Underdog Aviators Cover Themselves With Glory in Defeat,
Time After
Time Halting Bengals;
More Than
34,000
Alliance High School’s
Aviators and Massillon Washington’s Tigers staged the greatest scholastic
football show northeastern Ohio has ever seen, Friday night, when they battled
in the Akron Rubber Bowl, before a throng of more than 34,000 fans.
Massillon’s Tigers, as
expected, won the game. The Bengals triumphed 40 to 0 but they had to fight for nearly
every point and the underdog Aviators covered themselves with glory in defeat.
Fighting all the way,
As it was,
Tigers
Win Toss
“Pokey” Blunt made a first
down on the alliance 45. Tom James
picked up six yards before he was nailed by Bill Snodgrass. On an end around play, Gillom
took the ball from James and ran 39 yards for the first touchdown. He had perfect blocking to get him into the
clear. With James holding the ball, Getz
placekicked the extra point.
Gillom then kicked off to
It was the first time this
season any opponent had held the ball inside the
Gainor punted to the
When play was resumed
James passed to Gillom for a first down on the
Gillom kicked off for
At the outset of the third
quarter after the Tigers had regained possession of the ball on their 49 when Gainor punted, they drove to the
Gainor punted to the
Passes by
Young Eddie Howell fumbled
and
Coach Paul Brown of
The Tigers were penalized 40
yards to five for
The game was sponsored by
the
Before the game the
Lineups and
summary follow:
Robinson L.E.
Broglio L.T. Stoica
Russell L.G. Iannoti
Appleby C Ruff
Wallace R.G. Boschini
Gillom R.E. Branfield
Kingham Q Gainor
Getz L.H. C. Castiglione
James R.H. Snodgrass
Blunt F Luca
Score by
quarters:
Touchdowns: James 2, Getz, Gillom,
Blunt and Robinson.
Points after
touchdown: Getz 4, (placements).
Substitutions:
Holt, Demando,
Oliver, Erdely, Bray, Stout and Fuchs.
Bugara.
Sees Game As
Insult To
Alliance-Massillon Tilt Protested
AN
Every man is entitled to his
own opinion and if that is his, that’s all right. From our observations around town yesterday;
from conversations heard everywhere; from countless phone calls from fans who
just wanted to say they had never before dreamed such a complete football show
was possible, I’d like to say that this coach’s opinion is definitely in the
minority.
IS IT WRONG to entertain our
neighbor’s children simply because we happen to have children of our own?
If and when it becomes wrong
to permit two teams to play on a neutral field in a neutral city, then there
could be no Army-Navy game in Philadelphia, because Jefferson Medical college, Pierce,
and Penn Charter school are all located there.
And
Never again could
TO WHICH we say phooey. Spectacles like that presented by
This one pulled a great
throng because it is so unusual for
Let
Football fans have to be
satisfied. For 55 cents Friday night
they could see a brilliantly staged three-hour show replete in unusual, novel
and highly entertaining features.
If 27,000 or more persons
elected to see the Friday night show than attended a city series game here
yesterday afternoon, that certainly was within their rights to do so.
They do not want to be
criticized for any shortcomings in building strong football clubs. They want criticism directed at higher school
administrative officers.
Nobody is attempting to
argue that
Massillon simply has
perfected a great football machine and a super band show, which ranks among the
greatest the nation has ever known. By no stretch of imagination can we figure
out why it is an insult to anybody in letting Akronites
see this show without having to go out of town.
THE
During the recent conclave
of sports writers at the World Series, the Massillon story was told dozens of
times by Fritz Howell, Lew Byrer,
Robert Olds, this writer, and other Ohioans, to the anxiour
ears of writers from Louisville, Detroit, Chicago, New York, Newark, New
Orleans, Atlanta, Pittsburgh and scores of other cities where good high school
football is known and appreciated.
These fellows either have
written it by now or will be writing the story soon. The nation’s largest newspaper syndicate is
preparing articles on
In every line of endeavor it
is nice to have some one unit excel; to stand out far above all others; to
illustrate just how this particular endeavor should be done….properly.
