Tigers Signature Win
Comes At Price
By JOE SHAHEEN
Joe.Shaheen@IndeOnline.Com
When the Massillon Tigers return to the
gridiron Friday against the Mansfield Tygers, they
will do so with a 2-0 record, the knowledge they have knocked off one of the
very best big school programs in the state and – in all likelihood - without
the services of starting defensive end Dirk Dickerhoof
and starting outside linebacker Quentin Paulik.
Dickerhoof and Paulik, both
seniors, suffered injuries to the shoulder/collarbone area in the Tigers' 35-31
upset of Cincinnati Elder on Saturday at Paul Brown Stadium in
While the loss of two of the Tigers' top
defenders did not put a damper on Massillon's stunning performance in the third
game of the Prep Classic, the way the game went after the locals took a 35-7
lead into the fourth quarter nearly gave Stacy and his coaching staff a group
coronary.
Elder scored three touchdowns in the final
stanza - two within a span of 40 seconds - to make what appeared to be a Tiger
blowout victory into a nailbiter that went down to
the final play.
"We've got to finish," Stacy said
shaking his head. "We didn't finish last week and we didn't finish this
week. Now, we got two wins and that's the positive part. But when you continue
to play good teams like we play down the road and you get in this situation, we
better learn to finish it off."
Leading 35-14 midway through the fourth
quarter, the Tigers were knocking on the door but failed to score from point
blank range.
"The fact we didn't finish it off is the
offense's fault," Stacy said. "We get down there on the one-foot
line, we've got to stick it in and finish the game off and we didn't do that.
It darn near cost us. That's on the offense. That's on me as the offensive
coach. We've got to get that corrected."
Compounding the Tigers' failure to find the
end zone one final time was an unsportsmanlike conduct call against them after
they were stopped by the Elder defense.
"We lost our composure," Stacy said.
"You can't lose your composure. It's
something we've been trying to work on during camp, during two-a-days. We
have to continue to work on it. We can't lose our composure.
"Our kids are really, really
competitive and they play really hard. There's a lot of pressure on them to win
at
Even senior cornerback Troy Ellis, who set
a Massillon Tiger single game record with five - that's right, five -
interceptions, was disconsolate about how the game nearly got away from the
Tigers.
"When Elder recovered the first onside
kick, it was like a heart job," he said. "It was scary but we pulled
it out.
"This win is real big. The last two
years we started 0-2 and 1-1. Now we're 2-0 and it gives the team a lot of confidence."
As for his thievery, which included a
fumble recovery and 20-yard return for a touchdown to open the scoring on the
afternoon, Ellis admitted he had no premonition he was going to have the game
of his life on such a grand stage.
"I had no clue this was going to
happen. No clue," he said. "The coaches put me in a position to make
plays. They gave me great coverage calls and I was just back there playing the
ball. It was fun throughout the whole game. It was fun all the way
around."
Ellis was voted the game's Most Valuable
Player for the media.
Tiger junior tailback Brian Gamble must
have been a close second in the voting after rushing for 173 yards and two
touchdowns on 15 carries. His first score of the afternoon came in the first
minute of the second half on an off tackle run that appeared to be bottled up.
But Gamble turned to his right, found the Elder defense out of position and
bolted 60 yards to the end zone to put the Tigers up 21-0.
"That was a great run," Stacy
said. "It was just a power off tackle play and Brian Gamble broke
it."
Gamble refused to take any credit for his
heroics.
"It's not me," Gamble said.
"Our line has been blocking excellent and we've got Lanale
Robinson running the football, too."
Now, Gamble says, people around
"That put us on the map," he
said. "It will get us a lot of respect. People were underestimating us and
I think we came out here and proved what we had to prove.
"The way it ended teaches us a great
lesson. Come playoff time or big games we have to learn to finish, to suck it
up. Hopefully we'll do a better job next time."
After Ellis' fumble return put the Tigers up
7-0 at
A
37-yard Gamble burst on the second play of the drive moved the ball to the
Elder 33. Six plays later, junior quarterback Bobby Huth
ran the bootleg keeper around the left end and galloped into the end zone.
Steve Schott's point after made it 14-0
Elder marched from its 28 to the
On
Elder's next possession, following a Tiger punt, the Panthers drove from their
35 to the
Gamble opened the second half with his long
touchdown run.
After a
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