Tigers blitz Chardon early,
roll to fourth straight
By JOE SHAHEEN
It's shaping up as a very
special season of Massillon football.
The Tigers amassed over 500
yards of total offense and scored a school record 35 first quarter points in
dealing the Chardon Hilltoppers a 49‑7 setback in front of 8,495 yards at
Paul Brown Tiger Stadium Friday.
For Jim DiPofi, Chardon's
sixth‑year head coach, it was his worst nightmare. Hoping to get into a
ball control battle in which his Wing‑T offense could eat up the game
clock, DiPofi watched in horror as the Tigers scored on their first five
possessions to make it a rout early.
"That," said
DiPofi, "is a great football team. They hit us square on the chin early.
"They have a
quarterback who was throwing darts to receivers with great hands. When you
start chasing them that opens up a lot of gaps. Then they have that speed that
just slices you. It's like a three‑headed monster."
Tiger head coach Tom Stacy
was aiming to land a knockout punch early and that's how things transpired.
"We got some big
plays," Stacy said. "In this stadium that's what you've got to do to
teams. We've got some guys who can make some big plays. We wanted to establish
some domination early and we were able to do that."
Massillon opened the game
with a nine‑play, 90‑yard drive that took 4:12 off the clock and
was culminated by a 12‑yard Bobby Huth to Brett Huffman touchdown pass.
Huth opened the march with a
26‑yard pass completion to Brian Gamble. Five plays later, Huth rolled
to his left and with pressure in his face found Huffman running free over the
middle. The senior tight end juggled the ball momentarily, regained control and
left the Tigers in the red zone when he finally went down at the Chardon 14.
"We started off
throwing the ball a lot more tonight," Huffman said. "Bobby threw one
my way and I went up and got it for him.
“It was great getting into
the end zone for the first time this year. I forget what it felt like. It was
great. I was happy to get back there."
Stacy was thrilled at that
development also.
"As good as player as
Brett is we haven't used him quite as much as we should," Stacy said.
"It was nice to see him get involved more."
Chardon went three‑and-out
on its initial possession and the Hilltoppers punt left the Tigers with first
down at their own 45.
Huth dropped back and
quickly found Gamble open at the Chardon 35. The junior running back cut to his
right and was off to the races for a 55‑yard scoring play. Schott's kick
put Massillon up 14‑0 at 5:58 of the opening stanza.
It was another three‑and-out
for Chardon on its second possession and again the Hilltopper punt gave Massillon
possession at its own 45.
Once again Tiger lightning
struck the Chardon defense but this time there was a little trickery involved.
Backup quarterback Shawn Weisend snuck into the game at a wideout position and
took a pitch from Huth on what appeared to be an end around. But Weisend
pulled up and~ threw a strike to Trey Miller at the Chardon 28. Miller was in
the clear and easily raced, to the end zone. Schott did the honors again and
the Tigers were running away and hiding at 21‑0 with 3:56 to play in the
first quarter.
"We've got to keep
people off balance and that play gives people something they have to prepare
for in the future," Stacy said of Weisend's strike to Miller. "We
talked about that this week as a coaching staff, that we have to do some more
of those wrinkles to give people something else to prepare for."
Chardon only ran two plays
on its ensuing possession, fumbling on second down. Tiger cornerback Neil James
recovered at the Hilltopper 28.
Lanale Robinson opened the
possession for Massillon with a 12‑yard burst up the middle. One play later
Robinson took a handoff and again attacked the middle of the Chardon defense.
He broke through the line to the 12, bounced to the outside and raced to the
corner of the end zone for Massillon's, fourth touchdown in less than 10
minutes of play. Schott's point after kick made it 28‑0 at 2:53 of the
first.
The Hilltoppers fumbled the
ensuing kickoff and Mike Porrini recovered for Massillon at the Hilltopper 15.
"You don't want to give
them the ball inside the 15 yard line," DiPofi said. "They don't need
any help. That's great football team. You can't give them the ball inside the
15."
Massillon fullback Robert
Morris gained nine yard around right end on first down, and Robinson traversed
the final six yards to the end zone ‑ again around tight end ‑ and
Massillon was up 34‑0 on Schott's conversion boot.
Massillon's final first half
touchdown capped off an eight‑play, 71‑yard drive. Gamble covered
the final 3 yards on an innocent looking run off left tackle. He was cornered
at the 20‑yard line by a Chardon defender but ran through the tackle and
didn't stop sprinting until he reached pay dirt. Again Schott obliged and the
Tigers carried a 42‑0 bulge into the locker room at halftime.
"You have to give
credit where it's due," DiPofi said. "That's a great football team.
It is very well coached. We played our hearts our but it, wasn't anywhere near
enough. ,
"Tom is doing the right
thing with these kids. He has them playing no‑nonsense downhill football.
He has them executing."
Huth's final statistics were
Roethlisberger‑like. He completed 9 of 11 passes for 192 yards and two
touchdowns.
"Bobby is playing with
a lot of confidence," Stacy said. "He is making great decisions. He
made a couple of great plays with his feet tonight to get balls to receivers in
tough situations. He continues to improve and impress. With the teams we play
in the future, he needs to get better. We all do."
This page was created September 16, 2005
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