It might be a Bobby Jones in
golf, the old Yankees in baseball; a Bobby Riggs in tennis. For complete football show it is
WE KNOW full well that some
persons look unkindly upon this game and this great spectacle. And some will complain about parking and
others about slow ticket handling…
This is something new in
athletic ventures for
But every good
And if it should work out
that
Best direct benefit from
tonight’s affair – not considering now the child welfare work the program will
help carry on – would be for Akron’s own high school teams to look upon it as a
challenge, and to set in at once to determine the two best local elevens and to
plan for a meeting on the Rubber Bowl gridiron as a climax to the current
season.
Then, with every
++++++++++++++
SOME OF THESE days the new
stadium is going to be completed. It is
nearer completion today than it was last Friday but not by any great measure.
Maybe if the president had
decided to stop off long enough this evening to take a look at WPA’s handiwork at the stadium, the edifice would be
completed today as though by miracle.
“Big
League Stuff,”
Says Little Old Man
At Rubber Bowl
By EDDIE BUTLER
A LITTLE old man, who
admitted he had come out to be surprised, settled himself comfortably on row 34
directly behind the southeast goal post for last night’s
Massillon-Alliance charity
grid battle, beamed as people swarmed in from all angles of Akron’s palatial
Rubber Bowl and, tickled as a kid with a new toy, quipped: “Boy, this is the
big leagues.”
And the 30,000 fans who
witnessed the complete show – a rip-snorting, football battle, a glamorous band
performance, and a colorful fireworks display, will agree he said a mouthful.
But the best part of the
whole affair was that everyone present had a seat where the show could be seen,
followed and enjoyed.
More than surprised with
what he had seen, the little old man remarked as he got up to leave; “This is
the first time in my life I paid general admission prices for a ringside seat.”
And the crowd got plenty of
action for its kopeks.
It was power and speed that
saved the Tigers. The Aviators had the
Tigers’ trick stuff down so well that only on the Tigers’ initial touchdown was
it effective.
The fans expected to see a
faultless Tiger eleven in action – and they did. But it was the band’s antics that left’em gasping.
At their best for this show,
the Tiger bandettes quickly reviewed all their regular
stuff – and then wowed the spectators with a flag formation done with lights
after the big stadium lamps had been extinguished.
Almost without hesitation,
the band offered a salute to
In the post-game performance
the band played “Take Down the Flag,” and then concluded a brilliant
performance with a novelty number that included a military march, a Dutch
dance, a swing tune and a hillbilly hop – and this called “Mutiny in the Band,”
just about stole the show.
A tribute to the band’s
performance is the fact that few persons moved from their seats until the bandettes rolled off down the field.
But that was the senior
band. The
An announcement over the
public address system by Bob Wilson that a car was parked and securely locked
in the parking lot with the motor running drew one of the evening’s big laughs.
The second guessers among us
in the closed end of the stadium thought the Massillon captain erred in the
third period when he refused a penalty against Alliance after the Aviators had
successfully punted out from their own one-yard line. The Tigers had the ball on
The skin worn by Obie the Tiger mascot is a $400 creation.
Many persons are asking
today: “How does the
Then Bird introduces the
outline to the band, McKelvey takes the majorettes,
and Wickersham provides the properties.
Only after the band has
mastered the details – and its precision last night was remarkable – and the
majorettes have learned their cues, and all the properties have been obtained
is the idea presented to the Massillon fans.
A gent who claimed to be a
member of the
You haven’t seen anything
until you’ve seen the black and silver outfits of the Tiger majorettes. The girls appeared first in all white – and
did a quick change for their half-time strut in skin-tight shorts and jackets
that are just about the niftiest outfits ever seen here.
End Earle Branfield of
A souvenir seeker in the end
section got his sports mixed and wanted to keep the ball when the
Golf Pro Johnny Coughlin of
Few persons cared that
AVIATORS SHOW
GREAT
DEFENSE
Tigers Gain At Will In Middle Of Field But Have Hard Time Moving Ball
Inside The 25-Yard Lines In
A gallant band of red and
blue clad Alliance football players, tried their utmost Friday evening to shock
the Ohio scholastic football firmament, by beating Massillon, and though they
succeeded in part where four others failed, they eventually went down to a 40-0
defeat.
