Once-in-a-career play
twice
in one day
McKinley
nips Tigers, misses playoffs
By STEVE DOERSCHUK
Independent Sports Editor
McKinley's
14-6 win over Massillon Saturday was a football student's football game.
Last
year's was all day at Cedar Point on the tallest coaster 'til you're dizzy,
Tigers 42-13.
This time it was a lot of Woody vs. Bo,
rock ribbed running, smashing hits, tight all the way, every decision might
mean the game.
McKinley won it, really, on the double
screen pass that sprang Che Bryant for a 57-yard touchdown.
Thom McDaniels has been McKinley's head
coach since 1982. How many times has he used the double screen pass?
"Twice," he said after the game witnessed by 17,863 at Paul Brown
Tiger Stadium. "Once to day when it went for a short gain. Once today when
it went for a touchdown."
Massillon led 3-0 at halftime on a
22-yard Jason Brown field goal. McKinley had a third-and-two on the first
possession of the second half when McDaniels sent in the double screen.
"We thought Massillon would have the regular screen pass pretty well
defended," McDaniels said. "We thought it would help to add a wrinkle."
The wrinkle was to let the Tigers
through to charge quarterback Joe Pukansky. Fullback Tremaine McElroy would be
available as the dump-off man on the right side of the field. Tailback Che
Bryant would be ready on the other side.
"I was just hoping we could get a
first down out of it," Pukansky said. "They bit on the fake (to
McElroy). It was open to Che's side."
It was wide open. Bryant caught the ball
around the line of scrimmage, the McKinley 43, ran ahead down the left sideline
for 10 yards, spotted a gaping hole, cut across the grain, and used what he
says is 4.5 speed in the 40 to race untouched into the right corner of the
south end zone.
"Joe
Gallo (the center) threw a real good block," Bryant said. "Alfonso
(Ash, the flanker) threw another one." Two Tigers were on the ground when
Bryant made his cut.
"We knew McKinley was a good screen
passing team," Rose said. "I was disappointed with our defense on
that play. We lost our pursuit angles."
Sophomore Josh McDaniels, the coach's
son, booted the point-after to give McKinley a 7-3 lead with 9:55 left in the
third quarter.
The Tigers relied on 5-foot-5 senior
fullback Eugene Copeland to respond immediately. Copeland, whose best game of
the season yielded 85 yards in 14 carries, ran 17 yards on a trap to the
McKinley 40.
A 25-yard sideline pass from, Mike Danzy
to Alonzo Simpson, both juniors, got the Tigers close. The possession boiled
down to fourth-and goal from the 5.
Rose said he thought about going for the
touchdown. But it was so early. He sent in Brown and got a 24-yard field goal.
It was 7-6, McKinley, with 5:17 left in the third quarter.
Partly since backfield starters Bryant
(6-3, 178, Jr.) and McElroy (6-2, 195, Sr.) double, as standouts on defense,
McDaniels likes to give them a breather for one or two series each game.,
The backups are sturdy and quick, just like the starters. Fullback Jeremy
Kirkpatrick (6-1, 207, Sr.) and tailback Denell Harris (6-1, 195, Jr.) ran
McKinley into scoring position early in the fourth quarter.
However, Bryant was re-inserted on
fourth-and-one from the Tiger 21-yard line.
Both teams used defensive shifts and
blitzes, successfully. This time, Massillon safety Eric Woods inched up to the line before the snap,
then shot the gap. Woods smashed Bryant to the turf, for a two-yard loss. The
Tigers got the ball back with 10:24 left in the game. McKinley's lead remained
one lonely point.
The Bulldog defense forced a punt, then
the Tigers got McKinley in a fourth-and-one from just short of midfield with
four minutes left. The Bulldogs acted as though they were going for a first
down. Pukansky barked but the Tigers didn't bite. McKinley called time out and
lined up for a punt.
Rose disdained one' risk having to drive
80 or 90 yards with time running out - in favor of another. "We went for
the block," he said. "Even if we didn't get the block, we'd have a
good chance of forcing a bad punt."
