Tigers hit Walsh early
and often
By JOE SHAHEEN
Independent Sports Editor
At
4‑1, the Massillon Tigers weren't generating much respect around the
state, mostly because the combined record of the four teams they conquered was
5‑15.
That
all changed in front of 11,023 fans on an ideal Friday night for football at
Paul Brown Tiger Stadium as the Tigers swarmed over the Walsh Jesuit Warriors,
handing Ohio's No. 8 ranked Division III team a 27-14 setback.
Actually,
it could've been a much larger margin of victory, but the Tigers seemed to go
into hibernation after building a four‑touchdown first half advantage,
leaving head coach Jack Rose a little glum after the final gun.
"I'm
just disappointed that when we got up 27 we just didn't finish it off,"
Rose said. "The last half of the second quarter was really disappointing.
We got the ball with 2 1/2 minutes left in the half and there was no sense of
urgency on the part of our offense. It's like they were content. That's what I
told them at halftime. I was upset about it. They played like the game was
over. We’ve got to be better than that,"
Walsh
Jesuit, which falls to 42, came out with the intention of taking control of
the game early. Veteran head coach Gerry Rardin indicated before the game that
was a key for his team to post its first ever regular season win at P.B. But
reality was 180 degrees in the opposite direction.
Those
guys came after it on offense and their defense came after it to," Rardin
said, “They came out tonight on offense and they attacked. Their offensive line
was impressive. All their running backs were impressive.”
Part
of the reason for the Tigers passionate first half plav may have been a little
pre‑kickoff gamesmanship on the part of Walsh Jesuitr.
"We
came out, the kickoff was ready and (Walsh Jesuit) made us wait another five
minutes or so," said cornerback B.J. Burick. "That added some wood
there, too. We were all pumped.
We
were ready. We were mentally prepared for this game the best we have been this
year. This is the real Tigers. That wasn't the real Tigers against Lima
Senior."
The
real Tigers forced Walsh to punt after three snaps following the opening
kickoff, and Josh Kreider's 10‑yard return set the home team up with good
field position at their 42.
Quarterback
Tip Danzy gained 13 yards on a bootleg run around left end on first down. Three
plays later, on fourth‑and‑1 from the Warriors' 36, fullback David
Hodgson got a nice hole on a trap play and rumbled 24 yards to the 12. Two
snaps later from the 3, Hodgson went into the line and emerged in the end zone
to cap the seven play, 58‑yard drive. Josh Hose nailed the extra point
and Massillon led 7‑0 at 7:11 of the first period.
The
Tigers defense repeated their opening series performance as Chris Smith sacked
Walsh quarterback Dan Larlham on third down to force another three‑and‑out.
It was an especially gratifying play for Smith, who has been idle since the
Week Three victory over Garfield with an ankle sprain.
"It
really felt good," Smith said. "I'm still a little out of shape. But
I figured I'd go out there and have some fun and get in on a few plays.
"We
thought about it before the game. The coaches had a long talk with us before
the game about being intense and having fun. And we just combined the two.
Everything fit."
Everything
fit on Massillon's second possession of the evening as well.
After
Danzy picked up a first down at the Walsh 35 on a sneak, he hit Clint Dean on
pop pass for seven yards. Then Hodgson picked up nine yards and Morgan added
seven more to the Warriors' 12. After another Danzy sneak, Hodgson got the
ball on two consecutive snaps, bursting into the, end zone from the three on a
hard driving run at 1:21 of the first quarter.
Hose's
conversion kick made it 14‑0 Massillon and the Warriors were reeling.
Finally,
on their third possession, the visitors picked up their first first down of the
evening as time expired at the end of the first quarter. But just four snaps
later, Larlham fumbled the ball and Massillon senior linebacker Brad Dean recovered
at the Walsh 41.
