3-38.
Hawkins 1-31,
Hawkins 1-31,
Owens 1-6,
Miller 1-4.