Author: <span>Eric Smith</span>

Massillon Tigers Black Letter Logo History

1994: Massillon 6, Akron Garfield 21

Tiger lament: Missed opportunities
Massillon falls 21-6, but score not indicative of tilt

By JOE SHAHEEN
Independent Sports Editor

When your offense gets inside the “red zone” against the rug­ged Akron Garfield Golden Rams defense, it had better put some points on the scoreboard.

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The Massillon Tigers learned that lesson the hard way, squandering two “golden” scoring opportunities in the first half and falling to the de­fending Akron City Series champions 21‑6 Friday night in front of 15,772 at muggy Paul Brown Tiger Stadium.

The defeat drops Massillon to 2‑1 on the season with the Man­sfield Tygers scheduled to visit next Friday. Garfield improves to 2‑1.

The Tigers had all the better or it in the first half, but failed to put any points on the board. Garfield recharged its batteries at halftime and dominated play in the third and fourth quarters.

Massillon took the opening kickoff and marched to the Garfield 10 before stalling.

The drive was keyed by senior tailback Leon Ashcraft, who returned the kickoff 43 yards to the Rams 45‑yard line. Ashcraft found a hole over left guard and picked up 12 more on the second play of the drive to move the ball inside the 30.

On fourth‑and‑four, quarter­back Willie Spencer gave the drive life by hitting Ryan Sha­nor over the middle for a first down at the 16. Vinny Turner picked up three yards on first down and Spencer added three more on second down.

But Ashcraft was stuffed for no gain on third‑and‑four at the 10 and Garfield’s Antoine Win­field came up with an intercep­tion in the end zone on fourth down to end Massillon’s first threat.

“When you get backed up your own goal line,” said Garfield coach Bill McGee, “sometimes character comes through and our guys had char­acter tonight. I was real pleased we got solid and tough when we had to. Of course, you don’t have to defend as much ground, so it gets easier.”

Garfield’s next three posses­sions and the Tigers next two series ended in punts.

Brennan Rohr returned the Rams’ third punt of the evening from the Tiger 35 to near mid­field and Massillon would mount its second serious march of the night from that point.

Ashcraft got the orange‑and-­black started by picking up 11 yards on first down. Then, on second‑and‑nine from the Gar­field 40, the Massillon line opened up a hole over left guard and tackle, and Ashcraft burst 18 yards to the Rams’ 21.

Turner picked up eight more on first down, prompting Gar­field head coach Bill McGee to call for time out. It didn’t help much as Spencer rolled around right end for 10 yards to the three‑yard line two snaps later and it looked like the locals would draw first blood.

But with first‑and‑goal at the three, Massillon’s second opportunity to put up points went by the boards. Ashcraft was tackled for a loss of two on first down. Spencer lost four on a rollout on second down, then was sacked by Damon Turner for an 11‑yard loss on third down.

After a delay of game, Massil­lon faced a fourth‑and‑goal from the 26 and Spencer’s pass went out of the end zone for a Garfield touchback.

“Against a team the caliber of Garfield, you can’t miss those opportunities,” said a de­jected Jack Rose in the Tiger locker room. “That was a big series for them when we got it down there and didn’t get in right before the half. It kind of took the momentum away from us a little bit. If we had punched it in there, it would have been a different ballgame.

“Give Garfield a lot of credit. They really controlled the line of scrimmage down there. We just couldn’t block them.”

Despite failing to score in the first 24 minutes, Massillon had the better of things. The Tigers out gained Garfield 100‑to‑65, re­corded eight first downs to the Rams’ four, and owned a time of possession advantage of 14:26 to 9:34.

But the most important sta­tistic, the score, was still 0‑0 and Massillon’s inability to put up any points proved fatal.

“I was happy to be 0‑0 at half­time, especially the way we played offense in the first half,” McGee admitted. “I knew we wouldn’t play that way the en­tire game.”

Obviously, he was correct. The Rams opened the second half by driving from their 22 to the Tigers 38 in eight plays. But Spencer fell on a Garfield fum­ble on the 29 yard line to quell the incursion.

Again the Tigers marched, sparked by runs of 14 and 31 yards by Ashcraft, who finished the night with 142 yards on 19 carries. Massillon had first-­and‑10 at the Garfield 25, but failed to gain any yardage on the next three downs. On fourth-­and‑10, Damon Turner sacked Spencer for an 11‑yard loss.

On the ensuing series Gar­field moved from its 36 to the Massillon 47, where it was second‑and‑five. Desmond Bell took a handoff and attacked the middle of the Tiger line. He burst through a small seam as if he were launched by a rocket didn’t stop until he struck paydirt. The kick made it Garfield 7, Massillon 0 with 4:04 to play in the third.

Massillon coughed up the football at their 30‑yard line on its next possession and Garfield went for the kill. Winfield and Bell took turns blasting into the Massillon line. Then fullback Eric McKinstry took three handoffs in a row, diving in from the one on fourth‑and‑goal at 11:22 of the fourth quarter. The PAT made it 14‑0 Garfield.

Massillon came back with a 13‑play, 79‑yard march. Ashcraft had bursts of 19‑ and 14‑yards to move the ball to the Garfield 40. Spencer hit Rohr for 13 yards and then found Tur­ner for 10 more to the Rams’ 2. The senior quarterback culmin­ated the drive by scoring on a rollout around left end, making a superb cutback at the 3‑yard line to elude a final defender.

The Tigers tried for a two­ point conversion, but the pass was intercepted and it was a 14­-6 game at the 5:28 mark.

There was still time for the locals and the comeback looked possible when Garfield faced a second‑and‑20 at its 10‑yard line. But Winfield dashed the hometown hopes by slashing up the middle and dashing 73 yards before Courtney Herring drag­ged him down from behind all the way down to the Tiger 17‑yard line.

Six plays later, Alonzo Wal­lace kept the football on the op­tion play and swept around right end for the icing‑on‑the­-cake TD with just l:50 to play.

“I thought our defense did a great job,” Rose said. “They couldn’t have played any better. Take a couple of plays out of there and we really shut them down. That last run of Win­field’s for 72 yards … up until then we had him contained. But a great player makes great plays in big games, and he made a couple on offense and defense. ”


Leon Ashcraft

Massillon Tigers Black Letter Logo History

1994: Massillon 39, Dayton Trotwood Madison 18

Another blowout Trotwood Madison Tigers’ 2nd victim
Tigers take turnovers to trounce Trotwood
Massillon improves to 2-0 with 39-18 win

By JOE SHAHEEN
Independent Sports Editor

Just when it looked like Trot­wood Madison tailback Howard Lankford would torture the Massillon defense all night long, the electrifying mighty mite coughed up the football and gave the Tigers the momen­tum they’d never relinquish in a 39‑18 victory in front of 10,201 at Paul Brown Tiger Stadium, Friday.

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With the Tigers clinging to a perilous 13‑12 lead in the final three minutes of the first half, Lankford ‑ who finished with 145 yards rushing in 25 carries ‑ fumbled after diving into the middle of the Massillon line. Senior linebacker Courtney Herring recovered for the Ti­gers at the Trotwood 40.

Massillon was quick to capi­talize. On second down, senior tailback Leon Ashcraft skirted left end on a counter play and danced 23 yards to the 15. Two plays later, senior quarterback Willie Spencer rolled right, pump faked and sprinted into the end zone to give the Tigers a seven‑point advantage at 19‑12 and a much‑needed burst of confidence going into halftime.

“You just cannot turn the ball over against a quality team like Massillon, especially when we had things going our way,” said Trotwood coach Bill Dennis, who then addressed Spencer’s touchdown run. “Going in we knew we had to contain Spencer and keep him from getting to the perimeter. But he’s such a good athlete. We just didn’t get it done.”

Up to that point, it appeared Lankford would be the fly in the Tigers ointment the entire evening. He rushed for 97 first half yards and had the Massil­lon faithful holding its collec­tive breath every time he touched the football.

“We just couldn’t tackle him, he’s so quick,” said Tigers coach Jack Rose. “They do a nice job of getting him the ball in certain situations and he is hard to find. They’d get him the ball and he’d just pop out of there.”

However, the Tigers came out in the second half and put the game away with two third-quarter touchdowns within a three minute span and a refo­cused defense that didn’t allow a Trotwood first down until there were nine minutes left in the game.

”The defensive coaches made some nice adjustments at halftime,” Rose observed. “But overall, our defense played to­day like it practiced all week, and we didn’t practice worth a lick.”

The first half was a different story. On the opening kickoff, Lankford showed what was to come, sprinting and spinning for 35 yards to the Trotwood 44. The Massillon defense stiffened and a fake punt misfired giving the Tigers superb field position at the Trotwood 48.

On third‑and‑seven, Spencer rolled right and hit Brennan Rohr, who made a sliding catch along the sideline at the 14‑yard line. A clipping penalty moved the ball back to the 18, but Ashcraft found a huge cavity on a delay over left guard and charged into the end zone for an 18‑yard touchdown and a 7‑0 Tiger lead at the 7:52 mark of the first quarter.

“That Ashcraft is a nice, little runner,” Dennis commented. “Their offensive line did a good job. We couldn’t get off their blocks and fly to the football like we did last week.”

“Bones runs hard,” Rose con­curred. “He had a real nice game tonight.”

But Trotwood came right back, marching 52 yards in nine plays. Lankford put the points on the scoreboard when he took a pitchout around right end, ran through three would‑be tack­lers for an 18‑yard touchdown with 4:29 to play in the first quarter.