While 33,000 fans, the
largest crowd either team has ever played before and probably the largest crowd
ever to attend a scholastic football game in Ohio, looked on in awe, the
Alliance gridders, fighting like gamecocks, held the
Tigers to one touchdown the first period and completely whitewashed them the
third quarter.
What was wrong with
Massillon was ripe for an
upset, and
Statistics do not show the
Tigers so badly outplayed. They made 19
first downs and gained the net total of 502 yards from scrimmage. Trouble is that
They moved the leather as
usual between the 30-yard lines last night but when they got beyond that going
their attack bogged down and time again they were thrown back as
Red Welbush,
Nick Stoica and Louis Boschini
must have made somebody a promise they were going to best Massillon, so
brilliantly did they perform. They were
in on many a Tiger play and more than once spilled the ball carriers for
losses.
Massillon’s end around
reverses had a hard time clicking and the well-known deep weak end reverse, just couldn’t be maneuvered. There were
There were what you might
call two perfect running plays and they produced the first and last touchdowns of
the game. Horace Gillom circling left end on the first for 39 yards and
Herman Robinson snaring a shovel pass from Dick Adams for 23 yards and the
other.
There was what you might
call a perfect pass play too, a very fine 30-yard shot that Gillom
caught on the fingertips of his outstretched hands in the end zone. The other three touchdowns came the hard way,
with Fred Blunt, Tom James and Ray Getz doing the scoring.
Half the Tigers’ points were
rolled up in the fourth period after
Tommy James tried to solve
the situation by forcing the visitors’ secondary back with passes, and
succeeded to some extent, but the Aviators by keeping their secondary on the
loose until the start of play were also able to roam that territory fairly
well. The Tigers completed 10 of 18
passing attempts for a gain of 161 yards.
Where
Only once was
Early in the first quarter,
James fumbled Gainor’s punt on the 15-yard line, the
ball rolling back to the five where Stoica flopped on
it. That was the nearest any
The
James, in fact, fumbled one
ball for the second touchdown.
He was on his way for a
smash at right tackle when the ball popped out of his arms. It looked like a dribble in a basketball game,
for a tackler coming in to stop him, dove for the ball instead and the leather
bounced back up into the arms of James and he never lost his stride as he
ripped around right end for 12 yards and a touchdown.
Ray Getz’s placekicking is still
improving. He kicked six out of eight
last night, but only four counted since both teams were offside on two
occasions.
Though
The Tigers started in true
Alliance received but Luca
was forced to punt, and James fumbled it to give
14-yard line. Gillom
ran literally about four yards around left end but only gained two. On the next play James jumbled his way across
the goal line, completely outrunning the
The Tigers drove to the
Many expected the Tigers to
make a rout of it the third period, but the
In the closing minutes of
the quarter, however, they launched another drive that began with
After an exchange of punts,
the Tigers secured the ball on the
Blunt covered a fumble on
the
First downs 19 1
First downs rushing 13 1
First downs passing 6 0
Yards gained rushing 381 62
Net yards gained 341 33
Net yards forwards 161 0
Total net yards gained 502 34
Forwards attempted 18 1
Forwards completed 10 0
Forwards intercepted 1 1
Yards intercepted returned 7 0
Times punted 3 12
Returned by 3 1
Average punts (yds.) 37 31
Average kickoffs 50 46
Yards punts returned 36 11
Yards lost rushing 40 29
Yards kickoff returned 35 77
Lost ball on fumbles 1 1
Penalties 4 2
Yards penalized 40 10
Times Yards Yards Yards
Carried Gained Lost Net
Blunt 18 17 13 64
James 9 112 1 111
Getz 9 54 8 46
Gillom 8 79 15 64
Pizzino 1 5 0 5
Robinson 1 23 - 23
Snodgrass 6 9 10 -1
Luca 16 34 2 32
Gainor 11 16 16 00
Bugara 1 0 1 -1
Howell 1 3 0 3
MASSILLON WINS AS 34,000 WATCH
28th Straight Is 40-0
Decision Over
(Reprinted from Saturday’s final edition)
AKRON, O., Oct 11 – The
mighty Massillon Tigers scored their 28th successive victory
tonight, over powering a stubborn Alliance squad, 40-0, in Akron’s new Rubber
Bowl before a record-breaking crowd of 34,000.