Woods,
who earlier had distracted Josh McDaniels into missing a 23-yard field goal
attempt with a strong rush, was one of the shock troops assigned to go after
the punt of junior Rob Pukansky, the quarterback's first cousin, and possibly
McKinley's starting QB next year.
The Tigers got a bad punt out of it. It
went off the side of my foot," Rob Pukansky said.
But Pukansky and Woods both wound up
writhing in pain of the field, the aftermath of what became a roughing-the-kicker
penalty.
I felt the rush coming," Pukansky
said. "When that happens, I just try to get the ball out of there, not
worry about booming it or making it look pretty. I got hit right here (he
pointed to his stomach)." Woods and Rob Pukansky both were helped from the
field.
McKinley kept the ball, then drove.
Harris, the backup tailback, wound up crashing up the middle for 16 yards and
a touchdown on a fourth-and-one play. Josh McDaniels' kick created the 14-6
final score with 50 seconds left.
McKinley improved to 9-1 but was denied a
playoff bid. The Bulldogs needed to finish in the top four in Region 3,
Division I. They came in seventh.
McKinley played the same strong schedule
as usual but missed the tournament because four opponents they beat did not
fare as well as usual: GlenOak (3-7), Warren (5-5), Boardman (4-6) and
Massillon (5-5).
Copeland, with his 85 yards, and Bryant,
with 92 yards in 18 carries to go along with the touchdown reception, were
Saturday's leading offensive players.
Each
team wound up throwing only nine passes. The Tigers came through an entire
quarter without going to the airways.
On its first possession, Massillon ran
four plays and elected to punt on fourth-and-a-foot from its own 36. McKinley
then punched the ball past midfield on an all running segment before a post
pattern from Joe Pukansky to Ash netted 27 yards to the 8. Tiger defensive
backs Dan Hackenbracht and Chad Buckland thwarted a third-down try for a
touchdown pass, after which Josh McDaniels couldn't connect on a 23-yard field
goal attempt.
The Tigers' first pass - on their first
play of the second quarter - was a 19-yard Danzyto-Simpson strike. That triggered
a 50-yard drive from the Tiger 45 to the Bulldog 5, featuring a 22-yard run on
a third-and-12 quarterback draw by Danzy. Brown's 22-yard field goal came on
fourth-and-goal from the 5 and gave the Tigers a 3-0 lead with 6:13 left in the
first half.
McKinley wound up with a 327-173 lead in
net offensive yards, a statistic belying the closeness of the game. Take away
McKinley's yardage on the double screen and the yardage the Pups gained after
the roughing-the-kicker call, and McKinley's edge was a modest 217-173.
The
Tigers still lead the all-time series, 53-40-5.
MAS McK
First downs
rushing 6 15
First
downs passing 3 2
First
downs by penalty 0 1
Totals first downs 9 18
Yards gained rushing
138 237
Yards lost rushing 15 6
Net yards rushing 123 231
Net yards passing 50 96
Total yards gained 173 327
Passes
attempted 9 8
Passes
completed 3 5
Interceptions 1 0
Times kicked
off 3 3
Kickoff average
42.3 38.4
Punts 4 2
Kickoff return
yards 22 11
Punting average
36.5 28.0
Punt return
yards 1 0
Fumbles 0 0
Fumbles lost 0 0
Penalties 2 4
Yards penalized 21 20
Number of
plays 40 60
Time of possession
18:43 29:17
Attendance
17,863
McKinley 0 0
7 7 14
Massillon 0 3
3 0 6
MAS - FG Brown 22
McK - Bryant 57 pass from Pukansy (McDaniels kick)
MAS - FG Brown 24
McK - Harris 16 run (McDaniels kick)
Individual statistics
Rushing
(Massillon) Copeland 14-85,
Stinson 8-7, Danzy 7-31.
(McK) Bryant 18-92, McElroy
11-34, Pukansky 7-22, Harris 9-52, Kirkpatrick
5-32.
Passing
(Massillon) Danzy 3-9-1 50.
(McK) Pukansky 5-9-0 96.
Receiving
(Massillon) Simpson 2-44, Stinson
1-6.
(McK) Bryant 2-60, Ash 2-27, McElroy 1-9.