Trotwood got a gift on the drive when Massillon was flag­ged for a late hit on a third down play, giving the Rams new life at the Tigers 21‑yard line.

The Tigers were intercepted on the second play of their next possession, but got the ball right back when Lavell Weaver reco­vered a Trotwood fumble to put the Massillon offense in busi­ness at midfield.

Ashcraft burst for 15 yards on first down, Spencer ‑ after a beautiful play fake ‑ hit tight end Ryan Shanor for 23 yards to the Trotwood 13, and Ashcraft finished off the lightning march with an 11‑yard bolt off left guard and tackle for a touch­down to make it Tigers 13, Trot­wood 6 with :38 to play in the opening period.

Again Trotwood counterpun­ched after getting great field position at their own 40 after a short kickoff. With Lankford carrying on five of the seven snaps, the Rams pulled to with­in one point with 10:21 left in the first half. The 5‑5, 160‑pounder finished off the TD drive by finding paydirt on a seven‑yard draw play up the middle to make it a 13‑12 contest.

Massillon moved the ball on the next possession, but were finally forced to punt and downed the ball inside the Trot­wood 1.

The Rams brought it out, as halftime approached, but gave the ball and the ballgame away on Lankford’s key fumble.

Massillon marched with the second half kickoff moving from its 20 to the Trotwood 19 before losing the ball on downs. The Tiger defense got the ball back by forcing the Rams to punt after just three plays. On first down from the 45, Vinny Turner picked up 17 yards on a draw and Spencer rolled around right end for a 23‑yard pick‑up to the 4‑yard line.

One play later Spencer scored on the quarterback sneak to make it 25‑12 with 3:56 to go in the third.

Again the Massillon defense did its job, forcing Trotwood to punt after three snaps. On first down from the Tiger 29, Ashcraft found a huge gap be­hind center Mark Wells, broke to the right sideline and gal­loped 52 yards to the Rams’ 19­-yard line. Four plays later, Ashcraft dove into the end zone from the 3 to make it 33‑12 with less than a minute left in the third.

MASSILLON 39
TROTWOOD 18
M T
First downs rushing 17 11
First downs passing 3 5
First downs penalty 1 1
Total first downs 21 17
Net yards rushing 353 172
Net yards passing 85 132
Total yards gained 438 304
Passes attempted 7 26
Passes completed 3 17
Passes int. by 1 1
Times kicked off 7 4
Kickoff average 41.4 49.0
Kickoff return yards 25 129
Punts 2 2
Punting average 37.0 36.0
Punt return yards 26 0
Fumbles 0 4
Fumbles lost 0 3
Penalties 2 3
Yards penalized 30 24
Number of plays 56 57
Time of possession 26:09 21:51
Attendance 10,201

TROTWOOD 6 6 0 6 18
MASSILLON 13 6 14 6 39

SCORING SUMMARY

First Quarter
M ‑ Ashcraft 18 run (Pribich kick)
T ‑ Lankford 17 run (run failed)
M ‑ Ashcraft 11 run (kick failed)

Second Quarter
T ‑ Lankford 7 run (pass failed)
M ‑ Spencer 11 run (kick failed)

Third Quarter
M – Spencer 1 run (kick failed)
M – Ashcraft 3 run (Shanor Pass from Spencer)

Fourth Quarter
M ‑ Lewis 4 run (kick failed)
T ‑ Williams 25 Pass from Hutson (pass failed)

FINAL STATISTICS

Rushing:
Massillon
Ashcraft 17‑170, 3 TDs;
Spencer 8‑73, 2 TDs;
Lewis l4‑72, 1 TD;
Turner 8‑33;
Fraelich 1‑5;
Herring 1‑0.
Trot­wood‑Madison
Lankford 25‑145, 2 TDs;
Christon 5‑18;
Hutson 1‑9.

Passing:
Massillon
Spencer 3‑7‑85, 1 int.
Trotwood‑Madison
Hutson 16‑24‑129, 1 TD, 1 int.;
Walker 1‑2‑3.

Receiving:
Massillon
Shanor 2‑55,
Rohr 1‑30.
Trotwood‑Madison
Williams 5‑51, 1 TD;
Russell 6‑39;
Lankford 4‑10;
Mark 2-32.


Leon Ashcraft

Massillon Tigers Black Letter Logo History

1994: Massillon 41, Youngstown Rayen 6

No contest!
Tigers maul Rayen in season opener Ashcraft, Spencer spark Massillon to easy victory

By JOE SHAHEEN
Independent Sports Editor

The Massillon Tigers seemed intent on giving Youngstown Rayen every opportunity to make a game of it in the teams’ season opener at Paul Brown Tiger Stadium, Friday. But Rayen was just as determined to make things easy for their hosts.

In the end, Massillon walked off with an unfulfilling 41‑6 vic­tory in front of 10,756 on an un­seasonably chilly night.

How hard did Rayen try to be the perfect guest?

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With Massillon leading 14‑0 early in the second quarter, the Rayen defense stiffened and forced a punt. But Massillon re­tained possession when Rayen was whistled for illegal participation. That usually means 12 men on the field, one too many. In this case, an official spotted 13 players on the field for the Youngstown entry.

The penalty gave the Tigers new life and they scored on the drive take a 21‑0 lead that would prove to be insurmountable for the visitors.

There’s more.

Late in the first half, Tigers quarterback Willie Spencer strolled out of bounds on a third-and‑long play. That meant the Tigers would have to punt, apparently giving Rayen a final opportunity to get on the scoreboard. But a Rayen defen­der bumped Spencer after the play was dead and then got into a jawing match and was flag­ged for unsportsmanlike con­duct, an automatic first down for the hosts.

Massillon was not sharp, especially in the first half which ended with the locals holding a 21‑0 advantage. Spencer fum­bled twice, recovering both. The secondary was burned twice for long pass plays, each of which went for over 35 yards. And Massillon’s longest pass play of the night, a 64‑yard hookup between Spencer and Steve Griffith, was called back on an illegal‑motion penalty.

Still, there were some bright spots for the Tigers, not the least of which was the impress­ive running of junior fullback Vinny Turner. When. it became apparent Rayen’s defense was eying on the Massillon tail­backs, head coach Jack Rose in­serted Turner and began feed­ing him the football on quick hit­ters in the middle of the line.

Turner (5‑9, 194) responded with an impressive first half. He carried the ball seven times and picked up 65 yards before the band show, a 9.3 yards per carry average. His effective­ness forced Rayen to begin paying attention to the fullback and opened up things for tail­backs Leon Ashcraft and Nate Lewis.

“They were really penetrat­ing hard off the back side,” Rose said. “So we thought we’d hit them quick, right over top of the center and soften them there. Then we hit them a cou­ple times off tackle with the trap play and got a couple of good gainers there.

“Vinny is a converted tailback and has great feet. He has a great future, whether it be at tailback or fullback.”

Ashcraft scored twice in the first half. He capped a five-­play, 43‑yard drive on the Ti­gers second possession with a one‑yard TD dive over left guard. The stocky senior went in from 13 yards out on Massil­lon’s next possession, absorb­ing a big hit at the 5 and keeping his balance to score standing up. The run culminated a three-­play, 47‑yard drive that was keyed by Turner’s 31‑yard burst up the middle on the initial snap of the possession.

“That second run there was a nice little hole there and I just had to take it up in there,” Ashcraft explained. “A couple of people got on me, but I just did what I had to do to help the team.”

The Tigers only sustained drive of the first half took place on their first possession of the second quarter. Massillon moved from its 25 on 12 plays, scoring when Spencer snuck into the end zone from a yard away at 4:46 of the second period. Ashcraft’s ten‑yard burst off right tackle and an 18­-yard scamper by Spencer on a roll out around right end keyed the drive.

Massillon came out sharp in the second half. Senior fullback Jeremy Fraelich rumbled for 25 yards on the first play after the band show. Spencer then hit Jason Manson for nine yards and two plays later found Vaughn Moeller along the left sideline for 30 more to the Rayen 7.

Spencer rolled right on second‑and‑goal and hit tight end Ryan Shanor under the crossbar for the TD and the Ti­gers led 28‑0 with 8:22 to play in the third.

Spencer found Moeller with a 37‑yard scoring toss at 3:38 of the third to make it 34‑0 and sig­nal the end of the night’s work for the majority of Massillon’s starters.

“Vaughn has deceiving speed,” Rose said. “He got behind the secondary a couple of times. He can be a real deep threat for us this season.”

Rayen got on the scoreboard with 2:06 left in the third when Damien Williams gathered up a Tiger fumble and ran 46 yards to paydirt to make it 34‑6.

Lamar Lancaster inter­cepted a Rayen pass with 5:30 to play and ran it back to the five-­yard line. Nate Lewis closed the scoring on first down when he burst into the end zone on the draw play. The kick made it 41-­6.

“We’ve got to improve in the passing game,” Rose summarized. ”We had a couple of drops again tonight. We’re catching the ball and falling down and we should be catching the ball and running with it. But we im­proved as the game went on.

“Defensively, we missed a lot of tackles tonight. It looked like we were there, we just weren’t wrapping up.”

Rose had mixed feelings on the performance of his young offensive line, an area he be­lieves will be the key if the Ti­gers are to return to the playoffs for a second year in a row.

