Tigers’ attack hits high gear
By JOE SHAHEEN
Independent Sports
Editor
The Massillon Tigers put the air back into the
football Friday night, scoring three first half touchdowns ‑ two through the air ‑ in handing the
Akron Garfield Rams their third straight defeat 21‑10 in front of 10,180 fans on a warm, late summer evening
at Paul Brown Tiger Stadium.
One week after passing the football just nine
times in a. drubbing of Lima Senior, the Tigers (2‑1) put it up 14 times
in the first half alone, completing eight of those aerials, including scoring
tosses of 34 and 25 yards to Neil Buckosh and Marc Cleveland.
Senior quarterback Tom Fichter connected on 8‑of‑14
first half throws for 120 yards, putting the winless Rams back on their heels
and in a hole from which they never recovered.
Jon Stanke set the Massillon offense up with
exceptional field position by returning the opening kickoff all the way for a
touchdown. Unfortunately for Stanke and the Tigers, a holding call negated the
score and put the ball at the Garfield 37.
After two incompletions and facing a fourth‑and‑7,
Fichter dropped back to pass, got excellent protection, and laid a perfectly
thrown pass over the right shoulder of Buckosh. The senior tight end pulled the
foot in at the 10‑yard line and dashed to the end zone to put Massillon
up 6‑0.
Brett Marshall's conversion kick made it 7‑0
at 10:58 of the first quarter.
"We do a lot of distraction drills in
practice," Buckosh said afterward. "On that play their guy ran right across my line of sight and those
practice drills paid off. I stayed on the ball.”
"Tommy made a great throw for me. I give
all the credit to Tommy Fichter."
Fichter made a pre‑snap read on the play
and recognized his tight end might be open.
“I knew the route Buckosh was going to run and I
saw who was going to cover him," Fichter said. "I know Neil has good
hands and I knew I had to put the ball where it had to be. I got lucky and put
it right there and Neil made a great catch and good run and we got six points
out of it.
The Tigers defense nearly got an interception
from cornerback Brandon Clark on Garfield's initial drive and forced the Rams
into a three-and‑out series. Rocky Dorsey's punt return set Massillon up
with a first down near midfield '
Fichter found Buckosh open over the middle on
the very first snap for 20 yards to the Garfield 32. After Ronnie Lynn picked
up 12 yards to the Rams' 15, two Marc Cleveland sweeps did the rest. The
second, a pitch sweep around left end from seven yards out, made it 13‑0
with 7:13 to play in the first quarter.
Marshall tacked on the PAT and it was a 14‑0
Tiger cushion.
"We came out and we did exactly what we
wanted to do," said head coach Rick Shepas. "We know that Garfield is
a well coached football team. We know they are very talented and they play hard
and if they know they're in the football game then we're going to have problems
with them.
"Getting nicked twice in their first two
games made it a different atmosphere for them. Fortunately we were able to
come out and get the good kick return and get it in the end
zone, get a good defensive stop, get it in the
end zone again and now they might question themselves a little bit."
Garfield got on the scoreboard on an eight‑play,
43‑yard drive capped by Greg Kulick's 28‑yard field goal that made
it a 14‑3 game with 5:04 left in the first half. The Rams had first-and‑10
from the Tigers 12, but consecutive outstanding defensive plays by Ellery
Moore, Clark and Jamie Allman prevented any further incursion into Tiger
territory.
Massillon took the ensuing kickoff and put
together a well executed drive. The first big play on the march was an 11-yard
Fichter‑to‑Jason Clemens sideline pass on third‑and‑eight
that moved the ball into Garfield territory as well as netting a first down.
Then on fourth‑and‑five from the
Rams' 43, Fichter found Cleveland open for 18 yards along the right hash mark
for another do‑or‑die first down.
Three snaps later, on third-and‑10,
Fichter dropped back and floated the football into Cleveland's waiting hands in
the end zone from 25 yards out. Marshall again converted and the Tigers were up
21‑3 with just :35 until the band show.
"We started to get things going,"
Fichter said in the locker room. "We started to feel good about ourselves
again."
Shepas built on that theme. “I think the kids
feel better about themselves," he said. "That's what we're trying to
do.’
"I was pleased with Tom's performance in
the first half. We're still not seeing all the field and you can see that in a
number of instances. But we did a better job for the quarterbacks this week in
practice, giving them a better look at what they were going to see coverage‑wise
to make them more comfortable. Every week we're going to start over again.
We’re going to go out and teach for four days before we play a football game.
We're going to see if we get better and we're going to start to understand more
things as the games go by."
The Massillon defense was as much the story as
the re‑emergence of Shepas' West Coast Offense. The Tigers held Garfield
to 145 yards of total offense for the entire game. The Rams did not complete a
pass in eight attempts and scrambling quarterback Eli Ward only gained 45 yards
in 11 totes.
"If offense can go out and get some scores
and put some points on the board, the defense doesn't have to worry about where
they are on the field," pointed out Shepas. "They can fly around and
make plays. Hey, we have our marquee players on defense. We want to play good
defense. We're taking steps to improve in that area, too. We did eliminate some
mistakes and we're one week better, but that's all we are.”
"What's taking more time than anything is
getting to know who our people are and how to use our people. That's the
biggest thing. We've done a 360 degree turn since the summer and we're starting
to find out more and more who to play in these football games. It's going to
take the entire season to get a feel for who we got."
"The offense is coming around," said
Buckosh, who finished with three catches for 59 yards. "We had a great
first half on offense The second half we didn’t score any points so we’ve got
to get better. We're in great shape, better shape than our opponents. We just
need to focus on not putting the defense in jeopardy.”
Garfield got its only touchdown of the game
late in the third period on a 43‑yard drive set up by Massillon's second
interception of the evening. It took the Rams 11 plays, but they finally
punched it in from a foot out after three tries from inside the 5‑yard
line.
"For us it's been a lack of consistency,"
explained Garfield coach Bill McGee after the game. "Our defense has been
tough in the first half the first two weeks. Tonight we gave them a couple of
easy ones in the first half and we had breakdown in the kicking game which
gave them good field position.”
.
"This was an improvement for us in some
areas. After the first seven or eight minutes of the game we outscored them,
but we put ourselves into too big a hole.'
MASSSILLON 21
GARFIELD 10
M G
First downs rushing 5
8
First downs passing 6
0
First downs by penalty 0
2
TOTAL first downs
11 10
Net yards rushing 91
145
Net yards passing 136
0
TOTAL yards
227 145
Passes attempted 18 8
Passes completed 10
0
Passes intercepted 2
0
Punts 3 5
Punting average 47
29.4
Fumbles/Lost 3/0 2/0
Penalties 7 4
Yards penalized 57
20
MASSILLON 14
7 0 0 21
GARFIELD 0
3 7 0 10
SCORING
M - Buckosh 34 pass from Fichter
(Marshall kick)
M ‑ Cleveland 7 run
(Marshall kick)
G ‑ Kulick 28 field goal
M ‑ Cleveland 25 pass from
Fichter (Marshall kick)
G - Ross 1 run (Kulick kick)
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
Massillon rushing:
Cleveland 18‑79,
Lynn 1‑16,
Miller 6‑5.
Garfield rushing:
Jones 14‑53,
Ross 14‑46,
Ward 11‑45.
Massillon passing:
Fichter 8‑16‑2 120, 2 TDs,
Eyerman 2‑2‑0 16.
Garfield passing:
Ward 0‑8‑0 0
Massillon
receiving:
Buckosh 3‑59,
Cleveland 3‑46,
Clemens 2‑22,
Dorsey 1‑7,
Miller 1‑2.