It
didn't take the Tigers long to capitalize. On the very first play after the
turnover, Danzy pitched the ball to Morgan on the option and the 6‑foot‑4
tailback cut up the right hash marks. He was hit by two Warriors at the 25,
but shed both and galloped the rest of the way to paydirt as Massillon took a
20‑0 lead at 10:04 of the second quarter.
Then
it was the Massillon defense's turn to have some fun. Senior outside linebacker
Josh Hill, who had recovered an earlier fumble only to lose it back to Walsh on
the run back, got another shot. Junior nose guard Chris Turner sacked Larlham
forcing a fumble at the Walsh 25, and Hill scooped up the loose ball. He didn't
quit running until he pierced the end zone for the second Tiger TD in less than
a minute. Hose's PAT made it 27‑0 with 9:18 until the band show.
Walsh
Jesuit finally got on the scoreboard on a three‑play drive that began at
its 36 with less than a minute remaining in the first half. Larlham hit Dan
Basch along the left sideline for a 28-yard gainer to the Tigers 27. On the
very next snap, the junior QB again found Basch, this time in the right corner
of the end zone for a touchdown. The extra point made it 27‑7 with four
seconds left on the second quarter clock.
"It
seemed like we had it all to‑ether the first two quarters, except for
that last drive when they threw the ball on us and scored a touchdown,"
noted Rose. "We were playing pretty good. I don't know if we relaxed when
we got up four touchdowns on them. You can't do that on a team like that.
Hopefully we learned from that."
Massillon
took the opening kickoff of the second half and marched from its 32 to the
Warriors' 33, but the eight‑play drive stalled and Walsh Jesuit took
over. With Larlham effectively running the football around the flanks and a
wide receiver screen to Matt Powers mixed in, Walsh moved the ball to the
Tigers 4.
Tom
Lopienski, the Warriors fullback who is headed to Notre Dame, got a pitch from
Larham, fumbled it into the end zone where Powers fell on the football for a
Walsh touchdown. The PAT made it 27‑14 at 3:11 of the third and the
natives were beginning to get a bit restless.
The
Tigers moved to midfield on the ensuing possession but were forced to punt.
However, junior outside backer Jason Bradley intercepted Larlham on Walsh's
next possession to effectively quell any momentum the Warriors had at that
point.
The
Massillon defense forced Walsh to punt once again and Smith recovered a Warrior
fumble to wrap up the win, the Tigers' fifth in six tries.
"Anytime
you beat these people it's good," Rose said, "because it's a well
coached team, they're going to have a good game plan and they have the kids who
can execute it."
MASSILLON 27
WALSH
JESUIT 14
M W
First downs
rushing 16 4
First downs
passing 0 8
First downs by
penalty 1 1
TOTAL first downs 17 13
Net yards
rushing 288 68
Net yards
passing 6 166
TOTAL yards 294 234
Passes attempted 4 18
Passes
completed 1 11
Passes
intercepted 0 1
Punts 4 4
Punting
average 28 40
Fumbles/Lost 3/1 5/4
Penalties 6 3
Yards
penalized 69 22
MASSILLON 14
13 0 0 27
WALSH 0
7 7 0 14
SCORING
M ‑ Hodgson 3
run. Hose kick.
M ‑ Hodgson 3
run. Hose kick.
M - Morgan 41 run.
Kick failed.
M - Hill fumble
recovery. Hose kick.
W ‑ Basch 27
pass from Larlham. Ducharme kick.
W ‑ Power
fumble recovery. Ducharme kick.
INDIVIDUAL
STRFAMCS
Massillon
rushing:
Morgan 23‑146,
Hodgson 15‑96,
Danzy 15‑44.
Walsh
rushing:
Larlham 19‑55,
Lopienski 915.
Massillon
Passing:
Danzy
1‑4‑6.
Walsh
Passing: Larlham 11‑18‑166
ITD. I INT.
Massillon
receiving:
Dean 1-6.
Walsh
receiving:
Powers 4‑68,
Basch 3‑72.