“I thought we handled their pressure pretty good when we came down and did our steps correctly and zoned properly. We did a nice job,” Rose said. “The back side blocking could use some improvement.

MASSILLON 41
RAYEN 6
M R
First downs rushing 14 3
First downs passing 2 4
First downs penalty 2 0
Total first downs 18 7
Net yards rushing 262 65
Net yards passing 89 107
Total yards gained 351 172
Passes attempted 8 21
Passes completed 5 7
Passes int. by 1 1
Times kicked off 7 2
Kickoff average 45.7 38.5
Kickoff return yards 18 92
Punts 0 4
Punting average 0 25.0
Punt return yards 15 0
Fumbles 2 3
Fumbles lost 1 1
Penalties 5 12
Yards penalized 29 87
Number of plays 49 43
Time of possession 26:17 21:43
Attendance 10,756

Y’TOWN RAYEN 0 0 6 0 6
MASSILLON 14 7 13 7 41

SCORING SUMMARY

First Quarter
M ‑ Ashcraft 1 run (Pribich kick)
M ‑ Ashcraft 12 run (Pribich kick)

Second Quarter
M ‑ Spencer 1 run (Pribich kick)

Third Quarter
M ‑ Shanor 7 pass from Spencer (Pribich kick)
M – Mohler 37 pass from Spencer (kick failed)
R ‑ Williams fumble recovery in end zone (pass failed)

Fourth Quarter
M ‑ Lewis 5 run (Weirich kick)

FINAL STATISTICS

Rushing:
Massillon
Turner 9-72;
Lewis 9-61, 1 TD;
Ashcraft 9‑49, 2 TDs;
Spencer 7‑33, 1 TD;
Fraelich 4‑37;
Whitfield 3‑10.
Rayen
Johnson 7‑30,
Morgan 3‑18,
Jeffries 8‑14,
Wil­liams 4‑3.

Passing:
Massillon
Spencer 5‑7‑89, 2 TDs;
Whitfield 0‑1, 1 int.
Rayen
Jeffries 7‑21‑107, 1 int.

Receiving:
Massillon
Mohler 2‑66, 1 TD;
Shanor 1‑7, 1 TD;
Manson 1‑9;
Rohr 1‑7.
Rayen
Crenshaw 2‑71,
Jones 3‑33,
Williams 1‑4.

Leon Ashcraft
History

1993: Massillon 20, Walsh Jesuit 30

Walsh Jesuit holds on: Massillon finishes 10-2

By JOE SHAHEEN
Independent Sports Editor

Jack Rose knew 16 points would not be enough to beat the Massillon Tigers.

And he told his team that at halftime of Saturday’s Division I regional championship game against Walsh Jesuit at the Akron Rubber Bowl. The Tigers trailed the Warriors 16-0 at the time.

With 8:48 left in the contest, Rose looked like a prophet as Massillon had pulled to within 23‑20 on a 55‑yard touchdown bomb from Mike Danzy to Lonnie Simpson.

At that point, not only were the Tigers believers, so was Walsh Jesuit head coach Gerry Rardin.

“I was thinking, ‘We can’t let this happen again,”‘ confided Rardin after the game. “I was. I’ll admit it now.”

Rardin had seen Massillon come from behind to defeat his team in the 1989 playoffs and last year during the regular season. This time, however, Walsh Jesuit was able to hang on for a 30‑20 victory and a berth in the state semi-finals against Cleveland St. Ignatius on Dec. 4 at Fawcett Stadium.

The Warriors cemented the win with a clutch seven‑play, 48‑yard touchdown drive following Simpson’s TD catch. It was set up when Matt Lloyd gave his team superb field position with a hard‑driving 39‑yard kickoff return.

After quarterback Todd Riddle started things off with a 22‑yard strike to Brock Kreitzburg that moved the ball to the Massillon 26, Lloyd finished the Tigers off the way he does all of his rushes. The senior tailback carried on four of the next five plays, scoring on a two‑yard smash into the middle of the line with 4:38 to play.

“Matt Lloyd’s a great kid. Matt Lloyd’s an outstanding tailback,” Rardin said, “He just runs with a great deal of heart and determination.”

Those same remarks would apply to more than one Tiger on what turned out to be a disappointing evening. Danzy showed enormous heart in rallying his team in the second half with a 68-yard touchdown run on an option keeper and the lone bomb to Simpson. The 5‑7, 165‑pound senior was a heavyweight this day with 120 yards and 107 yards passing.

Ali Dixon and Courtney Herring played key roles also. Dixon breathed life into the running game in the second half while, Herring’s two‑way play at tailback and linebacker belied his lack of experience.

The Massillon defense, despite Walsh Jesuit’s 30 points, hung in against a well‑balanced Warrior attack. It forced and recovered two fumbles in the third quarter to get the comeback started. The second one, recovered by Chris Porrini, led to Jake Laughlin’s 3‑yard touchdown dive that made it 16‑7 with 3:39 to go in the third period.

Walsh Jesuit countered with an eight‑play, 78‑yard touchdown march. Lloyd personally accounted for 71 of those yards (54 rushing, 17 receiving) and put the points on the board with a 28‑yard scoring run on a counter gap play over the Warriors’ right side. The PAT made it 23‑7 with :07 to go in the third.

Massillon showed why if is appropriately dubbed the City of Champions by fighting right back. Danzy electrified the crowd of 11,765 with his 68‑yard TD scamper on the option keeper. His conversion pass failed but it was 23‑13 with just under 11 minutes still to play.

The Tiger defense made another stand on Walsh’s next possession, forcing the Warriors into a three‑and‑out sequence by sniffing out a screen pass to Lloyd on third down.

After the punt, Massillon had it first‑and‑10 at its own 45. Danzy rolled right found Simpson wide open along the right sideline at the ­Walsh 25 and put the pigskin on the money. Simpson did the rest, outrunning the secondary to the end zone to make it 23‑20 with just under 9:00 to go.

That’s when Lloyd and the Warriors put together their final scor­ing march, drawing the curtain down on a fine comeback season for the Tigers.

“It was a heck of a season,” a disconsolate Rose said softly in the empty Massillon locker room. “Going 10‑2 isn’t too shabby, coming back from a 5‑5 season.

“We’ve got a real nice junior class coming back and we should have another real fine season in 1994.”

Rose cited two factors contributing to the Walsh Jesuit victory; third‑down efficiency and pass protection.

“They did a real nice job on third down,” he noted. “They converted a lot of third down plays. They had to have a great percentage, (56 percent for the game) especially on that first drive when they got the field goal.

“Riddle is a strong kid. He can shake off a guy. They did a good job of protecting him and he really threw the ball (12‑for‑20, 173 yards). He was on. He can throw the ball well.”
Unlike the week before against McKinley, Walsh Jesuit was not able to be one‑dimensional on offense. The Warriors went to the air early and often – Riddle was 8 of 12 for 127 yards in the first half alone – to keep the Tigers defense off balance.

“We felt we would have to mix it up a lot more to keep them­ honest,” Rardin said: “The kids executed a lot‑of‑things well, even when it got tough and they were stuffing us. They kept their poise and they continued to execute. That was the difference.”

MASSILLON 20
WALSH JESUIT 30
M W
First downs rushing 10 10
First downs passing 3 3
First downs penalty 0 0
Total first downs 13 18
Net yards rushing 236 203
Net yards passing 108 173
Total yards gained 338 355
Passes attempted 13 20
Passes completed 3 12
Passes int. by 1 0
Times kicked off 4 6
Kickoff average 45.5 58.0
Kickoff return yards 54 83
Punts 3 1
Punting average 35.0 28.0
Punt return yards 2 3
Fumbles 2 3
Fumbles lost 2 2
Penalties 2 1
Number of plays 44 59
Time of possession 18:41 29:19
Attendance 11,765

WALSH JESUIT 3 13 7 7 30
MASSILLON 0 0 7 13 20

Mark Fair
History

1993: Massillon 46, Mansfield Senior 6

Tigers rebound: maul Mansfield

Walsh Jesuit next hurdle

By JOE SHAHEEN’
Independent Sports Editor

Yes, Virginia, those were the same Massillon Tigers thrashing Mansfield 46-6 Saturday in Parma as the squad that fell to Canton McKinley 21-13 seven days ago.

And, while Mansfield isn’t McKinley, neither is the artificial turf of Byers Field comparable to the muck and mire that is the Fawcett Stadium playing surface.

Now Massillon gets a Walsh Jesuit team that is peaking after an impressive 19-0 victory over McKinley. The Tigers and Warriors will do battle at 7:30 p.m. Saturday at the Akron Rubber Bowl.

One play underscored why the Tigers are among Ohio’s elite high school football teams when the playing surface isn’t a factor in the contest. It came in the second quarter, about 5½ minutes before halftime. Mike Danzy tried to execute the option around the right side of the Tiger offensive line on second-and-32 from the Massillon 27.

Mansfield got excellent penetration and had the play defensed. So Danzy reversed course in the backfield, looking for some daylight around left end. A wall of blockers formed and Danzy found a seam to the 51-yard line as the pursuit closed in on him.

But the Tigers’ 1993 Most Valuable Player wasn’t satisfied. He cut back against the grain at midfield, leaving a host of defenders grasping at air in his wake. Danzy turned on the afterburners and sprinted to the Mansfield 7-yard line before one of the Tygers’ track stars pushed him out of bounds.