The game was the first high
school contest played in the new stadium and the attendance was the largest
that ever has witnessed a football game in the
The Tigers tallied their
first score early in the opening period when Tom James found a big hole at his
left tackle and behind perfect interference raced 39 yards for the
touchdown. Ray Getz kicked the extra
point.
Robinson L.E. Branfield
Broglio L.T. Welbush
Russell L.G. Boschini
Appleby C Ruff
Wallace R.G. Iannotti
Gillom R.E.
Kingham Q Gainor
Getz L.H. Snodgrass
James R.H. Castiglione
Blunt F Luca
Subs:
Massillon – Pizzino, lh; Cardinal, lt; Adams, lh;
White, lh; Holt, q; Demando,
rt; Oliver, lt; Erdley, rh;
Bray, re; Stout, c; Fuchs,
c.
Alliance – Adnreanni, c; Bard, rg;
Demuth, le; Mantho, lg;
Howell, lh; Bugara, lh; Fritz, re.
Touchdowns – James 2, Getz, Gillom, Blunt, Robinson.
Points after
touchdown – Getz 4, (placekicks).
Tigers
Depend On Aerials For 28th Triumph In Row
Determined Aviator Defense
Forces
Tom James Sparks Winners
Until Injured
By SAM FOGG.
Repository Staff Correspondent.
AKRON – A mammoth record
breaking throng of 33,00 northeastern
The huge crowd roared its
approval of the dazzling Tiger pass attack which won the game, of the spirited
defensive play of the Aviators that threw back the famed Massillon running
attack, and of a stirring band spectacle presented by three band units of the
two schools.
An inspired
Penetrating waves of Tiger
interference, the Aviator forward wall time and again spilled
In turn the Tiger line
matched the play of their opponents as they stopped the first serious threat of
the season on the one-yard line in the opening quarter and allowed only 37
yards from scrimmage. With James, Dick
Adams, and Getz firing passes to all-Ohio Horace Gillom,
Herman Robinson and Dick Kingham for long gains, the
Tigers collected six quick scores.
Scores On End Around
Receiving the opening kickoff the Tigers used four
plays to drive over their first touchdown.
From the 40-yard line, Getz, Fred Blunt and James hammered to the
Four plays later
James engineered two
For the other touchdown,
James tossed to Getz for 30 yards and Getz scored on a sharp cut back from the
4-yard line. In the third period, James
was injured on a play and left the game.
On the opening play of the
final quarter, Dick Adams threw a pass to Gillom for
30 yards and a touchdown. Later
Essentially a defensive
dog-fight between the two lines, the game featured the play of Harry Welbush, Nich Stoica,
Steve Luca and Chuck Gainor.of Aliance
and James, Gillm, Jim Russell, Eli Broglio and Adams for the Tigers.
The
Branfield L.E. Robinson
Welbush L.T. Broglio
Boschini L.G. Russell
Ruff C Appleby
Iannotti R.G. Wallace
Stocia R.T.
Gainor Q Kingham
Snodgrass R.H. Getz
Castiglione L.H. James
Luca F Blunt
Substitutions
for
F. Cardinal, qb; Oliver, t; Erdley, hb; White, hb; P. Getz, g;
Bray, e; Stout, c; Holt, qb; Fuchs, c.
For
Bugara, hb; Howell, hb; Mantho, t.
Touchdowns: Gillom 2, James, Getz, Blunt, Robinson.
Points after
touchdowns: Getz
4.
Referee – Earle Gross.
Umpire – Verlin
Jenkins.
Head linesman – Eddie
Howell.
STATISTICS
MASS. All.
