Tiger skill
shines through
Massillon has
too much
of just about
everything
for
overmatched visitors
By CHRIS EASTERLING
Chris.Easterling@lndeOnline.com
The
gifts were exchanged by the two teams prior to the Massillon Tigers' 2006 opener
against North Park Collegiate out of Ontario. Once the game began, the Tigers
weren't nearly as giving, rolling to 68‑6 victory over the Trojans in
front of approximately 9,000 fans at Paul Brown Tiger Stadium.
As
little as the Tigers gave North Park, many gave even less credit to themselves
for the lopsided rout. Massillon senior Brian Gamble shouted to no one in
particular, "We got to get better," as he walked across the field for
the postgame handshake.
"It
was like a morgue in here at halftime," said Tiger coach Tom Stacy, whose
coaching staff received hockey sticks from the North Park coaches during a
pregame ceremony. "I told them after the game that's good. That means your
expectations are high. We have enough veteran guys who know if they're playing
well or not."
And
to think the Tigers led 35‑6 at the intermission.
"The
thing is, when you look at the score, how can you complain," Stacy asked
rhetorically. "A young football team, and we knew going in that it was
going to take some time to develop. I think this was a good building block for
us."
The
Tigers weren't a finished product entering the game, and head into next
Saturday's home tilt against Washington, D.C., Woodson still searching for some
of those answers. Most of the questions remain on defense, which despite
scoring twice on interception returns in the first half, gave up its share of
yardage as well to a North Park team which suited up only 29 players for its
third appearance in Tigertown.
The
Trojans accumulated 153 yards in the first half alone, including a 56‑yard
run by bowling ball like running back Matt Socholotiuk which set up the
Trojans' first score of the game with less than two minutes left in the first
half. Socholotiuk finished with a game‑high 147 yards rushing.
"Our
defense, we feel we can do better every game," said outside linebacker
Michael Porrini. "So we feel like we could have done better. We could have
wrapped up a little better. It was pretty good overall."
However,
Massillon held North Park to just 64 yards in the second half.
"Are
we happy with how we tackled at times? No,” Stacy said. "But it's a
start.”
The
Massillon offense, meanwhile, left little question in anyone's mind that it has
a chance to live up to the high hopes expressed by Stacy.
The
Tigers scored on seven of their first nine possessions, and the first time they
couldn't change the number in the scoring column was due to a field goal which
just slipped wide right from 26‑yards out on their second possession. The
other time was the final play of the first half.
By
the time the Tigers went to their backups with 5:17 left in the third quarter,
it was 49‑6 Massillon. The first‑unit offense racked up 319 yards
in just over a half of football, with 194 yards of that coming through the air
on Bobby Huth's arm and another 85 yards rushing on the legs of Gamble.
"I
thought it went pretty good," said Huth, who connected on 12‑of‑18
aerials. "I thought the offensive line played pretty well. I didn't play
the way I should have played. The first play should have been a touchdown, but
I underthrew it. I felt like I didn't throw the ball very well tonight."
The
Tiger offense was explosive, but also methodical. Of the first six scoring
drives, none were completed in fewer than six plays, even though they had three
drives of 54 yards or less.
"I
thought the second half, we had some bigger plays, and that's what we're kind
of looking for," Stacy said. "We had some good drives, and we didn't
rip off as many big ones in the first half as we would have liked. But you know
what? Give them credit, too. Their kids were playing hard."
Stacy
said before the season he wanted to showcase Gamble and Andrew Dailey, and the
Tigers did just that. Gamble put Massillon in the lead for good with 8:15 left
in the first quarter when he took a handoff to the right, skirted off tackle
and outran the defense to the end zone for a 12yard touchdown.
Dailey,
meanwhile, hauled in a pair of touchdown passes as part of a three‑catch,
80‑yard evening. The first was a 20‑yard strike in the end zone with
7:40 left in the second quarter, which gave Massillon a 21‑0 lead.
He
then added a 51‑yard catch and run on a post pattern to make it 42‑6
with 9:58 remaining in the third quarter.
K.J.
Herring wrapped up the Tigers' stretch of scoring with a pair of touchdown
runs, the last a two‑yarder which gave the Tigers a 56‑6 lead with
2:00 left in the third quarter. Justin Turner and Cody Nickels added
fourth-quarter touchdown runs.
"It's
a start," Stacy said. "I'm never going to complain when you win like
that."
Massillon 68
North Park 6
North Park 0 6 0 0 0
Massillon 14 21 21 12 68
SCORING SUMMARY
M
‑ Gamble 12 run (Schott kick) 8:15,1st
M
‑ Massey 26 int. return (Schott kick) 8:03, 1st
M
‑ Dailey 20 pass from Huth (Schott kick) 7:40, 2nd
M
‑ Leonard 9 pass from Huth (Schott kick) 4:14, 2nd
M
‑ Gamble 36 int. return (Schott kick) 2:22, 2nd
NP
‑ Dandle 9 pass from Maddock (McDonell kick blocked) :15, 2nd
M
‑ Dailey 51 pass from Huth (Schott kick) 9:58, 3rd
M
‑ Herring 10 run (Schott kick) 6:33, 3rd
M
‑ Herring 2 run (Maylor kick) 2:00, 3rd
M
‑Turner 29 run (Nickels kick failed) :41, 4th
M
‑ Nickels 43 run (Nickels kick failed) 1:50, 4th
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
Massillon rushing:
Gamble
12‑85, 1 TD, Herring 9‑64, 2 TDs.
North Park rushing:
Socholotiuk
ing:
Massillon passing:
Huth
12‑18‑194, TDs, Ryder 3‑6‑27.
North Park passing:
Maddock
7‑15, 1 TD, 2 INTs.
Massillon receiving:
Dailey
3‑80, 2 TDs, Gamble 3‑28, Miller 3‑23.
North Park receiving:
Padmore
4‑32.