Tigers fall on own
swords vs Spartans
By JOE SHAHEEN
Independent Sports Editor
If
Jack Rose has any trouble selling his Massillon charges on their playoff
potential in the wake of Saturday's 25‑7 setback at Lima Senior, he need
only point toward the Tigers' tormentors.
The
very same Li ma Senior Spartans who left Paul Brown Tiger Stadium one year ago
on the short end of a 28-14 final, went on to win 12 straight football games
and the Division I state championship.
But
the Tigers first defeat of the 1997 season‑was no accident. Lima Senior
controlled the game in the trenches, especially during the second half when it
denied Massillon a first down until being flagged for running into the punter
with 3:05 left in the game.
We
got to do a better job at the line of scrimmage,' Rose said afterward.
"We've got to block a hell of lot better than we did tonight. We,
demonstrated the ability to do that in the scrimmages.
"They
didn't break any big plays on us. They were just methodical and consumed the
clock. They'd get three or four yards a clip and get out on the option
occasionally. They kept our offense off the field, and when we did get there we
had a lot of three-and-outs.
Lima
played with more discipline than in its penalty-marred opening game loss to Toledo
St. Francis in which it committed 12
infractions. Perhaps more important, the Spartans also displayed playoff level
intensity for 48 minutes and they used Tiger spirit as motivation.
"Massillon
totally disrespected us," said All‑Ohio defensive back Joe Sellers,
who shadowed Tigers tailback Christian Morgan all night long. "They came
here with their signs along I‑75 and that “Welcome to Paul Brown Stadium’
stuff. They gave is no respect.'
"They
were very emotional," concurred Rose. "They played an emotional
pitch. They've been sitting on this one for a year. We were the only ones to
hang a loss on them, so I.m sure they thought about this game.”
Massillon
hurt itself with nine penalties for 111 yards, including back to back 15‑yard
personal fouls on Lima's scoring drive, one for celebrating a tackle and the
other for grabbing the face mask.
Sellers
punched in the first score from a yard out at 2:21 of the second period to
make it 6—0. but the fireworks were just beginning.
After
a muffed kickoff, the Tigers attempted a short pass to the left flat on second‑and‑7
at their own 19-yard line. Lima defensive lineman JaJuan Godsey made a leaping
interception at the 14 and rambled untouched into the Massillon end zone.
Massillon
was intercepted at midfield on its ensuing possession, and Lima’s Quentin
Manley ran the ball back to the Tigers’ 4-yard line with 21 still left in the
half. The Massillon defense came up with a big play as Josh Krieder scopped up
a Lima fumble at the 8 to quell the threat.
It
appeared Massillon may have a shot at getting back into the game when Tyrie
Clifford returned the second half kickoff from his 14 to the Lima Senior 47.
But the Tigers offense went three and out leading to a botched punt which set
the Spartans up with good field position for their next scoring drive.
"We're
down 12‑0 and we haven’t played worth a lick,” recalled Rose, ".so
we get our adjustments in at halftime, get some good field position, then we
run an off tackle play and lose two yards and it just crushed our momentum.
"The
problem we have up front is we just aren't very big and we got overpowered in
some places, at a few positions. We didn't sustain blocks. We didn't get on
them and stay on them.”
Lima's
third scoring drive was a 12-play march that covered 53 yards and consumed 4:14
off the game clock. Sellers scored from two yards away, but the key to the
drive came at the Massillon 12 when Lima fumbled, recovered and picked up seven
yards in the process.
One
of the Tigers few bright spots cam late
in the third quarter when Krieder returned 59 yards for a touchdown. The
senior’s heroics came after the Lima punter was flushed by a good rush and got
off a line drive kick.
But
Massillon again was its own worst enemy, following. the TD by kicking off out
of hounds, giving Lima the ball at the 35 yard line. The Spartans put the game
away on that possession, taking 11 plays to score on an 18-yard pass from Fred
Collins to Nathan Collins on a fourth‑and‑seven play. Once again
the hosts got a boost from a Tiger 15‑yard facemask penalty.
Among
the more damning statistics for Massillon offense; Four first downs, 1.7 yards
per running play, 38 total yards of offense, 0-6 third down conversions.
LIMA 25
MASSILLON 7
L M
First downs
rushing 11 1
First downs
passing 3 1
First downs by
penalty 5 2
TOTAL first downs 10 4
Net yards
rushing 151 31
Net yards
passing 56 7
TOTAL yards 209 38
Passes
attempted 7 10
Passes completed 6
2
Passes
Intercepted 2 0
Punts 2 3
Punting
average 34.5 41.7
Fumbles/Lost 5/2
O/0
Penalties 4 9
Yards
penalized 31 111
LIMA
SR. 00 12 06 07
25
WASSILLON 00 00 07
00 07
SCORING
L - Sellers 1 run (Kick failed)
L - Godsey 11 pass interception return (Kick
failed)
L - Sellers 2 run (Kick failed)
M - Krieder 59 punt return (Hose kick)
L - Nathan Collins 17 pass from Fred Collins
(Oheney kick)
INDIVIDUAL
STATISTICS
Massillon
rushing:
Morgan,
13‑31,
Hodgson 1-0,
Burick 2‑13,
Danzy 2-(minus)13
Lima
rushing:
Nigh 19‑77,
Sellers 16-44,
F. Collins l1‑33.
Massillon
passing:
Burick 1‑4‑4 2 INT;
Danzy 1‑5‑3
Lima
passing:
Collins 6‑7‑58 l TD
Massillon
receiving:
Dean 1‑4,
Hodgson 1‑3,
Lima
receiving:
Lepley 2-15,
N. Collins 1-17, l TD,
Sellers 1‑12,
Cannon 1-11.