First
downs, rushing 13 1
First
downs, passing 6 0
First
downs, total 19 1
Yards
gained, rushing 390 67
Yards
gained, passing 163 0
Yards
lost 43 28
Yards
gained, net total 510 39
Passes
attempted 18 1
Passes
completed 10 0
Passes
incomplete 7 0
Passes
intercepted 1 1
Own
fumbles recovered 3 1
Opp. fumbles covered 1 1
Penalties,
yardage 40 10
Punts 3 12
Punts, average
yardage 44 32
Record Crowd of 34,000 in
(From Plain Dealer Bureau)
AKRON, O., Oct. 11 – The
mighty Massillon Tigers scored their 28th successive victory
tonight, overpowering a stubborn Alliance squad, 40-0, in Akron’s new Rubber
Bowl before a record-breaking crowd of 34,000.
The game was the first high
school contest played in the new stadium and the attendance was the largest
that ever has witnessed a football game in the
The Tigers tallied their
first score early in the opening period when Tom James found a big hole at his
left tackle and behind perfect interference raced 39 yards for the
touchdown. Ray Getz kicked the extra
point.
Alliance came the nearest of
any school to cross the Massillon goal line this season when Nick Stoica recovered a fumble by James on the
The Tigers drove 59 yards
for a score in the second period with James tallying from the
14-yard line. Getz again kicked the
point.
Late in the second Getz took
a short pass from James and galloped to the
For the first time this
season
On the first play of the
fourth period
Another aerial,
Herman Robinson recovered an
Alliance fumble on the Aviators’ 24 and then flipped a shovel pass to Adams,
who raced for the final score.
The Tigers completed 10 of
18 passes to net 161 yards through the air.
Officials here tonight
claimed that the crowd was the largest that ever has viewed a regularly
scheduled high school game in the state with only the post-season charity game
in
Robinson L.E. Branfield
Broglio L.T. Welbush
Russell L.G. Boschini
Appleby C Ruff
Wallace R.G. Iannotti
Gillom R.E.
Kingham Q Gainor
Getz R.H. Snodgrass
James L.H. Castiglione
Blunt F Luca
Subs:
Holt, q; Demando,
rt; Oliver, lt; Erdley, rh;
Bray, re; Stout, c;
Fuch, c.
Alliance – Andreanni, c; Bard, rg; Demuth, le; Mantho, lg;
Howell, lh; Bugara, lh; Fritz, re.
Touchdowns – James 2,
Getz, Gillom, Blunt, Robinson.
Points after
touchdown – Getz 4 (placement).
Record Crowd of 34,000 in
(From Plain Dealer Bureau)
AKRON, O., Oct. 11 – The
mighty Massillon Tigers scored their 28th successive victory
tonight, overpowering a stubborn Alliance squad, 40-0, in Akron’s new Rubber
Bowl before a record-breaking crowd of 34,000.
The game was the first high
school contest played in the new stadium and the attendance was the largest
that ever has witnessed a football game in the
The Tigers tallied their
first score early in the opening period when Tom James found a big hole at his
left tackle and behind perfect interference raced 39 yards for the
touchdown. Ray Getz kicked the extra
point.
Alliance came the nearest of
any school to cross the Massillon goal line this season when Nick Stoica recovered a fumble by James on the
The Tigers drove 59 yards
for a score in the second period with James tallying from the
14-yard line. Getz again kicked the
point.
Late in the second Getz took
a short pass from James and galloped to the
For the first time this
season
On the first play of the
fourth period
Another aerial,
Herman Robinson recovered an
Alliance fumble on the Aviators’ 24 and then flipped a shovel pass to Adams,
who raced for the final score.
The Tigers completed 10 of
18 passes to net 161 yards through the air.
Officials here tonight
claimed that the crowd was the largest that ever has viewed a regularly
scheduled high school game in the state with only the post-season charity game
in
Robinson L.E. Branfield
Broglio L.T. Welbush
Russell L.G. Boschini
Appleby C Ruff
Wallace R.G. Iannotti
Gillom R.E.
Kingham Q Gainor
Getz R.H. Snodgrass
James L.H. Castiglione
Blunt F Luca
Subs:
Holt, q; Demando,
rt; Oliver, lt; Erdley, rh;
Bray, re; Stout, c;
Fuch, c.
Alliance – Andreanni, c; Bard, rg;
Demuth, le; Mantho, lg;
Howell, lh; Bugara, lh; Fritz, re.
Touchdowns – James 2,
Getz, Gillom, Blunt, Robinson.
Points after
touchdown – Getz 4 (placement).