It was the type of play that cannot be scripted, but one which Danzy and several of his teammates are capable of making at any time. Such plays are a big reason the Massillon offense is so explosive.

“You just cannot make that run on a muddy, sloppy field,” Jack Rose said of Danzy’s highlight file scamper.

The Massillon offense, paced by a line that gouged huge holes in the Mansfield defense front and the determined running of Leon Ashcraft (80 yards, three touchdowns), functioned like a well-oiled machine.

But it was the defense that limited Mansfield to a paltry 2.7 yards per rush and 144 yards of total offense that made a statement. The Tygers came into the game averaging more than 30 points per start. Yet Massillon shut the speedsters down, permitting just one meaningless score in the fourth quarter after the issue had long since been decided.

“The defense really was swarming to the football,” Rose said. “We looked quick tonight. That’s the way we looked all year. We were on the right surface. It was good to get on a good playing surface.”

There was more to the way the defense performed than just the playing surface. There seemed to be a higher than usual level of intensity.

“We were pretty disappointed with the way things went last week,” said Tiger tackle B.J. Payne, “and I think we turned that disappointment into anger. Mansfield just happened to be the opponent and they had to deal with it.”

Still, Payne loves playing on the fake grass.

“It helps a lot because we are more of a quick team,” he said. “On turf, we don’t have to worry about the mud making us look like we’re on a roller skates.”

Mansfield played the first half as if it was on roller skates, fumbling four time and losing three to the opportunistic Tiger defense. The first turnover came on a bad punt snap on Mansfield’s first possession. Geoff Osborn recovered at the Tyger eight, and after a penalty Ashcraft plowed into the end zone from four yards out on the first snap and Randy Endsley’s PAT made it 7-0 with just over two minutes elapsed in the game.

The Tygers marched from their 17 to Massillon’s 27, but Tim Menches recovered quarterback Effie James’ fumble to set up the Tigers’ best sustained march of the night. The locals drove 79 yards in 14 plays. A 15-yard Danzy to Greg Merchant pass and Mike Paul’s 22-yard burst highlighted the sequence, which was capped by Ashcraft’s 5-yard TD run behind the blocking of Trevor Paisley and Mark Fair on the left side. Endsley’s boot made it 14-0 at the :43 mark of the first period.

Christmas continued to come six weeks early for the Tigers. On Mansfield’s next play from scrimmage, James’ bad pitch was caught in mid-air by Massillon’s Matt Robinson at the Tyger 16. Three plays later, Paul went in untouched – some trick for a fullback in a goal line situation – and Endsley made it 21-0 at 11:18 of the second quarter.

Massillon scored twice more in the half, on a five play, 71-yard drive keyed by Danzy’s spectacular ad lib run, and on a 12-play, 63-yard march that featured Ali Dixon, who caught a 5-yarder for the TD to make it 34-0 at halftime.

The Tigers drove 52 yards with the second-half kickoff, capped by Courtney Herring’s 2-yard touchdown run at 5:08 of the third period.

Herring’s 53-yard burst over left tackle highlighted Massillon’s final scoring drive. The junior tailback scored from the 2 to make it 46-0 after three periods.

Mansfield head coach Stan Jefferson attributed the outcome more to his team’s errors than anything the Tigers did in the playoff opener.

“we did the damage to ourselves,” Jefferson said. “We had the bad snap. Then we fumbled. Then we had another fumble. I mean, that’s 21 points we gave right now. It was nothing Massillon did to us. It was self-inflicted wounds.

“When we came out there and saw (Massillon) today, they didn’t look as big as the first time we saw them. We felt coming in anything could happen.

MASSILLON 46
MANSFIELD 6
M O
First downs rushing 17 5
First downs passing 1 1­
First downs penalty 2 1
Total first downs 20 7­
Net yards rushing 379 131
Net yards passing 25 70­
Total yards gained 395 14
Passes attempted 6 13
Passes completed 3 3
Passes int. by 0 0
Times kicked off 8 2
Kickoff average 39.6 18.5
Kickoff return yards 0 31
Punts 1 3
Punting average 5.0 44.7
Punt return yards 58 0
Fumbles 2 5
Fumbles lost 2 3
Penalties 5 11
Yards penalized 57 71
Number of plays 70 40
Time of possession 30:03 17:57
Attendance 10,312

MANSFIELD 0 0 6 0 6­
MASSILLON 14 20 12 0 46

SCORING SUMMARY

First Quarter
MASS ‑ Ashcraft 4 run (Endsley kick)
MASS ‑ Ashcraft 5 run (Endslay kick)

Second Quarter
MASS ‑ Paul_2 run.(Endsley kick)
MASS ‑ Ashcraft 2 run (Endsfoy kick)
MASS – Dixon 5 pass from Danzy (kick failed)

Third Quarter
MASS ‑ Herring 1 run (kick failed)
MASS ‑ Herring 2 run (kick failed)

Fourth Quarter
MANS ‑ Lawrence 50 pass from Jones(run failed)

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

RUSHING
Massillon
Danzy 8‑86;
Ashcraft 16-80, 3 TDs;
Herring 8‑77, 2 TDs;
Dixon 11-44;
Paul 6-38, 1 TD;
Turner 7-21;
Laughlin 4-16;
Fraelich 2-8;
Hiegl 1-3.
Man­sfield
James 6‑50,
Fountain 8‑39,
Barber 5‑6,
Jackson 4‑9.

Mark Fair
Massillon vs. McK - Throwback (Large) History

1993: Massillon 13, Canton McKinley 21

Clutch plays decided this one

By JOE SHAHEEN
Independent Sports Editor

For the first nine weeks of the 1993 high school football season, the Massillon Tigers made the big plays, evidenced by a 47 points per game average, a 9‑0 record and a number four statewide ranking.

But things went the other way at Fawcett Stadium Saturday afternoon, as the McKinley Bulldogs parlayed big plays into a 21‑13 upset of the Tigers.

Program Cover

Making many of the big plays for McKinley was one of their smaller players, 5‑9, 140‑pound senior quarterback Josh McDaniels.

With the game at tied at 7‑7, and less than three minutes left in the first half, the Bulldogs took over at their 34 yard line. On third‑and‑5, McDaniels kept the ball on an option, picking his way for 15 yards and a key first down.

On the very next snap McDa­niels rolled right and hit Jaivon­ne Richards along the right sideline for 18 yards to the Tiger 28, and the Pups were in range.

McDaniels found Tom Hast­ings for seven more to the 21. But it appeared the Tigers Chris Porrini had come up with the stopper, when he smelled out a middle screen to Kinta Mitchell for a three‑yard loss.

McDaniels barely overthrew Hastings along the left side on a perfectly run fade pattern, setting up fourth-and‑6 at the Tiger 24. It also set up what may have been the play of the game.

On the next snap, McDaniels and Hastings connected on a short curl in the left flats, and Hastings pitched the ball back to Denell Harris, who scooted to the Tiger five where Lonnie Simpson made a touchdown ­saving stop.

With a minute to go until the half, McDaniels rolled right but couldn’t find an open receiver. So the coach’s son tucked the ball and took off, finding paydirt, and giving the Pups a 14‑7 lead at half.

McKinley opened the after­noon scoring on its first posses­sion. Tailback Che Bryant car­ried the ball on the first three plays ‑ including a 27‑yard burst ‑ as the Bulldogs moved from their own 20 to Massil­lon’s 47. The Pups kept the foot­ball on the ground with Mitchell and Harris on the next two plays, moving it to the Tiger 27. Then Bryant found a gaping hole over left tackle. Defensive back Tim Menches made one of many fine stops at the 19.

Bryant then gained 10 more yards over right tackle on the next snap, making it first‑and-­goal at the eight. Three plays later, McKinley faced a deci­sion. It was fourth‑and‑goal at the three.

In came McDaniels, who didn’t start at quarterback. He lined up in field goal formation, but shifted to a conventional set at the last moment. He handed the ball to Harris, who went over left tackle for a TD. McDa­niels’ PAT made it 7‑0 with 6:50 to play in the first quarter.

The drive covered 80 yards in 11 plays.

Massillon came right back on its initial possession of the con­test. It looked like three downs and out, but a roughing‑the-­kicker call on McKinley, giving the Tigers new life on their 46. On the next play, a late‑hit‑penalty moved the ball to the 39.

Tiger fullback Mike Paul car­ried twice for 14 yards to the 25, then Mike Danzy ran around right end for 10 more. On third‑and‑6 from the 11, Paul carried on a draw play, cut off a fine block by Brock Her­ring, and picked up a first down at the four. Three plays later, Paul scored from the one to make it 7‑7 with 11:57 left in the first half.

The Tigers came out for the third quarter, and looked like they were ready to erase a 14‑7 lead, driving from their 36 to McKinley’s 16, as Dixon and Danzy took turns making plays.

Dixon picked up 13 on a coun­ter around left end to give the locals a first down near midfield, then ran another counter over right guard to the 33. Two plays later, he hit Merchant to the 21.

Danzy then found tight end Isaiah Jackson to set up first‑and‑goal at the six. But the Bull­dog defense stiffened and Mas­sillon turned the ball over on an in­terception by Richards in the end zone.

The Massillon defense stop­ped McKinley on the next pos­session. But the Tigers fum­bled, giving the Bulldogs back the ball at the Tiger 35. Eight plays later, Mitchell found the end zone from three yards out to make it 21‑7, 37 seconds into the fourth quarter.

