Picked
off!
Interceptions turn tide against the Tigers
Tigers fall in Shepas debut
By JOE SHAHEEN
Independent Sports
Editor
The first game of the
Rick Shepas era at Massillon began on a positive note but a pair of third
quarter interceptions were fatal to the homestanding Tigers who fell to Clovis
West of California 21‑9 in front of 13,147 at Paul Brown Tiger Stadium,
Friday.
The Tigers, unveiling
Shepas' multiple pro offense, jumped out to a 7‑0 lead late in the first
quarter and held that advantage at halftime. But the Tigers threw an
interception inside the Clovis West 10‑yard line which turned the tide
late in the third quarter and the visitors never let Massillon regain momentum.
"We hung tight at
the beginning of the game," observed Clovis West coach Randy Blankenship.
"Massillon plays good defense.”
"But we wear
people down. We just keep pounding and find the right combinations and we wore
them down. We didn't make any adjustments at half' time. We just talked about
getting our pads down and hitting somebody. They started to get tired if we
got any more than four offensive plays in a row."
“That interception
after a good defensive stand was huge," said Shepas. "Our offense and
defense need to feed off each other. When the defense does a good job, the
offense needs to kick it into gear. That's what this program needs to work on.
It is hinging on those important things taking place."
It appeared Clovis
might jump out early, stopping Massillon inside its 5‑yard line on the
Tigers initial drive. After a nice punt return gave the Eagles possession at
the Tiger 26, the visitors marched to the 6, but were stopped on downs by a
swarming Massillon defense.
Massillon stopped
Clovis West's second possession when Alex Borbely fell on a fumble at the Tiger
23.
The Tigers launched
their first sustained drive of the game, moving 77 yards in 11 plays. Tom
Fichter hit Neil Buckosh for 11 yards and then found Rocky Dorsey along the
right sideline for 11 more to move the ball to the Massillon 45. Three plays later
Marc Cleveland burst off right tackle for 14 and the Tigers were in business at
the Eagles’ 28.
After an incompletion,
Fichter hooked up with Dorsey along the left sideline at the Clovis West 10.
The junior wide out made a leaping catch, then turned to find nothing but green
between him and the end zone as the Tigers drew first blood.
Brett Marshall tacked
on the extra point and Massillon led 7‑0 at the :12 mark of the first
quarter.
Massillon mounted
another sustained drive late in the first half, moving from its 20 to the
Clovis West 20 as Fichter went 4 of 5 through the air. The senior hit Marcus
Simpson for 17 yards to the Massillon 38 on the second snap of the drive, then
connected with Jason Clemens on a third‑and‑10 play for 19 yards
to the Clovis West 43.
After two more
completions to Dorsey moved the ball to the Clovis 20, a 15‑yard
offensive pass interference call stalled the drive.
Clovis took the second
half kickoff and moved the ball from its 28 to Massillon's 26 on eight
consecutive running plays, but the Tiger defense stiffened an the Eagles turned
the ball over on downs after failing to
convert on fourth‑and‑two.
"The defense
played a good, solid game," said Shepas. "That's a good Wing‑T
team we faced. A good executing team we faced. With a little more offensive
productivity they get less chances to touch the football and that makes it
easier on our defense."
Massillon and Clovis
exchanged punts following the Tigers defensive stand, setting up the game's
turning point. Following a 10‑yard punt return by Dorsey, the Tigers took
over at their 49 and Cleveland immediately made a big play, spinning off a hit
in the backfield to pick up 21 tough yards around his right end.
"Our offense and defense need to feed off each other. when
the defense does a good job the offense needs to kick it into gear" ‑
Rick Shepas,
The senior running
back, added 14 more yards, carrying the ball on each of the next three snaps.
Then on second‑and‑eight from the Clovis 16, Massillon tried a
quick pass to the left sideline. Clovis West's Perron Wiley stepped in front of
the throw and returned the ball 54 yards to the Massillon 36.
On the very next play,
Sean Soares hit into the middle of the line and burst free for a 36‑yard
touchdown run. The conversion kick tied the game at 7‑7 with 3:57 left in
the third quarter.
"That
interception was huge," Blankenship said. "That was really big. The
kid who made the play wasn't able to play last year and I was really happy for
him.
"Massillon threw
some outs on us. I'm not worried about teams throwing outs because if you make
a mistake you're going to get it picked off. It's a matter of time and being
patient. We were just inches away (from interceptions) a couple of
times."
The Tigers appeared to
be ready to strike back when Cleveland ran 17 yards on Massillon's first snap
after the ensuing kickoff. But three plays later, Clovis West's Brandon
Gonzales stepped in front of an out pattern to the right sideline, made the
interception and sprinted untouched 38 yards to pay dirt.
The point‑after
made it 14‑7 in favor of Clovis West with 1:53 to play in the third.
An illegal
participation penalty and a sack doomed Massillon’s next drive and the Eagles
took over at their own 37 following a punt. Two illegal procedure penalties
moved the visitors back to their 27, but on first‑and‑20, Soares
hit into the middle of the Massillon line and came free. The 6‑foot‑1,
199 pound.senior turned on the jets and outran the Tigers defense for a 63‑yard
touchdown that seemed to seal the outcome with 9:32 to play.
Massillon moved to the
Clovis 33 on its next possession, but consecutive penalties ended the threat.
The Tigers last gasp
came when Clovis snapped the ball out of its end zone on a punt for a Tiger
safety with 4:06 left. But on Massillon's first play after the Eagles' free
kick, the Tigers took an 11‑yard sack to turn out the lights.
"We had a couple
holding penalties and the procedure penalties are frustrating," said
Shepas. "Those came from our wide receivers, not our interior lineman. It
changes the play call when you go from second‑and-six to second‑and‑11.
The play call you send in has to change.”
"But we have to
continue to believe in what we're building here. We're a football program
that's only four months old. I think we improved again. The thing is we're
still in an infancy state on offense and we may have to simplify more and
more."
Cleveland certainly
did his part in the opener. The 5‑9, 186-pound senior toted the football
19 times for 97 yards, impressing Shepas along the way.
"Marc Cleveland
pours his heart and soul into the football game," Shepas said.
CLOVIS WEST 21
MASSILLON 9
C
M
First downs rushing 11
8
First downs passing 0
8
First downs by penalty 0
0
TOTAL first downs 11 16
Net yards rushing 237 88
Net yards passing 0 158
TOTAL yards 237 246
Passes attempted 7 27
Passes completed 0 13
Passes intercepted 0 2
Punts 5 9
Punting average 26.2 40.3
Fumbles/Lost 2/1 1/0
Penalties 3 10
Yards penalized 15 80
CLOVIS 0
0 14 7 21
MASSILLON 7
0 0 2 9
SCORING
M ‑ Dorsey 28 pass from Fichter
(Marshall kick)
C ‑ Scares 36 run (Potteroff kick)
C ‑ Gonzales 43‑yard
interception return (Potteroff kick)
C ‑ Scares 72 run (Potteroff kick)
M ‑ Safety, Clovis snap rolls out of
end zone
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
Massillon rushing:
Cleveland 19‑97,
Miller 7‑33,
Radich 5‑9,
Burrigarner 2‑8.
Clovis rushing:
Scares 14‑162,
Chayly 2-26.
Massillon passing:
Fichter 8‑18‑2 107,
Eyerman 5‑9‑0 51.
Clovis passing:
Elbert 0‑7‑0 0.
Massillon receiving:
Dorsey 7‑104,
Clemens 1‑19,
Simpson 1‑17,
Buckosh 1‑11.