Shepas still sees progress
and promise in Massillon
Tigers’ ferocity in defeat to Warren Harding
has coach proud, excited
By JOE SHAHEEN
Joe.Shaheen @ IndeOnline.Com
You don’t want
to be in the midst of a four-game losing streak as you prepare to play your
biggest rival, but that’s the scenario facing the Massillon Tigers this week
with five days until they face off with Canton McKinley for the 111th time this
Saturday at Fawcett Stadium in Canton.
The
scoreboard at Paul Brown Tiger Stadium on Saturday night past displayed the
bottom line: Warren Harding 31, Massillon 15.
What it
didn’t reflect was how hard the Tigers battled against the No. 3 team in the
nation, sending the Raiders back to Warren with injuries to quarterback Alex
Engram (Left shoulder), running back Delbert Ferguson (broken right leg),
running back Richard David (ankle) and starting split end Peter Sparks.
The
Tigers, meanwhile, come into McKinley Week with more to play for than pride and
a win over their longtime rivals.
“Believe
it or not there is still an outside shot to make the playoff,” Tiger head coach
Rick Shepas revealed. “Believe it or not, there is (a chance to get in.)
Mathematically some things have to happen but they happened for us last year
and we made a run.”
The Tigers
are also much more confident about their quarterback position than a week ago.
Sophomore Quentin Paulik connected on 23 of 42 passes for 310 yards and two
touchdowns against one of Ohio’s elite high school football teams.
“Quentin
Paulik showed a lot of poise in the pocket,” observed Shepas. “Early on he had
a couple of balls get tipped but I think he will learn from it. He’s one week
better from last week.
“I thought
it was a nice changeup with what we did with Steve Hymes, not to knock him up
too much, get him an extra week of rest but still have him on the field.”
Warren
Harding head coach Thom McDaniels, a high school and college quarterback
himself who takes a great deal of pride in coaching that position, thinks the
Tigers may have another rgood one in Paulik.
“We’re
going to try to pressure a guy like Paulik who is inexperienced to find out
whether or not he can handle that kind of pressure,” McDaniels said. “He more
than met the test because he did some good things, his receivers did some good
things, and they generated some offense. We just were able to get some
turnovers.”
Ah, yes.
The turnovers. Massillon gave up six, including five interceptions, continuing
a troubling trend that began with St. Edward and continued with Dayton
Chaminade-Julienne and was evident against Warren Harding. In that three-game
span, the Tigers have turned the ball over 20 times.
Shepas pointed
out not all of the turnovers against Warren are on his quarterback.
“We’ve got
to catch the ball too,” he said. “some of the turnovers we had were from tipped
passes. I thought (Paulik) came out and played well.”
“We
started getting back into our style of offense a little bit with Quentin. You
see, you need to throw the ball to keep people off balance.”
That’s
exactly what the Tigers did on their first possession of the night against
Warren. Trailing 7-0 following a nine play, 72-yard opening march by the
Raiders, Massillon went back to the ‘pass first, ask questions later’ attack
that has been so successful during the Shepas era.
On the
Tigers first play from scrimmage beginning at their own 20, Paulik meshed with
junior tight end Wayne Gates on short slant over the middle that became a
45-yard gain. Then the sophomore found Ryan Schindler for eight yards, and one
play later hit Gates in full stride for an 18-yard touchdown.
Zach
Smith’s extra point made it a 7-7 game with 6:16 to play in the first quarter.
“We had
them reeling a little bit,“ Shepas said. “We put together one of our best
drives of the season early on in the game. It made it exciting for awhile.
We’re going to be better from this schedule.”
Warren
retaliated with a 35-yard field goal to make it 10-7.
But what
sent Massillon sliding down that slippery slope was an interception just three
plays into its ensuing possession, giving Warren the ball at the Tiger 46.
Three
plays later, Engram hit Sparks on a 10-yard slant and the senior wideout turned
on the jets for a 36-yard touchdown. The PAT made it a 17-7 game with most of
the second quarter still to be played.
The
Massillon defense forced Warren to punt on its next two possession but a Tiger
fumble inside their own 20-yard line at the outset of the second half gave
Engram and Sparks an opportunity to reprise their touchdown connection and the
Raiders were up 24-7.
Warren’s
next four possessions ended with a punt, a blocked field goal, and two Engram
fumbles as the Tiger defense scrapped and clawed.
“I’m
really proud of the way our kids played,” Shepas said. “I’m proud of the way
they practiced after the three losses we had coming into this game and playing
the No.2 team in the state and No 3 in the country. Plenty of teams could have
turned tail and run from that but I don’t think our kids did.”
“We tried
to utilize our guys to the best of their ability. I’m excited about it. I’ve
always been excited about our kids. I’m happy with the way we played. We’re
playing this schedule for a reason and it’s going to pay off for us.”
An Engram
to Jonte Stroud touchdown pass made it 31-7 Warren with six minutes to play.
Massillon
answered with a 40-yard Paulik to Billy Relford scoring aerial and Relford’s two-point
conversion run to cut the Tigers deficit to two touchdowns and two two-point
conversations. The ensuing onside kick, though was recovered by Warren, sealing
Massillon’s fate.
Warren Harding 31
Massillon 15
Mas W
First downs rushing 3 11
First downs passing 13 4
First downs by penalty 1 0
TOTAL first downs 17 15
Net yards rushing 6 298
Net yards passing 310 107
TOTAL yards 316 405
Passes attempted 42 12
Passes completed 23 8
Passes intercepted 5 0
Punts 4 3
Punting average 30.5 36.0
Fumbles/Lost 1/1 2/2
Penalties 1 6
Yards penalized 17 40
Warren Harding 10 7 7 7 31
Massillon 7 0 0 8 15
SCORING
W – David 1 run (Spain kick)
M - Wayne Gates 18 pass from Quentin
Paulik (Zach Smith kick)
W – Spain 35 FG
W – Sparks 36 pass from Engram (Spain
kick)
W – Sparks 7 pass from Engram (Spain
kick)
W – Stroud 30 pass from Engram
(Spain kick)
M – Billy Relford 40 pass from
Quentin Paulik (Relford run)
INDIVIDUAL
STATISTICS
Massillon
rushing: Tuffy Woods
6-22.
Warren
Harding rushing:
Engram 10-89
Massillon
passing: Paulik
23-42-310, 2 TD, 5 INT.
Warren
Harding passing:
Engram 8-12-107, 3 TD.
Massillon
receiving: Wayne Gates
7-122, TD; Billy Relford 2-72, TD.
Warren
Harding receiving:
Sparks 3-50, 2 TD.