But the Tigers came, back, getting a big play of its own on the next possession, as Danzy hit Jackson on the right sideline for 44‑yeard gainer to the McKinley 28. Two plays later, Danzy hit Merchant for a short pass on the left side. Merchant slipped two tackles, and sprinted down the sideline into the end zone, making it 21‑13.

Harris tipped away a conver­sion pass, intended for Jackson.

McKinley was forced to punt on its next possession. But the Tigers couldn’t do anything, giving it back to the hosts with 3:59 to play. McKinley ran out the clock without giving the Ti­gers the ball back.

The Bulldogs averaged 6.7 yards on first down plays, com­pared to under three yards for the Tigers.

MASSILLON 13
MCKINLEY 21
M Mc
First downs rushing 8 10
First downs passing 4 2
First downs penalty 2 1
Total first downs 14 13
Net yards rushing 108 240
Net yards passing 101 44
Total yards gained 209 284
Passes attempted 15 10
Passes completed 5 6
Passes int. by 2 0
Times kicked off 3 4
Kickoff average 54 31.3
Kickoff return yards 10 28
Punts 2 3
Punting average 34 31
Punt return yards 6 0
Fumbles 2 1
Fumbles lost 1 1
Penalties 4 7
Yards penalized 40 55
Number of plays 48 50
Time of possession 24:43 23:17

MCKINLEY 7 7 0 7‑21
MASSILLON 0 7 0 6‑13

McK. ‑ Harris 3 yard run (McDanielS kick)
Mass. ‑ Paul 1 yard run (Endsley kick)
McK. ‑ McDaniels 5 yard run (McDaniels kick)
McK. ‑ Mitchell 3 yard run (McDaniels kick)
Mass. ‑ Merchant 28 yard pass from Danzy (pass failed)

Individual statistics

RUSHING:
Massillon
Dixon 10‑38,
Paul 11­-28,
Danzy 5‑24,
Herring 2‑7,
Laughin 2‑5,
Spencer 2‑4,
Ashcraft 1‑2;
McKinley
Harris 15‑101,
Bryant 8‑77,
Mitchell 8‑26,
Burns 4‑18,
McDaniels 4‑15,
Pukansky 1‑3.

PASSING:
Massillon
Danzy 5‑15‑101‑2, 1 TD;
McKinley
McDaniels 5‑8‑38‑0 0 TDs,
Pukansky 1‑2‑6‑0, 0 TDS.

RECEIVING:
Massillon
Jackson 3‑65,
Mer­chant 2‑36;
McKinley
Alkire 2‑3,
Richards 1­-18,
Harris 1‑16,
Hasting 1‑10,
Mitchell 1‑3.

This one is more than
just a game

By TODD PORTER
Independent Sports Writer

For many of the Massillon fans at Fawcett Stadium Saturday afternoon, the McKinley game is the culmination of an entire season.

For others, it’s the one game they live for while growing up in Tigertown.

Some are former players or booster club members. Some are only part‑time fans. Others are just your everyday Massillon Tiger fanatics.

They all had something in common. They were pulling for the Tigers to come out on top.

The game is the pinnacle of the season for both teams.

The Bulldogs did their best to take the Tiger faithful out of the game early, surging to a 14‑7 halftime lead.

“I said I was worried about this game,” one fan decked out in orange and black said on his way to take his seat after a visit to the concession stand.

“McKinley’s better than most people give them credit for.”

Many fans spent part of the afternoon reliving the excitement leading up to “The Game.”

“Everything else ‑ the nine games before this, the practice before the sea­son ‑ is superficial, ” said Al Rogers Jr., who played for the Tigers in 1976.

“This is what playing Massillon Tiger football is all about. You throw all the records out. I remember when I was a junior we played McKinley and we were 5‑3‑1 coming in and they were 9‑0. We beat them and knocked them out of the playoffs.

“That’s what makes this game so spe­cial. The tradition is what sets this game apart from any other game in the country.”

Tiger Booster Club president Rollie Layfield will always remember the 1993­-94 season. Win or lose, the Tigers, according to Layfield, had a great team.

“If we get into the playoffs, I think we’ll be respectable,” said Layfield who is only allowed to serve one term a president. “This has been a great season. This group of young men have come together as a team, and that’s what this game is all about.”

Rob Maylor, who played offensive line for the Tigers in 1981 and ’82, is a staunch Tiger fan. Maylor was one of the booster members forming the man‑made tunnel before the Tigers took the field.

He hasn’t lost any intensity since his playing days.

Maylor was slapping helmets am screaming encouragement to the Massillon players.

“As a player, this game is something you live for,” Maylor said. “When I see the players come out of the locker room and head for that hoop, I get goose bumps every week.

“This game is special, It’s the pinnacle of the season.

Mark Fair
Massillon Tigers Black Letter Logo History

1993: Massillon 63, Youngstown East 6

Massillon runs roughshod over East

Tigers tune up for McKinley with 63‑6 win

By MIKE KEATING
Independent Sports Writer

Maybe seven years ago it would have been an inviting matchup between the Massillon and Youngstown East Golden Bears.

But Friday night in Paul Brown Tiger Stadium before 8,975 fans, it was no contest.

The Tigers scored early and often and crushed East by a 63‑6 count, their final regular season game before next Saturday’s battle against arch‑rival McKinley.

Massillon has won its first nine regular season games for the first time since 1982, the last time the Tigers played in the state championship game.

That Massillon team featured junior two‑way starter Chris Spielman, now a starting line­backer for the Detroit.

“It’s great to be part of a Mas­sillon team that has the same record as one that had Chris Spielman on it,” said defensive tackle B.J. Payne.

“There’s no greater feeling than being 9‑0 heading into the McKinley game,” added quar­terback Mike Danzy.

Danzy downplayed skeptics who said the Massillon schedule is not as rugged as in past years, especially with the absence of Cincinnati Moeller.

“People might say we don’t play anybody because we’ve beaten teams by a lot of points,” he shrugged. “But you have to understand we’ve beaten some teams that were supposed to have success this year.

“Look at (Youngstown) Rayen. They were supposed to be a playoff team. Then the (teacher’s strike) happened and they had a hard time re­covering. They also lost their good runner (Herman Benson).

“We’ve also beaten teams that have had success against us in the past.”

East, however, has not been one of those teams. The Golden Bears, whose strike­ abbreviated record reads 1‑4, were tamed handily by the Ti­gers in the five meetings since the series resumed in 1988.

The closest score was 24‑0 in 1989, followed by 45‑7 in 1990, 76-­26 in 1991 and 55‑20 last fall.

Selling the Tigers on East wasn’t the easiest task for the Massillon coaching staff. But Jack Rose was pleased with how the team concentrated on taking it one game at a time.

“The seniors also knew it was their last game on their home field,” said the second‑year Massillon mentor. “They came out and played hard. So did the other kids.”

Despite the final margin of victory, the Tigers were tested by East.

“They have great team speed,” said Rose. “They had a good option scheme. They were more disciplined.”

“Their linebackers blitzed us from the backside and gave us some problems,” Danzy added.

Whatever problems East pre­sented, the Tigers were able to answer with smash‑mouth foot­ball.

Massillon kept the ball on the ground most of the game, as the line fired out and controlled the line of scrimmage. The Tigers finished with 434 rushing yards.

“You don’t put the ball in the air too much, when you average 13 yards a carry,” Rose noted.

Massillon scored on its first nine possessions, with max­imum efficiency.

When fullback Jeremy Fraelich plowed off tackle into the end zone from five yards out with 3:44 left, it was only the 44th play the Tigers had run from scrimmage.

“We just came out and fine tuned everything,” said run­ning back Ali Dixon. “We wanted to be sure we’re ready for the next game.”

Dixon was ready for East and gave the partisan Tiger fans an indication of what would trans­pire on Massillon’s first play from scrimmage.

He ran an isolation play up the middle, turned outside and raced to the end zone for a 49­-yard score as Massillon led 7‑0 at the 9:51 mark of the first quarter.

Danzy faked a dive play into the line and optioned left for a six‑yard touchdown run at the 6:07 mark of the first quarter and it was 14‑0.

Maybe seven years ago, the Golden Bears would have been able to slug it out with the Tigers. The 1986 East team fashioned a 9‑1 regular season record, defeating Youngstown Ursuline, Boardman and a Youngstown South team that paddled McKinley 27‑10.

While the 1993 edition strug­gled most of the contest, East managed a sustained drive in the opening quarter. Quarter­back Leartis Day, similar in size to Danzy, completed a 12-­play, 65‑yard march with a 7-­yard touchdown strike to tight end Michael Claytor and it was 14‑6 at the 1:18 mark.

Massillon, however, was un­daunted and tacked on another score on its next series to stifle any East comeback hopes. Dix­on raced 48 yards for the touch­down and the Tigers moved ahead 21‑6 with 10:51 left until halftime.

Junior Leon Ashcraft, who has shared the halfback spot with Dixon this season, burned East with a 51‑yard touchdown run on a trap play at the 7:54 mark and it was 28‑6.

Kevin Buckland’s 17‑yard punt return to the East 30 set up the fifth and final Massillon first‑half touchdown. It was Ashcraft who did the honors on a six‑yard scamper with 2:41 to go as the Tigers lead swelled to 35‑6.

Fullback Jake Laughlin, run­ning back Courtney Herring, and Fraelich scored in the second half.

Herring, a 5‑10, 169‑pound junior, led the Tigers in with 154 rushing yards and was a workhorse on the team’s 84‑yard scoring drive. His 2‑yard burst off left tackle at the 9:33 mark of the fourth quarter was his 11th carry of the drive.

“This was a big win,” said Danzy. “The 1991 team kind of looked ahead in the ninth game and (Akron) St. V got them.”

The Tigers now have scored 425 points this season. The school record is 483 by the 1935 team. Danzy thinks the key to the McKinley game is offense.

“We have put points on the board (against McKinley) like we did against other good teams we played like Mansfield, (Akron) Garfield and (Austin­town Fitch),” he said.

“Now,” smiled Rose, “we can turn our thoughts to McKinley.”

MASSILLON 63
EAST 6
M E
First downs rushing 17 4
First downs passing 1 3
First downs penalty 1 0
Total first downs 19 7
Net yards rushing 434 73
Net yards passing 26 77
Total yards gained 460 150
Passes attempted 4 17
Passes completed 3 5
Passes int. by 2 0
Times kicked off 10 2
Kickoff average 40.8 49.0
Kickoff return yards 58 119
Punts 0 5
Punting average 0.0 23.0
Punt return yards 69 0
Fumbles 1 1
Fumbles lost 0 0
Penalties 4 6
Yards penalized 52 40
Number of plays 46 50
Time of possession 24:41 23:19
Attendance 8,975

EAST 6 0 0 0 6
MASSILLON 14 21 14 14 63

SCORING SUMMARY

FIRST QUARTER
M ‑ Dixon 49 run (Endsley kick)
M ‑ Danzy 6 run (Endsley kick)
E ‑ Claytor 7 pass from Day (kick failed)

SECOND QUARTER
M ‑ Dixon 48 run (Endsley kick)
M ‑ Ashcraft 51 run (Endsley kick)
M ‑ Ashcraft 6 run (Endsley kick)

THIRD QUARTER
M ‑ Laughlin 1 run (Pribich kick)
M ‑ Herring 18 run (Pribich kick)

FOURTH QUARTER
M ‑ Herring 2 run (Pribich kick)
M ‑ Fraelich 5 run (Weirich kick)

FINAL STATISTICS

Rushing:
(Massillon)
Herring 12‑154,
Dixon 6‑118,
Ashcraft 8‑85.
(East)
Fitzgerald 14‑55.

Passing:
(Massillon)
Danzy 3‑4‑0 26.
(East)
Day 4‑15‑1 72.

Receiving:
(Massillon)
Merchant 1‑16,
Dixon 1‑5,
Simpson 1‑5.
(East)
Claytor 3‑62.

Mark Fair
Massillon Tigers Black Letter Logo History

1993: Massillon 42, Akron St. Vincent St. Mary 7

Massillon staves off the Fighting Irish

Tigers are 8‑0 with East next

By JOE SHAHEEN
Independent Sports Editor

Each of us has had a moment in our lives when a little voice inside tells us it is time to step up and take charge.

Massillon Tigers senior Paul Schroeder heard that little voice Friday night and heeded the call.

Schroeder’s clutch 33‑yard reception midway through the third quarter turned momen­tum back in the Tigers’ favor and helped them secure a clos­er‑than‑it‑sounds 42‑7 victory over scrappy Akron St. Vincent-­St. Mary in front of 10,412 at Paul Brown Tiger Stadium.

Program Cover

Massillon led 14‑0 at halftime but began the second half as if it didn’t want to remain unbeaten. On the Tigers first play from scrimmage in the third quarter, missed connections on a basic handoff left the football on the sand turf. The Fighting Irish re­covered at the hosts’ 39 and seemed to get a burst of confi­dence.

One third‑and‑five from the 34, sophomore quarterback Bob Butash rolled left and found sophomore running back Andre Knott along the left sideline. By the time Knott had been pulled down, the ball was at the Tigers’ 5‑yard line. Three plays later, Gary James found a seam over his right tackle and scored. The extra point, which was ex­ecuted three times due to a pair of penalties, made it a 14‑7 con­test.

But Massillon’s generosity had not been tapped out. Fol­lowing the ensuing kickoff, the Tigers took over at their 30. On first down, sloppy execution of the triple option left the football on the ground again and once again the visitors from Akron recovered.

Sensing a real threat, the Ti­ger defense stiffened. Josh McElhaney sacked Butash on first down and B.J. Payne blasted James for a loss on third down. Then Geoff Osborn bat­ted down a fourth‑and‑seven pass to give the offense an opportunity at redemption.

After gaining four yards in two plays, Massillon needed something to happen on third-and‑six from the 20. Schroeder obliged, hauling in Danzy’s 33-­yard strike along the right side­line to breathe life into the attack.

“That was a real big play down there,” said head coach Jack Rose. “It gave us the momentum back.”

The Tigers seemed renewed by Schroeder’s catch. Three plays later, Danzy executed the quarterback draw to perfection, cut off a superb block by Jake Laughlin and scampered 17 yards to the Irish 29.

On second down, Danzy rolled right, eluded the rush and hit Lonnie Simpson along the right sideline at the 5. Simpson cruised into the end zone to give the Tigers a 21‑7 lead and con­trol of the ball game.

But it was Schroeder’s play that seemed to light Massillon’s fire.

“It was a play action for the off tackle play,” Schroeder re­called. “I show blocking and I cut out and go towards the cor­ner and break it toward the sideline. Mike threw a perfect ball. You couldn’t ask for a more perfect ball. My job is easy, catching it.”

It was the second time Rose had sent in the play. The first time, Schroeder passed up the assignment.

“The first time they called it, I told the other tight end Isaiah (Jackson) to take it,” Schroed­er said. “So we switched sides and he went out. When they cal­led it the second time, it was like, let me have this one. I could just feel it. So I just did my job.

“I’m supposed to go to that side on that play. But for some odd reason, the first time I just told him to take it and the second time something in me told me, ‘Let me have this one.’”

The Irish weren’t able to do much after Simpson’s touch­down catch. They went three-­and‑out on their next possession and Massillon took over at its 45. Two snaps later, Danzy hit Simpson with a short pass and the senior wideout broke it for a 22‑yard gain to the 19. After St. Vincent‑St. Mary dropped two sure interceptions, Ali Dixon took a pitch out around left end and outran the pursuit for a seven‑yard touchdown and a 28-­7 advantage.

The scoreboard didn’t stay the same for long, as Willie Spencer Jr. picked off his sixth interception of the year and raced down the right sideline for a 36‑yard touchdown return and a 35‑7 lead.

It was three‑and‑out for the Irish once again and the Tigers set up shop at the 45. After a couple of quarterback draws, Danzy rolled left and hit Simp­son along the left sideline at the 5. Again No. 21 stepped into the end zone to close the scoring at 42‑7.

Longtime St. Vincent‑St. Mary head coach John Cistone was not all that unhappy with his team’s performance.

“We were in it,” Cistone said. “When we couldn’t score down there fourth‑and‑seven … what are you going to do? We had to put it in.

”We had the momentum going and we ran out of gas. Most of our kids go both ways. The kids gave a hell of an effort.”

Rose was not quite as upbeat as his counterpart.

“Well, we turned the damn ball over,” Rose observed. “You turn the ball over against a team like that and you’re just asking for trouble. We turned it over twice down there in the third quarter.

“They never really stopped us. We were stopping ourselves.”

Rose found a lot to be desired in his squad’s play along the offensive line.

“I was really disappointed in our line play tonight,” he said. “We just didn’t play very well. We have a lot to work on. We took a step backwards in that area tonight. We’ve got to get that straightened out in the last two weeks or we’re not going to go where we want to go.”

Simpson, who had four catch­es for 77 yards and those two touchdowns, acknowledged the Tigers didn’t get going until midway through the third quarter.

“Yeah, we started a little slow,” he said. “But we got on the move. Look what we done.

“I feel real good about this team. We had a great week of practice; a good week of con­ditioning and it showed in the second half. The coach got us going.”

Schroeder confirmed that the Tiger staff did a little motiva­tional speaking.

“Coach jumped on us and said we’re not playing up to our potential,” Schroeder reported. “We just showed a little of our potential out there in the second half. There’s always room for improvement, so we’re going to improve this week and take on Youngstown East.”

Danzy finished with 219 yards of total offense and made another fan along the way in Cistone, who has seen a few quarterbacks in his time.

“We wanted to keep him from getting outside,” Cistone said. “No one has been able to keep him inside and I thought we did a good job there. But still, his athleticism … . He still makes the plays. I don’t know what else we could’ve have done.

MASSILLON 42
St. V‑St. M 7
M V
First downs rushing 10 4
First downs passing 8 2
First downs penalty 0 0
Total first downs 18 6
Net yards rushing 172 50
Net yards passing 158 56
Total yards gained 330 106
Passes attempted 21 14
Passes completed 10 4
Passes int. by 1 1
Times kicked off 7 2
Kickoff average 43.6 44.5
Kickoff return yards 27 68
Punts 1 6
Punting average 44.0 31.2
Punt return yards 25 0
Fumbles 3 1
Fumbles lost 3 1
Penalties 3 7
Yards penalized 25 32
Number of plays 58 44
Time of possession 23:07 24:53
Attendance 10,412

ST. VINCENT 0 0 7 0 0
MASSILLON 7 7 7 21 42

FIRST QUARTER
MASS ‑ Ashcraft 1 run (Endsley kick)

SECOND QUARTER
MASS ‑ Dixon 4 pass from Danzy (Endsley kick)

THIRD QUARTER
ST. V ‑ James 2 run (Schapel kick)
MASS ‑ Simpson 26 pass from Danzy (En­dsley kick)

FOURTH QUARTER
MASS ‑ Dixon 7 run (Endsley kick)
MASS ‑ Spencer 36 pass int. return (Endsley kick)
MASS ‑ Simpson 25 pass from Danzy (Pri­bich kick)

FINAL STATISITICS

RUSHING
(Massillon)
Dixon 18‑94. 1 TD;
Danzy 13‑61;
Arney 2‑10;
Paul 2‑4;
Ashcraft 2‑3, 1 TD.
(St. Vincent)
James 15‑29,
Knott 5‑19,
LaCause 4‑15.

PASSING
(Massillon)
Danzy 10‑21‑158‑1, 3 TDs.
(St. Vincent)
Butash 4‑14‑56‑1.

RECEIVING
(Massillon)
Simpson 4‑77, 2 TDs;
Dixon 5‑47, 1 TD;
Schroeder 1‑34.
(St. Vincent)
Knott 3‑41,
Shenigo 1‑15.

Mark Fair
Massillon Tigers Black Letter Logo History

1993: Massillon 62, Youngstown Rayen 0

Tigers roar past Outmanned Rayen

By TODD PORTER
Independent Sports Writer

No, the stork hasn’t landed at the Jack Rose house, but the Massillon Tigers are still flying high ‑ above the ozone.

Rose, whose wife is expecting to deliver their third child any day, watched the Tigers roll to a 62‑0 win against Youngstown Rayen Friday night. In front of 10,021 fans on Homecoming night at Paul Brown Tiger Sta­dium, the Tigers ran their re­cord to 7‑0, for the first time since 1982.

In ’82, Massillon finished 12‑1, with the only blemish coming against Cincinnati Moeller in the state championship game.

Program Cover

“Everyone keeps talking about the computer points and how the strike in Youngstown is going to affect us,” Rose said. “But I told the kids not to worry about things you can’t control and we have no control over that. All we can do is go out there and win each week. Some­one said we’d have to beat McKinley to get into the play­offs. Heck, I plan on beating McKinley regardless of the cir­cumstances. That’s one of our goals.”

As for the wife?

“She’s at home,” Rose said of his wife Diane. “If she would’ve went into labor tonight, I would have been there and Joe Studer would’ve taken over. But I think she’s in a holding pattern. Be­sides, all I am out there is traffic cop, directing everybody where to go.”

Maybe he could’ve pointed the Tigers from Youngstown in the right direction. The Tigers from Massillon were too much for Rayen to handle. Young­stown played in just its third game after a teachers’ strike forced weeks two through five to be canceled. Rayen played its second game in less than a week after Woodrow Wilson blanked the Tigers 26‑0 Sunday.

“It’s really too bad what happened to them,” said Rose, who led Massillon to its 665th win in school history. “They lost a lot of guys due to the strike and their tailback (Herman Ben­son) went down Tuesday. He’s a good back, an All‑State player and runs a 4.2 in the 40.”

Even with Benson the score may not have been much diffe­rent. Massillon’s swarming defense held Rayen to just 74 total yards, most of those coming against the second and third un­its in the second half.

The defense set up three scores and the special teams ran a punt back for a score.

“We want to go out there and play at our potential every week. Regardless of who the opponent is,” said senior tackle B.J. Payne. “If you go out there and take your opponent lightly, you end up playing to their level. You have to be up every week.

“It doesn’t matter who’s run­ning the ball in there. You put someone better in there and we’ll hit ’em. It doesn’t matter who we play.”

Senior Kevin Buckland re­turned his third punt for a touchdown this season when he went 71 yards in the third quar­ter as Massillon pushed the score to 49‑0 after Randy En­dsley’s PAT.

”We looked real good at times. Buckland did a good job returning the punt and I thought (quarterback Mike) Danzy ran the offense well,” Rose said. “But in order for us to win next week, we’ll have to play much better.”

It may be difficult for the Ti­ger defense to play any better. Regardless of the opponents, Massillon hasn’t allowed a team to hit the end zone since Austintown Fitch.

“I think it’s a combination of a lot of things,” explained Payne. “I think the line is get­ting in there and we’re swarm­ing on defense. Everybody is getting to the ball and it doesn’t matter who gets there, because we’re all strong. Anyone of us will hit you. And I think coach (Tim) Wolf is doing a good job calling the plays.”

Payne helped set up one of Massillon’s scores in the third quarter. With a stunt on, Payne hit Rayen quarterback Hilles Jefferies just after the snap.

“I shot the B‑gap and when I hit him the ball was out there,” Payne said. “I knocked it loose with my left hand and I tried to recover it.”

Senior linebacker Ian McClaskey did the honors for Payne. McClaskey pounced on the pigskin at the Rayen 6. Dan­zy went in untouched the follow­ing play giving Massillon a 42‑0 lead after Nick Pribich’s PAT.

Massillon’s high‑powered offense has outscored its oppo­nents 123‑3 in the last two games. Against Rayen, the Tigers chalked up 383 total yards. Danzy and junior tailback Leon Ashcraft led the ground game with 72 yards rushing each. Danzy completed 3‑of‑8 passes for 70 yards as well.

”I’m starting to feel more comfortable back there,” said Danzy, who checked off twice at the line of scrimmage with both leading to touchdowns. “When they slid up in a Bear (defense), I checked off to the option. That gives us the outside and we can attack the perimeter.”

Just before halftime, the 5­foot‑8, 164‑pound Danzy worked the Tigers out of a jam. With 16 seconds left in the half and Mas­sillon facing a fourth‑and‑12 from the Rayen 18, Danzy checked off to the option. He carried the ball to the 10‑yard line before pitching the pigskin to senior Ali Dixon. Dixon went in from the 10 untouched.

“That play is designed to ­work like that,” Danzy said. “I’m supposed to carry the ball to the pitch key (Rayen’s out­side linebacker) and pitch it. That was there tonight when they went to the Bear look.”

While Rayen was forced to punt every possession that didn’t end in a turnover, Massil­lon had little trouble scoring. The Tigers fine‑tuned engine roared early and often.
On the first possession, Mas­sillon traveled 48 yards in eight plays with Ashcraft doing most of the work. He carried six times for 37 yards including the first TD of the game, a 2‑yard plunge. The score was set up on a 19‑yard run by Ashcraft on a trap play to get Massillon inside the 10. Tackle Mike Miller and center Mitch Colly opened a hole large enough to drive a truck through.

Less than three minutes latter, Massillon struck again. Danzy hit Lonnie Simpson on an out‑and‑up route for a 53‑yard scoring strike. Simpson bent down to catch the ball, kept his balance and still outran the Rayen defense the last 40 yards to the end zone.

“It was an out and up, and I kind of under threw the ball to Lonnie a little,” Danzy said. “He made a nice catch and flew down the sideline.”

After Rayen put together its longest drive of the night (nine plays before punting), Massil­lon hit paydirt again. Danzy capped a 9‑play, 51‑yard drive when he took a play‑action boot­leg into the left corner of the end zone.

“Mike, I thought, made some real nice reads out there tonight,” Rose said. “The line did a good job opening holes and we got a lot of people in there.”

Already up 28‑0, Tigers put the game out of reach on the first drive of the second half. Danzy converted an option keeper into a 34‑yard scamper setting Massillon up on Rayen’s 21. Two plays later, Danzy went in from 13 yards out, making three Youngstown defenders miss along the way.

“The thing with our offense is, everybody contributes,” Danzy said. “On that play, Isaiah Jackson had a nice’ block.

Surprisingly, Rayen head coach John Protopapa wasn’t upset with his team’s play
.
“This is one good football team we played tonight,” Pro­topapa said. “I think Massillon will match up well with whoev­er it plays. They have a very talented team and Danzy is a great one. They can do a lot this year. ”

Akron St.‑Vincent St. Mary is next for the Tigers.

MASSILLON 62
RAYEN 0
M R
First downs rushing 14 4
First downs passing 1 0
First downs penalty 0 0
Total first downs 15 4
Net yards rushing 313 63
Net yards passing 70 11
Total yards gained 383 74
Passes attempted 8 5
Passes completed 3 2
Passes int. by 1 0
Times kicked off 10 1
Kickoff average 45.0 49.0
Kickoff return yards 30 94
Punts 0 7
Punting average 29.6
Punt return yards 115 0
Fumbles 1 2
Fumbles lost 1 1
Penalties 3 5
Yards penalized 45 49
Number of plays 52 37
Time of possession 23:35 24:25
Attendance 10,021

RAYEN 0 0 0 0 0
MASSILLON 14 14 28 6 62

FIRST QUARTER
M ‑ Ashcraft 2 run (kick failed)
M ‑ Simpson 53 pass from Danzy (Danzy run)

SECOND QUARTER
M ‑ Danzy 10 run (Pribich kick)
M ‑ Dixon 10 run (Pribich kick)

THIRD QUARTER
M ‑ Danzy 13 run (Pribich kick)
M ‑ Danzy 5 run (Pribich kick)
M ‑ Buckland 71 punt return (Endsley kick)
M ‑ Herring 6 run (Endsley kick)

FOURTH QUARTER
M ‑ Spencer 11 run (kick failed)

RUSHING
Massillon
Danzy 7‑72, 3 TDs;
Ashcraft 10‑72, 1 TD;
Dixon 5‑47, 1 TD;
Herring 5‑36, 1 TD;
Paul 6‑31;
Lewis 6‑18;
Spencer 1‑11, 1 TD;
Simpson 1‑7;
Arney 1‑5;
Fenton 1‑1.
Rayen
Jennings 10‑52,
Johnson 8‑12.

PASSING
Massillon
Danzy 3‑8‑70, 1 TD.
Rayen
Jefferies 2‑4‑11‑1,
Jones 0‑1‑0.

RECEIVING
Massillon
Simpson 2‑55, 1 TD,
Griffith 1‑15.
Rayen
Donaldson 1‑3,
Wilson 1‑8.

It’s not easy for Tigers

In the wake of Friday’s 62‑0 trouncing of Youngstown Rayen, Massillon Tiger head coach Jack Rose isn’t about to let his team let up or give up.

It wouldn’t be hard for the Tigers to get that non-chalant attitude about winning. Considering, the last two weeks, Massillon has scored more points on the football field than some high school basket­ball teams score on the hard­woods, it would be easy to start taking teams lightly.

”Akron St. Vincent‑St. Mary is a much‑improved football team since the start of the season,” Rose said. “They al­ways play us tough and this is a good rivalry.”

After John Cistone’s Irish invade Paul Brown Tiger Sta­dium next week, Massillon hosts yet another Young­stown team hampered by the teachers’ strike in Young­stown East, a 21‑15 winner over LaBrae.

The Tigers then play McKinley in what is always a ‑ pardon the pun ‑ dogfight. Both Massillon and McKinley could have a great deal at stake in the final week.

“It’s definitely not easy,” Rose said.

Mark Fair
Massillon Tigers Black Letter Logo History

1993: Massillon 61, North Park, ON Canada 3

Rayen next for Tigers

By JOE SHAHEEN
Independent Sports Editor

While most northeast Ohio football fans were parked on front of their television sets Sunday to watch the develop­ing soap opera that is the, Cleveland Browns 1993 sea­son. Jack Rose was taking in some high school football.

On Sunday?

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That’s right. Instead of en­joying the cozy confines of their front rooms, Rose and several members of the Massillon Tiger football staff were in Youngstown to scout the Rayen Tigers’ first post‑teachers strike game of the season. (The work stoppage was the reason the game was delayed until Sunday.)

Rayen, which invades Paul Brown Tiger Stadium Friday fell victim to Woodrow Wilson High 26‑0.

It wasn’t the kind of shel­lacking the Tigers laid on the North Park (Ontario) Tro­jans on Saturday, but Rose re­ported it was thorough.

“You can tell they haven’t played for a while,” Rose said of Rayen. “I think Wilson had practiced. That’s the way it looked to me.”

Many people who witnessed Massillon’s 61‑3 victory over the visitors from the Great White North, might guess the Trojans hadn’t practiced. No­thing is further from the truth.

Fact is, North Park was over matched and it showed. Still, the Trojans ‑ to the player ‑ are probably happy they had the opportunity to test what is fast becoming recognized as one of the best high school football teams in Ohio.

As for Rose’s assessment of Saturday’s proceedings, it was succinct.

“We came out it injury free and that was what concerned us,” Rose revealed. ”I thought we did some good things.

“But we were honest with the kids all week. We told them we should win and we should win big if we did the right things. We were just concerned about shooting ourselves in the foot and with injuries and with just playing hard.”

The Tigers appeared to be intent on digging themselves a hole early against North Park. Their first three plays from scrimmage included a dropped pass and a lost fum­ble. The visitors took advan­tage of the gift to drive to the Tigers’ 5‑yard line, where a botched hold doomed a 22‑yard field goal attempt.

But, as if to get a jump on he post‑game exchange of gifts with the Canadians, the Tigers again coughed up the ball deep in their own terri­tory after a pair of 10‑yard running plays.

North Park used a first down pop pass from quarterback Jeff Dix to wide receiver Enes Medanhodzic to move it to the 17. Three plays later, Trevor Jones nailed a 38‑yard field goal and the Trojans led 3‑0.

The visitors’ advantage lasted just over two minutes as the Tigers moved from their 35 ‑ following an out‑of-­bounds kick‑off ‑ to the North Park 40 on three straight run­ning plays. On first down at that point, Danzy rolled left and hooked up with Lonnie Simpson for 31 yards . On the next play, Danzy rolled the same way but kept the foot­ball for a nine‑yard touch­down run. The PAT made it a 7‑3 game at 4:02 of the first quarter.

Willie Spencer Jr. nabbed an interception three plays into North Park’s ensuing possession to set the Tigers up at their own 40. On first down, Leon Ashcraft bolted 44 yards to the 16. Mike Paul picked up 14 more on the next snap. Then Danzy bootlegged around right end for the Touchdown. A muffed kick made it 13‑3 Massillon with 1:15 to go in the opening period.

Paul Schroeder picked off Dix on North Park’s next series and rumbled 35 yards before being dragged down at the Trojans’ 4‑yard line. On second down, Jake Laughlin ‑ a lineman inserted in the backfield for extra blocking – got the handoff and blasted into the end zone. Ashcraft’s conversion run made it 21‑3 with just under 11 minutes to play in the first half.

North Park got a first down on its next possession, but was forced to punt from its 31. Mas­sillon’s Kevin Buckland took the ball at the 33, followed his blockers to the right sideline and sprinted 67 yards for a touchdown. The kick made it 28-­3 and the Trojans were con­vinced.

But the beat went on. Two mi­nutes later, Ashcraft took a short pass and danced 38 yards for a touchdown. North Park threw an interception on the first snap following the TD, and Eddie Griffith picked his way for a spectacular 65‑yard re­turn, setting up a 5‑yard.scor­ing run by Courtney Herring.

Herring broke a run for 49 yards on Massillon’s next pos­session, then found the end zone from five yards out on the next snap to make it 48‑3 at halftime.

Spencer was inserted at quar­terback to start the second half and marched the Tigers 66 yards in seven plays. The drive was capped by a perfectly thrown 24‑yard touchdown pass from Spencer to Victor Rede­rick.

Junior speedster Nate Lewis changed the scoreboard for the final time on a simple dive play that turned into a 96‑yard touch­down run with :19 left in the third quarter. The kick closed the scoring.

“We saw some good things from our young players,” Rose said. “Courtney Herring ran real hard. I thought Willie (Spencer Jr.) did a nice job. He threw a beautiful pass for the touchdown. He’s got great touch on the ball. Nate Lewis had that big run. He’s got real good speed and a great work ethic.”

Rose wouldn’t mind getting some more playing time for his younger players this week against Rayen. But he wasn’t convinced the Youngstown en­try is the same team that showed up Sunday.

“They have one of the best running backs in the country in Herman Benson, but he only ran it about five times,” Rose observed. “I can’t figure it out. Their starting quarterback and one of their wide receivers didn’t play because of discipline problems. I’m sure they’ll be back for us though.”

In Benson (6‑foot‑2, 210), defensive end Andre Gibbs (6‑5, 235) and quarterback/corner back Damon Irby (5‑11, 175) Rayen has a trio of Division I prospects.

“Rayen has great team speed and it could be a problem,’ Rose said. “Plus, with three legitimate Division I players, you don’t want to let them hang around.”

MASSILLON 61
NORTH PARK 3
M N
First downs rushing 5 3
First downs passing 5 5
First downs penalty 1 1
Total first downs 11 9
Net yards rushing 272 70
Net yards passing 135 68
Total yards gained 407 138
Passes attempted 6 25
Passes completed 5 10
Passes int. by 5 0
Times kicked off 10 2
Kickoff average 42.0 39.0
Kickoff return yards 24 71
Punts 0 5
Punting average 00.0 25.4
Punt return yards 82 0
Fumbles 4 2
Fumbles lost 2 0
Penalties 3 5
Yards penalized 25 35
Number of plays 41 54
Time of possession 22.05 25.55

NORTH PARK 3 0 0 0 3
MASSILLON 13 35 13 0 61

N ‑ FG Jones 38
M ‑ Danzy 8 run (Pribich kick)
M ‑ Danzy 1 run (Kick failed)
M ‑ Laughlin 1 run (Ashcraft run)
M ‑ Buckland 67 punt return (Endsley kick)
M ‑ Ashcraft 38 pass from Danzy (Pribich kick)
M ‑ Herring 4 run (Kick failed)
M ‑ Herring 5 run (Pribich kick)
M ‑ Redrick 24 pass from Spencer (Kick failed)
M ‑ Lewis 96 run (Szasz kick)

Individual Statistics

RUSHING:
Massillon
Lewis 4‑106,
Ashcraft 8‑83,
Herring 5‑56,
Paul 2‑15,
Fenton 3‑8,
Heck 3‑7,
Danzy 3‑3.
North Park
Catalano 16‑41.

PASSING:
Massillon
Danzy 2‑3‑0 70,
Spencer 2‑2‑0 38,
Heck 1‑1‑0 27.
North Park
Dix 10‑24‑5 68,
Medanhodzik 0‑1‑0.

RECEIVING:
Massillon
Ashcraft 1‑38,
Simpson 1‑32,
Manson 1‑27,
Redrick 1‑24,
Griffith 1‑14.
North Park
Medanhodzik 3‑29.

Mark Fair